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Religion, Conservatism, and Liberationism
Modern Age ^ | Winter 2002 | Peter Augustine Lawler

Posted on 05/11/2002 6:42:12 PM PDT by cornelis

RELIGION, CONSERVATISM, AND LIBERATIONISM
Is conservatism necessarily grounded in religious faith? The answer depends, of course, on what is meant by both conservatism and religion. My charge is to make my answer personal, but I hope not too personal. I woul dnot want to say that conservatives must be Catholics, much less think and believes as I do in every respect. So I am going to define conservatism for this occasion in an expansive way. And I am going to limit myself to sayig that much of Christian psychology and portions of Christian faith must be true for me to be a conservative today, while not forgetting that I know for a fact that there are agnostic conservatives.

What conseratives want to conserve is human life or human liberty, the human being with speech or language who lives open to the truth and must be virtuous to live well. The opponenets of conservatives are not so much the liberals, who at their best (say, a Raymond Aron or even an Alexis de Tocqueville) are somewhat confused or ambivalent conservatives, but the liberationists. They say that it is good and possible to liberate human beings from the constraints and miseries of being human. They aim to have the human will transform human nature into something else. They aim to create a new man who is not really a man at all.

We conservatives are quick to remember what most liberal thinkers are too confused to know or decent to say: Liberal thought is, at its core, liberationist. Liberal theory as articulated by John Locke and many others, is based on the premise that nature of God give huan beings just about nothing worthwhile.So we have no choice but to create value out of nothing; all that exists that is of human benefit is the product of human will or labor. Property, the family, government, and in fat all human relationships are human inventions for the benefit of the individual. Liberal theorists think that government and also the family are ordained by neither Go nor nature, and so they can be transformed at will by human beings to suit their convenience.

Human life, say the Lockeans or liberal theorists, is defined by calculation, consent, and contract. And there are no definite limits to how far human beings might move themselves away from an indifferent and penurious nature. Human beings, in fact, constitute themselves (almost) out of nothing, and the idea of willful self-constitution provides hope for a future free from the limits of the past and the present. Human beings are apable of indefinite perfectibility through the progressive negation and transformation of what they have been given by nature.

Liberationists haracteristically do not devote themselves to reflection upon the mystery of human freedom. They hold that the point is not to understand nature and human nature, but to transform them. Their task is, in fact, to eradicate mystery from the world, to create w orld in which human beings experience themselves fully at home. Their goal is always something like the commuism described by Marx, a world in which human beings live unalienated in freedom and abundance. That goal is also shared by our pragmatists, such as Richard Rorty, and perhaps by our new upper class, called by David Brooks the “bourgeois bohemians.” If Brooks is right, those “Bobos” believe that every moment of life should be a hobby.

Today the largest group of liberationists are the libertarians. They say, with Allan Wolfe, that moral freedom or free self-constitution is a necessary companion of political and economic freedom. That freedom requries the embrace of every technoogical invention that can increase personal freedom and reduce human suffering. So it eans the embrace of the biotehnological effort to produce indefinite logevity and designer (designed eithe rthrough interventions into the womb or through cloning) children. The libertarian hope is that human beings can live free from the miseries of birth and death and really from the cruel misery of love Libertarians hope that biotechnology will do what communism failed to do, create a society in which politics ad God can wither away. They share the delusion of Mar that such a world could really be populated by free human beings open to the truth and capable of love.

Let me now explain why, for me, the conservative opposition to liberationism is necessarily religious. The Christians say that human beings are alienate by the very nature of their being here. As St. Augustine states, we are aliens or pilgrims in the earthly city. Atheistic existentialists, beginning with Rousseau, say that our alienation is merely accidental or absurd, and so the liberationists are right to try to overcome it. If it cannot be overcome, then human life as such is absurdly full of mysterious misery; it is a life not worth living. So twentieth-century atheistic existentialists tended to vacillate between Stalinism (or Hitlerism) and suicide.

But Christian thinkers such as Blaise Pascal and Walker Percy believe that our ineradicable alienation is the clue to the truth about our being. The mysterious experience of displacement that is the source of our greatness and misery points to the conclusions that our true home is somewhere else. We cannot help asking why we are the only beings “lost in the cosmos,” and reason by itself provides no solid answer. But what we really do know about our distincitve natures points in the direction of our being creatures of a personal Creator. Christian faith provides the most plausible answer to questions we must ask about ourselves but cannot answer through reason. That fact, of course, cannot by itself be the source of faith, but it does show our need for it. It also shows that we are constituted by nature so that there is rreducible “space” for faith. We seem to need to believe to live well as whole human persons, to avoid self-denial of one sort or another.

Leo Strauss seems to say that, through reason, some human beings can live in unalienated serentiy without God in search of the truth, endlessly unraveling the riddle of Being. The undeniable existence of these rare but real philosophers refutes Pascal’s claim that man is necessarily miserably lost without God. But I cannot see how philosophizing overcomes human alienation. The being who wonders is a signular and mysterious exception to the rest of Being. That being, the human thinker, cannot incorporate himself in the cosmos he can otherwise pretty well eplain according to impersonal natural laws, and he cannot really show, without faith, that all of existence somehow points to him. Our physicists sometimes now claim that what the human mind can know correspondes to the truth about the cosmos, and so the human mind is fully at home in the world. The problem is that a physicist is not pure mind, but a human being with a body too and subject to all sorts of troubles and perversities that do not fit into the world his mind describes. The real human bieng who calls himself a phsycisits is, like the rest of us, an alien. The same goes for those who call themselves philosophers. That is why Walker Percy says that the human being, the wonderer, is ncessarily a wanderer. A genuinely self-conscious philosopher, as a Thomist would say, must also be a pilgrim..

