Yesterday evening,
looking at the supposed conflict between faith and science, I suggested
as a conclusion that scientific research and enquiry was one set of
practices among many in the human world: no more good or evil in itself
than anything else. Its moral compass was not derived from itself but
from all kinds of factors in the culture around. But all of that should
encourage us in thinking that the Church and other religious bodies
has every reason for supporting and encouraging scientific research,
and no great reason to panic, whatever anybody might say. But if we’re
thinking about science as one practice among many in the human world,
and if we’re acknowledging that scientific work doesn’t generate
its own moral compass, then we have to face a number of issues around
how society itself shapes its moral vision and its sense of what’s
distinctive about humanity. In other words, as you think through some
of the issues around faith and science, you’re more or less bound
to get into questions about faith and the public realm: faith and politics.
This
is a building in which the National Anthem is sung fairly frequently.
But the historic second verse of the National Anthem is probably sung
rather less frequently than the first, or the revised version of the
second verse. For those of you who don’t habitually sing the original
second verse, I may need to remind you that part of it runs ‘confound
their politics, / frustrate their knavish tricks’. The rhyme tells
you all you need to know about what the author believed about politics.
Politics has, in the history of the English language, a rather bad name
as a term. Shakespeare in King Lear refers famously to ‘scurvy
politicians’ who pretend to see the things they do not. Politics and
politicians in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were not respectable
activities or agents: they were plotters, manipulators. And ‘politics’
in that period of the English language had a very negative connotation
for that reason. Even rather later on and outside Britain, you find
the great French poet Charles Peguy saying about a century ago that
everything begins with mystique
and ends with politique. All human visions, it seems, begin with
something transcendent, something luminously obscure and suggestive,
and they all end in committee rooms. Politics carries with it that abiding
sense of a corrupting or corrupted milieu: the language of faith
ought not to be mixed in with the necessarily ambiguous and sometimes
corrupt business of getting your way in the public world.
One
of my tasks this evening will be an attempt to rescue the word ‘politics’.
In its most ancient use, as it’s used by the Greek philosopher Aristotle,
for example, as the title of one of his great works, politics is simply
the discipline, of how to think about civic life intelligently and consistently,
and how to manage civic life in a rational and just way. Politics is
the science of living together without conflict or major injustice.
And in that sense you can perhaps see how a rather different meaning
just might be given to the words of the French poet. Yes, everything
begins in mystique, begins in vision, and needs to be translated
into the science of human living together; and in that sense
also, politics is inescapable for anyone in or out of the Church or
any other religious community. And the Christian Church is itself a
political community: it’s about living together in justice. Now
that is no fashionable modern discovery, it’s already taken for granted
in Christian scripture. The early Church saw itself as a body of
citizens: you’ll find the language in the New Testament, famously
in Paul’s letter to the Philippians: ‘your citizenship is in heaven’
says Paul, using the Greek word politeia. The city you belong
to is something other than the community you think you belong
to here on earth. You are still social beings who have to make choices
about living together, but the community to which you belong is greater
than any limited human society.
The
politeia, the citizenship of the Church is to do – like other
kinds of citizenship – with how people take responsibility for the
management of power, how they cooperate, how they become responsible
to each other. And the Christian community talks about itself as a
polity, a kind of civic life which is in some way transparent
to God. It builds on the whole history of God’s dealings with
the people of Israel in the days of the first Covenant. God deals with
the world it seems, in biblical terms, not by individual revelations
or even by generalized messages from heaven. God deals with the world
by bringing into existence a community living by law, aspiring to justice,
and in its dealings within itself, the dealings between people, somehow
showing transparency to God.
Ideally, somebody looking at ancient Israel would have been able to
work out the kind of God it believed in. And the same applies, in the
mind of St Paul and other early Christian thinkers, to the Church. ‘Look
at the Church and you may begin to see what kind of God is being talked
about when you see how people relate to each other.’
It’s
not only in the New Testament that you find that political language
and imagery around. As has very often been pointed out, the very word
for Church in Greek, ekklesia, meant ‘a citizen’s assembly’
in the ancient world. And so in the earliest Christian period, to become
an adopted child of God in Jesus Christ, was simultaneously to become
a political being, in a new way: to become a citizen of a larger society.
