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.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Dellapenna's Werk

Having read bits of this in process, I can say it is thorough scholarship and deserves to have a great impact:

Dispelling the Myths of
Abortion History

by Joseph Dellapenna,

Villanova University School of Law

View table of contents (PDF)
Carolina Academic Press, ISBN 0-89089-509-0, 1300 pp , $95.00

Receive a 30% Special Discount until the end of June!
(Type "30% Special Discount" in the comments section of the order form.)


In Roe v. Wade, Justice Harry Blackmun structured the argument of the majority around the history of abortion laws. That history built on the work of law professor Cyril Means, Jr., and historian James Mohr. Means and Mohr proclaim four theses as summarizing the "true" history of abortion in
England and America:

(1) Abortion was not a crime "at common law" (before the enactment of abortion statutes in the nineteenth century.

(2) Abortion was common and relatively safe during this time.

(3) Abortion statutes were enacted in the nineteenth century in order to protect the life of the mother rather than the life of the embryo or fetus.

(4) The moving force behind the nineteenth-century statutes was the attempt of the male medical profession to suppress competition from competing practitioners of alternative forms of medicine.

This book dispels these myths and sets forth the true history of abortion and abortion law in English and American society. Anglo- American law always treated abortion as a serious crime, generally including early in pregnancy. Prosecutions and even executions go back 800 years in
England, establishing law that carried over to colonial America. The reasons offered for these prosecutions and penalties consistently focused on protecting the life of the unborn child. This unbroken tradition refutes the claims that unborn children have not been treated as persons in our law or as persons under the Constitution of the United States.

Order online at www.caplaw.com or call (800) 489-7486.

Utah Supreme Court polygamy opinion

On May 16, 2006, the Utah Supreme Court upheld Rodney Holm's convictions for bigamy and unlawful sexual conduct with a minor. The Court rejected varous constitutional arguments (e.g., free exercise and due process) that Holm's relied upon to defend his "polygamous practices." The Court's opinion is here. The most interesting opinion was authored by Chief Justice Durham who dissented on various grounds. The Chief Justice concluded that the free exercise of the Utah Constitution protected Holm's conduct. On the main federal constitutional issue, the Chief Justice concluded that Lawrence v. Texas would have supported Holm's if his conduct had only involved consenting adults. This latter issue--whether Lawrence should be read narrowly or broadly (Durham noted that "Lawrence rejected the very notion that a state can criminalize behavior merely because the majority of its citizens prefers a different form of personal relationship")--is one that continues to divide the lower courts.

Richard M.   

Michael's punishment

Michael is a good sport.  I would, however, never presume to haul him out to the woodshed, nor would I ever want him to take a seven-day blogging break.  No, his punishment is to sit through an episode of, say, the O'Reilly Factor [Too harsh!  Rick and Michael agree that this would be cruel and unusual.  ed.], while answering the question I raised in my spanking-post:   

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?

Like Michael, I want (at least, I think I do) the answer to the "can we expect this convergence" question to be "well, yes!"  But, is that the answer?

China v. "the Vatican"

In my view, the insistence of the government in China on selecting Catholic bishops is among the most pressing religious-freedom issues of our time.  To the New York Times, though, what's going on is a "public spat", a curious struggle between two similarly creaky and authoritarian entities, China and "the Vatican", for control over Catholics in China:

The dispute, at its core, is about how much each side is willing to cede in a struggle for control of the hierarchy of China's official Catholic Church.

Actually, the dispute, "at its core", is about quite a bit more than this.  One wishes the editors, writers, and (many of the) readers of one of the world's great newspapers appreciated this.  One imagines these editors, readers, and writers waking up in cold sweats, worrying about the threats posed to freedom by "theocrats" who would do things like put up Ten Commandments monuments or enact faith-based initiatives.  But the totalitarian government of the world's largest nation trying to run -- in order to neutralize -- the Catholic Church . . .  hmmm, interesting.  

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

More on the Episcopal Church

Notwithstanding his (unnecessary) apology, Michael's response to my earlier post is a good reminder for me not to so casually cast criticisms at my former church, so let me be more specific.  I'm not claiming that there no non-lefty grounds for favoring same-sex marriage or abortion rights, only that the broad panoply of social positions staked out by the New York diocese of the Episcopal Church is largely indistinguishable, in my view, from the pre-Clinton/DLC policies of the Democratic Party.  In other words, the church's political identity is wide open to the criticism that it is no more than a product of its surrounding culture (New York City).  A more serious problem is the diocese's apparent lack of humility in staking out some of these positions.  (E.g., the diocese refused to support a friend of mine as a candidate for the seminary -- much less hire him as a priest -- on the ground that he would not state his willingness to bless same-sex relationships.)  While I favor some of the diocese's positions (including supporting some sort of legal recognition for same-sex relationships), I wish there was greater space made for reasonable disagreement on the thorny task of translating the Gospel into workable and humane policies for society.  (Perhaps the Catholic Church is open to the same criticism on certain issues, but that's another story.)

Rob

Clarification

I did not follow (but should have) Rob's links to the three policy positions of the Episcopal Diocese of New York (on abortion, marijuana, and school vouchers).  I misunderstood Rob's point.  (I'm sorry, Rob.)  Half of my penance:  being taken to the woodshed and spanked by Rick Garnett.

The point I made in my post--because of my misunderstanding of Rob's  point--was not about abortion, marijuana, or school vouchers.  It was about one issue only:  same-sex unions.

The other half of my penance:  Rick says I can't post to MOJ for seven days.  I'll have to find something else to do with my time.  (Is "The Da Vinci Code" worth seeing?)
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"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?

Homosexuality and the "Right/Left" Grid

Thanks to Rob for linking MOJ-readers to an excellent piece.

In his post, Rob refers sardonically to "a strangely perfect convergence between Christianity and lefty secular social policy."  As I read our social text, the right/left grid is not helpful in understanding the controversy over same-sex unions:  Many conservative Republicans are articulate supporters of the legal recognition of same-sex unions.  Nor is the religious/secular grid helpful in this context:  Some of the most profound statements in support of the legal recognition of same-sex unions are theological.

(Come to think of it, the right/left grid is not helpful in understanding the controversy over abortion either:  There are liberal democrats who are articulate proponents of a pro-life policy on abortion--even if, as Rick will be quick, and right, to remind us, they have been marginalized in their party.)

So I think that 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, the convergence is not "strange" after all.  It's just what we should expect, later if not sooner.
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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."