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What Question Should Moral Clarity Examine?

The strongest conversations often begin with an honest question that people are afraid to ask.

Submit a current issue, cultural concern, biblical question, public policy debate, or moral dilemma you believe deserves thoughtful examination.

Your submission may help shape a future episode, Question of the Week, article, resource file, or audience discussion.

Ask honestly.
Think carefully.
Stand courageously.

BEFORE YOU SUBMIT

What Makes a Strong Moral Question?

Moral Clarity looks for questions that move beneath the surface of public controversy.

01

It Identifies a Real Tension

The question should involve competing principles, duties, freedoms, consequences, or definitions of justice.

02

It Can Be Investigated

Strong questions allow us to examine Scripture, official documents, research, laws, statements, and other evidence.

03

It Matters Beyond One Personality

The best questions reveal a broader moral issue rather than merely asking whether someone should be praised or condemned.

04

It Seeks Truth

A serious question remains open to evidence and does not simply disguise a predetermined conclusion.

QUESTIONS WORTH EXAMINING

What Could You Ask?

Your question may involve faith, culture, government, freedom, justice, family, media, leadership, or public responsibility.

Should elected officials be required to live under the laws they pass?

When does government protection become government control?

Does free speech include the right to communicate ideas that are deeply offensive?

What does Scripture require when political loyalty conflicts with moral truth?

Can justice be achieved through policies that treat people differently according to race?

What responsibilities do citizens have when institutions become dishonest or corrupt?

SUBMIT YOUR QUESTION

Bring the Issue Into the Room.

Give us enough information to understand the question, why it matters, and what makes it difficult.

You do not need to write an essay. A clear explanation will help us evaluate whether the topic fits an upcoming conversation.

Please do not submit confidential, medical, financial, or other highly sensitive personal information.

Name
Please enter your first and last name.
Email Address
We may use this email to contact you if we need clarification about your submission.
Examples: faith and culture, government, freedom, justice, family, media, leadership, elections, or public responsibility.
Focus on the deeper moral issue rather than simply asking whether a particular person or political party is right or wrong.
Tell us what makes this question important, difficult, timely, or widely misunderstood.
Please do not submit confidential, medical, financial, or other highly sensitive personal information.
May Moral Clarity quote or discuss your submission publicly?
Privacy Consent
Submission Agreement

WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Every Submission Will Be Considered.

Submission does not guarantee that a question will become an episode, but every serious question helps us understand what people are wrestling with.

01

We Review It

We examine the question for clarity, relevance, evidence, and moral significance.

02

We Research It

Strong topics may lead us to Scripture, laws, reports, data, historical records, and competing arguments.

03

We May Feature It

Your question may become an episode, audience poll, article, resource file, or Question of the Week.

THE CONVERSATION STARTS HERE

A Better Question Can Change the Entire Discussion.

Bring us the issue. Bring us the tension. Bring us the question people are discussing without examining carefully.

Then let us ask together: What is right?

Submit Your Question