Many MOJ readers will be interested in this: Clarence Thomas, Silent but Sure.
Friday, March 12, 2010
Linda Greenhouse on Clarence Thomas
Thanks to Rick
Before "The Hurt Locker" won the Academy Award last Sunday, only about a dozen people (other than Academy members) had seen the film. After the Academy Award, that will change.
Before Rick's review of my book appeared in Commonweal, only about a dozen people had read the book. After Rick's review, I'm waiting for Hollywood to call. I want George Clooney to play James Bradley Thayer.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Review of Perry's not-quite-latest book
"Public Reason Disease"
I have a review of Steve Shiffrin's excellent new book, The Religious Left and Church-State Relations, in the current issue of Commonweal. I don't agree with everything in the book, but I heartily endorse his willingness to respond to the religious right's influence in politics, not by demanding that they take their theologically informed political views out of the public sphere, but by seeking to offer better political views, and to "combat bad theology with good theology."
'Spiritual, Not Religious,' Catholic Marxism, and Spiritual-Materialism
Hello All,
Rick's interesting recent posts remind me of a few related items I've meant to post about for a while now, and as it happens there's an open moment or two here, so here goes.
First, on the 'spiritual, not regligious' locution that one often hears, I remember that I used to fee a vague sense of irritation each time I heard someone give utterance to it. I tended to suspect that what the user meant was that s/he affirmed all the desired goodies that one often associates with certain doctrines of faith -- particularly the forgiveness and eternal life bits -- while at the same time declining to be bound by the bill one must pay for these benefits. In this connection I also found quite compelling a line of thought associated with the Jewish theologian Yeshayahu Leibowitz, who, if I read and recall him correctly, criticized the idolatrous aspect of what I think he called 'endowment' religions -- religions that promised various things rather than simply demanding things, like observance of the Law, or Halahkah. The austerity and emphasis on duty seemed so very pure and powerful. It still does. And so does the wisdom that seems to me to inhere in the oft-heard observation that 'spirituality' that is not bound up with discipline or practice or 'religious observance' of some kind is apt to dissipate into a sort of empty sentimentalism or sighing ennui.
On the other hand, I have also come over the years to suspect that the urge which many people seem to feel to issue a sort of 'not religous' disclaimer immediately after affirming a generally favorable disposition toward certain aspects of our faith traditions might be reflective of a failing on many of our parts in our living and affirming those traditions. I am inclined, in other words, in substantial measure to 'blame myself,' or 'ourselves,' for the widespread misunderstandings we find out there in the world in respect of the question of what we're about. I don't think it merely an accident, or merely a failure on the part of casual observers to look more carefully, or merely a product of silly mass media portrayals of religious adherents, that we are often thought to be likely bigots, or repressed, or keen to judge and condemn, or ready to force our wills upon others under a more exalted name than 'will,' or to be hypocritical, etc. etc. when we say we adhere to a faith. So take this for what ever it strikes you as being worth, but I'm going to suggest that we look first to ourselves in seeking explanations of why it is that one so often hears this phrase 'spiritual, not religious.'
Second, I'm delighted that Rick also cites a Catholic Marxist today. The reason he does so, as I understand it, is also the reason that I take delight in the reference. It's this: To my mind, one of the most wonderful aspects of the Aristotelian tradition that suffuses Catholic, Marxist, and indeed all German idealist thought properly understood, is its valorization of materiality. I remember that when I converted to Roman Catholicism, one of the reasons I used to offer to others was that in this tradition you actually saw a dying body on its crucifixes, rather than simply a cross. The idea that 'the spiritual' was actually *in,* and indeed partly *constitutive of,* 'the material' seemed to terribly powerful and important and just plain real. And the same is true of the Aristotelian and German Idealist -- hence also Marxist, when properly understood -- understandings of the role of *material* life in human and beyond-human life.
I've often thought of myself, in this connection, as a sort of 'spiritual materialist,' or better (given that this phrase took on a different, to my mind less attractive meaning in some of the theological writing of the 60s and 70s), a sort of 'spirit-suffused or -underwritten materialist.' I find a monist methaphysics to be the most plausible and attractive, in other words, such that all around us is indeed matter, but matter itself can be minded, can be conscious, can be 'spirited,' etc. It's not dead stuff. It's living stuff. The doctrine of literal, bodily resurrection, as distinguished from metampsychosis or ghastly substance rising like steam from the ground after death, seems to me very much in keeping with such a view. So I sign on in significan part to 'historical materialism' and so forth, without understanding 'material' in any way to exclude all that we find most noble in material earthly life -- love, thought, faith, devotion, caring, creativity, etc. And it seems to me that considerations of this sort also offer a good grounding for those who would affirm our obligations to care for all of our fellow creatures, as well as the broader natural environment, as well. It still is His garden, after all, and we're still but the groundskeepers. And as it is sacred ground, while we're but the custodians, it seems to me it's our duty to tend to it well.