What faith does, among other things, is to give us an explanation for why we experience ourselves as aliens or wanderers. It allows us to be ambiguously at home in the world. Knowing why we are not fully at home, we are free to experiene the good things of the world for what they are. Christian otherworldliness has produced the thought, ade famous by Pascal, that the greatness of man in this world is inextricably bound up with his misery. But if we were created for this life, how could it be nothing but bad? Could original sin, or sin generally, really have been that devastating for our natural existence? The modern or liberal view that man is a solitary and suffering individual nature is based on the unrealistic abstraction of the state of nature, not on a genuinely Christian anthropology. Real human beings are social beings born not only to suffer and die but also to know and love. And we are born not primarily to know and love “the truth,” but, above all, other persons, each other and God. What we know about nature, God, and each other is limited; our knowledge culminates in myster. But why should we, in some liberationist fashion necessarily equte invincible mystery with a nature or a cosmos simply hostile to our existence? Surely human life would be unendurable if purged of all myster.

For the Thomist, one road o faith is that we can glimpse by nature something of the goodness and gratuitousness of created being. What we really know is the foundation for what I believe to be the conservative virtue of gratitude. What we have been given as human beings is good; we are, on balance, the privileged beings in the cosmos. What we have been given are personal gifts—qualities of soul—that must have been given by some person, not some impersonal force. By what we know simply through our natural capabilities, the personal source of our gifts is mysterious, although we do know that those gifts are rooted in our distinctive natures. In gratitude under God, we conservatives dismiss the liberationists thought that we would be better off as beings without love, virtue, and truth, including knowledge of our death. And the mystery of creation, especially our creation, gives us reason to believe that we are more than merely natural beings.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: brooks; lawler; locke; pascal; percy; rorty; strauss; tocqueville

1 posted on 05/11/2002 6:42:12 PM PDT by cornelis
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To: cornelis
Good grief Corny!

-- Seldom have I seen a piece of writing with more bombastic, indecipherable bull. -- Did you scribble this?

2 posted on 05/11/2002 7:02:55 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: cornelis
I am just finishing Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind. If it is to be believed, the roots of conservatism are a belief in the durability of ideas, and the transience of Man. That would seem to demand some sense of a higher order, a god if you will. But I don't know that it predicates the existence of a Judeo-Christian God.

American -- indeed Western -- conservatism is defined by its desire to sustain the Judeo-Christian ethic because that is the ethic that defined this nation and its founders. But I suspect that any religion which places Man in his humble station in the Universe would suffice.

3 posted on 05/11/2002 7:20:18 PM PDT by IronJack
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Comment #4 Removed by Moderator

To: IronJack
But I suspect that any religion which places Man in his humble station in the Universe would suffice.

Good comment, IJ, and a worthy topic.

Yes, it is sufficient in large part--mindful that relgion has a rather short life span when tied to a false humility.

Still you can get a lot of mileage out of that life span: Vaclav Havel is the noted public subscriber to the piety that began with Socrates and continued through Cicero--all for whom a higher order does not predicate the existence of a Judeo-Christian God. There is a difference, however, between the piety of the ancient polytheist and the politician that grew up in that ethic that defined the nation and its founders. That difference is a monotheism which nothing predicates, but predicates our existence. In other words, true religion is not a one-way street, an ascent of piety toward worlds (gods!) bigger than ourselves. Rather, it is enough to admit that true humility is that which responds to the divinity that recognizes us. It would be ridiculous (as much as the ancient Xenophanes laughed at the fallacy of Greeks anthropomorphism) to think that humility was one way and a matter of going it alone. There's a thread running with some talk about the universe in this Stoic sense.

I admire Havel and what he has done to move us away from the arrogance of the apes.

5 posted on 05/11/2002 7:56:46 PM PDT by cornelis
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To: cornelis
it is enough to admit that true humility is that which responds to the divinity that recognizes us.

Very pithy thought you've expressed there. It could be that if we look into the Universe and sense it looking back, we recognize our own insignificance, and in so doing, we sense that only our ideas outlive us. So it is in the preservation of our ideas that we validate our existence. Otherwise, it is as though we never lived at all, and the whole experience is rather pointless.

6 posted on 05/11/2002 9:25:12 PM PDT by IronJack
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To: skemper
How does the universe define what is right and wrong?

I don't know that it comes down to right and wrong so much as permanence and transience. Ideas, both constructive and harmful, have a lifespan beyond their authors', so it is in their creation, nurturing, and bequeathal that our lives continue.

7 posted on 05/11/2002 9:27:32 PM PDT by IronJack
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To: cornelis
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8 posted on 11/04/2002 4:35:00 PM PST by maddogmurph
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