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THE IMPORTANCE OF "HAVING" THE TRUTH: A critique of Reinhold Niebuhr's fallibilist theory of religious toleration

Kelly Alvin Madden
7,670 words
1 January 2001
Theology Today
517-532
Volume 57, Issue 4; ISSN: 0040-5736
English
Copyright (c) 2001 Bell & Howell Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. Copyright Theology Today Jan 2001

Reinhold Niebuhr's theory of religious toleration based on human fallibility remains popular, particularly because of its apparent connection to the virtue of humility. The reality of pluralism makes uncertainty-if not relativism-especially plausible today. At the scholarly level, several Christian thinkers formed by Niebuhr's thoughtRichard John Neuhaus, Ian Markham, Glenn Tinder, and others-include this theory to various degrees in their work. Both at the intellectual and popular levels of discourse, any other justification for tolerance may have at least a whiff of incivility. In No Offense: Civil Religion and Protestant Taste, John Murray Cuddihy shows that, by the overwhelming weight of evidence, Reinhold Niebuhr's position on tolerance was sociologically driven.1 But Cuddihy does not address the theory on its own merits.
This essay contends that Niebuhr's theory is not tenable, particularly for adherents of orthodox Christian traditions. At issue is not whether Christians and others should tolerate other religious perspectives, much less whether human fallibility necessitates humility and awareness of our sinfulness, our ignorance, the relativity of our positions, or our limitations as finite and fallen creatures. Instead, the question is whether fallibility constitutes a solid basis for tolerance.
The criticisms of this essay are organized around three observations. After outlining Niebuhr's theory, I argue that toleration is based on belief, not fallibility. Next, I show that Niebuhr's theory owes more to the secular liberal understanding of public life than to the Christian tradition. Finally, viewing the issue of toleration from the vantage point of Christian orthodoxy, I point to the more fruitful approach of framing the question in terms of its theological and political issues.
"HAVING, AND NOT HAVING, THE TRUTH"2
"Religion, by whatever name, is the inevitable fruit of the spiritual stature of man; and religious intolerance and pride is the final expression of his sinfulness."3
In the interim between the disclosure and fulfillment of history's meaning, says Niebuhr, we experience "partial realizations" and "positive corruptions" of what history is about. At times, we may approximate the meaning of our existence, but never without the taint of sin. Niebuhr discerns two categories of activity in history: the quest for truth and the "achievement of just and brotherly relations with our fellowmen.114 The two are inextricably linked in the problem of religious toleration.
Religious toleration requires holding two attitudes simultaneously: "The test is twofold and includes both the ability to hold vital convictions which lead to action; and also the capacity to preserve the spirit of forgiveness towards those who offend us by holding to convictions which seem untrue to us."5 The focus of Niebuhr's attention is on the second attitude, while he simply reiterates the necessity of the first. Where he does develop the first attitude, here and elsewhere in his theology, Christian doctrines are heuristic devices, to be held "in principle." They are not to be associated too closely with time-and-space historical reality. Indeed, to identify them with historical events would destroy the creative dialectical tension on which Niebuhr's whole system depends.
The structure of Niebuhr's anthropology gives leverage to his theory of religious toleration. He affirms that the capacity for self-transcendence, the awareness of human finitude and limitations, "makes it impossible to accept our truth as the truth." Because we are self-transcendent, we are challenged to realize that there are "constantly new and higher points of vantage for judging our finite perspectives in the light of a more inclusive truth." At the same time and for the same reason, we realize that there is a ceiling on our capacity for truth. The reality of sin also makes us aware of the "ideological taint" of our position, making it less than the truth and only our truth.6
However, we sometimes fail to appreciate our position and we claim finality for our finite perspectives. In this case, we have a failure in self-transcendence. We are ignorant of our ignorance and of our selfinterest in the truth we claim to possess. We "hold the truth in unrighteousness." There is, however, one attitude that will mitigate the peril, living by what Niebuhr calls "the paradox of grace." In our historical activities, the fulfillment of the meaning of history will be less tainted if we do not claim to be pure. "The test of how well this paradox of the gospel is comprehended, and how genuinely it has entered into human experience is the attitude of Christians toward those who differ from themselves in convictions which seem vital to them. The test, in other words, is to be found in the issue of toleration."7 It comes as no surprise, then, that he claims:
The worst form of intolerance is religious intolerance, in which the particular interests of the contestants hide behind religious absolutes. The worst form of self-assertion is religious self-assertion in which under the guise of contrition before God, He is claimed as the exclusive ally of our contingent self "What goes by the name of 'religion' in the modem world," declares a modem missionary [Henrik Kraemer], "is to a great extent unbridled human selfassertion in religious disguise."
