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.

Friday, December 4, 2009

"Constitution in 2020" video

The streaming video from the "Constitution in 2020" conference is now up.  I participated in a panel (along with MOJ-friend Paul Horwitz) on "Individual Rights", and talked about the importance of institutions -- especially religious institutions -- in the infrastructure of rights-protection.  The video of this panel is here.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Cardinal--and former New York Archbishop--Egan and the sex abuse scandal

NYT, 12/3/09

In Egan’s Depositions, a New View of a Sex Scandal

The deposition was in its fifth grueling hour. The lawyer and the witness had dueled over the meaning of common words, about whether an executive “supervises” or “administers,” about the difference between a lie and a failure to tell the truth.

Then the lawyer sprang his big question: You could have prevented someone from hurting people and you decided not to. Why?

The witness was Edward M. Egan, then the Roman Catholic bishop of Bridgeport, Conn. The question was about a priest who had been accused of sexually molesting children.

“I didn’t make a decision one way or the other,” said Bishop Egan, whom the lawyer suggested had failed to act quickly against the cleric. “I kept working on it until I resolved the decision.”

The exchange is one of hundreds recorded in a vast trove of documents the Diocese of Bridgeport made public on Tuesday after battling in court for seven years to keep them sealed. The archive — more than 12,000 pages of memos, church records and testimony — was gathered for 23 lawsuits, alleging sexual abuse of children by seven priests, that the diocese settled in 2002.

At the heart of it lies the bishop’s testimony, in two wide-ranging depositions from 1997 and 1999. Punctuated by legal parsing and frequent exasperation on both sides, transcripts of the videotaped sessions show the man who would become one of the church’s most prominent American leaders — the archbishop of New York, and a cardinal — as he navigated a budding scandal that still threatens the church’s finances and reputation.

Since 2002, when he moved to New York and nationwide attention focused on the church hierarchy’s handling of abuse complaints, Cardinal Egan has faced troubling accusations about his tenure in Bridgeport: that he allowed priests facing multiple sex abuse allegations to continue working; that he did not refer complaints to criminal authorities; and that he showed little interest in meeting with accusers.

[Read the rest here.]

Our new art

The lovely images of the Blessed Mother that now appear on this blog's banner appear courtesy of our friends at Villanova, where they are enjoying a beautiful new building and chapel.  The chapel's stained-glass window was designed by Fr. Richard Cannuli, OSA.  His website is here.

Are crisis pregnancy centers deceptive? Is that OK?

The Baltimore City Council is requiring crisis pregnancy centers to put up signs making clear that they do not provide abortions or birth control.  I do not support such a mandate from the government, but I do wonder, should crisis pregnancy centers be making the nature of their services clear on their own, or is deception part of their mission in that it gives them the best chance to gain a hearing for their pro-life message?  Should deception be a legitimate part of the pro-life cause?

ABA Journal Top 100

Mirror of Justice is among the ABA Journal's "Top 100" law-blogs -- more specifically, it's one of the 15 listed "legal theory" blogs on the list.  You can vote for your favorites here.  Please do!

Romney, religion, politics, etc.

A few days ago, my friend and colleague Dave Campbell (and some co-authors) published this piece in USA Today.  He observed that Mitt Romney faced -- and will face again, in 2012 -- "a major obstacle that should concern all Americans: religious intolerance":

 Polls showed that anywhere from one-quarter to one-third of Americans openly said they would not vote for a Mormon candidate for president. Mormons are hardly the only religious group to face such overt hostility. Polls show that Muslims, Buddhists and people without a religion are all viewed more warily by Americans. And as America becomes more religiously diverse, we can expect still more candidates from faiths that might be unfamiliar to many Americans, or those who profess no religion at all.

The good news is that accurate information about such unpopular religious groups can help the cause of religious tolerance in America. . . .

Yesterday, at First Things, Joe Carter discussed a self-described atheist's claim that, because all religions are bizarre, we should of course ask questions about, and take into account, Romney's (and others') beliefs: 

If freedom requires religion, if his Mormon faith sustains his life and he will be true to those practices, then I’m at an utter loss as to why we should ignore Romney’s religious beliefs when evaluating his fitness for the White House. . . .

