Our own Professor Bainbridge has a nice post on the Times' discovery of faith-based legal education (see my earlier post on that discovery), as does Ann Althouse. Midwestern Mugwump asks, "Where is Notre Dame in all of this?"
Rob
Tuesday, November 23, 2004
Our own Professor Bainbridge has a nice post on the Times' discovery of faith-based legal education (see my earlier post on that discovery), as does Ann Althouse. Midwestern Mugwump asks, "Where is Notre Dame in all of this?"
Rob
Monday, November 22, 2004
[Notice the figures on abortion at the end of this piece. I was surprised.]
Sightings 11/22/04
Outmoded Morals?
-- Martin E. Marty
“The Fourth Commandment says, ‘Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath of the Lord your God; in it you shall do no work.’ … It’s simply breaking God’s law to be open on Sundays. … I don’t work on Sunday because God says not to in His Word." So spake John Cully, owner of one of the largest independent Christian bookstores in the country. He gave voice to what, a half century ago, almost 100 percent of Protestant church people on the “values and morals” front insisted was God’s law for themselves, the nation, all Christians.
Jamie Dean in World (November 13) fair-mindedly reports on the conscience-struggles of evangelical business owners and their employees over Sabbath observance in “Day of Retail." In contrast to Mr. Cully, owners of the Family Christian Bookstore (FCB), a chain of 326 stores, recently decided to open on Sundays, causing their store managers to regularly miss church.
How does FCB legitimate this choice to violate the Commandment? FCB’s CEO Dan Browne called it a “ministry decision." Reminded that Hobby Lobby and Chick-fil-A keep the Sabbath on good evangelical grounds, Browne responded “No one’s going to go to hell for not eating a chicken sandwich,” implying that not being able to buy a religious book on Sunday might mean going to hell. The Berean Christian Stores chain is also now open on Sunday. Its VP, Greg Moore, gave his “higher critical” defense: “There is more value in saving a lost soul than adhering to an Old Testament custom that later became a commandment."
Is there any outrage against this latest assault on God’s Law? Pollsters found that 80 percent of FCB constituents shop on Sunday. Jamie Dean checked inventories of the FCB stores for books “specifically about the Sabbath,” a topic regularly addressed by Catholic and mainstream Protestant spiritual literature. How many titles did he find? “Zero."
Is this how values and morals change: when enough people engage in a new practice, the fight over the divine origin of “custom” or “Commandment” slips from view? Surveys show that something like this also happens on conservative Protestant fronts. Thus, calling divorce a sin and preaching against it, as evangelicals once did -- now it is a "tragedy" that is ministered to in “pastoral care” -- and, increasingly, preaching against gambling is largely off the evangelical screen. Birth control was preached and editorialized against decades ago, and the "born-again" now take it for granted.
What’s next? Women identifying themselves as Protestant obtain 37.4 percent of abortions in the U.S. Catholic women? 31.3 percent, slightly above the general public average. Jewish women? 1.3 percent. As of now, nearly one-fifth of all abortions are performed on women who identify themselves as born-again/evangelical.
If the "born again" number grows, will anti-abortion continue to hold the place it now does on the “values and morals” front? Or will it too fade?
Data Sources:
Religion abortion statistics: http://www.agi-usa.org/sections/abortion.html or http://www.abortionno.org/Resources/fastfacts.html.
A close-up, in this case of Oregon, on change in the “morals and values” practices front, see Benton Johnson’s study:
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:a8_uxQbD6rwJ:rra.hartsem.edu/1996%2520Pres.
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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
The John Paul II Cultural Center and the Columbus School of Law at Catholic University are co-sponsoring (what looks to be ) a wonderful event: Deans Tom Mengler (St. Thomas), Mark Sargent (Villanova), and John Garvey (BC) are participating in a panel discussion, "Catholic Intellectual Life and the Culture of Legal Studies." These are three accomplished and thoughtful scholars and law deans (even a blogger!), whose thoughts on legal education, intellectual life, and the Faith will, I'm sure, be provocative and inspiring.
Rick
[I've reproduced below two entries from Eugene Volokh's blog (Nov. 16) and a response from a blog titled "Ciceronian Review" (Nov. 17). Thought this material would be of interest. Later, I'll post my own thoughts.]