Determining Niebuhr's exact coordinates on many questions is problematic, no less so for this one. Niebuhr's theory of religious toleration takes several forms. In The Nature and Destiny of Man, Niebuhr argues that toleration is only possible if one has uncertainty about the final nature of one's own truth: "Toleration of others requires broken confidence in the finality of our own truth." He also states this in the form of the contrapositive: Toleration is not possible if one is certain about the final nature of one's own truth. So, according to Niebuhr, "no toleration is possible without a measure of provisional scepticism about the truth we hold." Likewise, he says, "The one everlasting truth of the gospel contains the insight that mere men cannot have this truth `remote from all fluctuations due to individuality and existence.' This error is the root of all Inquisitions."9
On this construction, then, toleration is possible if and only if uncertainty exists about our full grasp of the truth. Niebuhr approvingly quotes Charles James Fox: "The only foundation for toleration is a measure of scepticism and without it there can be none." 10 Elsewhere, Niebuhr ties tolerance to the recognition of our sinful state: "Our toleration of truths opposed to those which we confess ... is possible only if we are not too sure of our own virtue."" Niebuhr increasingly emphasized humility as a basis for toleration:
The solution requires a very high form of religious commitment. It demands that each religion, or each version of a single faith, seek to proclaim its highest insights while yet preserving an humble and contrite recognition of the fact that all actual expressions of religious faith are subject to historical contingency and relativity. Such a recognition creates a spirit of tolerance and makes any religious or cultural movement hesitant to claim official validity for its form of religion or to demand an official monopoly for its cult. 12
At other times, he connects tolerance to relativity:
This provisional understanding of the relativity of human knowledge, including the relativity of various interpretations of religious revelation ... is the primary cause of the ability of the Renaissance to meet one of the two tests of the problem of toleration: the willingness to entertain views which oppose our own without rancour and without the effort to suppress them.13
A pluralistic world like our own, indeed any democratic world, requires a certain degree of relativity on some points of moral practice if not on points of moral doctrine. 14
Tolerance for Neibuhr also is dependent on the knowledge of our own need for forgiveness and our ability to forgive others.15
In one instance, he divulges a deeper suspicion that toleration is historically dependent on the dissolution of religious commitment: "It must be admitted that toleration in religion could probably not have been achieved in any modern democratic society had there not been a considerable decay of traditional religious loyalties." 16
"Provisional skepticism," "humility," "broken confidence," a spirit of forgiveness, "relativity," uncertainty about our virtue and certainty of our sinfulness-these are very different concepts. Their connotations concerning truth are wildly divergent. Although we may separate and categorize his arguments, it seems that Niebuhr is not interested in a coherent and systematic rationale for religious toleration. Yet all these concepts function similarly in Niebuhr's theory. They have their origin in his existential dialectic, on the one hand, and their purpose in grounding religious toleration in human fallibility, on the other hand. Each functions to prevent adherents of particular traditions from acting on their "convictions which lead to action" in intolerance.
TOLERATION AND TRUTH "Toleration"
In considering the problems associated with Niebuhr's theory, we must first consider the definition of "toleration." Niebuhr suggests his own when he claims that the test of how well the paradox of grace is apprehended lies in one's attitude: "The real test of toleration is our attitude towards people who oppose truths which seem important to us, and who challenge realms of life and meaning towards which we have a responsible relation." This test is not just about attitude, but must include "the ability to hold vital convictions which lead to action" on the part of tolerators and the tolerated alike. 17
So, toleration requires a difference of religious opinion or practice. It must concern an issue of importance and of moral conviction. The tolerator must also have power over the tolerated but refrain from using that power. Although groups may exert some social pressure on others, this is ultimately a question of political power, the "police power" of the state, since the state has a monopoly on coercion. Finally, toleration must in some sense be considered a good. "To sum up," says Peter Nicholson, "toleration is the virtue of refraining from exercising one's power to interfere with others' opinion or action although that deviates from one's own over something important and although one morally disapproves of it., 18
We see right away something wrong with fallibilist arguments for religious toleration, including Niebuhr's. Toleration is not indifference. On examination, we do not "tolerate" another's belief unless we are convinced that it is wrong. If we are not convinced that our own contradictory belief is true, then we are not really "tolerating" the other's belief. Similarly, if we are convinced that our own contradictory belief is true, then we are not bringing it into question. It is not clear that one can hold vital concerns "which lead to action"-potentially including the action of coercion-while also holding in question those concerns. One might hold other vital concerns (love, pacifism, pragmatic political ethics) that lead to refraining from coercion, but how does the same vital concern lead both to action and to inaction? Our toleration, where it exists, would therefore be based on our convictions concerning how to treat others with differing beliefs, not on uncertainty concerning our belief. Niebuhr does not offer an example of a contested issue to test his theory.
