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June 20th, 2007

The 10 Driving Commandments

catholic driving school

The Catholic Church has issued a set of ’10 driving commandments’. See the BBC news report, or the full text of the document (warning: quite lengthy). The document also talks about prostitution, street children and the homeless.

There are of course humourous aspects to a document such as this, but overall I think that it is a very good initiative. Well done to the Catholics. I think that Christians generally would do well to reflect on how they conduct themselves on the roads. The following section from paragraphs 25 and 26 resonated:

The domination instinct, or the feeling of arrogance, impels people to seek power in order to assert themselves. Driving a car provides an easy opportunity to dominate others. Indeed, by identifying themselves with their car, drivers enormously increase their own power. This is expressed through speed and gives rise to the pleasure of driving. This makes drivers wish to experience the thrill of speed, a typical manifestation of their increased power.

The free availability of speed, being able to accelerate at will, setting out to conquer time and space, overtaking, and almost “subjugating” other drivers, turn into sources of satisfaction that derive from domination.

Cars particularly lend themselves to being used by their owners to show off, and as a means for outshining other people and arousing a feeling of envy. People thus identify themselves with their cars and project assertion of their egos onto them. When we praise our cars we are, in fact, praising ourselves, because they belong to us and, above all, we drive them. Many motorists, including the not so young, boast with great pleasure of records broken and high speeds achieved, and it is easy to see that they cannot stand being considered as bad drivers, even though they may acknowledge that they are.

[Being a campervan driver "the free availability of speed, being able to accelerate at will" is a slightly foreign concept, but that is an aside.]

A good summary of the driving 10 commandments:

Those who know Jesus Christ are careful on the roads. They don’t only think about themselves, and are not always worried about getting to their destination in a great hurry. They see the people who “accompany” them on the road, each of whom has their own life, their own desire to reach a destination and their own problems. They see everyone as brothers and sisters, sons and daughters of God. This is the attitude that characterises a Christian driver.

[PS. Thanks for the contributions to my cartoon ideas thread below. Please don't stop!]

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8 Responses to “The 10 Driving Commandments”


  1. selvaratnam.org » Archive » 10 Driving Commandments says:

    [...] (HT: Dave Walker) Posted in Driving, Catholic, Humor on June 20th, 2007 [...]

  2. Jack the Lass says:

    Excellent cartoon Dave as usual, I did laugh.

    I’m a bit perplexed* by the summary of the attitudes of the Christian driver. Everybody knows that cars with fish symbols on them are the worst-driven in the world. Presumably because people think it doesn’t matter as they’re going to heaven anyway. Bah.

    * will try to think of something perplexing about the church. But haven’t got much time for such a potentially time-consuming activity so will get back to you.

  3. Sacre scuole (guida) « SPIRITUAL SEEDS says:

    [...] scuole (guida) Giugno 20, 2007 Posted by donmo in Società e religioni, Cattolicesimo. trackback Per quanto riguarda l’ultimo documento vaticano, sposo in pieno la tesi di Luigi Accattoli,però la vignetta è carina (non servisse ad altro che ad averla provocata, già sarebbe qualcosa). [...]

  4. Ann says:

    The fuuniest thing I have seen on this – when I was driving in Oregon (US) I saw many “praying for Portland” bumper stickers (there was some sort of Billy Graham-type event coming up) – generally on the most aggressively and terribly driven cars. I think we did need prayers to protect us from them – maybe it was a warning prayer!!

  5. Chris Clark says:

    I thought the camper van had gone? I need to refrain from blasting my horn at them and cutting them up in case it is you :-)

    Having an unofficial role as keeper of the traffic rules I find I have a hard job in Worthing. As Jack the Lass points out Icthus seems to imply bad driving and I find I need to be ready to change the hand from a clenched fist of admonition to one of a friendly wave of greeting as mostly the bad drivers turn out to be friends from the numerous churches we have here.

  6. Dry Wonton Mee says:

    From the first quote, I had enormous fun exchanging some key words. Try swapping:

    Driving a car = promoting your take on religion

    Speed = other people being manipulated to suit your take on religion

    Cars = denominations/churches

  7. Dry Wonton Mee says:

    By the way, I’ve just remembered there used to be something called ‘the emerging church’. Did it pull its head back in? Has it become the ‘Over-Modestly Nuanced and Intriguingly Imperceptible Church in a Neutral but Still Postmodern State of Quasi-Manifestation’ church? (OMNIICNSPSQM) That’s pronounced: “Omni-ickens-pss-kwum”

  8. Anne says:

    All this has reminded me of the bumper stickers that said “Honk If You Love Jesus.” They were prevalent when I was a student still living at home. One day I was out driving with my mother, and she stopped at a red light behind somebody with that particular sticker. She tootled her horn melodiously, and the fellow who was driving put his hand out of the window and extended the middle finger in a vulgar gesture.