[Volokh, posted on Nov. 16:]
One's Religious Dogma on the Legal System:
I keep hearing evangelical Christian leaders criticized for "trying to impose their religious dogma on the legal system," for instance by trying to change the law to ban abortion, or by trying to keep the law from allowing gay marriage. I've blogged about this before, but I think it's worth mentioning again.
I like to ask these critics: What do you think about the abolitionist movement of the 1800s? As I understand it, many -- perhaps most or nearly all -- of its members were deeply religious people, who were trying to impose their religious dogma of liberty on the legal system that at the time legally protected slavery.
Or what do you think about the civil rights movement? The Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., after all, was one of its main leaders, and he supported and defended civil rights legislation as a matter of God's will, often in overtly religious terms. He too tried to impose his religious dogma on the legal system, which at the time allowed private discrimination, and in practice allowed governmental discrimination as well.
Or how about religious opponents of the draft, opponents of the death penalty, supporters of labor unions, supporters of welfare programs, who were motivated by their religious beliefs -- because deeply religious people's moral beliefs are generally motivated by their religious beliefs -- in trying to repeal the draft, abolish the death penalty, protect labor, or better the lot of the poor? Perhaps their actions were wrong on the merits; for instance, maybe some anti-poverty problems caused more problems than they solved, or wrongly took money from some to give to others. But would you condemn these people on the grounds that it was simply wrong for them to try to impose their religious beliefs on the legal system?
My sense is that the critics of the Religious Right would very rarely levy the same charges at the Religious Left. Rather, they'd acknowledge that religious people are entitled to try to enact their moral views (which stem from their religious views) into law, just as secular people are entitled to try to enact their moral views (which stem from their secular, but generally equally unprovable, moral axioms) into law.
Now some particular legal proposals may well be wrong. Perhaps banning abortion, or setting up welfare programs, or abolishing the death penalty violates people's rights, or is bad social policy, or what have you. But if that's so, then these proposals would then be equally wrong whether they're suggested by religious people for religious reasons, or by secular people for secular reasons. And conversely, if particular legal proposals are morally and pragmatically right, then religious people are just as entitled as secular people to advocate them.
So people should certainly criticize the proposals of the Religious Right (or Religious Left or Secular Right or Secular Left) that they think are wrong on the merits. But they would be wrong to conclude that the proposals are illegitimate simply on the grounds that the proposals rest on religious dogma. Religious people are no less and no more entitled than secular people to enact laws based on their belief systems.
And they would be quite inconsistent to (1) say that religious people ought not enact law based on their religious views, and nonetheless (2) have no objection when religious people do precisely that as to abolition of slavery, enactment of antidiscrimination laws, abolition of the death penalty, repeal of the draft, and so on.
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[Volokh, posted on Nov. 16:]
Reason and Law:
Reader Michael Benson responds to my post [above] by saying:
"Personally I hold the position that it's illegitimate (from an ethical, not a constitutional standpoint) to justify one's decisions about how society should be run based on assumptions one cannot defend reasonably. As I have yet to see any compelling defense made on evidence that for example 1) there is a god and 2) that god does not want me to be a homosexual, I find it unethical to try to legislate my choice to be or not be homosexual based on those propositions. My understanding is that a significant segment of the religious right makes their case exclusively on these grounds. I take this position not because of moral relativism, but because of the lack of a reasoned argument that can be presented for the case. To the extent that one desires to restrict another based on propositions one cannot defend reasonably, I believe that one is behaving unethically. I think that legislating me based on assumptions based on faith rather than reason disrespects me as a human being capable of thought.
"This could cut against someone like Martin Luther King ONLY in the event that he was unwilling and/or unable to justify his program without resorting to indefensible references to god. IE, if he was incapable of making a case through reason he was behaving unethically.
"With that said, I should note that I'd be unwilling to endorse any legislation that tried to enforce this rule because I think as a practical matter it would be liable to the worst kinds of abuses. But as a principle of right action, this is what makes me believe the religious right is behaving in a way that I not only disagree with, but find morally reprehensible."
[Now, Volokh responds:]
I sympathize to some extent with the correspondent's point; for instance, if we don't hear a compelling reasoned justification for a proposed law, that certainly is reason for us to reject the proposal.