There is, however, another understanding of "toleration." It is a redefinition of standards. Toleration in this case simply means redefining norms to accommodate what some consider deviancy. Although it is often what is popularly meant by tolerance, this is not genuine toleration. Nor is it an accomplishment in a pluralist context, since it depends on effacing differences rather than finding ways to live with our differences without compromising our convictions. Despite his "test of toleration," it is this second definition of toleration that Niebuhr actually promotes. He engages in a classic "bait and switch" move. He holds up the promise of civil harmony with theological integrity. What he delivers is a counterfeit toleration.
True Tolerance
Niebuhr several times acknowledges his game by agreeing with Chesterton's well-known quip: "Toleration is the virtue of people who don't believe anything." 19 Niebuhr apparently concludes that belief must therefore be compromised. Chesterton opted for intolerance and orthodoxy. Both men were mistaken, because the aphorism is false.
J. Budziszewski outlines the case that toleration depends not on doubt, nor skepticism, nor ethical neutralism, but on belief. Contrary to much current thinking, tolerance does not necessitate the suspension of judgment. Judgment is not only compatible with tolerance; true tolerance requires moral conclusions and judgment. Properly understood, tolerance is a matter of knowing when and how to tolerate: "To tolerate at the right time and in the right way is not a failure of moral will, or a forbearance from judgment; it is a perfection of moral will, and an exercise of judgment." Budziszewski also articulates a formula he says is at work behind every action of tolerance: "Evils must be tolerated in just those cases where their suppression would involve equal or greater hindrance to goods of the same order, or any hindrance at all to goods of higher order. More briefly (and less exactly): true tolerance is the protection of ends against means." 20
Budziszewski examines the cases of Christianity, classical utilitarianism, Millian utilitarianism, Rousseauan contractarianism, Lockean contractarianism, and neo-Kantianism. In each, he identifies the same pattern of toleration. Toleration, where it exists, is based on explicit or implicit faith commitments. Tolerance never results from indifference to ends but tolerates evils for the sake of ends.21
The simplest refutation of Niebuhr's theory and validation of Budziszewski's counterclaim is in actual practice. Niebuhr concedes that skepticism has led to intolerance, but the point bears elaboration. Total skepticism, should it exist, would not favor tolerance over intolerance.22 Richard Tuck and Alan Ryan demonstrate historically, first, that toleration is not the necessary result of doubt, and skepticism may lead to intolerance as well as tolerance, depending on the social and political context. Second, toleration based in skepticism has been pragmatic and not more principled than other arguments for toleration. It has been dictated by considerations of public order and peace.23
Human fallibility has hardly constituted the only basis for tolerance in reason or history. Niebuhr himself notes that "sectaries" have often been more instrumental in toleration than either secularists or more mainstream churches. He attributes this to their humility concerning their grasp of the truth and cites Roger Williams as an example.24
The actual influence of Williams in the foundation of religious toleration in the United States is questionable, but his stance on freedom of religion is beyond doubt. His position was not, however, tied to any uncertainty about his own grasp on the truth. By the end of his life, he saw his wife and himself as the only true believers, and he had his doubts about her. His advocacy of toleration was based on a fanatically separationist view of the relationship between church and state.
Sectarian groups are almost always formed out of the conviction that other groups are not as accurate in their grasp of the truth as they themselves are. In general, they argue for widespread tolerance either because they believe coercion in matters of religious conviction and practice is unethical by the standards of their own religious tradition, or for pragmatic reasons.
