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.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Chaput nails it

Here (thanks to First Things) is a bit from a recent address, given by Archbishop Chaput, in Indianapolis:

. . . We don’t just profess belief in the Incarnation. We say we believe that God took flesh at a precise moment in time and in a definite place. Pontius Pilate and Mary are mentioned by name in the creed—and the reference to Mary, his mother, guarantees Christ’s humanity, while the reference to Pilate, who condemned him to death, guarantees his historicity.

All this ensures that we can never reduce the Incarnation to an abstract concept, a metaphor, or a pretty idea. It ensures that we can never regard Jesus Christ as some kind of ideal archetype or mythical figure. He was truly a man and truly God. And once he had a place he called home on this earth. There’s something else, too. We believe that this historical event, which happened more than 2,000 years ago, represents a personal intervention by God “for us men and for our salvation.” God entered history for you and me, for all humanity.

These are extraordinary claims. To be a Christian means believing that you are part of a vast historical project. And it’s not our project. It’s God’s. . . .

This Christianity thing?  It's about reality. It's about a real person, who lived, walked, breathed, slept, laughed, and cried in time, in a real, identifiable place.  It's not just about values, principles, commitments, and messages.  Heavy.

Velasco on CST and corporate law

Several MOJ-ers have blogged about the recent CST conference at Villanova, on markets, the state, and the law.  I asked my NDLS colleague, corporate-law scholar Julian Velasco, for a summary of the paper he presented at the conference.  Here it is:

I focused on developing some guiding principles to help me in trying to put CST into practice in corporate law in the real world.  First, we have to give due consideration to the status quo in enacting reform.  Thus, for example, if shareholders are the owners of the corporation, then we must respect those ownership rights — even if only to pay just compensation before abolishing them.  Second, “more” CST is not necessarily better.  Thus, we cannot say things like, “my plan demonstrates greater solidarity than yours and therefore is more Catholic.”  Plans that are strong in some areas of CST may well be considerably weaker in other areas.  Third, it is not necessarily the case that every aspect of CST is speaking to each society with the same urgency.  Thus, for example, it may be that, in America today, the universal destination of goods is a greater concern than the right to work.  We probably should focus our efforts accordingly.  Finally, it may be too much to expect corporate law, or even all of business law, to solve all of the world’s problems.  Maybe it is enough that they do what they can.  And CST does not necessarily say what that is.  Ultimately, CST should not be expected to provide specific solutions to complex moral problems.  Instead, it should be understood as providing important principles that are intended to be embraced and applied in good faith.

Monday, September 24, 2007

More from Frankovitch on the culture of life

A few weeks ago, I posted this and this in response to Nicholas Frankovitch's First Things post, "The Seamless Garment Reconfigured."  Frankovitch has returned to the discussion with these thoughts.  Here's a bit:

Our right to abort entails the duty to accept that others have the right to have aborted us. Now, maybe the train of thought leading to that conclusion strikes you as abstract and remote from the way most of us think about this issue in real life. “People are not that logical!” So wrote J. Budziszewski in “The Revenge of Conscience,” an essay published in First Things. “Ah,” he continued, “but they are more logical than they know; they are only logical slowly. The implication they do not grasp today they may grasp in thirty years; if they do not grasp it even then, their children will. It is happening already. Look around.”

We know what abortion does to the aborted. To the aborting it does the psychological equivalent. “Do unto others . . .” is a principle that moves along a straight and narrow path and, please note, in both directions. As I would have others do unto me, I ought to do unto them. And so if I have already done unto them, I am now committed to wishing the same for myself. If I abort my unborn child, well, that’s nothing I would deny my parents had the right to do to me.

Self-hatred is what I end up with when I carry to its logical conclusion the proposition that abortion rights are morally necessary, that justice demands them. . . .

