INDIVIDUAL, COMMUNITY AND STATE: HOW TO
THINK ABOUT RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
by Matthew J. Franck
October 2012
THERE IS A GROWING awareness among Americans that
religious freedom in our country has come under sustained pressures. In the
public square where freedom of religion meets public policy, it becomes clearer
all the time that there is a high price to be paid for being true to oneÕs
conscience. This is no tale of Chicken Little—although a chain of chicken
sandwich restaurants based in Atlanta is part of the story. Let me give you a
few examples.
In our universities, those citadels of toleration, we
find that toleration can be sharply limited. At the Hastings College of Law in
San Francisco, the student chapter of the Christian Legal Society was denied any
status on the campus because it would not abandon its requirement that members
commit themselves to traditional Christian norms regarding sexual morality. The
U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 ruling in 2010, held that the student groupÕs
rights were not violated by a Òtake all comersÓ policy. Following this lead,
Vanderbilt University has rewritten its student organizations policy and
effectively chased every traditionally Christian student group off campus,
denying them regular access to campus facilities.
And at the University of Illinois, an adjunct professor
of religion, hired to teach a course on Catholicism, was let go because a
student complained about his patient explanation of the Catholic ChurchÕs
natural law teachings on human sexuality. (He was later restored to his
teaching duties, but at the expense of the Newman Center, not on the state
payroll.)
In our states and localities, we see other kinds of
pressures. Authorities in Washington state and Illinois have attempted to force
pharmacists, against their conscience, to dispense Òmorning afterÓ pills when
other pharmacists short distances away make these abortifacients available. New
York City has barred church congregations—and them alone—from using
public school buildings outside school hours.
In New Mexico, a Christian wedding photographer was
fined for violation of a state Òhuman rights actÓ because she refused to take
the business of a same-sex couple who claimed to want her services at their
civil union ceremony. And in Massachusetts, Illinois, San Francisco, and the
District of Columbia, the adoption and fostering agencies of Catholic Charities
have been shuttered because they will not place children with same-sex couples,
as the local authorities demand.
In our courts, we see the First Amendment turned on its
head or simply disregarded, in active hostility to the place of religion in our
public life. The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court recently ruled that a Wisconsin
public high school could not rent space for its annual graduation exercises in a
local church, lest it be seen as ÒendorsingÓ religion and ÒcoercingÓ its
students to view Christianity in a positive light.
In 2010, Judge Vaughn Walker of the U.S. District Court
in San Francisco ruled that Proposition 8, preserving marriage in the California
constitution as the union of one man and one woman, was unconstitutional. He
held that the affinity between traditional religion and the moral case against
same-sex marriage was reason enough to strike down the popular referendum, and
went so far as to say that religious doctrines holding homosexual acts to be
sinful are in themselves a form of ÒharmÓ to gays and lesbians. In this he
followed the lead of the Iowa Supreme Court, which held in 2009 that the
stateÕs law restricting marriage to a man and a woman was an expression of a
religious viewpoint, and for that reason unconstitutional.
Finally, we have listened to Obama administration
officials, including the President and the Secretary of State, speak of
Òfreedom of worshipÓ as though it marked the full extent of freedom of
religion. The President famously spoke at the University of Notre DameÕs
commencement in 2009, but in that speech, he treated religious opinions that
disagree with his views on abortion and other social issues as fundamentally
irrational, and thus to be relegated to the private sphere and ruled out of
order in our public debates.
Having succeeded in persuading Congress to repeal the
ÒDonÕt Ask, DonÕt TellÓ policy for the military, the administration has been
strongly opposed to legislation that would protect the conscience rights of
chaplains and other service-men and women who continue to hold and to express
the view, on religious grounds, that sexual relations are morally permitted
only in a marriage between a man and a woman. In the recent term of the Supreme
Court, the administrationÕs lawyers took the position that there should be no
Òministerial exceptionÓ on religious-freedom grounds, for employers such as
religious schools, from federal anti-discrimination laws.
Church schools and other religious institutions, they
argued, have only as much protection as non-religious groups do on Òfreedom of
associationÓ grounds—as though the religion clause of the First Amendment
added no ground whatsoever for a unique religious freedom claim. In the best
religious freedom news of the year, the administration lost this case 9-0 in
the Supreme Court, which held that the Obama Justice DepartmentÕs view was
Òremarkable,Ó Òuntenable,Ó and Òhard to square with the text of the First Amendment
itself.Ó
And of course there is the infamous Health and Human
Services Òcontraception mandate,Ó the cause of the most pointed confrontation
in recent memory between a presidential administration and major figures in
AmericaÕs religious communities. Under the HHS mandate, an administrative rule
authorized by the 2010 Affordable Care Act, every employer with more than 50
employees must provide group health insurance that includes, in the category of
preventive medicine for women, no-cost coverage of sterilization services and
FDA-approved prescription contraceptives—including those that are better
understood as abortifacients because they can act to destroy embryos rather
than merely prevent conception. A narrow exemption was included for religious
employers that are non-profit, exist to inculcate Òreligious values,Ó and
primarily employ and serve members of their own religious community.