Where toleration and uncertainty are bound together, it is often the case that Niebuhr's cause and effect are inverted. Religious groups are born from the conviction of their unique status relative to the truth but practice tolerance as a political necessity in a pluralistic society. The psychological dissonance involved in this posture constantly pushes them to question their own exclusive claims to truth. Tolerance may cause uncertainty at least as often as the reverse, and as Cuddihy demonstrates, this was true in Niebuhr's own life story.25
In reality, other motives for toleration have been multiple. They have included a popular desire for peace after long sectarian conflict, a religious group's foresight concerning the consequences should their present position of political strength be lost, or an understanding of history that anticipates the damage done to the true faith when the state advances its cause. The most important case for religious freedom in this century, Dignitatis humanae (Vatican II) and the writings of John Courtney Murray, argues for freedom from coercion in religious thought and practice based on human dignity.26 Niebuhr himself once claimed that secular banishment of religion from public life was sometimes the only practical solution to the problem of sectarian strife.27 Politically pragmatic arguments for religious toleration played a strong role in the history of religious toleration in the writing of the First Amendment. Moreover, Niebuhr's is not the only theory seen in history or reason that tries to build a basis for tolerance in a rational foundation having universal pretensions.
More Dubious History
These are not the only historical problems in Niebuhr's theory. The instances he cites as the best examples of basing tolerance in fallibilism actually qualify as toleration only in our second sense: accommodating what some consider deviancy. He points to a handful of men who supposedly display a genuine toleration based on fallibility concerning our grasp of truth. In fact, each man is asking his opponents to view their convictions as uncertain because he does not agree with their theological positions.
John Saltmarsh, says Niebuhr, exemplified the proper ideal of tolerance when he wrote, "Let us not ... assume any power of infallibility to each other;... for another's evidence is as dark to me as mine to him ... till the Lord enlighten us both for discerning alike."28 But Samuel Rutherford accurately accused Saltmarsh of teaching, among other things, antinomianism, universalism, and "that every creature is God, or a substantial part of God."29 His tolerance was actually the refusal to draw lines.
Niebuhr quotes Oliver Cromwell as one who addresses the issue of conflicting religious absolutes with the charge "By the bowels of Christ, remember that you may be mistaken."30 Assessing this and other documents, however, David Smith says:
In one respect, Cromwell seems to have been unusual. Most puritans assumed that God's 'elect' were contained within the particular church [denomination] to which they belonged-a belief which discouraged toleration of others, who were assumed to be among the 'reprobate'. By contrast, Cromwell thought that the 'elect' were divided among the different churches on earth, and that if these scattered fragments could only be brought together, then a united, godly commonwealth would emerge.31
John Milton is the "most distinguished of all champions of toleration" for Niebuhr, with a tolerance "superbly expressed" in Areopagitica.32 Yet Milton was widely perceived as an Arian, and as Niebuhr acknowledges, his thought was a synthesis of Christian and non-Christian humanist sources. Milton's openness to learn from other sources may be laudable--plundering the Egyptians, in Origen's analogy-but to use Milton as an example begs the question. His "convictions leading to action" pushed him toward openness, not rejection. Where he had convictions leading to action in intolerance, he was intolerant, notably of atheism and Roman Catholicism.
In each case, these men were opposed to the dominant position on the issues in controversy. The fallibility in question was their opponents'. Whatever we may think of their theology, the "toleration" they desired was on behalf of their own positions.
A Logical Problem
Niebuhr positions his theory above the particularity of any form of Christianity or secularism. He wants an argument for toleration that will appeal to any actor in public life, regardless of one's particular faith commitment. But beyond its historical inaccuracies, Niebuhr's theory based on fallibility does not ground religious toleration as a logical imperative of the existential epistemology he offers.
Before continuing, I should emphasize what Niebuhr is not saying here and what I am not refuting. In "Having, and Not Having, the Truth" and elsewhere, Niebuhr is not just saying that every perspective is limited, that we all have something to learn from others, and that humility should make us cautious about using the weapons of the state to enforce our convictions. Few would disagree with this pragmatic openness. The question is always at what point one must practically take a position. Where does one draw the line between having, and not having, the truth? It is part of Niebuhr's prophetic role to blur such lines, to undermine the spiritual pride that can accompany any formulation of the truth. To this extent, he serves all who are on the path. But Niebuhr is saying that toleration is always on the "not-having-the-truth" side of the line. Because of our finite condition, we cannot and should not take any truth as "final." The implications are not only that none of us has the whole truth, as it were, but, that none of the truth we have is whole.
