Posted on 04/03/2005 1:15:59 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
A master of theatrical timing to the very end, it is worth noting that John Paul II II, 264th successor of St. Peter and Vicar of Christ, died two days after Terri Schiavo, a small and seemingly insignificant member of his enormous flock. There is no doubt John Paul II will go down in the history books as one of the finest of Popes. There has been for some time talk of him as only the third Pope to deserve the title Great, after Leo I ( 461) and Gregory I ( 604), and even the most conservative assessment will rank him along with Innocent III ( 1216) and Leo XIII ( 1903) as one of the outstanding popes in history.
But what was impossible to know before the events of the past few days is that this world historical figure might well be paired with Terri, heretofore relatively unknown, on the recto and verso sides of a single holy medal, as it werethe one the latest victim, the other the most prominent opponentof what John Paul II himself has called the culture of death. Stranger things have happened. The Roman matron Vibia Perpetua and the slave woman Felicitas never met until they were martyred in the circus at Carthage, but there they became Perpetua and Felicity, declaimed together countless times in the Roman canon that is still celebrated in the Catholic church as the first Eucharistic Prayer. We pray for John Paul II and for Terri; but I doubt if they need our prayers. It is we who need their intervention.
What brings these two together is the problem of justice, an issue to which John Paul II devoted much of his pontificate. He told us he would do so from the outset. In the very first of his many encyclicals, Redemptor hominis (1979), he said: The redemption of the worldthis tremendous mystery of love in which creation is renewedis, at its deepest root, the fullness of justice in a human heartthe heart of the first-born Sonin order that it may become justice in the hearts of many human beings [sec. 9]. Virtually the last individual case of justice to which he turned his mind was that of Terri Schiavo. We are by this time all too familiar with her sad demise. But let us turn to her case once more, this time looking at her as the reverse side of John Paul IIs emblem.
Now every moral and legal decision involves knowing two very different kinds of things: the facts on the ground, particular facts about the particular case we face; and some set of principles or guidelines or rules, most often only implicit in our minds. Moral and legal decisions are made by bringing together facts and law or facts and principles. Decisions are good or bad based upon whether our moral or legal principles are good and are well understood, and also whether the principles are properly applied to the particulars of the case at hand. The traditional terms for these two kinds of practical knowledge are moral wisdom for understanding principles and prudence for knowing how to apply principles to particular cases. Judges are still occasionally called magistrates, a term first used in the Middle Ages to indicate that a good judge must be a master (magister) who correctly understands both things, a person wise in the law and prudent in its application. Let me attempt to illustrate how deep is the trouble in Terris America, by pointing to mistakes on both counts so profound that her case has been characterized by a prominent writer on the left as judicial murder. We can then turn to how this man of justice, John Paul II II, would have treated her case.
Terris case is particularly maddening at the level of prudence. The U.S. judiciary up and down the line has shown itself extraordinarily imprudent. Why? It is obvious to everyone that, unlike John Paul II, she was not in the process of dying. Two sets of relatives were vying for control of her. The U.S. judiciary failed the kind of test that the wise jurist Solomon passed when he threatened two claimant mothers with cutting the baby in half, thereby discovering who the real mother actually was. The American judges could not keep their eyes on the relevant issue, which was not ownership but what was good for Terri.
The prudent verdict would have been to turn her over to the care of her parents, not because of their relation to her but because they wanted to take care of her, not to turn her over to Michael Schiavo, who wanted to kill her, and did. And one need not be a Bible reader to see what prudence requires. The injustice of her case would have been equally as obvious to a Greek physician called Hippocrates, who wrote around 400BC: First, do no harm. How then did the matter come to such a pass?
Here we come to moral principles or rules or guidelines, call them what you will, and here we come to the kind of comic relief Shakespeare always inserted in his tragedies, supplied by a self-styled medical ethicist from New York. In her best pseudo-professional bedside manner she sagely informed us on national TV that the one silver lining in Terris case was that it showed the need for everyone to have a living will. This couldnt be further from the truth. But this inanity does point out the problem of principle. Terri had no living will. Her judge realized that the present legal basis for such cases as Terris is not for him to act like Solomon in rendering impartial justice in a particular case, because there is no longer agreement on what justice is. His humbler function was to bow to Terris own decision, to her own will in the matter.
