Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Monday, April 4, 2005

JPII @ TCS

My column on John Paul II's legacy in the economic sphere is now up at TCS.

John Paul II's "Sunflower Field"

How to summarize in just a few words the influence that this great and holy man has had not only on my intellectual formation, but on my whole life?  As a law student, I had the gift of being part of the preparations for World Youth Day in Denver, and so yesterday was just flipping through some precious pictures-including one receiving communion from his hands.

 

Some of my college-age friends who had participated in World Youth Days in Rome (2000) and Toronto (2002) have been putting together a collage of their memories and impressions, and it was through their words that I was able to find my own.  They have been genuinely touched by his deep and personal love for the youth, as manifested by the tears in his eyes when he saw the huge crowds, and responded "John Paul II loves you, too," when they chanted, "John Paul II, we love you!”

One could be ambivalent about the World Youth Day format—fearing that huge and emotional gatherings with a “superstar” figure can easily fizz out in the flatness of ordinary life, and so they may not lend themselves to a deep appreciation of the cultural message that the Church has to deliver.  But what hits you when you read the impressions of these young people is the long-lasting and incredibly profound influence that John Paul II has had on their spiritual lives—how these have been genuine occasions for them to understand, as one put it, “how important we are to the Church and how important we are to him.”  “He managed to leave footprints of God's Love everywhere in the world and even on my heart.”  They have been touched by how concrete and selfless his love for them was—keeping up with exhausting travel schedules, even through driving rains.  “He is so selfless,” one wrote, “he inspires so many of us to think of others and not of ourselves.”  And of the last few years, his “joy through suffering” has been a profound example and lesson.  “He was a true sign of life, a life for God.” 

One young woman, remembering the kiss she received from him as a small child, compared it to the planting of a seed which, as she grew, helped her to be like a sunflower, turned toward God for direction in her life.  She concludes with a prayer, “May God bless you immensely for creating a sunflower field on earth by simply touching the lives of the youth with your life.”

With them, I am part of this JPII-generation “sunflower field”; and with them, the sense of profound loss now overflows with immense gratitude.  As Paul IV wrote in Evangelii Nuntiandi, people today “listen more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if they do listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.”  (n.41).  Thank you, John Paul II, for your witness of selfless love—of sanctity, in and for today’s world.   

Amy

THE POPE OF HUMAN RIGHTS

In this morning's New York Times, Helen Prejean has a piece about John Paul II's position on capital punishment.  For an extended defense of the Prejean interpretation of the Pope's position, see E. Christian Brugger, Capital Punishment and the Roman Catholic Moral Tradition (Notre Dame 2003).  As Brugger points out, however, the Pope's position is more radical than the Church's "official" position, in spite of what Sister Prejean says.  To read Sister Prejean's entire piece ("Above All Else, Life"), click here.  An excerpt follows:

Of the many great legacies of Pope John Paul II, the one I prize the most is this:  He was instrumental in helping the Catholic Church reach a position of principled opposition to the death penalty - an opposition that brooks no exceptions. . . .   [I]n 1999[,] when the pope visited St. Louis, he uttered words of opposition to the death penalty that could not have been more uncompromising: 

"A sign of hope is the increasing recognition that the dignity of human life must never be taken away, even in the case of someone who has done great evil."

For this statement, and for his leadership, I am forever grateful. Thank you, Pope John Paul. Because of you, the Catholic Church can at last stand alongside those human rights groups that oppose, unequivocally, government killing.

Sunday, April 3, 2005

John Paul II and the Law: A First Try

I'm sure that many of us are reflecting on the effect that the Holy Father had on our faith and lives, and thanking God for the gift of his ministry and example.  It also makes sense, here on MOJ, for us to consider what the Pope's work and thought might mean for law and legal theory.  A few thoughts:

First, many of the Pope's writings focus on the importance of culture as the arena in which human persons live, thrive, and search for truth.  His was not a reductionist Christianity -- one in which the choices and hopes of persons drop out of the analysis, and are replaced merely by one "dialectic" or another. Nor is Christianity merely a matter of a rightly ordered interior life.  We are precious and particular, bearing the "weight of glory," but also social, relational, political -- and cultural.  And, he recognized, law both shapes and is shaped by culture.

