Friday, September 01, 2006

Religion And Polity

Two commentators of great skill, Heather MacDonald of the Manhattan Institute and Professor Michael Pakaluk of Clark University, appear to have "squared off" over how great an influence religious faith and its expression should have on political discourse. Miss MacDonald's article takes a strong secular position, whereas Pakaluk's adopts a position more favorable toward traditional public invocations of faith. Both evince considerable passion, both mount elegant arguments, and both miss the point.

The brilliant Michael Novak, America's foremost thinker on the interface between religion and politics, recently responded to a challenge from Miss MacDonald that Christianity prove its claims to truth:

Mac Donald is right to demand as much.

Either the Catholic Church (to stick to what I know best) is true, or it isn’t. That’s where the Church makes its stand. (As Lenny Bruce used to joke, “It is the only one true church.”) It can do no other, for the name it accepts for God is that God is “Spirit and Truth.” The very first commandment, handed on to the church by Judaism, is “thou shalt not have false gods before me.” Between false gods and the true God the decisive point is truth.



The significance of Novak's approach will be lost on many persons of our time, mostly because of the shallowness of contemporary education. Any religion that addresses the great questions of the human experience must deliver answers that, at the very least, do not require us to accept demonstrably false statements. If a creed's claims are consistent with the truths revealed by reality, it may get a respectful hearing. Of course, with the passage of time, Mankind becomes more capable of testing such claims; accordingly, a faith that appeared consistent with temporal reality in year X might not look so good in year X+100, or X+1000. But that's built into the nature of intellectual inquiry.

The two great Thomases, Aquinas and Jefferson, agreed that true religion does not demand that the mind accept absurdities, Tertullian's nonsense notwithstanding. In other words, they conceded that the evidence of the world around us, delivered through our sense organs and the instruments we build to extend them, is primary; it trumps theories of all kinds, not merely scientific ones. Neither Hillel nor Christ uttered a single word to dispute them.

Wherefor, then, the wrangle over the political admissibility of faith? Politics -- "the art of the possible" -- is concerned with achieving particular conditions and results in this world. Politicians have unlearned the nasty habit of predicting that their opponents will roast in Hell; among other things, the concomitant lip-smacking tends to leave spots on one's tie. More important, the temporal world operates according to strict rules of cause and effect, without regard for one's faith. A political platform that promises results of some kind because God, if properly petitioned and propitiated, will intervene to deliver them is massively presumptuous, to put it mildly.

The great orators of America's past were sensible enough to confine their public religious statements to expressions of faith and gratitude. Those who argued for this or that policy or program "because God wants it that way" are less well remembered. But conversely, secular sorts were once far less disposed to take offense at public figures' expressions of faith in or gratitude to God. Our contemporary anti-theists have turned militant, as if for President Bush to quote Isaiah or cite Christ as his favorite philosopher were somehow a mandate laid upon them as well. That's a modern vice which we would do well to unlearn.

3 comments:

  1. "ut conversely, secular sorts were once far less disposed to take offense at public figures' expressions of faith in or gratitude to God. Our contemporary anti-theists have turned militant, as if for President Bush to quote Isaiah or cite Christ as his favorite philosopher were somehow a mandate laid upon them as well."

    To completely bastardize a great orator: Never before has someone said so much, and yet been so wrong.

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  2. Mac Donald is right to demand as much.

    If only this was what she was demanding. There is literally no one within Christianity who is not eager to examine its truth claims with outsiders.

    Of course, Ms. Mac Donald is not interested in such engagement - she's just hoping to shush up the God talk with a little shame & run. Mr. Novak is not oblivious to this fact, and basically dares her to pursue it with his persistent, "Mac Donald is right to demand as much."

    Don't hold your breath waiting for that one.

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  3. Well, yes, Matt, but I'm trying for a particular slant: to address the usefulness and appropriateness of religious rhetoric in political discourse, rather than the more difficult subject of whether any particular religion's claims are sufficiently provable to justify its claims as the explicit commands of God to Man.

    Miss MacDonald isn't a religious person. Dr. Novak and I are. Given that cleavage, how shall we converse on political subjects? Given that the overwhelming majority of Americans are at least somewhat religiously inclined, how may a public figure address them on the rei publicae without slighting their sentiments or offending those of the unprecedently militant non-religious minority?

    The problem is stiff. It won't go away of itself. At its core is the modern hyper-readiness to take offense, and to leap down another's throat, upon hearing anything with which one disagrees.

    Our civility deficit weighs heavily upon our political system, in this and many other ways. But I'm not telling you anything you don't already know.

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