To this, Carter responds:

[I agree] that religious beliefs—indeed I would include all beliefs of any type—should be considered fair game when evaluating a candidate. The question Knepper leaves unanswered, though, is how such beliefs are to be evaluated in the public square. Where is the line between reasonable criticism and irrational bigotry?

Personally, I’m open to being exceedingly tolerant of raw religious bigotry as long as its accompanied by a healthy portion of religious liberty. When we enter the public square I’m willing to allow anyone to make whatever nasty remarks they like about evangelicalism as long as I can presents arguments that are rooted in my faith and that are given a fair hearing.

Not everyone, however, is willing to offer such a compromise. How do we accommodate those who believe both that their religious convictions shape their thinking and that these beliefs are too personal to be scrutinized in public? . . .

Thoughts?

"Reminding Caesar of God's Existence": An Interview with Robby George

A few days ago, a few of us noted the "Manhattan Declaration."  At National Review, Kathryn Lopez has this interview with our own Robby George, one of the Declaration's co-authors.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

A few thoughts on Prof. Kaveny's "Clashes of Conscience"

Thanks to Michael P. for linking to my Notre Dame colleague Cathy Kaveny's timely and thought-provoking Washington Post op-ed.  

I am not entirely sure what I think about Cathy's observation that "you don't win the minds and hearts of ordinary Americans by holding the food, shelter and medical care of needy people hostage to moral principle."  Descriptively, this seems right.  But, I'd want to hold on to a distinction between holding these things "hostage to moral principle" and insisting, even when it's costly, on the need and right to act with integrity.  How that distinction -- assuming there's something to it -- "maps" onto the two debates that Cathy discusses (abortion funding in the healthcare-funding proposals and same-sex-spousal benefits by religious social-welfare organizations that cooperate with government) is a tricky question.

I disagree, I think, with Cathy's suggestion that "in the enforcement of anti-discrimination law in Washington, D.C gay rights activists are in exactly the same position as the bishops are with respect to abortion."  I guess I think the merits do matter, as does the "framing" of the issue.  To say this is not to say that "error has no rights," and Cathy is, obviously, correct to note that history tells "many tales of the majority being mistaken on matters such as slavery, religious liberty, and the rights of aboriginal peoples."  But, it is a deep injustice -- wholly apart from tricky questions about taxpayers' culpability for the wrongs done by their governments -- for a political community to permit, let alone to fund, abortions, because abortion is a grave wrong.  (The problem is not, in other words, that Catholics are being made to pay for a practice they oppose; it is that the political community is funding and facilitating abortions, thereby helping to entrench the unjust exclusion of unborn children from the law's protections.)  On the other hand, it is not a deep injustice for religious institutions to take religious teachings -- including religious teachings on sexual morality -- into account when hiring and firing.  (To be clear:  to say this is not to deny that it would be wrong for the government to take religious teachings on sexual morality into account when hiring and firing.)

Of course, a lot depends on how one "frames" or describes what it is that is being funded:  I think that what the District funds when it cooperates with Catholic Charities (say) in the provision of social-welfare services is, well, "social welfare services", or even "social-welfare services by an organization that serves all comers but hires and fires in accord with its animating principles."  It is, I think, wrong for governments to discriminate, but it is not (I think) wrongful discrimination for a religious institution to hire and fire in accord with religion -- even when that institution is cooperating with the government to provide social-welfare services.  But, a health-funding proposal that says "public funds will be used to pay for abortions" is, it seems to me, harder to re-frame.

In any event, Cathy is entirely right to remind everyone that "[t]here is no easy way to resolve the theoretical tension between respect for moral truth and respect for consciences which disagree with the majority's best assessment of truth."  This -- stated at a general level -- is a vexing question, as anyone who thinks about conscience, religious liberty, and politics knows.

Yet another former student of mine, ...

... this one--Cathy Kaveny--well known to many MOJers, has just published something of interest to MOJers, namely, the following op-ed.  (Cathy was a student in a course I co-taught with Robin Lovin at the University of Chicago Divinity School back in my Chicago days.  Cathy then headed off to Yale, where she received her JD and PhD, and then to a clerkship with John Noonan, who, despite his critique of the magisterial position on contraception, Robby probably wouldn't want to trade.)  Cathy is the John P. Murphy Foundation Professor of Law and Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, where she studies the relationship of law, religion, and morality.