But the trouble with the correspondent's broader notion -- "that it's illegitimate . . . to justify one's decisions about how society should be run based on assumptions one cannot defend reasonably" -- is that ultimately most of the moral principles that each of us has can't be defended purely reasonably. Should people be barred from abusing animals? There's no purely reasonable answer to that; at some point, it comes to down to a moral axiom, such as "people shouldn't be allowed to pointlessly inflict pain, even on animals" or "people should be free to do whatever they please with their property." And if you think this claim isn't an axiom, but can be defended reasonably through some other principle, that just means there's some other moral axiom lurking in the background.
Likewise, should abortion be legal? Pro-life people say personhood, and entitlement to moral rights, begins at conception. Pro-choice people select some other line. There's no way of proving it using pure reason; even if one makes an argument such as "a woman should be free to do what she likes with her own body" (which would, incidentally, allow abortions even at 8 1/2 months), then that becomes the axiom that you may believe but can't prove.
Or what about protecting endangered species? Many people want to protect them purely on moral principles -- humans shouldn't exterminate other species. That too is a moral axiom, or at least rests on moral axioms. Others argue that there's a pragmatic reason for it, for instance that protecting endangered species is needed in case the species may yield some useful biotech products some time in the future, or in case they fill an important ecological niche. But even such pragmatic reasons rest on unprovable moral judgments, such as that a small and incalculable chance that the species might prove useful in the future justifies the real costs to real people that saving the species would involve. Now these judgments may well be right -- but they aren't reasonably provable. And ultimately, the same is true, I think, for moral judgments even about matters such as the wrongfulness of murder, rape, robbery, and so on, and certainly for more contested matters such as race discrimination, breach of contract, defamation, invasion of privacy, moral rights in published works, and so on. All these moral and legal claims rest on unprovable moral assertions.
Of course, these assertions may be supportable, though not provable -- one can come up with plausible arguments that might influence people to accept one or another (for instance, "dogs can feel pain and emotions just like humans do, it's bad to needlessly inflict pain on humans, and it's therefore bad to needlessly inflict pain on dogs"). But these are appeals to intuition, aesthetics, and emotion. They aren't reasoned proof.
In this respect they're similar to religious people's arguments that, for instance, homosexuality is wrong because it's unnatural, and because the normal uses of our various organs reveal that God intended us to use them one way and not another way. Now the former arguments may be more persuasive to you or me than the latter. (I find the unnaturalness argument quite unpersuasive, for reasons I mention here.) But it's not because the former involved reason proof and the latter don't. Neither involve pure logic; both involve attempts to appeal to intuitive senses of right and wrong, though intuitive senses that vary among people.
So we are certainly free to say that certain arguments, whether arguments from the text of the Bible, arguments from the perceived will of God as expressed in the way the world works, arguments from church teachings, or what have you, are unpersuasive. And then if someone uses those arguments to support a law that we think is immoral, we can criticize him on the grounds that the arguments are unpersuasive and yield immoral results.
But I don't think that we can argue that the only legitimate laws are ones that can be defended using pure reason -- most important judgments about what the law ought to be ultimately rest on some unprovable moral assumptions.
*************************************************************************************
[Ciceronian Review, posted Nov. 17:]
Clear Miss
I want to remark on an argument advanced by Prof. Volokh. The gist is that it is a confusion (at best) to argue tha it is wrong for the religious to attempt to impose their religious values through legislation, because moral values all end up as assumptions and there is no reaonsable basis for sorting them. Volokh lays it out in more detail and with a bit more care, but the central argument is there. It is wrong, and pretty clearly wrong. Volokh trades on ambiguity in the notion of reasonable. His line requires that in the absence of proof to certainty, assumptions are on par with each other. There are a host of things wrong with this sort of thinking. First of all, there is no need to insist on certainty, and no reason to think of certainty in this context as a standard of deductive proof. Second, there is no genuine distinction on the sort of standard Volokh is using. Deductive proofs are based on asumptions of various kinds, which cannot themselves be proven within the same system. Third, there is a great difference between a value argument founded on publicly shared values and one founded on revelation. The complaint within the poltiical sphere turns on the nature or the political association. Volokh seems to presume that the political association is bare majoritarianism. That is a mistake. It is doubtfula political community could survive on such a basis, and it is reaosnably clear that the US is not such a polity even if one were possible (or should I say practicable?). Fourth, the notion that values are indistinguishable, which is what V's position ends up, is very hard to make sense of, for a variety of reaosns related to the nature of the expressions used and the nature of the values. (He could, however, simply deny that anyting was going on, but then his libertarianism would be pointless) . I will try to develop this in reasonable detail later in the week.