This meant that while churches and other houses of
worship would be exempted, countless religious schools, universities,
hospitals, and charitable institutions would not. Under pressure, the
administration has promised a future ÒaccommodationÓ for a broader range of
religious institutions, with an ill-defined Òsafe harborÓ until the new
arrangement becomes effective in August 2013. At that time, these institutionsÕ
employees would still be entitled to the same Òpreventive services,Ó but with
insurers rather than employers responsible for the costs.
Some religious institutions, such as the University of
Notre Dame, are self-insured for their employee health plans, and there is no
sign yet regarding how their situation could be addressed. And who can be
fooled by the promise that insurance companies rather than employers are paying
for the coverage, and that employers will somehow have clean hands in a
three-cornered contractual relationship in which these services are guaranteed?
It is no wonder that the U.S. Catholic bishops formed an
Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty last year; and that they published a
major statement on religious freedom in March; and that they organized a
ÒFortnight for FreedomÓ to pray for religious liberty in June and July.
Recognizing the threat to themselves as well, particularly in the mandated
coverage of abortifacient pharmaceuticals, a number of evangelical Protestant
institutions have joined in the litigation against the HHS mandate, while
Jewish, Mormon, and Muslim leaders have joined in formal protests. There are,
at last count, 28 separate lawsuits pending in federal courts around the country,
involving more than 80 separate plaintiffs.
Perhaps the most interesting case involves, not a
religious school, hospital, or charity, but Hercules Industries of Colorado, a
private company that makes heating and air conditioning equipment. Its sole
owners are the Newlands, a family of Catholics who object to providing the
mandated coverage to their employees, against the dictates of their conscience
as informed by their faith.
The argument of the Obama Justice Department in the case
is astonishing. It is that no one can claim, on behalf of an incorporated
business he owns, any right of religious freedom or conscience that can trump a
requirement of the law. Period. The members of the Newland family may have
religious scruples, but the business they own cannot be conducted in accord
with those scruples. Once individuals opt for incorporation of a business, they
lose the freedom of religion so far as the actions of that corporation are
concerned. Luckily, a federal judge in Colorado has entered a preliminary
injunction barring enforcement of the HHS mandate against Hercules Industries
while litigation continues. But the all-out character of the administrationÕs
disregard for claims of conscience is a grave portent of things to come.
* * *
What is the cause of these pressures on freedom of
religion and conscience? And how can we respond in the spirit of a renewed
commitment to principles of religious liberty?
In truth and charity, we must give those responsible for
the policies IÕve described the benefit of the doubt, as acting on some vision
of the good. Those in charge of our universities, our state and local
governments, our courts, and the Obama administration, seem to be animated by a
desire to serve the goal of womenÕs health as they understand it, or to advance
a certain view of freedom or equality. They think of electoral and legislative
victories as vindicating the rightness of their views.
And they often see the push-back that results as a
failure to understand something obviously just. Hence the Obama
administrationÕs rhetoric about a Òwar on womenÓ expresses a real opinion on
the part of the president and his supporters that the equal position and basic
health of women in American society are served by a mandate that burdens all
but the smallest employers and the most narrowly defined institutions of
worship with the legal obligation to provide free contraceptives, abortifacient
drugs, and sterilization services.
But while they may seek a certain good as they
understand it, they fail to grasp the perspective of the religious dissent
their policies generate. There is a blundering impatience on the part of the
secular state, and the secular elites in charge of it, whenever countervailing
claims are made in the name of religious conscience, the integrity of religious
institutions, or the foundational character of religious communities as part of
American civil society. And there is a characteristic failure to perceive the
legitimate contribution of religion to public discourse.
Thus our predicament drives us back to first
things—to the necessity of thinking through, from the beginning, the
ground of religious freedom as an individual right; the relation of the
individual believer to his fellows in a naturally formed community; and the way
in which these individuals and their organic relationships of family, church,
and other spontaneous expressions of civil society, are responsible for
creating the state by their mutual consent.
I have twin touchstones for the reflections that follow:
the ÒMemorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments,Ó which was
addressed by James Madison to the Virginia General Assembly in 1785 and helped
defeat a bill to spend tax dollars on the support of clergy; and Dignitatis Humanae, the ÒDeclaration on
Religious FreedomÓ of the Second Vatican Council in 1965.
