Prof. Chris Gamwell of the University of Chicago Divinity School and Protestants for the Common Good (PCG) responds to our earlier posts (here, here, and here) on their statement criticizing the Christian Right. My comments inserted at places:
My thanks to Tom Berg for inviting attention to the “Statement on the Christian Right” issued by Protestants for the Common Good and to him and Rick Garnett for the thoughtful comments they posted. . . .
1. While I appreciate that Mr. Berg could not post the entire statement, it is at some pains to say that the Christian Right, on our use of the term, is not equivalent to Christians evangelicals or Christian conservatives generally. The former is defined in relation to a particular political agenda, and we are grateful to share with many Christian evangelicals and Christian conservatives political purposes we call our own. I will be happy to send the entire statement to anyone who wishes to have it, and I can be reached here.
2. Nothing in the statement says or implies that a commitment to the formation and practice of private virtues, on the one hand, and, on the other, to mutuality in the sense we advocate are, as Mr. Garnett says, “competitive” or that the former is not, as Mr. Berg puts it, “essential to the latter’s effectiveness.” As Mr. Berg also noted, the statement explicitly says that “we, too, wish to affirm the importance of personal virtues” and, moreover, do so because we are committed to mutuality: “We affirm the need for personal character because mutuality is gravely threatened when dedication to intimate relationships, taking responsibility where one can, and charity for those who suffer are widely missing.”
Thus, the statement does not criticize the Christian Right because it asserts the importance of private or personal virtues. To the contrary, we object that its political purposes are dominated by the formation and practice of private virtue, which implies that the widespread practice of private morality is sufficient for the good society, and thus many communal sources of empowerment are unimportant or largely unimportant. On our reading, the Christian Right excludes any significant political concern for poverty, the want of many persons for health care, the massive inequity of income distribution, inequality in educational funding, injustice in the criminal justice system, persisting structural forms of racism, and so forth.
Fair enough -- and I personally agree that the Christian Right overall pays far too little attention to these structural/communal matters. But let me issue a challenge back: do groups like Protestants for the Common Good translate their concern for private virtues (and the admission that these are "essential" to communal empowerment) into public policy emphases? Are such groups, for example, proposing policy solutions -- or even efforts within the Protestant churches -- that directly address the problem of pervasive divorce (which certainly contributes to many social ills, and causes special problems for the most vulnerable)? The interaction between groups like PCG and the Christian Right still seems trapped in the "either-or" debate when they could look, and perhaps even cooperate on, "both-and" solutions.
Second, we ought not to limit "communal sources of empowerment" to government. Private social service organizations and other mediating institutions (religious and nonreligious) themselves offer empowerment in a communal setting -- often a more personal and effective setting than that of government. Indeed, the PCG statement affirms the importance of "a favorable pattern of associations" among the societal conditions that "empower people to achieve, and [that] are the business of justice." I would hope that PCG could recognize a similar concern on the Christian Right in the form of the "faith-based" initiative, which ideally combines a society-wide commitment (in financing social services through taxes) with the work of mediating institutions (in delivering the services). (I say "ideally" because the Bush administration is reportedly failing to treat the initiative seriously.)
Prof. Gamwell continues:
While affirming the importance of private virtues, the statement does not seek to resolve controversial political issues about what those virtues include. For instance, the statement does not present a political position on abortion or same-sex equality. This is because those issues, as virtually all specific political questions, cannot be resolved solely by deduction from the inclusive understanding of justice and the common good we present. Protestants for the Common Good has, in fact, endorsed something like the conclusions (although not necessarily the reasoning) of Roe v. Wade and has argued for the legal equality of heterosexual and same-sex unions. But the arguments we give for these positions include judgments additional to the general principle of mutuality advanced by the statement, and we believe that other Christians who affirm the same general principle might come to differing resolutions of those specific issues.