Update:
Here is the key to Volokh’s argument:
There's no purely reasonable answer to that; at some point, it comes to down to a moral axiom, such as "people shouldn't be allowed to pointlessly inflict pain, even on animals" or "people should be free to do whatever they please with their property." And if you think this claim isn't an axiom, but can be defended reasonably through some other principle, that just means there's some other moral axiom lurking in the background.
Let’s take it in pieces. What this paragraph responds to is the claim that public morality should be based on reasonable argument, i.e., values reasonably defensible. Volokh answers that there is no ‘reasonable answer’ because every answer in the end, ultimately, ends up at a moral axiom. I think by ‘axiom’ what is meant is that there is some basis not itself subject to proof, but I am not sure. Axiom is an odd choice of terminology here. It is not an axiom in the normal sense to believe that pain is disfavored and presumptively wrong. For one thing, there is a vast amount of evidence supporting this idea, so it is not unsupported. For another thing, there is no proper deduction at issue. I am not trying to present a (logically) valid argument to a conclusion. (Spinoza’s Ethics is not the usual model of moral philosophy or of political argument.) Note also that there has been a shift in argument standard with the introduction of axioms. The original problem called for consideration of reasonable belief. That is not a call for deductive proof or derivation. Calling for reasonable argument is rather different, and asks for such things as considered evidence, relevant within the context, for values or beliefs which can be connected in a relatively straightforward fashion to the available evidence, etc. There is no doubt that the category ‘reasonable” is vague, but it is not for that unworkable.
Volokh also suggests that the criticism of religious beliefs fails because there must come an end to inquiry in moral and political discourse at some point. Well, certainly there must come an end, but in everything. There is no ineluctable epistemology laying around, applicable to human endeavor other than value theory. The standard is unworkable – it fails science, it fails mathematics. The whole line of argument ends up in emotivism.
“Of course, these assertions [re values] may be supportable, though not provable -- one can come up with plausible arguments that might influence people to accept one or another (for instance, "dogs can feel pain and emotions just like humans do, it's bad to needlessly inflict pain on humans, and it's therefore bad to needlessly inflict pain on dogs"). But these are appeals to intuition, aesthetics, and emotion. They aren't reasoned proof.”
This does not work either. If reasoned proof is deductive argument, then it is relatively easy to get to the conclusions once premises are set. If the idea is that the premises are subject to revision or subject to argument, the proper response is: So what? That is always true. It may be that there is nothing but emotions and aesthetics (how did aesthetics show up in this list? Isn’t it just a version of emotions here? And, while we have paused, what is meant by emotions in this context? Does Volokh really mean just affect/disaffect? Emotions, after all, entail cognitive content.), but this is not the road to showing that.
“So we are certainly free to say that certain arguments, whether arguments from the text of the Bible, arguments from the perceived will of God as expressed in the way the world works, arguments from church teachings, or what have you, are unpersuasive. And then if someone uses those arguments to support a law that we think is immoral, we can criticize him on the grounds that the arguments are unpersuasive and yield immoral results.”
This is incoherent given the preceding arguments Volokh has advanced. There can’t be immoral results in any robust sense of ‘immoral’, any more than there is any sense to ‘persuasive’ here. On Volokh’s account, persuasive can’t really exist. Instead, there is only ‘looks nice to me or not.’ Alternatively, the argument concedes exactly what is at issue, namely that there are terms or conditions on political argument, and hence some standards. That is, if ‘persuasive’ has content, then it is not just ‘strikes a pleasant feeling in me’ and so there are good and bad arguments.
The entire line of argument seems not to get off the ground. I think this is because Volokh is not really understanding what the complaint about religion in politics is. The point is not, at least as I understand it, that there I something wrong with people acting on moral beliefs, whether based in religion or not. The complaint is about whether it is appropriate to consider political action based on exclusively religious reasons. If the objection to X is that it is condemned by God, that is not an appropriate argument for political action because it is not a reason at all for those outside the religion. That the Bible says, is of no importance unless one thinks the Bible is a Bible. But the political community is not founded on acceptance of the Bible. It is founded on other, essentially secular, grounds. When the religious have nothing to offer but the revelation, they are not engaged in legitimate political conduct. But that hardly bars from political action, or legitimate political action. It merely requires (or counsels) that the political argument be couched in terms of values that part of the public political community. This is not a disadvantage to the religious because those terms of debate are fully open to them.
