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.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Jacqueline Rivers' forceful defense of religious liberty at AEI

This past Tuesday, American Enterprise Institute convened a discussion of W. Bradford Wilcox and Nicholas H. Wolfinger’s new book, “Soul Mates: Religion, Sex, Love, and Marriage among African Americans and Latinos” (Oxford University Press, 2016) about faith and family in minority communities. I have yet to watch the second promising panel with Douthat, Alvare and Pastor Suarez, but I at least wanted to alert MOJers to Harvard's Jacqueline Rivers' forceful defense of religious liberty at the very end of her excellent ten minute panel presentation here (from 29:36 to 40:00): 

What is troubling is in the current climate there is growing intolerance for Christian faith, and even more so, growing intolerance for holding to the teachings of the Bible which are the very source of these positive norms that are being taught in churches. How much more important it is--it is really in the interest of the state--to make sure that there is neither let nor hinderance in the promulgation of thriving black churches because we have the potential to change this cultural direction. 

Here is the event description from the website: 

Dr. Wilcox presented data suggesting that the black family is surprisingly strong, in his view because of the black church. Slate Magazine’s Jamelle Bouie also praised the black church but discussed structural factors — mass incarceration and housing discrimination, in particular — that impede the church’s work. Harvard’s Jacqueline Rivers and The Washington Post’s Michelle Singletary argued that the black church should better emphasize the importance of marriage before sex.

Dr. Wolfinger showed that Latino families are as strong as white families, despite lower incomes. Helen Alvare of George Mason University Law School confirmed how important family life is in Latino culture, but she also posited that the Catholic Church could improve in teaching the principles of family life. Evangelical Pastor Tony Suarez discussed the Gospel’s central role in helping his community improve. The New York Times’ Ross Douthat compared adaptations in the black and Latino Christian communities and wondered if increased drug addiction among the white working class reflects a failure to make similar adjustments.

Don't miss Frederica M-G today on NRO

On this 43rd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, when many of us destined for the nation's capital have had to cancel our trips and day after conference presentations due to the impending and potentially "historic" snowstorm, it sure is uplifting to read this fine argument--and hearty challenge--issued by long time pro-life feminist Frederica Mathewes-Green, today on NRO. It begins with her story and just gets better and better: 

At the time of the Roe v. Wade decision, I was a college student — an anti-war, mother-earth, feminist, hippie college student. That particular January I was taking a semester off, living in the D.C. area and volunteering at the feminist “underground newspaper” Off Our Backs. As you’d guess, I was strongly in favor of legalizing abortion. The bumper sticker on my car read, “Don’t labor under a misconception; legalize abortion.”

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Putnam's Our Kids

I just finished the audiobook version of Robert Putnam's highly praised book, Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis. In his concluding chapter, in which he offers myriad rationale for 'why we should care about any of this' and policy suggestions admirably borrowed from both the political right and the left, Putnam offers an enthusiastic nod to the moral leadership of Pope Francis:  

The most important service that Pope Francis has rendered to men and women of all faiths and of no faith at all is to remind us of our deep moral obligation to care for our neighbors and especially for poor kids. 'Almost without being aware of it,' [Pope Francis] said in 2013, 'we end up being incapable of feeling compassion at the outcry of the poor, weeping for other people's pain, and feeling a need to help them, as though all this were someone else's responsibility and not our own. when we isolate young people, we do them an injustice: young people belong to a family, a country, a culture, a faith. They really are the future of a people.'

There is much we could read to help us live out this Year of Mercy well. I'd highly suggest Our Kids, for Putnam's (mostly) non-ideological cast on a central issue of our time, presenting evidence both for 'family structure'/'cultural' causes of poverty in American and economic ones too. But I'd mostly suggest it to experience the gripping stories of 'our kids.'

My father and step-mother both spent their careers working in schools for the most disadvantaged. They've been a remarkable example to me--and I pray I can adequately witness to the responsibility we have for the 'least among us' to my own children. But as many great minds from Putnam, to Charles Murray, to Arthur Brooks, have revealed these last few years, the growing socioeconomic divide in our country today is notably distinct from other eras of American history. Our Lord told us, 'The poor will always be among us," but these days, the poor are scarcely among 'us' (for Putnam, all college educated are considered, for simplicity, 'upper-middle class'). We live in different worlds: different family circumstances and different schools and communities. This, in itself, is troublesome. Putnam is right, and we Catholics know this quite well: we have a deep moral obligation to care for the poor, but today, they may not be in our kid's schools, our neighborhoods, our parishes. This makes the exercise of our obligation much more difficult for us than it was in the past, difficult to seek out ways to serve, but also difficult to bring our own children into community with the more disadvantaged; recognizing this, in itself, may be just the grace we need to act. 