To receive the grace of God, God’s mercy transfiguring and enlarging
your life, was, at one and the same time, to take on responsibility
within the City of God, to take on responsibility for common life. St
Paul picks up one of the current metaphors in ancient philosophy for
society: the metaphor of the body. He didn’t invent it as a metaphor,
but he does some very distinct and new things with it. Instead of just
saying that everybody has a different job in society, Paul says everybody
has a different form of service in society, and what is given
to any one member of this society is given for the good of all and requires
a letting-go of selfish interest. Mutuality and self-giving belong
properly to this citizenship, and all kinds of power in this
citizenship are there as a capacity to be put at the service of common
life. So instead of the slightly static picture of the body as it appeared
in ancient philosophy—that is, a society where lots of people had
different jobs which more or less inter-locked—Paul gives a dynamic
focus to the language. The body is an organism where life flows
between different parts, where service occurs on the part of each to
all and all to each.
Now
that means that the politics of the Church and the political critique
and questioning which the Church may raise, is never going to be an
abstract scheme or programme, it’s going to be a set of critical touchstones.
‘Here’ says the Church ‘is a pattern of social life which we believe
to be transparent to God.’ How do the practices of this particular
society measure up to that transparency? What do they hide about God
and about humanity? Buried in that, of course, is a very ambitious and
unlikely claim indeed, that the Church is the ideal society. Ambitious
and unlikely, because five minutes’ reflection (or possibly even less)
may persuade you that this is some way from what the Church has
looked like and does look like. And yet, in the perspective of
the New Testament, that is precisely the claim made: the sorts of responsibility,
the sorts of priority, and the sorts of mutuality that exist in this
body are what God purposes for the human race. And in examining the
way in which this community works, you ought to be able to understand
what real justice might mean.
Among
the many mistakes the Church has made, historically, in coming to terms
with this, is the assumption that - sometimes and in some places –
this gives the Church license to set the agenda for everybody in sight;
to set it in coercive and often oppressive ways. But, as the Church
has very, very, slowly persuaded itself on some subjects like freedom
of conscience, it has come to realize rather more sharply that if it
is itself the body of those who freely consent to a common allegiance,
it can’t commit itself to coercive institutional forms, whether visible
hierarchy with absolute powers or any particular form of state administration.
It always remains what the great English poet Coleridge called ‘a
critical friend’, in the political sphere. It doesn’t seek to set
an agenda by imposing or controlling; it proposes not abstract criteria
for morality, but simply what it itself is. It proposes to the
society around that these forms of mutual care and service and
accountability are the forms transparent to the most fundamental reality
of all: that is to God.
So,
there is no way in which a Church can be indifferent to politics if
politics is understood as that science of understanding and managing
with justice the way human beings live together. And because of all
that, the Church proposes to the society around certain roles and images
and concepts to do with humanity. It’s a community that grounds its
practice on the conviction that human beings are created: that
is, they are responding beings before they are initiating
beings. They exist because God wills them to be. Human
beings are invited and enabled to respond and to be responsible to God
and to one another. Humanity rests on that responsiveness. And because
all are created and all are equally the subject of God’s invitation,
whether or not they accept it, the first and most important thing you
know in practice about another human being is that God has invited them
to exist and invites them to exist in greater fullness.
For
the Church, as for other faith communities, belief about humanity is
absolutely bound up with belief about God and vice versa. So
within a variety of human societies there exists a body of people whose
view of what humanity is about is shaped radically by belief in God
– an ‘inviting’ God, to whom response is required – whose view
of humanity is formed by the supposed attitudes of God to us, the promise
of restoration – a new beginning, of mercy and new creation. Within
every human society, that is going to be a presence, an element.