Since Terri had made no living will, one was concocted for her. While watching TV coverage of a case she did not then realize would have similarities to her own, she supposedly remarked that she would not want to go on living in such a condition. In the hands of her husband, lawyers, judges, psychologists, and doctors, this off-hand remark was elevated to the status of her long sought living will, that is, her own decision about her own case. Dont blame the judges, dont blame the lawyers, dont blame her husband; this is what Terri wanted.
Or is it? This is not the solution, it is the problem. Rendering justice, that is, prudently applying general principles to a particular case, has been replaced by rendering the individual will, in this case, Terris will. Though of course it is not really Terris will, it is her so-called husbands will. But who among us has not changed his own mind in a situation where before-hand we thought one way, but once we come face to face with the facts we finally see we must act differently. Such old-fashioned prudence has been rendered impossible in Terris and many other cases.
Terris judge was not striking out on his own. He was simply following his leaders, all the way up to the Supreme Court of the United States. Justice Kennedys explanation of the Courts ruling in Lawrence v. Texas (2003) that laws against sodomy are un-constitutional humbly noted that there is an
emerging awareness that liberty gives substantial protection to adult persons in deciding how to conduct their private lives in matters pertaining to sex.
The reason such laws are now null and void is because each individual person has the right, not to apply common moral principles to the particular cases they face, but to create for himself and out of whole cloth his own rules and his own particular theorem of the universe. In short, there are no universal moral principles that a prudent magistrate could make use of in rendering justice to a person under distress. What then is to be done? At the individual level, one consults will of the individual person. Hence, living wills.
But even more perniciously, at the level of general moral principles themselves, what can one do? There is only one option: try to discern the general will that emerges from the collectivity of individual wills. But that general will is and must be emerging, to use Justice Kennedys term, it is not quite here yetand never will be. In ancient times, priests and priestesses looked to the entrails of the birds and lambs and oxen they sacrificed to the gods, in order to forecast the future.
Once there are no over-arching and permanent principles of justice, what else is there to do but for our judges to don the robes of the ancient priests and try to read the entrails of the Zeitgeist. What results, of course, as the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who coined the term, predicted, is the will to power. It is power, pure and simple, nothing else, that took over in Terris case, and produced injustice.
What if John Paul II had been her judge? I have no doubt he would have acted as a true magistrate, like Solomon of old. We know this is true because his Vatican actually commented on Terris case. But what about John Paul II the man? Here we must realize that he experienced the culture of death in all three of the forms it took during his life, long before he coined the term. As a young man he daily faced the Nazi culture of death; as priest, bishop, and cardinal in Poland he faced the Stalinist culture of death; and as Pope he faced the contemporary European and North American versions of the culture of death.
At the level of prudence, his reaction to living in such extraordinary and difficult circumstances was to become the peoples Pope. As a philosophy professor in Lublin he developed a personalist philosophy, one he lived out as Pope. Ethics for him was not primarily a matter of abstractions but of persons, and he taught in many venues and many ways that prudence must be directed toward the true good of individual persons. While his own view of the nature of the Church told him that it is the duty of the clergy to set moral principles, the duty of the laity to figure out how to apply them to practical life, his own personalism drove him to very definite conclusions about how to apply such principles.
John Paul IIs prudence is what brought together the seeming contradictions in his life: tradition and innovation, liberal and conservative, the Catholic who prayed and worked Jews, Muslims, and non-believers. Even many of his own followers seem not to understand when his controversial stands were taken at the level of principleas on abortion and euthanasiaand when, as was more often the case, he was applying unchanging principles to changed circumstancesmost notably and recently on capital punishment, his consistent opposition to wars, including Iraq, and, most poignantly, on hydration and feeding tubes as non-extraordinary means of preserving life. At the level of prudence, there is simply no doubt that, had John Paul II been Terris judge, she would be alive today.
If in his prudential decisions John Paul II grew more and more innovative the longer he lived, the opposite is true at the level of moral principle. Because it fell to him to deal with the long term fallout from Paul VIs encyclical on birth control, Humanae vitae (1968), as his pontificate lengthened out, John Paul II found himself turning more and more to the great tradition of Catholic moral teaching, and most of all to the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas, the medieval Dominican friar whose theological and philosophical thought had been so strongly recommended by John Paul IIs important predecessor, Leo XIII.