Monday, January 4, 2016

Williams College: Pope Francis, gender theory, and being invited

Fr. Michael Sheehan, Williams College graduate and now priest of the Franciscans of the Primitive Order in Boston, is teaching a Winter term class at Williams this month called, "Pope Francis and the Problem of Evil." Papal biographer Austen Ivereigh will teach a class via Skype early in the month, and I will visit the class to discuss the pope's views on "gender theory" (which he has called a "new sin" against the Creator). Here's the course description:

Why does the "Pope of joy" speak so often about the prince of darkness?  This colloquy explores the mind and impact of Pope Francis (Jorge Mario Bergoglio), who has been called the most astutely political Argentine since Perón. Students will be encouraged to wrestle with the perennial questions of God and human suffering with the aid of Francis' perspective.  Reflecting on the drama of good versus evil will shed light on how and why the Jesuit pontiff weighs in on economics, social justice, and ecology.  This dialogue provides a platform for students to both express themselves and listen empathically to others.  There will be three types of weekly class meetings: plenary meetings, small group discussions, and visits to the Berkshire Food Project. 

 

I have also been invited by the Catholic Center on campus to speak in the evening on the topic: "In Search of a Pro-Woman Response to the Hook-up Culture," a reprise of my presentation at the World Meeting of Families last year. This is (apparently) noteworthy given the brouhaha at Williams last semester when speaker Suzanne Venker was disinvited from speaking on the failures of feminism, sponsored by the group, Uncomfortable Learning. The ironies are, of course, quite ripe. I too am a critic of mainstream feminism but I also find much with which to agree. Still given the climate on college campuses this academic year, I am eager to see how things shape up on January 18th. 

It was a Catholic speaker I heard while I was a student at Middlebury College--a college much like Williams, though that was two decades ago now--that moved me to question my own radical feminist assumptions and open myself to the Catholic worldview. I pray that the Holy Spirit may work a similar grace at Williams this month.

 

Friday, December 18, 2015

Threat to Religious Liberty in MA

Andrew Beckwith with the Mass Family Institute writes in the New Boston Post today that a Superior Court judge ruled this week that an all-girls Catholic school in the area "cannot refuse to hire a man who is married to another man, despite the fact that Catholic teaching defines marriage as between a man and a woman." A 1989 religious exemption in the state employment non-discrimination law would seem to protect the school in this situation. But the judge determined that exemption was restricted to those schools that “limit membership, enrollment, admission or participation” to the faith community the school represents. (Sound familiar?) Moreover, the judge noted, in support of his ruling, that the school at issue “encourages debate, including on issues of same-sex marriage, and does not prohibit students from exploring and even advocating ideas and positions contrary to church teachings.” 

One hopes an appeal is forthcoming. 

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Gender Ideology, the Synod of Bishops, and Feminism

The Final Report of the Synod of Bishops is now out -- in English. Chapter One begins with contexts and challenges. The ever-encroaching threat of current gender ideology is foremost among them: 

Today, a very important cultural challenge is posed by “gender” ideology which denies the difference and reciprocity in nature of a man and a woman and envisages a society without gender differences, thereby removing the anthropological foundation of the family. This ideology leads to educational programmes and legislative guidelines which promote a personal identity and emotional intimacy radically separated from the biological difference between male and female. Consequently, human identity becomes the choice of the individual, which can also change over time. According to our faith, the difference between the sexes bears in itself the image and likeness of God (Gen1:26-27). “This tells us that it is not man alone who is the image of God or woman alone who is the image of God, but man and woman as a couple who are the image of God. [...] We can say that without the mutual enrichment of this relationship — in thought and in action, in affection and in work, as well as in faith — the two cannot even understand the depth of what it means to be man and woman. Modern contemporary culture has opened new spaces, new forms of freedom and new depths in order to enrich the understanding of this difference. But it has also introduced many doubts and much skepticism. [...] The removal of the difference [...] is the problem, not the solution” (Francis, General Audience, 15 April 2015)....

 

[And then later in the document] Christianity proclaims that God created humanity as male and female, and blessed them to form one flesh and transmit life (cf. Gen 1: 27-28; 2, 24). Their difference, in equal personal dignity, is God’s seal of goodness on creation. According to the Christian principle, soul and body, as well as biological sex (sex) and socio-cultural role of sex (gender), can be distinguished but not separated.