Historically, it’s very often been a dominant or majority presence:
in many parts of the world it still is so. But in our North Atlantic
world as presently constituted, it would be rather hard to claim that
that was a dominant view. Nonetheless, there it is, shaping the vision
and priorities of certain people. And the question of the relation between
faith and politics therefore comes to be tightly connected with the
question of how such a group of people manage their relationship with
a dominant cultural environment which doesn’t
have that doctrine of human nature, and perhaps doesn’t have any
doctrine of human nature. How does the Church relate to that secular
environment? With what degree of confidence, humility, aggressiveness,
hopefulness? Before moving on, I would just like to mention one observation,
a quotation from Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, Archbishop of Milan, who
at a conference in Lyon some three or four years ago said: ‘the human
recognition of God’s existence is not a compliment paid by humanity
to God, but a gift given by God to humanity’. That, I think, sums
up rather more elegantly than I can a great deal of what I’ve been
trying to suggest in these opening thoughts.
So,
what happens when we find ourselves as a believing community in the
middle of a wider society that doesn’t quite know what it believes
about human nature or human distinctiveness? One of the tasks which
lies before us is perhaps to attempt to draw out a bit more fully, what
those around us do take for granted, if anything. I mentioned
in the first lecture the way in which the issue of creating human embryos
strictly for research purposes raised a number of broader questions
about where we regarded the limits of human dignity to lie. But there
are others in our society who, in different ways, would regard what
is human as in some sense, up for negotiation or recreation. There is
a movement rejoicing in the name of the Extropians who believe
that the ideal future for humanity is cyberspace, and that the limitations
of the body are more and more being eroded by the possibilities of electronic
cyber-relationship, and that that is where we should put our
energy and where we should hope to find the human future. If what I
said about the Church earlier on is both ambitious and unlikely, you
may feel it’s not the only project to which those adjectives can be
ascribed!
But
what I’m saying is that in our public debate, we need to draw out
a little bit further whether there is in any of this a doctrine about
humanity. And very often the doctrine that emerges is a doctrine about
human will and human choice, a doctrine which assumes that human will
and human choice can, in certain circumstances, override any sense of
the givenness of a human nature, an embodied human nature. Now, that’s
to oversimplify it radically, but it does seem that drawing out the
doctrinal tension between a view that gives priority to will and choice,
and a view that believes that something even if we’re not quite
sure what, is given about human nature and human dignity, invites
some very serious and far-reaching debate. And just as, in the case
of some of the scientific controversies I spoke about last night, we
are sometimes fighting in the dark with those who don’t fully recognize
that they are espousing doctrines, one needs to draw out such assumptions
so that there can be an open exchange. The problem arises when some
people imagine that their account of human nature, or their understanding
of human will and choice, is so rationally self-evident that it doesn’t
need to be drawn out, argued or defended. But it’s of the first
importance to recognize that a great deal of what is said in our current
debates, whether about the status of the embryo, the character of the
human body, or whatever, involves matters of faith – belief that dignity
belongs here and not here, that these are the limits of
what is given about humanity.
But
you may say that’s only one aspect of our contemporary human culture,
and not the most positive. What about the fact that we live now in an
environment very much dominated by the culture of human rights? Surely
that secures for everyone in society, a clear sense of what is non-negotiable
about humanity, a clear vision of a human dignity that can’t be adjusted
to convenience? The first thing I want to say about that is that it
is crucial that the Church should be positive about human rights. The
culture of human rights has made it harder to see human dignity
as negotiable; harder to see human dignity as the possession of some
rather than others. There is a thoroughly welcome universalism about
this approach. It’s no accident that the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights entitles itself in that way as a matter of promise to
all human subjects, wherever they may be. And yet, there remain
some difficulties here. The history of the twentieth century, including
the late twentieth century after the acceptance of a Universal
Declaration of Human Rights in the UN, is not a history that encourages
you to think that universal acceptance of human dignity is beyond question.
In addition to countless wars, in addition to the development of weapons
of mass destruction, we now also have the reopening of the question
of whether torture is ever permissible. This is a question which many
believed could no longer be raised some twenty years ago. Those remaining
uneven areas of our rights culture should at least make us wonder whether
the foundations on which it was laid were sufficiently secure.