There's more.  Check it out.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Moreau on Catholic schools' mission

Here in South Bend, we've been celebrating the beatification of Basil Moreau, C.S.C. (the founder of the Congregation of Holy Cross).  Here is a quote that reminded me how central the distinctive mission of Catholic schools is, and should be, to Holy Cross, to Notre Dame, and to the Church:

"We shall always place education side-by-side with instruction; the mind will not be cultivated at the expense of the heart.  While we prepare useful citizens for society, we shall likewise to our utmost to prepare citizens for heaven."

Anderson on "The Commercial Society"

Greg's post, below, on economics education for religious leaders -- and also the recent posts about the latest CST-fest at Villanova -- remind me that I've been meaning to link to Ryan Anderson's recent review of a new book by Acton Institute director of research Dr. Samuel Gregg called "The Commercial Society:  Foundations and Challenges in a Global Age."  (Here's a link for the book.)  Here's a bit:

Democracies often focus so much on who is making the decisions (the people!) that they don't consider whether the state should be acting in the first place. Pierre Manent explains that "the modern idea of representation leads naturally to a continuous increase in the state's power over society, because it continually erodes the intrasocial powers that ensure the independence and solidity of this society." Citizens become slaves to the state under "the illusion that they are obeying their own will." Combine the politics of redistribution with this soft despotism and you get a government that eliminates the voluntary associations and platoons of civil society that best serve the immediate needs of the poor, while at the same time wrecking the economic institutions that best secure their long-term well-being.

For all his focus on problems posed to commercial societies, Gregg entirely ignores problems they create for human flourishing. Consider the tendency of commercial society to become commercialist society: Gregg entirely ignores the materialism so rampant in the West today, and his discussion of the pitfalls of equality-as-sameness ignores one important truth. While it is certainly the case that the poor in wealthy societies are often better off than the rich in poorer societies, Gregg forgets that much of human fulfillment is social fulfillment. The wide, and widening, gap between rich and poor is cause for concern, and man's absolute well-being (measured in material terms) is insufficient.

These quibbles aside, The Commercial Society is eminently reasonable, particularly for its closing discussion of the possibility of "forced" commercial order. While we shouldn't view humans as passive victims of history, neither should we assume that generations of habits and institutions can be reorganized overnight--or by force. Whether it is European economic and demographic stagnation, Middle Eastern political turmoil, or Latin American and African liberationist policies, culture must be the driving force of economic and legal change. This places a special responsibility on religious leaders, who must understand and communicate social values to their flocks. Many religious leaders still harbor disdain for commercial order, but The Commercial Society could go a long way to educating them in the basics. In fact, this book is important for anyone who seeks to do what Gregg's home institution, the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, advocates: To "connect good intentions to sound economics."

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The CDF on food and hydration

Here is a link to the English translation of the CDF's recent response to questions from the USCCB on food and hydration for patients in a persistent vegetative state.  The response states, among other things, that even when the vegetative state is persistent, "the provision of water and food, even by artificial means, always represents a natural means for preserving life, and is not a therapeutic treatment" (emphases original).

Here are some initial thoughts, by Paul Lauritzen, at Commonweal.  Here are comments from the National Catholic Bioethics Center.  Here is the USCCB's statement, commenting on the response.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Maritain on truth and tolerance

This from Jacques Maritain's Reflections on America (link):

One happens sometimes to meet people who think that a primary condition of tolerance and peaceful co-existence is not to believe in any truth or not to adhere firmly to any assertion as unshakeably true in itself. May I say that these people are, in fact, the most intolerant people, for if perchance they were to believe in something as unshakeably true, they would feel compelled by the same stroke to impose by force and coercion their own belief on their fellow men. The only remedy they have found for their abiding tendency to fanaticism is to cut themselves off from truth. As a result, they insist that whoever knows or claims to know truth or justice simply cannot be a good citizen "because he cannot and is not expected to admit the possibility of a view different from his own, the true view."