These two brief documents, written under such different
circumstances 180 years apart, are not, of course, in perfect accord on every
point. But they have something in common in the way they ground religious
freedom in axiomatic reflections on the human condition, in the priority they
place on religious obligations as making a higher claim on our attention than
political obligations, and in the way they elaborate the limits of political
authority.
Both Madison and the authors of Dignitatis Humanae begin with reflections on the individual human
person and his relationship to God. Religious belief and devotion are not
anthropological curiosities or historical relics, but are basic to the human
experience—natural to us in the exercise of our most human faculties,
those of the mind. And religious belief impresses itself directly on the mind
in such a way that we can speak of it as not altogether voluntary—not a
matter of willing choice, but of compulsion in light of the evidence that both
reason and revelation place before us.
Thus Madison speaks of religious conscience as an
Òunalienable rightÓ—the same expression used for our most basic natural
rights in the Declaration of Independence—Òbecause the opinions of men,
depending only on the evidence contemplated by their own minds[,] cannot follow
the dictates of other men.Ó Likewise, Dignitatis
Humanae, which grounds religious freedom in Òthe very dignity of the human
personÓ: ÒThe truth cannot impose itself except by virtue of its own truth, as
it makes its entrance into the mind at once quietly and with power.Ó
The right of conscience, then, is a right not to be
compelled to speak or act as though what one knows to be true is actually
false. For one has a duty to truth, and no higher duty than to the truth about
the highest thing. As Madison goes on to say,
It is the duty of every man to render to the Creator
such homage and such only as he believes to be acceptable to him. This duty is
precedent, both in order of time and in degree of obligation, to the claims of
Civil Society. (emphasis added)
Similarly, Dignitatis
describes religious freedom as something Òmen demand as necessary to fulfill
their duty to worship God,Ó and this worship is the means by which we Òmay come
to God, the end and purpose of life.Ó This puts before us as our end what
Madison places before us as our beginning: Our freedom to fulfill our duty to
God must be untrammeled because that duty is both first and last for us, the
alpha and the omega. Fleshing out this common teaching, Dignitatis continues: Òthe exercise of religion, of its very
nature, consists above all else in those internal, voluntary, and free acts
whereby man sets the course of his life directly toward God. No merely human
power can either command or prohibit acts of this kind.Ó As Madison puts it,
ÒReligion is wholly exempt from [the] cognizanceÓ of political authority.
Perhaps not surprisingly, Dignitatis had more than Madison to say about the fact that
individuals do not practice their religion as a solitary act, but together with
one another. Dignitatis refers to the
Òsocial nature of man,Ó and the natural consequence that Òhe should profess his
religion in community.Ó It follows that the Òimmunity from coercion in matters religiousÓ
that men enjoy as individuals is Òalso to be recognized as their right when
they act in community.Ó The vitality of faith comes in its communal character,
in the individualÕs fellowship with others whose views support, inform, and
refine his own. Dignitatis treats at
length the freedom of religious communities to meet and to organize, to teach
and to witness to their faith, to control their own internal affairs, to
undertake Òeducational, cultural, charitable and socialÓ efforts as they see
fit. This receives less attention from the more individualistic Madison, yet he
implicitly agrees, assuming the existence of what he later called a
Òmultiplicity of sectsÓ and insisting on a politics of equal freedom for all
religious communities, with the state Òneither invading the equal rights of any
Sect, nor suffering any Sect to invade those of another.Ó
MadisonÕs ÒMemorialÓ—again, not
surprisingly—contains more of a political science than Dignitatis. It carries us back to the
principles of the Declaration of Independence, which move from our natural
equality as created beings, to our possession of rights inextricably bound up
with our nature and bestowed on us by the Creator, to the purpose and
foundation of government, made by us to serve rather than frustrate our natural
equality and liberty. Madison carefully employs the phrase ÒCivil SocietyÓ to
identify the whole community—the community of communities, made up of
families, churches, and all sorts of organic human relations—that is
responsible for authorizing and limiting political authority.
Civil society is the earthly sovereign, the supreme
temporal power that delegates the powers of government. But even this is only
the earthly sovereign. Over all there remains the ÒUniversal SovereignÓ to whom
all must answer: ÒBefore any man can be considered as a member of Civil
Society, he must be considered as a subject of the Governour of the Universe.Ó
For this reason, Madison says, religion is Òexempt from the authority of the
Society at large.Ó Much more so must it be exempt from the political authority
of the government society creates.