The Washington Post
December 1, 2009

Clashes of conscience

Should American lawmakers refuse to give government funding to those who object to the current moral consensus on controversial issues, or should they be generous in making allowances for conscience?

In recent weeks the U.S. Catholic bishops have been on both sides of this question, as they have dealt with the thorny issues of abortion, on the one hand, and gay rights on the other. Nationally, they don't want health care reform dollars to subsidize abortion, and in the District of Columbia, they don't want to lose public funding for Catholic Charities because they conscientiously object to providing equal benefits to gay couples.

Ironically, abortion and discrimination against gays with respect to employment benefits have roughly the same moral status in American life. Both practices are legal, but widely disapproved. Many people, nationally or locally, don't want tax dollars to go to organizations that practice or promote them. At the same time, significant - although often different - minorities think they have a moral right to seek or provide an abortion, or to treat heterosexual couples more favorably than homosexual couples.

The Catholic bishops have opposed any health reform package which would allow tax dollars to be used to support a policy a health plan that covers abortion. It does not matter how small the government subsidy is compared to the personal contribution, or how low a percent of the premium cost actually goes to abortion coverage. It is not merely the money, it is the principle at stake. In response to the claims of Planned Parenthood and NOW that the conscience of the policyholder ought to be respected, the bishops reply, "we are not prohibiting people from getting abortions entirely with their own money. But we, the majority of Americans, do not want our tax dollars used to support practices or organizations that contravene our basic values." If push comes to shove, some bishops would let health care reform go and leave millions without necessary medical treatment, rather than subsidize abortion, however tenuously.

But in the enforcement of anti-discrimination law in Washington, D.C gay rights activists are in exactly the same position as the bishops are with respect to abortion--and the Catholic bishops are making the pro-choice argument, so to speak. Gay rights activists maintain that no public funds whatsoever ought to go to an organization that practices or promotes discrimination against gay people. In response to the claim of Catholic Charities that the conscience of the service provider ought to be respected, the activists argue, "we are not prohibiting people from establishing programs that discriminate against gay people using only their own money. But we, the majority of citizens in Washington, D.C., do not want our tax dollars used to support practices or organizations that contravene our basic values." If push comes to shove, some gay rights activists would let Catholic Charities go and leave thousands in Washington, D.C. homeless and hungry, rather than subsidize discrimination against same sex couples, however indirectly.

Very different groups in our pluralist democracy try to "enforce morality" -- or at least to encourage it -- by using public funds as an incentive. In this respect, the bishops on abortion are no different from the gay rights activists on employment discrimination. But when they are in the minority, these groups all want space to act according to their consciences without sacrificing participation in public programs. Pro-choice activists don't want some benefit plans to be excluded from all public support because they cover abortion, and bishops don't want Catholic Charities to be excluded from all public support because they practice discrimination against gay couples in granting employment benefits.

There is no easy way to resolve the theoretical tension between respect for moral truth and respect for consciences which disagree with the majority's best assessment of truth. A crude moral relativism that allows everyone to do their thing is no answer. If most abortions are unjust killing, then those who support it are perpetuating a real injustice. If discrimination against same sex couples is irrational, those who promote it are trading in harmful prejudice. But a moral majoritarianism that proclaims error has no rights isn't the solution either. History tells too many tales of the majority being mistaken on matters such as slavery, religious liberty, and the rights of aboriginal peoples. Furthermore no one group of people, religious or secular, has been exempt from making mistakes.

But practically, here and now, all parties have strong reason to work out a compromise that respects the integrity of everyone involved. Such a compromise was worked out in San Francisco with respect to providing employment benefits; the Archdiocese provided benefits to households, including but not limited to same-sex partners.

The Catholic bishops, on the one hand, and pro-choice and gay rights activists, on the other, all need to the win minds and hearts of ordinary Americans before they can accomplish their very different goals of social reform. And you don't win the minds and hearts of ordinary Americans by holding the food, shelter and medical care of needy people hostage to moral principle.

At least not in the holiday season.


Further complications

Yes, Michael, thanks. I thought it was the case that he may have entered the Church. Thus I was all the more intrigued and mystified by his 2005 essay published in the New Humanist. It makes some of the matters we discuss here at the Mirror of Justice all the more interesting. But, we do live in interesting times. As always, thanks, Michael. I appreciate our exchanges.

RJA sj