3. Both Mr. Berg and Mr. Garnett comment that our summary of the Christian Right’s political agenda appears to include, as Mr. Berg puts it, issues of “justice for the broadest human community”—and the concern for abortion is cited by both as an illustration. We certainly agree that the Christian Right pursues issues that affect the entire community and, in that formal sense, issues of justice. Were this not the case, it would not be a political movement. The point is, then, that its understanding of justice is focused on legal encouragement and enforcement of personal moral character, and the intent to have abortions or virtually all abortions legally proscribed is a prime illustration. A prohibition of abortion would be enforcement of what is taken to be one aspect of sexual responsibility as a personal virtue. I recognize that, for those who so advocate, the prohibition of abortion would have as its principal purpose “protecting the life of unborn children from lethal violence.” But it remains that what is enforced is personal moral character, since refusal to do lethal violence to the innocent is certain among the most basic of such character traits.
Perhaps the statement should have clarified what it means by personal or private virtue. We mean habits or character traits whose widespread enactment is, within very generous limits, indifferent to alternative social and institutional arrangements. If these virtues are taken to be sufficient to a good life, one’s station in the communal structures or power, privilege, benefits, and burdens is not, again within very generous limits, fundamentally important to human flourishing. Being worthy of trust, for instance, is a moral trait all individuals can exhibit whether the society is equalitarian or feudal—and so, too, are refusal to do lethal violence to the innocent and sexual responsibility.
My point (and perhaps Rick's) about abortion was that in bringing unborn humans into the circle of protection, the pro-life position doesn't merely "affect the entire community"; it actually serves the goals that PCG states as fundamental, namely serving the "inclusive community," "loving all persons as oneself," and "treating each person [as] the neighbor for each one of us." I would urge PCG to recognize how the failure to protect the unborn is a failure of the very "mutuality [for] all humans" that the organization commends. Of course, I'd add that if the pro-life position fails to emphasize significant safety-net assistance to women as well, then it fails to treat them as neighbors too. In any event, I had read the PCG statement to criticize the Christian Right, unjustifiably, for not caring about members of the broader human community except insofar as it wants those people to receive personal salvation and enter the church. The clarified version here, I think, is more defensible: that the Christian Right does care about justice and service to others, but conceives of this too exclusively in individualistic and personal terms. Indeed, perhaps the problem is exemplified precisely by the Christian Right's political abortion position, which tends to include restrictions and leave out societal safety-net measures.
4. Doubt was expressed about our view that the Christian Right is a threat to democracy because it asserts religious authority as the sole basis for political decisions. Perhaps the term “sole” was a poor choice, because it suggests that no appeal is made to considerations that might be acceptable to those outside of the Christian community. The point we had in mind was this: Defense of political positions on the Christian Right at least often includes essential premises that themselves are dependent solely on the authority of scripture or religious teaching and thus cannot also be defended by argument, that is, by appeal to the reason of fellow citizens. Perhaps this reading is controversial. So far as I can see, however, the most important tenets of faith and morals are, for the Christian Right, not themselves open to rational assessment, and these tenets are often implicated in the specific political purposes pursued.
I still maintain that on several of the central political issues -- most notably abortion -- the wide range of responsible argument on the Christian Right appeals to premises other citizens can accept. With abortion, such "publicly accessible" considerations include the facts of fetal development, the presumption in favor of life, the vector of broadening the universe of persons receiving protection, and so forth. With same-sex marriage, the considerations include the dominant historical nature of marriage, the optimal nature of male and female role models, and so forth (perhaps less convincing, but nevertheless publicly accessible).
Tom
By golly, after these many months I finally figured out how to post a comment! Thus emboldened, I add the following thought to Rick's recent note re adoption by gay couples in Mass.:
I don’t understand why I never hear or read of the simple non-moralistic argument that even if homosexual parents would be the best role models for genetically-predestined homosexual kids (assuming, as today's conventional wisdom claims, that there are such children) gay adoptive parents still would not be the best role models for the heterosexual kids whom EVERYONE concedes to be the vast majority of kids. Since we cannot at this time test orphans for that incredibly powerful gay gene, we should do what will work out best in that vast majority of cases, i.e. seek first of all to place them with straight parents.