The priority of individual rights and of the claims of
organic communities also permeates Dignitatis,
which describes the Òcommon welfare of societyÓ as consisting Òchiefly . . . in
the protection of the rights, and in the performance of the duties, of the
human person.Ó Those duties are experienced and expressed in Òreligious
communities,Ó so it is Òimperative that the right of all citizens and religious
communities to religious freedom should be recognized and made effective in
practice.Ó
* * *
What are we to take away from these essential
reflections on the nature and requirements of religious freedom?
First, human beings are by nature truth-seekers and
truth-responders. If we are to live fully integrated lives, making our
relationship to the truth a central part of our being and character, then we
must respond to the truth as we understand it, and order our lives around it.
Second, thanks to the fallible character of our minds,
we grasp the truth in common with some of our fellows and differently from
others. But it does not follow from our conviction of the truth, shared with
others, that we who agree acquire a right to compel others who disagree.
Persuade yes, compel no.
Third, religious communities form an essential element
in the civil societies formed by men. They are as natural and as organic as
families. Their integrity and freedom come near to being as important as that
of the individuals of which they are composed.
Fourth, the power of government, necessary as it is to
maintaining a shared moral order, is the creature and not the creator of menÕs
rights, and the servant, not the master of our private relations in our
families and religious communities. It has no jurisdiction over belief; it
cannot properly legislate or adjudicate questions of religious duty or the
validity of requirements of conscience. This is not to say that the government
may never inquire into whether a claim of religious conviction is sincere. Nor
must the state yield entirely to every sincerely presented claim. In the words
of Dignitatis, the Òobjective moral orderÓ that calls for Ògood order and . . .
true justiceÓ will trump claims that threaten the public peace or the rights of
others.
But—fifth—short of such cases, the state
should respect, honor, and even foster the role of religious communities and
institutions as essential contributors to civil society. In crucial respects
they are expressions of something still more basic to the flourishing of the
human personality than is the political order itself.
The modern secular state errs in viewing religious
communities as subordinate—whether as handmaidens of government, rivals
for peopleÕs allegiance, or as mere interest groups in elections and public
policy debates. Subordination of the religious to the political tends to sever,
in the minds of policymakers and judges, the link between individuals and the
various expressions of religious community that enrich their understanding of
the truth, animate their peaceful encounters with their fellow citizens who
have different understandings, and inform the reasonable basis of our objective
moral order.
We can see many of these problems in the HHS
contraception mandate. In its administrative rulemaking, the Obama
administration presumes to define what forms of religious community are
religious enough to merit the stateÕs definition of Òreligious employer,Ó and
thus to qualify as a genuine claimant of an institutional conscience. Even its
promised ÒaccommodationÓ would treat religious colleges, hospitals, and
charitable ministries as second-class religious institutions.
Genuine religion, it seems to say, is mere
sabbath-keeping by individuals who attend the church of their choosing. And a
family like the Newlands, insofar as it is engaged in a business, is utterly
subject to the plenary power of the state. The creative gift of the Newland
family—their business enterprise—does not fully belong to them, to
be governed by their conscience. Their entrepreneurship must be severed from
their faith, as though they can be Catholics only in church on Sunday. And the
Obama Justice Department has the nerve to argue that the Newlands are Òimposing
their religionÓ on their employees!
Here we see one of the characteristic moves of the
modern secular state: the effort to push the vital institutions of civil
society aside—in this case, its religious communities and the unique role
they play in the lives of citizens. Richard John Neuhaus understood this nearly
30 years ago in The Naked Public Square:
ÒOnce religion is reduced to nothing more than privatized conscience, the
public square has only two actors in it—the state and the individual.Ó
And he added that Òa perverse notion of the disestablishment of religion leads
to the establishment of the state as church.Ó
At one of this summerÕs national political conventions,
we heard the startling statement that Ògovernment is the only thing we all
belong to.Ó In that understanding, the civil society and the communities to
which government is responsible are left out. As a crotchety old Hollywood
actor observed at the other convention, ÒWe own this country . . . politicians
are employees of ours.Ó He did not have religious freedom in mind, so far as I
can tell. But his principle is sound for our purposes. Individuals of faith,
joined in communities of faith, forming a civil society imbued with the many
faiths of those many communities, own this country.
The stateÕs authority comes from us, and its
power—the power of our elected employees—cannot be greater than
what we can rightfully give it. We cannot give the state power over the
conscience of men and women, because we do not ourselves have any right to come
between God and our fellow citizens. The sooner our elected employees remember
these foundational truths, the sooner we may begin to recover a healthy notion
of religious freedom.
Home | Hair Analysis | Saunas | Books | Articles | Detox Protocols
Courses
| About Dr. Wilson | The Free Basic
Program