Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Religious Liberty, Church Autonomy, and the Structure of Freedom
That's the title of Rick Garnett's contribution to a new volume edited by my Emory colleagues Frank Alexander and John Witte: Christianity and Human Rights: An Introduction (Cambridge 2010). Here's the abstract:
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What is the “right to freedom of religion,” a right which our leading human-rights instruments commit us to protecting, and what are the legal and other mechanisms that will sustain and vindicate our commitment? Some mechanisms might be better (or less well) designed for the purpose and so might work better (or less well) than others; some actors and authorities might be more (or less) reliable and effective protectors than others. In other words, the project of protecting human rights – including the right to religious freedom – involves not only reflecting on human goods and goals, but also wrestling with questions about institutional design and competence.
This chapter considers both the content of religious freedom and the ways it is protected and promoted. It proposes, first, that the “right to freedom of religion” belongs not only to individuals, but also to institutions, associations, communities, and congregations. Just as every person has the right to seek religious truth and to cling to it when it is found, religious communities have the right to hold and teach their own doctrines; just as every person ought to be free from official coercion when it comes to religious practices or professions, religious institutions are entitled to govern themselves, and to exercise appropriate authority, free from official interference; just as every person has the right to select the religious teachings he will embrace, churches have the right to select the ministers they will ordain.
Next, it is suggested that the
right to church autonomy is a structural mechanism for protecting both the
freedom of religion and human rights more generally. The relationship between
the enterprise of protecting human rights and religious communities’ right to
self-determination is a dynamic, mutually reinforcing one. Human rights law, in
other words, protects church autonomy – it protects the freedom of religious
communities to govern and organize themselves, to decide religious matters
without government interference, to establish their own criteria for membership,
leadership, and orthodoxy, etc. – and, in turn, church autonomy promotes the
enjoyment and exercise of human rights. This mechanism is, John Courtney Murray
thought, “Christianity’s basic contribution to freedom in the political order.”
If we understand and appreciate this contribution, we will better understand and
appreciate that often misunderstood and misused idea, “the separation of church
and state.”
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Rick's paper is downloadable here.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/05/religious-liberty-church-autonomy-and-the-structure-of-freedom.html