An interesting exchange. (Thanks to Amy Welborn.)
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
The Pope, India, and religious freedom
Sunday, May 21, 2006
Weigel on Europe's "Two Culture Wars"
An interesting read:
[Recent events in
] are a microcosm of the two interrelated culture wars that beset Spain
today. Western Europe
The first of these wars—let us, following the example of Spain’s birth certificates, call it “Culture War A”—is a sharper form of the red state/blue state divide in America: a war between the postmodern forces of moral relativism and the defenders of traditional moral conviction. The second—“Culture War B”—is the struggle to define the nature of civil society, the meaning of tolerance and pluralism, and the limits of multiculturalism in an aging Europe whose below-replacement-level fertility rates have opened the door to rapidly growing and assertive Muslim populations.
Friday, May 19, 2006
The Moussaoui deliberations
Ann Althouse has this post, commenting on a Washington Post story about the deliberations in Moussaoui case. According to the story:
Only one juror stood between the death penalty and Zacarias Moussaoui and that juror frustrated his colleagues because he never explained his vote, according to the foreman of the jury that sentenced the al-Qaeda operative to life in prison last week.
The foreman, a Northern Virginia math teacher, said in an interview that the panel voted 11 to 1, 10 to 2 and 10 to 2 in favor of the death penalty on three terrorism charges for which Moussaoui was eligible for execution. A unanimous vote on any one of them would have resulted in a death sentence.
Apparently, the hold-out not only "never explained his vote", but never identified himself as the hold-out, either. Professor Althouse has some interesting thoughts on the matter.
Tuesday, May 16, 2006
"Lefty secular" and "just"
In response to Michael's post: Rob cited, as examples of "a strangely perfect convergence between Christianity and lefty secular social policy," the positions of the Episcopal Diocese of New York on abortion ("The Diocese supports freedom of choice in abortion") and school vouchers ("none but public schools should be supported with public monies"). Then, after noting that some conservative Republicans support a right to same-sex marriage, and also that there are strong theological arguments in favor of legal recognition of same-sex marriages, Michael suggested what Rob refers to as a "a strangely perfect convergence between Christianity and lefty secular social policy" is "better described as a strangely perfect convergence between Christianity and just social policy. Put that way," Michael continued, "the convergence is not 'strange' after all. It's just what we should expect, later if not sooner."
Two quick points: I am confident that Michael agrees me that the positions of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, cited by Rob as evidence of a convenient "convergence" between Christianity and "lefty secular" social policy are, in fact, quite unjust.
Next, and more seriously: Is it really that case that we should -- this side of heaven -- "expect" perfect convergence between Christianity and just social policy? What would be the content of such expectations in a secular, democratic society?
Horwitz on Religious Tests
Paul Horwitz's latest paper, "Religious Tests in the Mirror: The Constitutional Law and Constitutional Etiquette of Religion in Judicial Nominations," is available on SSRN, and is well worth a read. I heard Paul give this paper at the AALS -- at a panel on "Religion, Division, and the Constitution." Here is the abstract:
The Religious Test Clause of the United States Constitution states that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States". Although it is the only place in the main text of the Constitution that mentions religion, it has been habitually ignored - until now. In the past several years, a spate of lower federal court nominations and two Supreme Court nominations - the successful nomination of Chief Justice John Roberts and the abortive nomination of Harriet Miers - have occasioned public debate over whether the Religious Test Clause forbids Presidents and/or Senators from supporting, opposing, or even questioning nominees on the basis of religion. More broadly, these events have been the occasion for discussions about whether and how religion may be raised in the public debate surrounding judicial nominees. Because the Roberts and Miers nominations present neat mirror images of each other, with religion used as a disqualification in one nomination and a qualification in the other, it is an opportune moment to assess what the Religious Test Clause has to say about these cases, and about the use of religion in the federal judicial nomination process more generally.
This article, a contribution to a Symposium on "Religion, Division, and the Constitution," is the first to fully examine these questions. After discussing the invocation of the Religious Test Clause in the recent nomination controversies, it looks carefully at the text and history of the Religious Test Clause. It argues that the Religious Test Clause precludes Congress or the President from imposing a formal test oath on would-be federal office-holders that would require them to avow or disavow, under oath, allegiance to a particular faith or set of religious doctrines. And that is all it does. A President may select nominees on the basis of their faith if he chooses; a Senator may question a nominee on his or her faith or religiously derived beliefs, or support or oppose a nominee on that basis. Thus, those public officials, public figures, and commentators who argued during the recent nomination process that the Religious Test Clause barred certain actions or inquiries were wrong.