So, in closing, thanks again to Rick for drawing this out!
All best,
Bob
Law and Religion in the U.K.
LAW AND RELIGION SCHOLARS NETWORK (LARSN)
CONFERENCE AND MEETING
Centre for Law and Religion
The Law School
Cardiff University
http://www.law.cf.ac.uk/clr
Tuesday 11th May 2010
Venue: The Law Building, Museum Avenue, Cathays Park, Cardiff
Take a look at the interesting agenda which MOJ friend Pasquale Annicchino sent our way, here.
And then book your flight to Cardiff!
"The Audacity of the State"
Here is Douglas Farrow, writing in Touchstone, about state control of education (and many other things). Check it out:
When I speak of the audacity of the state, the kind of state I have in mind is what we may call the savior state. The main characteristic of the savior state is that it presents itself as the people’s guardian, as the guarantor of the citizen’s well-being. The savior state is the paternal state, which not only sees to the security of its territory and the enforcement of its laws but also promises to feed, clothe, house, educate, monitor, medicate, and in general to care for its people. Some prefer to call it the nanny state, but that label fails to reckon with its inherently religious character. The savior state does have a religious character, precisely in its paternalism, and may even be comfortable with religious rhetoric. . . .
Pope Benedict XVI on religious communities' freedom and "equality legislation"
Here are some interesting and timely remarks, shared by the Pope with the Bishops of England and Wales:
Your country is well known for its firm commitment to equality of opportunity for all members of society. Yet as you have rightly pointed out, the effect of some of the legislation designed to achieve this goal has been to impose unjust limitations on the freedom of religious communities to act in accordance with their beliefs. In some respects it actually violates the natural law upon which the equality of all human beings is grounded and by which it is guaranteed. I urge you as pastors to ensure that the church's moral teaching be always presented in its entirety and convincingly defended. Fidelity to the Gospel in no way restricts the freedom of others – on the contrary, it serves their freedom by offering them the truth. Continue to insist upon your right to participate in national debate through respectful dialogue with other elements in society. In doing so, you are not only maintaining long-standing British traditions of freedom of expression and honest exchange of opinion, but you are actually giving voice to the convictions of many people who lack the means to express them: when so many of the population claim to be Christian, how could anyone dispute the Gospel's right to be heard? . . .
Read the whole thing. Comments are open.
"Does Faith Trump Equality"
"When religions believe they must discriminate on grounds of sex, or gender, or of belief, what should the state do?" Ugh. Still, this way of framing the question is revealing -- "what should the state do?" More here.
"Spiritual, not religious"
The youth (or, as Joe Pesci would put it, "the yutes") are, increasingly, "spiritual", not "religious." Patrick Deneen suggests, though, that they might have it backwards:
Spirituality is another kind of reaction against “forms” – this time in the religious realm – but, as with these other kinds of “informalism,” exists in order to overthrow the strictures and limitations that “forms” demand. As Blow reports, one woman arrived at spiritual “peace” by taking a vacation to Costa Rica, where she was able to overcome the “moral strictures” of her youth. Spirituality becomes the means to liberation, even dissipation.
Tocqueville argued that democracy would need forms, though it would seek their evisceration. Forms are necessary especially because democracy needs to inculcate the capacity for self-government, and self-government is achieved through an habituation in self-discipline that the forms provide. In so many areas of life today, it is obvious that our problems derive from our incapacity for self-governance, in the formal discipline of self.
What we need today is not a generation that is “spiritual, not religious.” I would argue that what is needed is the studied capacity to be “religious, not spiritual.” Let’s make that the new buzz.
What Eugene McCarraher -- one of my favorite Catholic marxists! -- once wrote makes, to me, a lot of sense:
“I think of myself as religious but not spiritual. Partial to the sensuous, communal, and cerebral forms of ritual and text, I’ve always considered ‘spirituality’ too ethereal and invertebrate a way of being.”