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.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Recommended Reading

A new essay by MOJ-friend, Greg Kalscheur, SJ.

       
Moral Limits on Morals Legislation:
Lessons for U.S. Constitutional Law
from the Declaration on Religious Freedom

GREGORY A. KALSCHEUR
Boston College - Law School
       
Boston College Law School Research Paper No. 111                  
Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal, Vol. 16, Fall 2006          
Abstract:    
A persistent American confusion regarding the proper relationship between law and morality is manifest in the opinions in Lawrence v. Texas. The Second Vatican Council's Declaration on Religious Freedom provides the foundation for an analytical framework that can bring clarity to that confusion. The heart of this framework is the moral concept of public order. This concept offers a principled explanation of both the holding in Lawrence and the limitations the Court placed on that holding. The Court could clarify the confusion manifest in Lawrence by explicitly acknowledging that a state interest only becomes legitimate for purposes of rational basis review when the asserted interest constitutes a public order concern. A constitutional jurisprudence that aspires to be faithful to the sort of limited government that is demanded by respect for human dignity should recognize that the state can only use law to restrain human freedom when that limitation serves a public order function.

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