|
The
Reverend Mr. Opitz is a member of FEE’s Senior Staff
Classical liberalism created a revolutionary new view of the political State,
its nature and proper functions. We may better understand this sea change in
political thought if we contrast the secular state of liberalism with it polar
opposite found in the ancient world. The great authority on the ancient city,
Fustel De Coulange, tells us that “the state was a religious community, the
king a pontiff, the magistrate a priest, and the law a sacred formula.” The
Greek polis was Church and State in one, Julius Caesar was Pontifex
Maximus; the citizen was bound to the State body and soul. When civic and
religious obligations are combined and owed to the same institution we have that
absolute power dreaded by Lord Acton.
It was the great achievement of classical liberalism, with its roots in the
post-Reformation era and mood, to desacralize the political order, thus
stripping the State of its religious and moral pretensions. Holy empires and
sacred monarchies claiming transcendent sanction have prevailed throughout
history, and the State was venerated as an order of salvation. From now on,
however, the sanctions of the State were to be much more modest, its objectives
limited to constabulary functions; “the night watchman State,” as a critic
dubbed it.
No longer would the State assume responsibilities beyond its competence for the
moral and spiritual regeneration of men and women. “It is not for a disdain of
spiritual goods that liberalism concerns itself exclusively with man’s
material well-being,” writes Mises in Liberalism, “but from a
conviction that what is highest and deepest in man cannot be touched by any
outward regulation.” (p. 4) The tutoring and renewal of the human mind and
spirit would, from now on, be the task of Church and School—in the broadest
sense—so these institutions were pried out from under the State’s umbrella
and assumed the autonomy they must have if they are to achieve their purposes.
“Separation of Church and State” is repeated endlessly and mindlessly among
us, so that the idea of a secular State is now commonplace. But it was a novel
idea in the 17th century, and it has not taken root anywhere in the world except
in regions responsive to the influence of classical liberalism. What was the
seed idea which eventually germinated as the concept of a secular State? And
what was the milieu in which the seed took root? It was a milieu in which an
aura of sanctity might be attached to virtually anything; trees, rivers, stones,
animals, as well as to the social order itself. And of course there were
priest-kings, divine monarchs and holy emperors.
The Old Testament records a sharp break with this mentality, a new departure
which removes the idea of the holy from nature and society and rests it
exclusively with the transcendent deity: “! am the Lord, your Holy One, the
Creator of Israel, your King.” H. Frankfort, in his Kingship and the Gods,
elaborates: “In the light of Egyptian, and even Mesopotamian, kingship, that
of the Hebrews lacks sanctity. The relation between the Hebrew monarch and his
people was as nearly secular as is possible in a society wherein religion is a
living force.” The distinction between civic and sacred is sharpened in the
New Testament, especially in Jesus’ rejoinder to a trap question: “Render
unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s, and unto God that which is God’s.” The
realm of Caesar, the State, is now shorn of its lofty conceits. The State is a
necessary and useful institution, but there’s nothing divine or sacred about
it. Only God is holy, and there is something of the divine in persons; but not
in the social order—the State is secular.
There is a private domain in man, touched by the sacred, to which only the
individual has rightful access. Invasion of this Self by any other constitutes a
violation, and the State’s apparatus of compulsion is set up precisely to
punish trespasses of this sort. Wanton killing is the most flagrant of
violations and it is the law’s business to punish murder. Stealing is a
violation of the bonds of ownership and is the ground for laws against theft.
And because no person can be held accountable for his actions, nor realize his
potential, unless he is free, the law seeks to secure equal freedom for all
persons. In short, each person has inherent rights, derived from a source beyond
nature and society, to his life, his liberty and his property; and it is the
function of the Law to secure these rights.
The State’s ability to punish evil should not create any expectation that the
State can enforce good. Goodness must be voluntary, and the most the State can
do on behalf of goodness is to curb evildoers and thus create “a free field
and no favor” where right thinking and well doing of every variety can take
root.
The State began to get out of the religion business early in the modern era; the
press got free, and speech was unfettered. Adam Smith demonstrated that the
economy did not need political controls, but only the Rule of Law, which
preserved social cooperation under the division of la bor. The best things in
life began to flourish in regions outside the domain of politics: family,
friendship, fellowship, conversation, work, hobbies, art, music, worship . . . .
It was a noble vision, but it did not promise utopia and thus disappointed those
who demanded a heaven on earth. A little more realism on this point and the
vision may yet take hold again.
|