Second, the Pope returned again and again to the theme of freedom.  Certainly, for lawyers -- and particularly for lawyers living and working in our constitutional democracy -- questions about the extent to which law can and should liberate (and, perhaps, liberate-by-restraining?) are appropriately on the front burner.  It's fair to say that John Paul II proposed an understanding of freedom -- and of its connection with (T)ruth -- that contrasts instructively with the more libertarian, self-centered understanding that seems ascendant in our law (particularly our constitutional law) today.

Third, I imagine we will be working out for decades the implications of the Pope's proposal that the God-given dignity of the human person, and the norm of love, richly understood, should occupy center-stage in our conversations about morality -- rather than utilitarian calculations, historical movements, or supposed categorical imperatives.  This proposal seems particularly powerful when it comes to the matter of religious freedom.

Finally, there is the (perhaps, at first) surprising fact that, at the end of the 20th Century, it was a mystical Pope who "stepped up" and reminded a world that had been distracted, or perhaps chastened, by reason's failures, and had embraced a excessively modest, post-modern skepticism, of the dignity and proper ends (without overlooking the limits) of reason.

There's a lot more to say, of course.  I would, for what it's worth, encourage any MOJ readers who work with or advise law journals to consider commissioning essays, or even symposia, on John Paul II's jurisprudential legacy.

Rick

UPDATE:  George Weigel, one of the Pope's biographers, has a nice essay on the Wall Street Journal's web site.  He expands, in particular, on my first point, emphasizing the place of history and culture in the Pope's thinking:

The key to the freedom project in the 21st century, John Paul urged, lay in the realm of culture: in vibrant public moral cultures capable of disciplining and directing the tremendous energies--economic, political, aesthetic, and, yes, sexual--set loose in free societies. A vibrant public moral culture is essential for democracy and the market, for only such a culture can inculcate and affirm the virtues necessary to make freedom work. Democracy and the free economy, he taught in his 1991 encyclical Centesimus Annus, are goods; but they are not machines that can cheerfully run by themselves. Building the free society certainly involves getting the institutions right; beyond that, however, freedom's future depends on men and women of virtue, capable of knowing, and choosing, the genuinely good.

That is why John Paul relentlessly preached genuine tolerance: not the tolerance of indifference, as if differences over the good didn't matter, but the real tolerance of differences engaged, explored, and debated within the bond of a profound respect for the humanity of the other. Many were puzzled that this Pope, so vigorous in defending the truths of Catholic faith, could become, over a quarter-century, the world's premier icon of religious freedom and inter-religious civility. But here, too, John Paul II was teaching a crucial lesson about the future of freedom: Universal empathy comes through, not around, particular convictions. There is no Rawlsian veil of ignorance behind which the world can withdraw, to subsequently emerge with decency in its pocket.

There is only history. But that history, the Pope believed, is the story of God's quest for man, and man then taking the same path as God. "History" is His-story. Believing that, Karol Józef Wojtyla, Pope John Paul II, changed history. The power of his belief empowered millions of others to do the same.

The Times on JP II

In today's lead editorial in the New York Times, we read:

The pope would certainly never have wanted his own end to be a lesson in the transcendent importance of allowing humans to choose their own manner of death. But to some of us, that was the exact message of his dignified departure.

As is so often the case (at least, in my experience) in conversations about morality and the end of life, the editorial writer seems to confuse the Pope's acceptance of suffering and death with joy and dignity with "choos[ing] [one's] own manner of death."  The way the Times puts it -- "the transcendent importance of choosing" -- suggests that Justice Kennedy is moonlighting as an editorial writer.  I imagine the Pope heard a call -- the invitation to a "good and faithful servant" -- and had no promethean illusions about control, autonomy, and "choice."