I argue that this conclusion is not only descriptively accurate; it is also normatively sound. There are many plausible reasons why a President or Senator might validly inquire into the faith, or religiously derived beliefs, of a nominee. To silence such inquiries because of the dangers of intermixing religion and politics ultimately disserves the broader principle that religion ought to be a fully welcome part of discussion in the public sphere. In addition, the broad reading of the Religious Test Clause, by constitutionalizing an area of politics, unduly limits the scope of popular responsibility for the political process. The best remedy for abuses of religion in the judicial nomination process lies in the realm of ordinary politics, and not in the Constitution.
Although the Constitution thus provides few if any barriers to the use and abuse of religion and religious rhetoric in the federal judicial nomination process, nothing prevents us from attempting to craft evaluative criteria that might lead to more fruitful uses of religion in public debate, and to guide our understanding of how well or poorly religion has been used in the public debate surrounding judicial nominations. The article thus offers several principles of "constitutional etiquette" that might guide our understanding of the sound use of religion in this context, and measures the recent nomination controversies against these standards. It concludes that even with these criteria in place, the invocation of religion in judicial nominations, as elsewhere, may lead to more rather than less division in our national politics. But the price is well worth paying, if our public discussions become richer and deeper as a result.
Here is more -- from the blogosphere -- by Paul about the issue.
Jaroslav Pelikan, RIP
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer is reporting, "Yale professor Jaroslav Pelikan, one of the world's foremost scholars of the history of Christianity, has died of lung cancer, his son said Monday. He was 82.
Pelikan wrote more than 30 books, using sources in nine languages and dealing with literary and musical as well as doctrinal aspects of religion."
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Prudence, abortion, and Casey
Some thoughts in reply to Michael's quick response . . .
First, I am perfectly happy to agree that responding legislatively to abortion in a just way would -- if the Supreme Court would permit such a response -- involve "prudential judgments," about which reasonable people (including faithful Catholics) could disagree. (I'd be surprised if anyone denied this.) And, I would be overjoyed if we ever reached a day when We the People could try to craft a just, workable, honest, and faithful response to what Michael and I agree is the tragedy of abortion. (Note that we are permitted by the Court to have such conversations about capital punishment.)
Second, neither the (I think uncontroversial) observation that responding legislatively to abortion would involve such prudential judgments nor the suggestion that criminalization of early-term abortions would, all things considered, be unwise provides any support for the view that the absolutist Roe / Casey regime should be maintained.
Third, and unfortunately, Bob Casey has made it clear -- in order to secure support from the abortion lobby -- that he will oppose judicial nominees who indicate a willingness to undo Roe's error. That is, notwithstanding his expressed pro-life views, Senator Casey would be committed to preventing us from ever exercising the kind of prudential judgment that Michael and I agree the tragedy of abortion calls for. So, it seems to me that if one holds the Perry / Kaveny / Langan view, one ought to oppose strongly candidates -- like Casey -- who are committed absolutely to preventing democratic deliberations and prudential judgments about the best legal response to abortion.
Fourth, Sen. Santorum's view on capital punishment seems to be moving in a direction that Michael and I both endorse. I will pray for similar growth from those Catholics in the Senate who persist in holding and promoting wrongheaded positions on school choice, religious freedom, and abortion.
Responding to Steve's (important and challenging) questions -- it is not at all clear to me that one who (correctly) regards abortion as a grave moral wrong and an attack on the dignity of human life is therefore required to treat abortion like murder. For all kinds of good reasons, we do not categorize or respond in law to all homicides in the same way. No one thinks (I assume) that we are hypocrites for not responding the same way in law to negligent homicide and malicious torture murders.
But again . . . I cannot wait until Steve's are the questions that we are permitted, as citizens and as a political community, to address. Unfortunately, neither the current Court, nor any Court that Senator Casey's superiors in the Senate would ever permit, will let us tackle these questions.
Friday, May 12, 2006
Bainbridge on Enterprise Liability and the abuse scandal
Check out Steve Bainbridge's latest:
Since 1950, more than 11,500 sex abuse claims have been filed against priests and other agents of the Roman Catholic Church. The eventual direct costs to the Catholic Church of the priest abuse litigation are predicted to range from $2 to $3 billion.