Well, if it were true that whoever knows or claims to know truth or justice cannot admit the possibility of a view different from his own, and is bound to impose his true view on other people by violence, the rational animal would be the most dangerous of beasts. In reality, it is through rational means, that is, through persuasion, not coercion, that man is bound by his very nature to try to induce others to share in what he knows or claims to know as true and just. Be it a question of science, metaphysics, or religion, the man who says "What is truth?", as Pilate did, is not a tolerant man, but a betrayer of the human race. There is, in other words, real and genuine tolerance only when a man is firmly and absolutely convinced of a truth, or of what he holds to be a truth, and when, at the same time, he recognizes the right of those who deny this truth to exist, and to contradict him, and to speak their own mind, not because they are free from truth but because they seek truth in their own way, and because he respects in them human nature and human dignity, and those very resources and living springs of the intellect and of conscience which make them potentially capable of attaining the truth he loves, if some day they happen to see it.

The views I have just criticized about the "what is truth?" supposedly required by mutual toleration are not specifically American -- it was Kelsen who made a system of them. Moreover, when you hear, them expressed -- not infrequently, I would say -- in this country, they are much more an easy-going way of speaking than an expression of serious views to be put into practice. In actual fact what people think is rather that a kind of humility always keeps pace with the spirit of tolerance. And this is perfectly true.

I don't believe, nevertheless, that it is without utility explicitly to realize that doubt and intellectual timidity are not a prerequisite for mutual toleration; and that it is truth, not ignorance, which makes us humble, and gives us the sense of what remains unknown in our very knowledge. In one sense there is wisdom in appealing to our ignorance, if we mean the ignorance of those who know, not the ignorance of those who are in the dark.

For more on the matter, there's always the Pope.

"In Search of the Common Good"

Over at the Marty Center's Religion and Culture web forum, I am some others have posted some thoughts in response to Lew Daly's essay, "In Search of the Common Good:  The Catholic Roots of American Liberalism."  Here's the link to the thread.  (I think that my fellow MOJ bloggers would really enjoy -- and enjoy posting about! -- Daly's essay.)

UPDATE:  A reader passes on this link, to the wonderful "Whispers in the Loggia" blog, where you can read a long excerpt from Archbishop Wuerl's Labor Day homily, which is heavy on CST.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Koppelman on gay rights and religious freedom

Andy Koppelman has a good post, here, at Balkinization on what he regards as the unnecessary conflict between the gay-rights movement, on the one hand, and religious freedom, on the other.

Our real national pastime: Religion and Politics

Here are some scribblings of mine, from today's USA Today, on church, state, religion, and politics:

With all due respect to baseball, America's real national pastime is, and has long been, arguing about the place of religion in politics. In the USA, religious faith has always played a role in shaping policy and inspiring citizens, and those same citizens have always wondered, and sometimes worried, about this influence.

(Illustration by Sam Ward, USA TODAY)

From the outset, we have believed that church and state are and should be distinct and also have known that faith and public policy are not and cannot be entirely separate. Finding and maintaining the right balance — avoiding both a reduction of religion to politics and an elevation of politics to religion — has been and remains a challenge.

One of the most important political stories of the past 25 years — one in which this challenge has been at center stage — is the emergence, energy and electoral success of the so-called Religious Right. This development unsettled what had become the comfortable consensus among many modern sociologists and suggested that their predictions of religion's decline, like reports of Mark Twain's death, were greatly exaggerated.

In the early 1980s, after the formation by Rev. Jerry Falwell of the Moral Majority and the election of President Reagan, many worried that the return of conservative Christians to the rough-and-tumble of party platforms, campaigns and elections threatened to unsettle the foundations of Thomas Jefferson's famous "wall of separation" between church and state. In 1984, Richard John Neuhaus responded to these concerns in an important and influential book, The Naked Public Square. Neuhaus insisted, correctly, that there was nothing un-American — and, indeed, nothing particularly new — about religious believers, ideals, claims and commitments in public life.

During the next two decades, conservative Christians continued to shape American politics, even as organizations such as the Christian Coalition and the Family Research Council replaced the Moral Majority. Issues such as same-sex marriage and partial-birth abortion during George W. Bush's time simply took the place of pornography and prayer in public schools during his father's presidency.