Statements like this are desperately needed as our post-Obergefell culture swims faster and faster toward gender [strike that - sex] oblivion. The ideological march toward the fringe of the feminist and gay rights movements (a fringe that tends toward obliteration of the very identity of the category of persons whom these movements represent) is fast approaching. A recent piece in the New Yorker on the creator of the popular tv show, Transparent, is indicative--and frightening. 

If trans people are scapegoats for the right, they are also requiring the left to undertake a momentous shift in thinking. “We’re asking the whole world to transition with us to a less binary way of being,” Drucker said. “It’s the next step in the fight for gender equality: removing the habit of always qualifying a person as a man or a woman. If we start thinking of each other as just people, it allows us to identify with each other in a way that has never really been possible before.” ...
 
In the utopia that [Transparent creator] Soloway envisions...there would be no need to transition, because there would be no gender in the first place. Soloway parsed it differently: “In a few years, we’re going to look back and say, ‘When we were little, we used to think that all women had vaginas and all men had penises, but now, of course, we know that’s not true.’"
 
[And in conclusion, the admission of the spiritual "obsession" of this quest:]  I’m obsessed with that part in the Bible when Jesus is given the opportunity to cure a person possessed by demons, and Jesus says, ‘What is your name?’ And the person replies, ‘My name is Legion.’ Whatever is not normative is many.” She liked the idea of a person containing more than one self, more than one gender.
 

"Part of it is just the fiction of being alive,” she said. “Every step, you’re making up who you are.” 

 

Though feminists are certainly a diverse bunch, this fast-moving ideological current is due to splinter feminism further--much like abortion did in the 1960s and 70s. Feminists for Life, founded by estranged members of NOW, might well need to be joined by Feminists for Women, an organization that would hold fast to the now controversial position that women are women--and that biological differences (asymmetry) have something to do with it. Here's my utopia: that Feminists for Women would recognize that they really ought to be Feminists for Women for Life because it was that move--acceding to a male-normative view of equality by agitating for abortion--that brought us down this dark road in the first place. And do note:  the pressure the LGBTQetc community has put on the culture to accommodate--no, force a transition to a "less binary way of thinking"--has shifted the properly feminist focus away from the central concern of the vast majority of women today:  how to both contribute to the world of work while prioritizing care for their children. The trans focus has been a major loss for women and for children. Kudos to the bishops for speaking the truth. 

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Fr. Ernest Fortin on Rerum Novarum and Centesimus Annus

I've been re-reading Rerum Novarum and Centesimus Annus in preparation for a presentation I'm giving at an upcoming conference on Human Ecology at CUA's School of Business and Economics. The late Fr. Ernest Fortin, political philosopher/theologian extraordinaire offers some keen analysis in volume 3 of Fortin's collected works, edited by Brian Benestad, Human Rights, Virtue, and the Common Good. The entire collection is worth reading and re-reading, as Fortin's comprehensive understanding of the tradition is much less common now, but for those of us particularly interested in the Catholic social teaching, volume 3 is a precious, untapped resource.

In his essay, "Sacred and Inviolable: Rerum Novarum and Natural Rights," Fr. Fortin applauds Pope Leo XIII's courageous insertion of the Church into the 'social question,' even as Fortin critiques what he takes to be an all too modern approach to questions concerning private property, the common good, and rights generally. Leo's attempt to synthesize these modern formulations with a more pre-modern return to "the nature and goals of civil society" is a difficult one, given the teleological starting point of the latter and the nonteleological starting point of the former. 

Here's a bit (find the entire essay online here): 

In a nutshell, what the encyclical calls for is nothing short of a wholesale return to a premodern and by and large Thomistic understanding of the nature and goals of civil society, whose insights are brought to bear on the new situation created by the rise of capitalism and the socialist reaction to it. That alone would be enough to set Rerum novarum apart as a document of unique theoretical and historical importance. One thing is certain: its publication marks the spectacular reentry of the Church into an arena from which it had been excluded as a major player by the great intellectual and political events of the Enlightenment and its aftermath. The other side of the story, and it is no less fascinating than the first, is that in elaborating its program for the reform of society Rerum novarum resorts to a number of categories that are proper to modern thought and not easily squared with its basic Thomism. Two of these merit special consideration: the overwhelming emphasis on the naturalness of private property and the doctrine of natural rights.