What’s more, the human rights culture as it has developed in a competitive,
increasingly globalized, boundary-free environment where historic communities
are fragmenting is a culture that has rather encouraged the sense that
the most important thing about any human individual is that he or she
has claims which somebody is able to enforce. And that, while an essential
part of a human rights culture within a law-governed society, is of
itself a rather slender basis for the understanding of human dignity.
Within
this environment - an environment which in some ways seems very uncertain
about the limits of human dignity, which in other ways has some hopeful
signs in terms of human rights and yet a lot of unfinished business
– where does the Church stand and what is the priority with which
it works.? The first thing I’d want to say is that if we’re speaking
of rights, the Christian community and the Christian individual need
to stand on their right to attempt to persuade – not a right
to settle questions by fiat: not a right to impose conclusions; but
a right to participate in public debate and try to convince.
About
eighteen months ago, when issues around the legalization of assisted
dying were very much in public debate, some said with feeling and anger,
‘by what right does the Church or any other religious body seek to
impose its understanding on others, to block the freedom of others to
do what they choose?’ And the answer which I tried to give then and
which I’d still give now, is that the Church has no right to
block the freedom of others and no right to dictate its philosophy,
but it has a right to attempt to persuade a voting public, whether
in the general public or in the slightly more rarefied atmosphere of
the House of Lords. I don’t believe that there is any insult to the
freedoms of others implied in that invitation to debate, and if the
Church or the individual fails to persuade and the vote goes the other
way: what then? Then, the Christian individual and community have the
same freedom as anyone else to seek to change the law, to persuade once
again. And what if the law imposes upon the Christian duties, obligations
that are in conflict with conscience? Then of course there arises a
very difficult problem. Christians have historically held to the right
to resist what is believed to be directly against God’s justice: to
disobey, to fail to obey a command - even from a legally appointed superior
– which is in conscience held to be against God’s justice. That
is a liberty the Church has always recognized, and a liberty which most
liberal states likewise recognize because of their valuation of conscience.
When abortion was legalized in this country, provision was made for
the consciences of some. And if society doesn’t grant this, then the
conscientious believer has to be prepared for the possibility of suffering
for conscience. None of that is new. It’s ingrained in that long-standing
tension between the community, the citizenship that is brought into
existence by the act of God in Jesus Christ for the Christian believer,
and the citizenship which belongs to the Christian in virtue of being
here or there at this particular time. It is that inescapable area of
reserve which makes the Christian always a slightly suspect figure in
a society that is looking for unconditional loyalty to anything and
everything it may determine. And I have to remind you that during the
twentieth century it has been of the first importance that there have
been Christians who have lived out of that sense of liberty and reserve,
and so have challenged the worst tyrannies of our time.
If
there really is a right to persuade, or at least to try to persuade,
that means also what might be called a ‘right to be visible’ –
an assumption that we still live in a society, which, however secular
its processes, is still open to the raising of fundamental questions.
From the religious viewpoint a healthy society is one that in order
to foster such debate is not afraid of the public acknowledgement of
and engagement with communities of religious conviction. It’s precisely
what is encoded in the existence of ‘faith schools’ as they are
now so unhelpfully called. The state decides that it can and should
engage with communities of religious conviction, negotiating what it
can do together, insisting on its own legal state supremacy and yet
negotiating with communities of conviction for the expression and dissemination
of their own views. That is a healthy society. To the extent that we
enjoy all of that, in this country, we live in a healthy society. And
one of the signs of slight risk to our social health is the rising presence
in our society of some unease about this: an unease about faith schools;
an unease sometimes expressed about whether it is right for people who
have certain convictions to play a part in government. Against this,
we can only say that the risks of a polity which overrules conscience
or which seeks to ignore communities of conviction in the public sphere
are very high. The coercion of conscience is never a pretty sight and
the exclusion, whether de facto or de jure, of people
with certain convictions from public office is again something for which
the precedents are not particularly happy. But the paradox is, I would
say, that in a healthy society both the believer and the secularist
may find themselves facilitating and defending the conscience of the
other. A healthy society is one in which the believer is prepared to
stand up for the conscience of the secularist as much as the secularist
for the conscience of the believer. Once again, I believe that is where
we largely find ourselves today in this country: to the extent that
this comes under question or criticism, we need to have the argument.