John Paul IIs encyclicals grew clearer and more persuasive during the course of his pontificate, in direct proportion to the influence of Leo and Aquinas on the writing of the former philosophy professor from Lublin. And the reason he turned increasingly in this direction was primarily because of the doctrine that there is a kind of natural law, revealed in the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes, to be sure, but also in the hearts of many [indeed, all] human beings.
This is the law, so ridiculed by Catholic politicians of the left beginning in the Bork hearings, that stands over the statutes of the U.S., even over its Constitutionthe law of nature and natures God to which Jefferson and Lincoln and Martin Luther King appealed so effectively. Within this law reside the ultimate principles guiding all human laws and all human decisions. His confidence in this law, a law open to all humans, would have guided John Paul II in rendering justice to Terri; and it was abandoning this law, the common heritage of humankind, in favor of the latest whisperings of the fascists of the left, that did her in.
If the late Pope needs my vote for greatness, he's got it.
Time to repeat yourself over here.
One other pope is sometimes called "the Great": St. Nicholas I (reigned 858-867).
When I heard [false report] that the Pope died exactly one week after Good Friday, the day after Terri Schindler/Schiavo, I thought it was a sign. It still seems as though some Great Wheel is spinning in ways that can almost be seen. Sad FReegards....
bump
Excellently written and argued.
If Judge Greer had been in Solomon's place, he would have given the baby to the woman who wanted to cut it in half.
.
This from someone who walked in that Valley of Death known as the IA DRANG Valley of Mid-November 1965:
Have no Fear,
for you are all very dearly LOVED,
as you are and are not.
I love you entirely,
GOD loves you perfectly.
And since...
...things may not be what they appear to be in this world, for...
...there are things in life you can see with your eyes and...
...in life there are things you see with your Heart
And since...
...LOVE is the Only Reality
And since...
...it is your Loving and...
...being Loved in return,
...in your Heart,
...that you really do live on FOREVER...
...you cannot miss,
with LOVE
"What if John Paul II had been her judge?"
Terri would not have died a brutal death.
The sick part is that the liberals are kind of glad the Pope passed and are hoping for someone a little more modern and liberal to replace him! God Help us!
As you suggest and as previously posted:
Much has been written over the last several days about the lessons that can be derived by comparing the circumstances surrounding the deaths of Terri Shiavo and Pope John Paul II. Some among us are attempting to unite these separate and unrelated events in the hopes that such juxtaposition will draw a stark contrast between death with dignity and state sanctioned murder. But such comparisons miss the broader point.
We live in a time when clarity of faith and purpose is sorely needed. Faced with an opportunity to provide such clarity by defending the inviolate value of human life, our society has instead chosen to express that value in fungible economic terms like burden, costs, and convenience.
We act as if it is possible for our own inborn, enlightened intelligence to finally and forever drive away the shadows of doubt and fear that have always been a part of the human condition. We no longer need to fear death because when the time comes we can choose to die with dignity.
Wouldnt it be better if we chose to live with purpose and die with meaning instead?
Meaning that is based not on changeable economic or emotional considerations, but on a genuine clarity of values and faith that is widely held and deeply shared.
The best of our leaders have tried to teach us that such clarity can not be resident only in one person. It must be constantly renewed in each of us. With the passing of Pope John Paul II, voices of every station, in every church and every community must affirm and express the foundational values of faith with greater clarity than ever before.
Perhaps then, these two extraordinary and unsettling events can find a common meaning by serving as a common source of renewal for all of us.
Well done, Ronnie!
Praise God !!!
Bless Pope John Paul II !!!
Never forget how Terri was MURDERED !!!
He did, but it was a man.
That is beautiful, Ronnie.
Thank you for that post.
annie: thank you for encouraging him.
Nice article. Thanks.
(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
What if John Paul II had been her judge? I have no doubt he would have acted as a true magistrate, like Solomon of old. We know this is true because his Vatican actually commented on Terris case. But what about John Paul II the man? Here we must realize that he experienced the culture of death in all three of the forms it took during his life, long before he coined the term. As a young man he daily faced the Nazi culture of death; as priest, bishop, and cardinal in Poland he faced the Stalinist culture of death; and as Pope he faced the contemporary European and North American versions of the culture of death.
You're absolutely right. Protestants would substitute common grace (God graciously restraining the inherent depravity of the human heart from approaching its fullest potential) for natural law, but the net effect is the same: There is a higher moral law, from which are civil laws are derived, and the denial of that fact necessarily subjects the lives of the weak to the relativistic whims of the strong.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.