---

[T]he teaching and the language of Rerum novarum stem from two distinct traditions, one premodern and the other modern. The first is teleological and stresses duties. It holds that human beings are naturally political and directed to some preestablished end in the attainment of which they find their perfection or happiness. The second is nonteleological and stresses rights. It denies that there is any supreme good to which human beings are ordered by nature and views them from the standpoint of their beginning or the passions by which most of them are habitually moved, namely, the desire for security, comfort, pleasure, and the various amenities of life. For the same reason, it denies that they are natural parts of a larger whole whose common good is superior to the private good of its individual parts. In the course of the discussion, I pointed to some of the difficulties involved in any attempt to blend the two approaches...Can the encyclical be said to have achieved a genuine synthesis?

 

The challenge that it faced was rendered particularly acute by the radical heterogeneity of the positions whose amalgamation was being sought. The heart of the modern project was from the beginning and has remained ever since its so-called "realism." Its originators had concluded on the basis of experience that premodern ethical and political thought had failed because it made impossibly high demands on people. It studied human nature in the light of its noblest possibilities and was thus compelled to speak about an ideal that is seldom if ever achieved among human beings. In a word, it was Utopian or, to use Descartes's image, quixotic. 

 

The best way to remedy the situation, it was decided, was to lower the standards of human behavior in order to increase their effectiveness or propose an ideal that was more easily attainable because less exacting. This led in due course to a recasting of all basic moral principles in terms of rights. Most people would rather be informed of their rights than reminded of their duties. Edmund Burke knew whereof he spoke when he said, "The little catechism of the rights of men is soon learned; and the inferences are in the passions."

 

The beauty of the new scheme is that it supposedly made it possible for everyone to enjoy the benefits of virtue without having to acquire it, that is, without undergoing a painful conversion from a premoral concern with worldly goods to a concern for the goodness of the soul. The intelligent pursuit of one's selfish interest would do more for the well-being of society than any concerted attempt to promote the common good. Mandeville, another bona fide Lockean, captured the spirit of the new enterprise as well as anyone else when, in The Fable of the Bees: Private Vices, Publick Benefits (1705), he argued that the day bees started worrying about moral virtue the hive would be ruined and that it would recover its prosperity only when each one returned to its vices. This, to a higher degree than it perhaps imagined, is the position that the encyclical would synthesize with its basic Thomistic outlook.

 

Syntheses, it has been aptly said, produce miracles. The miracle in this case consisted in using the categories of modern thought to restore something like the lofty morality they were originally calculated to replace. That miracle has yet to be attested. Catholics heard more about rights from Leo than they had from any other pope, and, thanks in large part to him, they were destined to hear more and more about them as time went on. Yet opinion continues to be divided as to whether this new emphasis has led to the spiritual renewal that Leo hoped to foster. Suffice it to say that in recent years the Church has had its hands full trying to resist the changes that are being urged upon it by some of its members in the name of the very rights it now promotes. In the best instance, the rights for which Leo pleaded had to do with the freedom to worship God and fulfill the rest of one's God given duties. Once these rights were granted independent status, however, it was only a matter of time before they were parlayed into a moral argument to criticize the law rather than to justify one's observance of it. 

 

This brings me to my last question, which is whether the drafters of the encyclical—Liberatore, Zigliara, Mazzella, Boccali, Pope Leo himself, and others—were fully aware of their dependence on modern modes of thought. The simplest answer is Yes. The Pope may have felt that the time had come to abandon the intransigence of his immediate predecessors and temper their inflexible principles with a more flexible policy, even if this meant adopting a terminology that is neither native nor congenial to the older Catholic tradition. Without capitulating to modernity, Catholics had to develop attitudes that were appropriate to living in the modern world. After all, there was much to be said for liberal or constitutional democracy, which, of the two viable alternatives on the contemporary horizon, is the one that came closest to what Christianity had always recommended. Moreover, something could be done to correct its defects, whereas the defects of socialism were seemingly irremediable....There is nonetheless reason to suspect that Leo and his mentors were invincibly blind to the theoretical implications of some of their statements.

 

In a later essay, "From Rerum Novarum to Centesimus Annus: Continuity or Discontinuity?" Fortin writes that JPII's "benevolent interpretation" of Rerum novarum enabled the prior to moderate the latter's unduly modern conception of rights (prepolitical rights dislodged from prior duties), even though Centesimus Annus was "demonstrably less Thomistic than that of Rerum novarum." This tighter link between rights and duties is especially true with regard to the 'ownership' of private property which JPII connects strongly with its 'use' in the "common destination of material goods." Still, Fortin points to other elements of Centesimus Annus which are beholden to modern formulations, most especially, human dignity. His conclusion (full essay here): 

Just as Rerum Novarum bears traces of the transition from late medieval to early modern thought, i.e., from the divine right of kings to the sacred right of private property, so Centesimus Annus bears traces of the transition from early modernity to late modernity, i.e., from the Lockean notion of the sacredness of private property to the eighteenth-century notion of the sacredness of the sovereign individual. 