So, in terms of M.L. King, he is of political significance because he did not argue solely in terms of his religion. Abolition may have been grounded in religious beliefs, but the arguments we need to consider go beyond (in the limited sense of addressing other value sources), and do not rest with some purported revelation. Thus, the underlying complaint is that the religious arguing from their religious beliefs alone is disrespectful to the rest of the political community. The debate should not be about the nature of value theory or about moral epistemology.
Sunday, November 21, 2004
The New York Times explores the new faith-based law school "movement" -- apparently consisting of Ave Maria, Regent, St. Thomas, and Liberty. The first three don't get a whole lot of attention in the article, primarily because they don't have Jerry Falwell ladling out quotes on their behalf. Falwell helpfully explains to the Times that "If our graduates wind up in the government, they'll be social and political conservatives. If they wind up as judges, they'll be presiding under the Bible." I have a difficult time believing that the folks at Liberty are sacrificing their time, talent, and treasure simply to create a cookie-cutter educational process churning out spitting images of Falwell, especially in light of this earlier post. But if they hope to capture the attention of the academy with a grander vision of the role faith can play in legal education, they should probably urge their founder to start keeping his own pipe dreams to himself.
Rob
Rick is right to be troubled by the unwillingness of the pro-abortion lobby to recognize the freedom of conscience and religious values that justify allowing e.g., a Catholic hospital to refuse to provide or pay for abortions without being penalized. The rhetoric of NARAL is that abortion is an important component of comprehensive reproductive health care. The more that rhetoric is permitted to prevail (think: Kerry's promise to make abortion part of mainstream health care), the less likely it is that the law will protect the freedom of those who oppose abortion on moral grounds to refuse to provide or pay for them.
I have already expressed some concern about this issue in my forthcoming Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy piece on the application of mandatory contraception coverage statutes to religious employers (the link to which is on the right side of this page under Papers). The New York Times article to which Rick refers suggests reason to be concerned about increasing infringement on religious freedom.
Susan
The New York Times reported on Saturday that "House and Senate negotiators have tucked a potentially far-reaching anti-abortion provision into a $388 billion must-pass spending bill, complicating plans for Congress to wrap up its business and adjourn for the year." The provision in question "would bar federal, state and local agencies from withholding taxpayer money from health care providers that refuse to provide or pay for abortions or refuse to offer abortion counseling or referrals. Current federal law, aimed at protecting Roman Catholic doctors, provides such 'conscience protection' to doctors who do not want to undergo abortion training. The new language would expand that protection to all health care providers, including hospitals, doctors, clinics and insurers." (Why the scare quotes around "conscience protection," I wonder?).
According to Senator Barbara Boxer, the conscience-protection provision would "tak[e] rights from women." Similarly, Louise Melling, director of the Reproductive Freedom Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, said that it would "effectively strip states of their right to 'enforce laws that were designed to protect women's health.'"
I find it striking, and troubling, that even firmly pro-abortion-rights legislators and activists appear unwilling to concede the serious freedom-of-conscience and religious-freedom values that are at stake in these "laws that were designed to protect women's health," i.e., laws that require training in, and provision of, elective abortions.
Rick
UPDATE: "Scrappleface" has the inside scoop on Senator Boxer's planned response to the conscience provision.
Here is a new scholarly paper, "Lawrence v. Texas and the Limits of Criminal Law," by Adil Ahmed Haque, that might be of interest to MOJ readers:
Although I am sympathetic to the arguments against the anti-sodomy law struck down in Lawrence, I am quite skeptical of Haque's sweeping argument that "the enforcement of popular morality as such does not constitute a legitimate state interest in the context of criminal punishment." |
Here is a provocative article, from today's New York Times. Eduardo Porter writes, in "Give Them Some of that Free-Market Religion:
Americans are more churchgoing and pious than Germans or Canadians because the United States has the most open religious market, with dozens of religious denominations competing vigorously to offer their flavor of salvation, becoming extremely responsive to the needs of their parishes. . . .
The suppliers of religion then try to stoke demand. "The potential demand for religion has to be activated," said Rodney Stark, a sociologist at Baylor University. "The more members of the clergy that are out there working to expand their congregations the more people will go to church."