The corporate structure of the Church under civil law can have a substantial impact on the ability of priest sex abuse claimants to recover on favorable judgments or settlements. In many U.S. dioceses, all Church assets are owned by a single corporation, typically a corporation sole, by virtue of which the local bishop becomes the legal titleholder of all Church-affiliated property in the diocese. The dominant view is that all assets of such dioceses, including those of individual parishes and other so-called juridic persons, are available to satisfy tort judgments against the diocese.
Some dioceses, however, long have separately incorporated at least some of their affiliated juridic persons. In response to the priest sex abuse liability crisis, there is a growing trend for diocesan assets to be divided among multiple incorporated entities. Although separate incorporation of diocesan assets implicates a number of legal doctrines, alter ego claims likely will play a central role in any litigation seeking to reach the assets of such corporations for the benefit of diocesan creditors.
There is no constitutional bar to a court using the alter ego doctrine to treat a diocese and its separately incorporated parishes as a single enterprise for liability purposes in the priest sex abuse scandal litigation (or any other dispute, for that matter). The analysis in this paper, however, suggests that appropriate cases for invoking the alter ego doctrine in this context will be few and far between.
Two entities will be treated as alter egos where (1) one entity exercises such a high degree of control that the other has effectively lost its separate existence and (2) the controlling entity has abused its power of control in an unjust or inequitable manner. As to the former prong, a diocesan bishop who comports himself in accordance with the requirements of canon law is unlikely to exercise the requisite degree of day to day control over a separately incorporated parish. As to the latter prong, the courts have discretion to consider the potentially severe deleterious impact of liability on the ability of innocent parties to exercise religious practices implicating constitutionally protected values. In other words, while the Free Exercise and Establishment clauses do not bar judicial application of the alter ego doctrine to churches, the values protected by those provisions appropriately may be weighed in the balance. Given the ready availability of alternative doctrines better suited to the problems at hand, particularly fraudulent transfer law, there case against invoking alter ego in this context thus becomes quite strong.
A win for "church autonomy"
A welcome decision out of Washington (thanks to Prof. Friedman):
The Yakima (Washington) Herald Republic reports that yesterday a Washington state trial court judge dismissed a suit accusing the Catholic Diocese of Yakima of forcing Robert Fontana, Diocesan Director of Evangelism, to resign after he questioned the Diocese's application of a new national policy on clergy sexual misconduct. Fontana claimed that he was reprimanded for complaining that Bishop Carlos Sevilla permitted a priest to continue his religious duties even though the priest was being investigated for downloading photographs of nude boys from the Internet. The court held that it lacked jurisdiction over Fontana's claim because of the "ministerial exception". Holding that Fontana's duties should be considered "ministerial", the court said that "a church's right to be unfettered by the state in its choice and control of ministers cannot abide state intervention where the heart of the issue depends on religious justification."
Wednesday, May 10, 2006
Can a Catholic defend legal equality?
I would have thought so but, apparently, some in the United Kingdom have their doubts. Ruth Kelly, The Independent reports, the U.K.'s "Secretary of State for Communities," is a "committed Catholic and a member of the Opus Dei group." And, some are questioning her ability to enforce the U.K.'s anti-discrimination laws. (Here is the Telegraph's story). The (great) Christianity Today weblog has more:
Devoutly Catholic British Labor MP Ruth Kelly is at the center of a national fight on homosexuality. Critics say that Kelly's religious views make her incapable of supporting equal rights for homosexuals in her new post as Minister for Women and Equality. Among the complainers is fellow MP Evan Harris, who told the gay U.K. news site PinkNews, "It doesn't help that the cabinet sponsor for gay rights who, through her religious views, does not support full equality."
Kelly told the same site, "People should be allowed to decide how they live their lives. I believe in a tolerant, diverse, multicultural society where everyone is protected from discrimination. I will fight discrimination, whether it be on the grounds of race, gender, disability or sexual orientation."
But it wasn't enough that Kelly said she would fight discrimination. For the last day or so, she has been hounded with one question: Does she believe homosexual behavior is sinful?
According to The Times, Kelly didn't respond directly, but turned the question around:
Is it possible to be a practicing Catholic and hold a portfolio in government. The answer is yes. Why? Because I am collectively responsible for Cabinet decisions, I firmly believe in equality and that everyone should be free of discrimination and I will fight to the end to make sure that's the case. I think everyone in society should be given the opportunity to fulfill their potential.
When asked again whether she thinks homosexual behavior is a sin, Kelly said, "I don't think it's right for politicians to start making moral judgments about people, it's the last thing I want to do or want to get into." The British press will likely be giving this saturation coverage for another day or so.