Special Pleading
Applying a standard or rule to others while exempting one's own position from the same standard without legitimate justification. Common in theology when miraculous claims in one's own tradition are treated as historically credible while identical claims in other traditions are dismissed.
Source: Classical rhetoric tradition – Public Domain
Also known as: Double Standard, Moving the Goalposts, Ad Hoc Rescue, Special Exemption
Special pleading is a fallacy in which a person applies a general rule or standard to others but claims an exemption for their own position without providing a principled reason why the exemption is warranted. The exemption is 'special' in the pejorative sense — it is claimed for one's own case without a principled basis that would extend to other similar cases. The fallacy is a violation of the principle of consistency: apply the same standards across comparable cases.
Special pleading is one of the most powerful intellectual self-deceptions because it typically operates below the level of conscious awareness. We rarely notice when we are applying a stringent standard to others' claims while quietly exempting our own from the same scrutiny. The asymmetry feels natural because our own commitments feel more certain from the inside — we have more evidence for them, we understand their nuances, we have lived with them and found them reliable. The fallacy lies not in holding those commitments confidently but in refusing to apply the same evidentiary standard to them that we apply to competing commitments.
In biblical apologetics, one of the most prominent examples concerns miracles. A skeptic may dismiss the resurrection as historically implausible on the grounds that miraculous events cannot be credibly attested by ancient sources — while implicitly accepting other ancient testimonies (Caesar's military campaigns, Thucydides' account of the plague, the Confucian corpus) that depend on the same kind of source-critical methodology. Conversely, a Christian apologist may accept the resurrection appearances with modest ancient testimony while dismissing comparable miracle claims from other religious traditions (the miracles of the Buddha, Muhammad's night journey, Hindu avatar traditions) using a far more stringent standard. If the standard for evaluating miraculous claims is that ancient testimony by committed believers is insufficient, it applies in both directions. If it is that such testimony is credible evidence that must be weighed, the same applies.
Paul confronted Peter with a case of special pleading in Galatians 2:14 — Peter ate with Gentiles freely when Jewish observers were absent but separated himself when Jewish Christians from Jerusalem arrived. He was applying one standard in one social context and another in a different one, not for principled theological reasons but for social pressure. Paul called this 'not acting in line with the truth of the gospel' — a moral form of special pleading with profound theological consequences.
- 1A standard of evidence, scrutiny, or criticism is applied rigorously to others' positions but not to one's own comparable position
- 2An exemption from a general rule is claimed without providing a principled reason why the case at hand is genuinely different
- 3Miracle claims, historical testimonies, or textual authorities are evaluated with different standards depending on whether they support or challenge the position being defended
- 4The phrase 'but this is different because...' appears, followed by a reason that would apply equally to the case from which one is exempting oneself
- 5One's own tradition's errors, contradictions, or embarrassments are treated with charitable nuance, while comparable issues in other traditions are treated as decisive refutations
Jesus addressed the special pleading fallacy directly and memorably. The Sermon on the Mount invokes it implicitly in the teaching on judging: 'Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?' (Luke 6:42). This is not a command to stop making judgments but a command to apply the same standard to oneself that one applies to others. Matthew 23:3 makes the same point about the teachers of the law: 'So you must be careful to do everything they tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach.' The problem is not the standard they hold — it may be entirely right — but the asymmetric application of it. Paul's confrontation of Peter at Antioch (Galatians 2:14) is the clearest apostolic example: 'You are a Jew, yet you live like a Gentile and not like a Jew. How is it, then, that you force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs?'
Identify the standard being applied to the opposing position
Ask: What specific standard of evidence, scrutiny, or consistency am I applying to this claim — and is it a standard I would endorse as a general principle?
Make the standard explicit. 'I am dismissing this miracle account because ancient religious communities cannot reliably attest supernatural events.' Or: 'I am accepting this historical claim because it is early and multiply attested.' State the principle clearly enough that it can be applied across cases.
Apply the same standard to your own position
Ask: If I apply this standard consistently, does it support or undermine my own position with the same force?
If the standard for dismissing others' miracle claims is that ancient religious community testimony is insufficient, apply it to your own tradition's miracle claims. If the standard for accepting historical testimony is early and multiple attestation, check whether your own tradition's historical claims meet that standard. If the application is asymmetric, you have identified a special pleading problem.
Articulate any principled reason for differential treatment
Ask: Is there a specific, principled reason why this case is genuinely different from comparable cases — a reason that is not just 'because it supports my position'?
Sometimes differential treatment is genuinely warranted. The resurrection claims come with specific historical arguments about the transformation of the disciples, the empty tomb, and the rapid development of resurrection theology in a context where the tomb could be checked. Whether these arguments succeed is debatable, but they represent a principled basis for treating the case as distinctive. The question is whether the reasoning for exemption is principled or merely motivated.
Engage your own tradition's difficult cases with the same rigor
Ask: What are the hardest cases for my own position — the texts, historical events, or theological tensions that are most difficult to account for? Am I applying the same rigorous scrutiny to these that I apply to difficulties in opposing positions?
Honest intellectual engagement requires steelmanning one's own difficulties. What are the most serious historical-critical challenges to the authorship of the Pastoral Epistles? What are the hardest harmonization problems in the Gospel accounts? What theological tensions within the biblical canon are most difficult to resolve? Engaging these with the same rigor you apply to others' difficulties is the remedy for special pleading.
Revise your position to apply standards consistently, or revise the standards
Ask: Given the consistency check, does my position need to be stated more carefully, or does my standard of evaluation need to be revised?
Consistency sometimes reveals that a claim is stronger than it appeared (it survives the same scrutiny one applies to competing claims) or weaker (the standard one was applying to others would also weaken one's own case). Either outcome is progress. The goal is not to undermine one's convictions but to hold them on honest grounds — which is the only kind of holding that is intellectually sustainable and genuinely persuasive to others.