The editorial also illustrates, again, the common failure to distinguish between choosing and causing death, on the one hand, and refusing treatment, on the other.  The concerns at issue in the Schiavo case had to do not with the fact that she died -- or even, frankly, with her right to refuse necessary treatment -- but with the possibility that, as some saw it, she was killed.

To be fair, the editorial ends on what I'm sure was intended to be a positive note:  "His embrace of each person's innate dignity was his touchstone, allowing him to shape our times even as he railed against them."  Even here, though, the writer just does not get it.  The Pope's relation with "our times" and the culture was not so adversarial; he did not merely "rail" against the times.  He embraced the world, and loved the young, and proclaimed constantly a message of optimism and hope.  His criticisms were not, as the Times seems to believe, the scolds of a curmudgeonly reactionary; they were the exhortations of a loving parent or faithful friend, who suspects that his loved ones are capable of doing better.

Rick

Saturday, April 2, 2005

Hibbs on JP II and Truth

"He Lived the Splendor of Truth," writes philosopher Thomas Hibbs of the Holy Father.

Rick

On "Clinging to Life"

I encourage everyone to read Steve Bainbridge's post "Did JP II 'Cling to Life'?", cross-linked below. He corrects the absurd argument that the Pope clung to physical life in a way that belies his own theology of suffering and the Catholic understanding of death. Of course, we don't know what happened in the final hours, but until that time he displayed a faithful (in the literal sense of "faith-full") equanimity in suffering and the approach of death that we can only pray to emulate. My only question: what's wrong with Jack Miles?

--Mark

call for Articles: Villanova Conference on John Courtney Murray

CALL FOR ARTICLES

An Interdisciplinary Conference

THE LEGACY OF JOHN COURTNEY MURRAY FOR LAW AND POLITICS

Sponsored by the Journal of Catholic Social Thought and Villanova University School of Law

Friday, September 16, 2005 at Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania

Thge 2004 presidential election showed that the perpetual question of the nature of the relationship between the Catholic Church and American politics and law remains unresolved, and that interest in the question is as great as ever. This question has always had many dimensions. It is at once a problem in the political theory of liberal democracy, in the law of Church and State and in the relationship of law and morality, and a problem of conscience for both ordinary Catholics and Catholic politicians. John Courtney Murray, S.J., created a major synthesis that seemed to ease what were very sharp tensions between the triumphal Church of mid-century and the claims of liberal democracy. To what extent is Father Murray's resolution of the tensions of that era useful for us today, after the culture wars of the last forty years (particularly over abortion), the rise of the religious right as a political force, the split between "right" and "left" in the Church, the trend toward privatization of religion in American life, and the increased difficulty of claiming, as did Murray, that "We Hold These Truth" ? These and related questions will be explored in an interdisciplinary conference including legal academics, political theorists, philosophers, theologians and others. Papers presented at the conference will be considered for punlication in the Journal of Catholic Social Thought.

PAPER PROPOSALS. Please send paper proposals to Mark A. Sargent at [email protected] , or Villanova Law School, 299 N. Spring Mill Rd, Villanova PA 19085, by May 15, 2005.

John Paul II

Jpiicampo

May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed,
through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

Posts on JP II over at my personal blog:

Welcome to Tom Berg!

I'd like to welcome our newest blogista, Tom Berg of St. Thomas Law in Minnesota. He is the director of St Tommy's new Terrence J. Murphy Institute for Catholic Law, Thought and Policy, which is sponsoring the program next weekend on "The Catholic Intellectual Tradition and the Good Society," about which Tom's colleague Greg Sisk posted below (Tom: I've almost figured out what I'm going to say on Saturday!). Tom's bio in the sidebar will provide the vital statistics, but I will note that Tom is a noted Church/State scholar, as well as a very thoughtful commentator on many aspects of religion in law, politics and culture. As our first non-Catholic blogista, he will add a dash of ecumenical spice to our discussions. I know that all the MOJers are delighted to have Tom aboard, and that our readers will benefit from his insights. A word of advice to Tom: hanging around with all these Catholics can be dangerous.... The phrase "all roads lead to Rome" has more than one meaning!

-- Mark