Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle, R-N.Y., and Rep. Tim Huelskamp, R-Kan., join in reciting the Pledge of Allegiance during the eighth annual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast in Washington April 19. (CNS photo/Nancy Phelan Wiechec)
Many people
today find it obvious that what’s good is getting what we want, justice is
getting it equally, and social justice is an overall system that promotes those
goals in every setting. If you don’t accept this view, people say you’re
hateful and oppressive, because you don’t want people to get what they want;
you’re greedy and overbearing, because you don’t like equality; and you’re
anti-reason, because you’re against rational systems for achieving obviously
worthwhile goals.
That view of
justice and the good is nonetheless defective, and the attempt to force it on
the whole of life squeezes out better goods and more just forms of justice. The
HHS mandate, which absolutely subordinates the integrity of Catholic
institutions to the individual desire for free birth control pills, is a case
in point.
But if that
view is a problem, what do we do about it? The first step toward something
better is a better understanding of what is goodthat is, what goals are most
reasonable to pursue. People today don’t like to raise that question, certainly
not in a political setting, because it suggests that law and policy should be
based on a particular understanding of how to live. They object to that,
because some people will disagree with the understanding, so acting on it would
amount to forcing someone else’s ideal of life on them.
The objection
seems plausible, at least to people raised in a liberal society. It nonetheless
falls apart on examination, because it’s impossible for a political system to
avoid taking a view on what things are most worth doing. Liberalism, for
example, holds that the point of government is to help everyone get what he
wants. That view of government implies that what people should do (or anyway
what’s most reasonable for them to do) is to go for whatever they happen to
want, as long as it fits a system that gives equal support to all people and
their goals. Liberalism thus has an account of the most reasonable goals for
societies and individuals, and so an account of the good. The account may seem
minimal, but it’s enough to define the way of life the contemporary liberal
state promotes, a life based on career, consumption, and political correctness.
There are
serious problems with the account of the good that makes that way of life the
standard. That account flattens out the human good, since it makes what to
pursue a simple matter of desire and manageability. Also, it fails to recognize
goods that are not individual and transferable, since it makes justice consist
of tallying up Tom, Dick, and Harry’s goods, and making the totals as equal as
possible. The result is that the human good becomes very much like possession
of a large sum of money, and justice like equalizing bank balances.
Individual
liberals may sometimes have a more subtle understanding of justice and the
good, but the subtleties have no effect. The importance of giving individuals
what they want and equalizing what can be equalized makes other concerns sink
into irrelevance. If Georgetown law school fails to provide free
contraceptives, and so burdens the equal sexual freedom of women, it has to
change its ways. That result follows whether or not there are liberals who are
somewhat troubled by the situation.
In fact, of
course, the human good is far more complex, and far more part of how we live,
than dominant opinion now assumes. When we are acting reasonably, we don’t want
particular things that we think are good so much as a good way of life. We want
particular things because we see them as part of a way of life that we aspire
to, and believe we should aspire to, because it embodies a standard (such as
closeness to God or an ideal of a life well lived) that seems worth living by.
So the human good is not at all like having lots of money. Whether viewed from
a commonsense, philosophical, or religious point of view, it’s part of a whole
way of life infused with goods like truth and beauty that exceed our grasp and
can’t be transferred or made to order.
Such a way of
life requires more than the efforts of individuals, markets, and bureaucracies,
the agencies liberalism accepts as authoritative. Other social institutions are
needed to provide a setting for complex non-economic relations and commitments.
A society can only be just and good if it helps the family be the family,
communities be communities, the Church be the Church, and so on, all so that
human beings can be human beings. Social
justice isn’t a big, unified machine that delivers equal amounts of stuff
to each of us and keeps us from interfering with each other, but a complex
condition in which not only individuals but a variety of associations get what
they need so that each can make its contribution to human life.
That is a
basic point distinguishing Catholic social teaching, which takes the complexity
of human goods seriously, from current views that make a unified, rational, and
efficient system for satisfying individual preferences the goal of political
life. Principles such as the right to life, the rights of the family, the
complementarity of the sexes, the need for sexual restraint, the freedom of the
Church, the real though conditioned rights of private property, and the general
principle of subsidiarity are not arbitrary, dogmatic add-ons to a basically
liberal view that identifies solidarity and the preferential option for the
poor with a global welfare state. They stand for a radically different
understanding of what makes for a good life and a good society.
That
understanding accepts nature and tradition as basically good although needing
correction, and it rejects centrally-administered social policies in favor of
widely distributed initiative and authority. It is therefore the least
tyrannical of all views. It is often considered conservative, because it
provides support for traditional American idealspatriotism, federalism,
limited government, private property, freedom of religion, individual
responsibility, family valuesthat are threatened by what liberalism has
become. It is not simply conservative, however, because it moderates and
completes those ideals, and brings out what is best in them, by bringing them
into a connected system rooted in a definite understanding of God and man.
Thus, for example, it makes private property a responsibility as well as a
right; makes freedom of religion a public as well as personal matter by
pointing to the place of God in human affairs; and supports and limits
patriotism by loyalty to Church, family, and local community.
Catholic
social teaching also supports liberal goals, to the extent those goals make
sense. Liberalism wants to help the poor and excluded, but offers them a way of
life that is sordid and nonfunctional because it has no place for higher goods
or for the soul. It wants to promote freedom, but ends by constructing a
comprehensive apparatus of control for fear we’ll oppress each other. A more
Catholic view would take the full range of human concerns seriously, and offer
the poor and excluded the dignity of participation in a way of life worthy of
devotion. And it would avoid the administered society by allowing more scope to
nature and custom. Thus, for example, it would reject “education” designed to
extirpate the inherited moral views and expectations that surround and support
traditional family life, and to replace them with careerism, consumerism, and
indifference to how others lead their lives. Instead, it would let boys be boys
and girls be girls, and offer them an ideal of life that accepts their natural
tendencies, disciplines and purifies them, and brings them into the functional
order of the Catholic family.
Those, at any rate, are some of the goals of
Catholic teaching. Achieving them is a tall order, and we’ll always fall short
in many respects. To get anywhere though we need to know what the ideal is. Our
most basic political problems today result from deep confusions regarding the
nature of man and the good, and better politics require a better understanding
of such things. There is no more fitting place to start than with what the
Church has to tell us.