Now,
all of this takes it for granted that our moral perspectives as human
beings, when they are clear and coherent, derive from what some anthropologists
like to call the ‘thick’ textures of common life – that’s to
say from a common life that is many-layered, culturally alive and creative.
Our moral perspectives don’t just derive from abstract civic principles.
Which is why a culture of human rights, without a context in practices
of respect, of traditions of behaviour and so on, can lead to a deeply
individualist atmosphere with a lot of anxiety about litigation and
enforcement. And again you won’t need me to underline that there are
aspects of our society driving in that direction. A society that is
only about individual rights and publicly enforceable contracts
is going to be a thin phenomenon. It’s going to be socially
and morally anaemic, and its capacity for positive and creative mutual
respect for the imagination of the other’s reality is going to be
very diminished. That’s why it is very hard to legislate a neighbourhood
into existence; why it’s hard to create a corporate identity out of
nothing; why it’s extremely difficult to define and legislate for
what we might mean by ‘Britishness’; why it’s very difficult to
sustain commercial life without a solid background of practices of mutual
trust, and so on. A healthy society is one where the culture of human
rights rests upon, is informed by and sometimes challenged by the many-layered,
interactive texture of a society aware of its past, aware of identities
and commitments that are more than just those of public, enforceable
contracts.
Once
again, to speak of this Abbey where we’re meeting: this is the place
where monarchs are crowned and whether you are a monarchist or a republican
or not too sure where you stand on the spectrum between, you will at
least, I hope, recognize that there is a very large question of what
it is in any society that holds together a body of practice and tradition
which can outlive any one political practice or party. And it’s that
wider context - not simply of civil society, but of communities, of
conviction and commitment – that wider reality, in which I believe
the Church along with other religious communities has a distinctive
place in shaping how a society thinks about itself, its health, the
right and wrong ways of change.
So,
moving to a conclusion: as I hinted at the beginning I’m proposing
this evening that rather like science, politics needs to see itself
as one set of practices which human beings are involved in. To take
yet another aphorism in which the word appears: everything is politics,
but politics is not everything. When politics seeks to be everything
- politics in the sense of pure management of our life together, without
history, corporate identity or tradition – it becomes what the National
Anthem describes as knavish. And the consequences for politicians
are just as serious. When politicians are understood to be first and
foremost a professional, political class without a human or cultural
hinterland, without connection with communities of conviction, when
the only thing we need to know about politicians is their absolute neutrality
with respect to any of the specific communities that make up real societies,
I think we end up not only with anaemic politics but anaemic politicians.
The great historian of German culture, Nicholas Boyle of Cambridge,
has spoken of the immense significance in European history of that nineteenth-century
process by which, especially in Germany, a class of professional politicians
was created. If politics is too important to leave to politicians, I
think I’d like also to suggest that politicians are too important
to leave to politics. I would like to see a situation in which our communities
of conviction, particularly our religious communities, actively encouraged
their members much more to enter into political life and responsibility,
simply so that we should go on having three-dimensional persons in public
life. Politicians deserve better than to be abandoned to pure politics.
So,
political identity, the understanding and management of life together,
is an inseparable and necessary part of the identity of a Christian.
And a Christian brings that dimension of politics to the understanding
and management of political life around him or her. Christian discipleship
is formed by that sense of responsibility to God and the other, and
the need to create a form of life together that is transparent to the
justice of God. And that vision, more than any set of principles, or
system of morality, that vision of life together is what the Christian
proposes in society. It may or may not be accepted, but healthy society
accepts the need for a critical friend, able to stimulate and sustain
debate about human dignity, its reality and its limits. Without that,
our politics and politicians are in danger of becoming bloodless. But
to raise those questions is to press a little bit closer to the issue
I hope to be reflecting on tomorrow night: what are the roots, the bases
from which Christian conviction grows? How does the Christian polity,
the Christian citizenship arise historically? And on what grounds might
we take that process of its arising seriously enough to believe still
that it has a place in our society and our intellectual horizons today?
©
Rowan Williams 2008