Catholicism sees freedom as directed toward the good life, and fills
in the details with its understanding of God and man. Liberalism likes
to avoid big issues like God, man, and the good, because they cause
arguments, so it sees freedom not as freedom to pursue anything in
particular but as freedom to choose freely. Freedom is freedom to go
after whatever it is you happen to want.
The result of that view, along with the view that freedom is the
highest political goal, is that the good life drops out of sight as a
public concern. That’s a problem for Catholics who want to promote the
good life through politics, because almost all politics today are
liberal. Even the battle between liberals and conservatives is mostly a
dispute between two groups of liberals. The two sides may differ in
their interpretation of freedom, but they agree that it comes first, and
that in essence it’s freedom to do whatever you want.
Progressive liberals take a consumer’s point of view, and combine the
belief that freedom is simple freedom of choice with egalitarianism and
social management. The result is a sort of Burger King “Have It Your
Way” vision of freedom: it’s freedom to choose from a menu that’s as
long as possible and available equally to everyone. For that kind of
freedom to exist, the choices must be independent of the choices other
people make. The menu therefore emphasizes choices that can be made
individually and separately, like consumer goods and private lifestyle
options. Freedom turns out to mean “access” and “tolerance”a state of
affairs in which people are given what they choose from a set list, and
they have a right to have other people go along with their choices.
The Obama campaign’s Julia
is a model citizen of a progressive liberal society. Her goals are
completely privateeven when she has a child it’s an entirely personal
choice that has nothing to do with anyone elseand her concern as a
voter is to have the government give her what she needs to attain her
personal goals reliably and comfortably. The campaign makes her an
Internet entrepreneur who creates jobs, and so gives her something of a
public role, but the description is unpersuasive. A successful
entrepreneur is not likely to be someone whose big political concern is
whether other people pay for her birth control pills and provide her
with a comfortable retirement.
The main alternative to the progressive liberal ideal today is the
conservative or classical liberal ideal. Conservative liberals see
freedom from a more typically entrepreneurial perspective. For them,
freedom is freedom of action rather than freedom to choose among private
satisfactions. They therefore favor a setting in which the rules of
property and contract, along with public services like roads, schools,
and national defense, allow people to form whatever goals they want and
pursue them with whatever means they can put together. Everything’s
open-ended, and the sky’s the limit, but it’s up to the individual to
figure out where he wants to go and how to get there. The conservative
version of Julia would therefore be more like an Ayn Rand heroine. Where
Julia wants secure enjoyment of daily satisfactions, an Ayn Rand
heroine wants adventure, struggle, and creativity. She is as
single-mindedly interested in doing whatever it is she wants to do as
Julia, but in a very different style.
Whatever the basic kinship between the progressive and conservative
liberal positions, each claims superiority from a moral point of view.
The conservative emphasis on individual action leads to an emphasis on
how people act, so people who tend in that direction are likely to favor
many traditional standards of conduct. On the other hand, the
progressive system looks after everyone equally, so its supporters claim
a more generous moral concern that protects the poor, marginalized, and
unsuccessful.
The argument goes back and forth, and most of us incline to one side
or the other. Active Catholics usually go for conservatism, because they
believe in being active and take individual conduct seriously.
Academics mostly prefer progressivism, because they like overall systems
that take care of everything. Progressives complain that conservative
morality is a mask for greed and bigotry, and the conservative love of
action means invading countries and torturing prisoners. Conservatives
respond that encouraging activity benefits the disadvantaged, and
progressive insistence on taking care of everything means scrapping
inconvenient babies.
Current developments give the conservatives something of a trump card
from a Catholic perspective. The progressives want to reform social
relations in a detailed way in line with their view of social justice,
so they have very little tolerance for dissenting views that get in
their way. That is why in much of the West you can be hit with criminal
penalties for saying unprogressive things about sexual ethics or the
merits of competing religions. In contrast, the conservative emphasis on
freedom of action means letting the Church say what she thinks and
carry on her activities in her own way for her own purposes. Ayn Rand is
no Mother Theresa, but she won’t force Ave Maria University to buy
abortifacients for Julia and hire her to teach alternate lifestyle
acceptance.
Still, from a Catholic standpoint both Ayn and Julia are remarkably
bad models to follow. Both ignore the transcendent dimension of human
life. Ayn Rand’s romantic capitalism is a fake transcendent if ever
there was one, and the faith, hope, and (government-administered)
charity the Obama campaign offers Julia have very little to do with the
Christian virtues. Also, both are essentially unsocial. Progressive
concern for those at the bottom doesn’t include taking them seriously as
actors, and the conservative appeal to traditional morality is shaky
because it’s not grounded in a serious understanding of the good life.
Hence the depressing effects of the progressive welfare state on how
people live, and hence the routine abandonment by conservative
politicians of issues such as abortion when they become mildly
inconvenient.
So what’s a Catholic to do? We have to deal with what’s around us, so
common cause with one side or the other is necessary on many issues.
Still, Catholicism is not a matter of joining this team or that. If the
Church is what she claims to be, she is the custodian of the most
important truths about human life. For that reason, Catholics cannot put
common cause with others first: they must know their own vision, and
emphasize that vision above all else.
The Catholic vision, as the Church tells us and observation confirms,
is what the world needs most, even politically. The striking thing
about liberalism, and mainstream politics in the West generally, is how
impoverished it is. To be rational, politics like any form of action
must aim at the goodat the goals it makes sense to pursue. Liberalism
tries to avoid arguments about those goals by limiting the common good
to freedom, and making freedom self-defining as freedom to choose.
As our discussion has shown, that approach doesn’t work. Freedom is
always part of a larger system that promotes some goals over others, so
it always promotes a particular way of life. The conservative version of
freedom favors a life of enterprise and acquisitiveness, while the
progressive version favors a life of safe and inoffensive hedonism. Ayn
Rand might like the one and Julia the other, but it’s unlikely many sane
and normal people would take either as the standard to strive for if
the situation were presented clearly.
With that in mind, the most important political function of the
Church is to present man’s situation clearly so he can choose truly. She
aims at truth rather than power, and exerts her influence by
transforming understandings. For that reason, the goal of Catholics
acting politically as Catholics should be less immediate victory than
broadening the very narrow spectrum of economic and social concerns that
now define public life. They can do that by maintaining Catholic
principles, in season and out, and never compromising them. That
approach can seem ineffectual, but the principles that are publicly
available define what is politically possible. There is no political
power greater than the power to change that, and that is the power
Catholics can exercise by remaining true to their vision.