In other words, if we place an infant (of necessarily unknown tendencies) with homosexual parents, even the most radical gay activist must concede that there is at least a 90% chance that the child’s parental sex-role models will not match his or her inner sexual tendency.
All by itself, the rather obvious argument above seems to me to provide sufficient reason for people of every ideological persuasion to reject putting adoption of children by homosexuals on a par with adoption by heterosexuals. Why is the argument not being made--or is it?
To say that they should NEVER be so placed would, however, be to claim that having mixed up sexual role models is the worst fate that could befall a child, which is doubtful. (This does not mean that Church agencies should not have a clear policy against such adoptions, e.g. in order to avoid scandal. It only means that an unintended lesser evil, bad role modeling, may be permitted if necessary in order to provide more immediately needed goods, e.g. food and shelter, I would think, now speaking from a Catholic perspective. I better stop here and see if others have any thoughts.)
BTW, I've been clicking on "SAVE" in order to post my comments, after composing them. Is this correct? It seems odd, but I don't see anything else to click on.
Dear MOJ friends:
I’ve come across two items of particular interest, a recent poem on abortion from the Alsop Review, found below. It’s not quite as good, but it reminds me a little of Pulitzer-laureate Gwendolyn Brooks’ truly great poem “the mother” [“Abortions will not let you forget. You remember the children you got that you did not get,...”]
Let me also mention an insightful article by Jon A. Shields, “Bioethical Politics”, from the March/April 2006 (vol. 43, issue 3) issue of SOCIETY (the social science journal published, I believe, in New Brunswick, NJ, by Transaction). Shields argues that pro-life activists use Rawlsian public reason while pro-choice activists typically refuse to do so. (I believe he has also written a longer piece (dissertation?) on the same topic; I found part of it on the web.) I do not know what his personal view of abortion may be.
Shields also seems to show that the large “gory photos” of abortion can be put to good use in furtherance of reflective debate on college campuses, something I had always doubted.
Sorry I couldn't find a way to link you directly to the article.
Here’s the poem:
The Abortion
Jennifer Reeser
Fold this, our daughter’s grave,
and seal it with your kiss.
For all the love I gave,
you owe me this.
Inside of me, she had
your lips and tongue, my air
of grimness, thin and sad,
with your thick hair.
Inside of you, I trust,
she was a simple mesh
of need and paper, lust –
potential flesh.
And there was such pure song
in life begun from you,
I held the dead too long,
as women do,
but leaving like you did,
when only I could feel
the biding, body, bid
of what was real,
she’s put out with the cur,
the garbage, heartache, cat.
Promise you’ll sing to her.
You owe me that.
Jennifer Reeser
Noted On the Gazebo | Alsop Review
Richard Stith
Yet another study suggests that parental notification laws might be more efficacious than The New York Times concluded. (Thanks again to Carter Snead.)
Rob
Jack Balkin welcomes the political implications of the South Dakota anti-abortion law, noting that George Allen, Mitt Romney and John McCain have all spoken favorably of the legislation:
If Republican presidential candidates announce their support for criminalizing abortions in the primaries in order to win the votes of the pro-life faithful, their Democratic opponents will be more than happy to remind the public of that position when the general election comes round. That, I predict, will help split the Republican coalition that has governed the country for years.
For this we can thank the wonderful folks in the South Dakota legislature, who have put the criminalization of abortion squarely on the table for public discussion. By making it important for Republican politicians to take a stand-- not on the relatively popular issues of partial birth abortion bans and parental notification requirements, but on the far less popular question of criminalizing abortion-- South Dakota has managed to do what years of Democratic politics could not-- create a wedge issue that will destroy the Republican party's winning coalition nationally.
Rob
Wednesday, March 8, 2006
Here is an op-ed, in the Boston Globe, on the debate in Massachusetts about the Catholic bishops' decision not to permit Catholic Charities to participate in adoptions by gay couples or by gays and lesbians.
[I]t would be a huge tragedy if Catholic Charities were to pull the plug on its adoption services. Yet it may be forced to do just that if some well-intentioned but obstinate adults refuse to back down from the hardline position they've taken.