[Sociologist Roger] Finke notes that this free-market theory also fits well with the explosion of religion across Latin America, where the weakening of the longstanding Catholic monopoly has led to all sorts of evangelical Christian churches and to an overall increase of religious expression.
The supply-siders say their model even explains secular Europe. Europeans, they argue, are fundamentally just as religious as Americans, with similar metaphysical concerns, but they suffer from a uncompetitive market - lazy, quasi-monopolistic churches that have been protected from competition by the state. "Wherever you've got a state church, you have empty churches," Mr. Stark said.
Porter adds:
Whatever its shortcomings, the free-market theory might also offer solace for those concerned about the creeping influence of religion in American government. That's because the theory posits that for religion to thrive, it must remain clearly separate from the state.
"Our pluralism helps religion expand," said Gary Wills, the historian. "The separation of church and state protected religion from anticlericalism."
My only quibble with the piece would be to question what appears to be the premise, in these latter paragraphs, that the "creeping influence" of religion in American government -- which I take to refer to religion's influence in politics, and in the public square -- involves a retreat from the "separation of church and state," properly understood.
Rick
This is a belated post on the excellent conference hosted by Angela Carmella of Seton Hall on November 5 on the diocesan bankruptcies. The Portland and Tucson bankruptcies, triggered by massive actual and potential liabilities to victims of sexual abuse, have generated a complex raft of issues in bankruptcy, corporate, constitutional and canon law. The Seton Hall conference included luminaries from all those fields, including David Skeel of Penn (bankruptcy), Nick Cafardi of Duquesne (canon law) Marci Hamilton and Doug Laycock (constitutional law) as well as some practitioners actually involved in the cases.
A threshold issue was whether the use of the bankruptcy was simply an attempt to avoid legal liability to the victims, hence yielding moral bankruptcy as well as legal. I think everyone agreed that the goal should only be to use Chapter 11 to provide for orderly payment of claims and fair treatment of all claimants. This moral question related to the legal question of whether the dioceses would be kicked out of bankruptcy court as "bad faith" claimants using the bankruptcy mechanism simply to gain ligation leverage despite being financially healthy. I believe the consensus was that the dioceses could be compared to companies such as Johns Mansville and AH Robbins who were permitted to use Chapter 11 as the best way to handle overwhelming tort liabilties to large numbers of meritorious claimants. There was also an interesting discussion of the extent to which the civil court should (or could) defer to canon law for purposes of determining ownership.
The conclusion that the bankruptcies could go forward, however, triggered new issues. What are the assets of the diocese (usually a corporation sole, with the bishop the sole member)? Do they include parish property, which may be titled in the name of the bishop or the diocese, but in which the parishes who raised the money to buy the land or build the church/school have an equitable interest? Were recent property transfers to parishes voidable preferential or even fraudulent transfers? Even if the property is the parishes' can substantive consolidation (like piercing the corporate veil) nevertheless treat the property as if it were the diocese's? How can a court or trustee in bankruptcy supervise a religious institution in Chapter 11 when decisions have to be made in light of vthe institution's religious mission? People had different views about these questions, but all agreed that these were questions of first impression in this context.
Differences were even sharper over the First Amendment and RFRA issues. Doug Laycock argued that THE First Amendment question here is whether hundreds of thousands of believers can be stripped of their places of worship and religious education because of the misdeeds of a very small number of clerics. Marci Hamilton, a staunch victims' advocate, asserted that those faithful had forfeited consideration under the First Amendment because they had acquiesced in a system of heirarchical governance that made the cover-ups and further abuse possible. This struck me as a bit harsh, considering that acquiescence in the episcopal system of governance because of religious belief in apostolic succession merits First Amendment consideration. Only specific, knowing acquiesence in wrongdoing by the bishops, I argued, would justify excluding the First Amendment from the equation. This is not to say, however, that Marci was wrong in her underlying assumption that a lack of accountability and transparency greatly faciltated gross errors in judgment and pastoral care. I addressed this issue in my paper, "After Chapter 11" (in sidebar), arguing that Chapter 11 creates the opportunity for greater lay involvement in diocesan governance.
All in all, a terrific and very timely conference. The papers will be published in one of Seton Hall's secondary journals.
- Mark