 

 

Papers on 'Women and Work' at Vatican

The papers from the Vatican conference at which Lisa Schiltz presented and I participated are up

Friday, December 4, 2015

Vatican Study Seminar on Women and Work: Topics

From the Vatican press release:  

The International Study Seminar Women and Work on December 4th and 5th 2015, organized by the Pontifical Council for the Laity. Around one hundred people from all over the world will participate: men and women, all experts in disciplines associated to the theme being studied.

Today it is necessary to recognise the important role women play both in public life, for building structures that are richer in humanity, and in family life, for the wellbeing of the family itself and the education of children. Starting from this premise, the Seminar’s goal will be to discuss causes and consequences of today’s dichotomy between family demands and the organization of work. Furthermore, the meeting will seek to analyse and consider paths to leave behind the “either-or” dilemma in which too many women find themselves today, and to propose innovative solutions towards a “one and the other” answer that combines the demands of work and the demands of family life. Proposals will be considered in favour of a greater appreciation of women's work, so that discriminations that women workers still face – like penalization of motherhood and disparity of salaries – might be overcome. Also, there will be analysis of how to bring to light the irreplaceable service that only feminine genius can offer to humanity, for the growth of each person and the building of society.

Finally, with this Seminar the Pontifical Council for the Laity wishes to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the publication of Saint John Paul II’s Letter to Women, in which he stated his heartfelt thanks and appreciation on behalf of the Church towards women involved in professional activities. He addressed them explicitly saying: “Thank you, women who work! … you make an indispensable contribution to … the establishment of economic and political structures ever more worthy of humanity.”

The Seminar will gather distinguished speakers from nine countries and there will be ample space for discussion to allow the participation of all present to the reflection. At the end of each study day two participants – a man and a woman – will be charged with providing conclusions of the discussion. The Holy Father Pope Francis will send a message to participants which will certainly give orientations for the work to be undertaken.

 

Seminar topics:

 

Women work and they have always done so. Stefano and Vera Zamagni (Italy)

 

Where feminine genius is to be found: women’s work today around the world. Ester Jiménez (Spain)

 

Male and female roles: an idea to be discarded?

  1. The paradox of gender theory: recent neurological and psychological research on the masculine and the feminine.Marco Scicchitano (Italy)

  2. The professional roles of men and women: stereotypical or interchangeable? Geneviève Sanze (Central African Republic)

  3. Today’s families and yesterday’s roles? Stereotypes and reality. Josefina Videla (Argentina)

 

 

Women at work with difficulties and opportunities

  1. Career and private life: Getting ahead? Holding back? Which equality should we aspire to? Helen Alvaré (USA)

  2. Women in leadership: is there a need for ‘pink quotas’? Ilva Myriam Hoyos (Colombia)

  3. Good looks: an advantage or an obstacle? Maria Teresa Russo (Italy)

 

 

Family and work: how to reconcile the two

  1. Effective policies to find a balance. Eugenia Roccella (Italy)

  2. Family: the primary driving force for development. Mina Ramirez (Philippines)

  3. Motherhood: a burden or added value for a business? Elizabeth Schiltz (USA)

  4. Working at home doesn’t stop at the front door: a contribution to the growth of all. Bryan Sanderson (UK)

 

To foster a feminine presence that can make the world richer in humanity

  1. Educating girls: feminine genius at the service of humanity. Terry Polakovic (USA)

  2. Care ethics: the inestimable value of embracing fragility. Susy Zanardo (Italy)

  3. Career and family: they can be balanced (Testimony) Clara Gaymard (France)

 

Monday, November 30, 2015

Women and Work at the Vatican

MOJer Lisa Schiltz and I will be at a conference in Rome this weekend, sponsored by the Pontifical Council of the Laity-Women's division. Lisa will be among the 15 speakers from around the world (and I among the 80 participants). Lisa is on a panel discussing how to reconcile work and family commitments. Helen Alvare and Endow Founder, Terry Polakovic, are also speaking from the US. Other papers include discussion of neurological and psychological research on the differences between the sexes, women in leadership, care ethics, and educating girls. My favorite title is: "Women Work and They Have Always Done So," offered by the married Italian economists Stefano and Vera Zamagni.