On the other side of the proverbial aisle, at least some of the Democrats' recent electoral victories can fairly be credited to many voters' increased interest in exploring the religious dimensions of environmental stewardship, immigration policy and waging war. Put bluntly: If religiously motivated voters helped the Republicans take over Congress in the mid-1990s, it appears that such voters helped to deliver it back to the Democrats in 2006.

Today, our national pastime is thriving. We continue to wrestle with, and to disagree about, faith and politics, church and state. The debate is both alive and lively, and informs policy topics from global warming and suburban sprawl to school choice and human cloning. It will not — and, in a free and diverse society, should not — end anytime soon. That said, and notwithstanding the popularity in some quarters of overheated and unfair diatribes about "Christian fascism" and "American theocracy," it is worth noting, and celebrating, the progress we've made toward clarity and consensus.

Far from a theocracy

For starters, scholars and commentators across the ideological spectrum increasingly agree that religious believers are entirely free to participate, as whole persons, in public life and in the civic arena. This freedom is the mark of an open, generous democracy, not a step toward "theocracy."

Nothing in the text, history or structure of our Constitution requires Americans to accept disintegration as the price of admission to the life of active, engaged citizenship. Even a government such as ours (especially a government such as ours), which is appropriately "separate" from religious authorities and institutions, need not and should not discriminate against religiously motivated expression and action.

During William Rehnquist's tenure as Chief Justice of the United States (1986-2005), the Supreme Court, for the most part, came to appreciate that the goal of our First Amendment — which protects religion's exercise in part by prohibiting its "establishment" — is not to push religious faith to the margins, in the hope that it will wither, but to protect religion from manipulation and distortion by governments, in the confidence that it will flourish.

True, each year brings another installment of the "Christmas wars" over holiday displays in public, and courts continue to struggle in cases involving Ten Commandments displays and religiously themed mottos and monuments.  It is tempting to elevate these skirmishes into epic battles between the sacred and the secular.

In fact, it is becoming well settled that legislatures may acknowledge religion's role in our history and practices, accommodate religious believers' special needs and cooperate with religious institutions in advancing the common good. All of this can be done without thereby "establishing" religion.

Of course, to note and welcome these developments is not to pretend that our faith-in-politics arguments are over or that the church-state problem has been solved. Looking ahead, at least two challenges seem particularly pressing.

The first is to remember and appreciate the importance of church-state "separation," rightly understood. Unfortunately, separation has often been misunderstood — by critics and defenders alike — as requiring that religion remain entirely private, confined to the sanctuary, the Sabbath and the self.

What the separation of church and state demands is that governments accept and respect the distinctiveness and independence of religious institutions and communities. It is not a menorah in the public park or the words "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance that today threaten to undermine the "wall of separation."

Instead, the present threats come, for example, from state laws that require religiously affiliated agencies to pay for their employees' contraception, and from employment-discrimination lawsuits challenging religious schools' decisions about the hiring and firing of teachers.

'Caution by the church'

If this first challenge is a call for limits on the state, the second might be seen as a call for caution by the church.

To say faith speaks to politics is not to imagine that it provides clear, authoritative answers to complicated policy questions. There are plenty of good reasons for reasonable, faithful believers to decide that it is unwise for church leaders to address difficult political questions, particularly when they are questions — as most are — about which reasonable, faithful believers can disagree.

Religious commitments could and should animate our entire lives, but they will not always neatly dictate a particular policy.

During its 25 years, USA TODAY has covered and analyzed the tenures of four U.S. presidents, the final days of the Cold War, an ongoing technological revolution and, regrettably, terrorist attacks at home. All of these events and developments have shaped our ongoing conversation about religious freedom under law.

If the past quarter-century is any indication, it would seem that bright and busy times — another 25 years, at least — are ahead for our national pastime.

Richard W. Garnett is the John Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C. associate professor of law at the University of Notre Dame.