Last fall, a Boston Globe story revealed that Catholic Charities had on a handful of occasions since 1987 arranged for a child to be adopted by a gay or lesbian couple. Apparently the Bay State's four Catholic bishops hadn't known about those adoptions, which violate explicit Catholic teachings. In 2003, the Vatican office headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger -- now Pope Benedict XVI -- pronounced the adoption of children by homosexual couples ''gravely immoral," a form of ''violence" that places vulnerable youngsters ''in an environment that is not conducive to their full human development."
So long as Catholic Charities' gay adoptions were not publicized, this doctrinal opposition could be finessed. As the agency's president, the Rev. J. Brian Hehir, would later say, ''You do it because you fulfill certain basic goods even though there are tensions on other fronts." But once the story was out, the bishops were constrained -- ordered by the Vatican -- to end the practice. . . .
So the bishops announced on Feb. 28 that they would seek a religious-freedom exemption from the state's policy in order to continue arranging adoptions ''in a way which does not conflict with Catholic teaching and practice." The next day, seven members of the Catholic Charities board of directors resigned. The bishops' stance, they said, ''threatens the very essence of our Christian mission." In a separate letter, former board chairman Peter Meade called the policy ''morally wrong" and decried the ''damaging fixation with this issue by some within the church."
There is no question that Meade speaks for countless people, Catholic and otherwise, who share his support for same-sex adoption and view the bishops' position as deeply insulting to gays. But the fact is, those ''within the church" who oppose placing children with gay and lesbian couples include the pope, and bishops are not free to disregard church policy. If the Vatican says, ''Thou shalt not," Catholic Charities -- which is subject to church authority -- cannot say, ''Yes, we shall." When I called Meade to ask whether there was anything else Boston Archbishop Sean O'Malley could have done, he conceded the point. ''I didn't feel," he said, ''that the archbishop felt that he had any other options."
So exactly who is allowing a ''damaging fixation with this issue" to threaten the vital adoption work that Catholic Charities is known for? The Massachusetts bishops, who have proposed a solution that would allow the agency to go on finding homes for children who badly need them? Or those who are so adamant about defending gay adoption, which accounts for less than 2 percent of all the adoptions Catholic Charities has facilitated since 1987, that they are willing to jeopardize the other 98 percent if they don't get their way?
The speaker of the Massachusetts House has announced that he will block any attempt to grant Catholic Charities a religious waiver. Both Boston newspapers have condemned the bishops' proposal. Meanwhile, more than 700 Massachusetts children who are legally free for adoption wake up every morning to find themselves still languishing in foster care, still aching for a family of their own. If Catholic Charities is forced out of the adoption field, those kids will go on languishing and aching for God knows how much longer. Whatever one's view of same-sex adoption -- and there are sincere arguments and good people on both sides of the issue -- what possible good can come of leaving children to twist in the wind?
This letter, from New York Democrats for Life board member and State Senator Ruben Diaz, criticizes Kristen Day, executive director of Democrats for Life, for endorsing the recent letter on abortion and religion signed by Catholic Democrats in the House. Diaz writes:
As a pro-life Democrat and elected official in one of the most liberal cities in the United States, I was shocked and dismayed to read your recent press release supporting a letter written by Rep. Rosa DeLauro and cosigned by mostly pro-abortion Democrats members of Congress. I found it to be deceptive and something I could never embrace.
Most of the letter's signers support unrestricted abortion and have a total disregard for the grave moral disorder in our society. And to me it is obvious that no child could enjoy the programs and policies mentioned in this letter if he or she fell victim to abortion. . . .
. . . Fighting for a good educational system, good health services, job creation, affordable housing, and other important social services equally available to all human beings, are some of the reasons that I am a public servant, however, as I said before, an aborted baby will never be able to enjoy these services. Therefore, it is the duty and responsibility of every good Christian, good Catholic and any pro-lifer to defend the sanctity of life and not allow the sagacity of these signees to distance us from our goals.
Here is the recent report, issued by Amnesty International, "Iraq, Beyond Abu Ghraib: Detention and Torture in Iraq." Here is the New York Times story on the report.