The importance of this distinction cannot be overstated. In order to prevent the possibility of drawing a clear line at some point, Niebuhr would logically have to deny the possibility of any final truth. And indeed, he goes this far, though he will have to retreat later.33 With respect to any conviction that could possibly lead to intolerance, Niebuhr wants to make uncertainty absolute. This of course presents a logical problem. If all truths are incomplete, then so is the affirmation "All truths are incomplete." It would appear that Niebuhr's principle is self-referentially contradictory. If no truth we have is final, then Niebuhr's dialectic itself is undermined. If no truth can be held with unassailable conviction, then the "paradox of grace" is only provisionally true. "Any principle which explains the corruption of all knowledge explains the corruption of no knowledge," notes Edward Carnell, "for it has already corrupted itself."34
Niebuhr has anticipated the objection and addresses the issue in a long footnote. Rifling through Paul Tillich's work, he plucks out an argument designed to elevate his existential epistemology and its conclusions above the fray. Tillich's theory says that the truth about knowledge cannot be true of knowledge about knowledge itself, "otherwise it would cease to have universal significance." The truth about knowledge itself must be universal in application. But, on the other hand, to make an exception for this one bit of knowledge (about knowledge) does indeed undermine the entire premise of the existential dialectic. What to do? The answer, says Tillich, is to elevate this judgment about the relationship of that which is conditioned to "the Unconditioned," out of the subjective realm of existence, out of the context of knowledge itself. It must stand in formal status above the context of existence. As such, it cannot take any form of expression in the realm of existence. Niebuhr then identifies this conclusion with his own statements defining the essence of human transcendence as our ability to see our finiteness and of sin as the refusal to admit that finiteness.35
We need not even tackle Tillich to see that this argument does not work. Even if Tillich's formulation were sound, as Carnell notes, there is a huge difference between Tillich's formal proposition and the material inferences Niebuhr draws from it. The only conclusion to be drawn is the formal proposition "All truth is relative." We are not able to move from this to the inference that "the paradox of grace" is the only adequate expression of the relation between time and eternity.36 Just the opposite. Niebuhr does not seem to see that Tillich's theory, even if true, specifically negates the kinds of logical conclusions Niebuhr wants to draw concerning the absolute theological necessity of tolerance. Tillich even rejects our ability to formulate the conclusion of his own theory propositionally: "This judgment is plainly the absolute judgment which is independent of all its forms of expression, even of the one by which it is expressed here."37 Niebuhr's system gives him no Archimedean point for defending tolerance over intolerance, justice over injustice, good over evil.38
"Humility"
Niebuhr's emphasis on humility concerning our apprehension of the truth may be the most weighty formulation of his theory of tolerance, since it is apparently based in a Christian virtue. His observations concerning pride are indeed a sober warning. Spiritual pride holds a place of special contempt, we note, in the preaching of Jesus in the gospels. Humility enjoys a corresponding position of divine blessing. The severity of this judgment also increases relative to one's power over others.39 Niebuhr is surely correct in his cautions concerning the dangers of pride in public issues. We must never identify God's will with our theological and political agenda.
Yet in the classics of the spiritual life, humility is a function of one's grasp, not an abstraction of the human condition, but of truth, as expressed in God's revealed law-in Scripture and also in nature, human and nonhuman. It is in "having the truth," a real and growing appreciation of how far one falls short of God's demands, that human pride is punctured and humility instilled. Especially in the Reformed tradition to which Niebuhr ostensibly belongs, the very purpose of the moral law is to humble humanity and to bring it into an awareness of its sinful state and need for salvation.40
Humility is not, however, achieved by acclamation, and something other than humility may be at work in fallibilist argumentation. In some instances, Michael Polanyi points out, "the emphatic admission of our fallibility only serves to reaffirm our claim to a fictitious standard of intellectual integrity and to bring out the shining qualities of our open mind, in contrast to the hidebound attitude of those who openly profess their beliefs as their final personal commitment."41 The plea for humility may actually mask the demand that believers surrender their own commitments in the name of an unidentified, superceding public morality.
Genuine humility should not force a tradition to view its commitments objectively, as simply "its form of religion" or "its cult," as in Niebuhr's solution. Stanley Hauerwas remarks, "From many Jewish and Catholic perspectives . . . such an account of humility appears to be asking them to understand their convictions in terms laid down by Protestant liberal theology... Humility... becomes an extraordinary weapon to still debate by Niebuhrians. Anyone who challenges the fundamental structure of their assumptions automatically becomes `authoritarian."' Niebuhr might "praise democracy's capacity to sustain conflict, but in effect the conflict democracy allows is well policed. Nowhere is that more evident than in the exclusion from the politics of democracy of any religious convictions that are not `humble."' 42
Niebuhr's system assumes a privileged position epistemologically. Part of his project is to commend Christianity, or his version of it, to its cultured despisers. To the modem mind, religious intolerance-the Crusades, the Inquisition, Servetus, and all that-is a primary cause of Christianity's implausibility. Niebuhr is commending Christianity here by holding up a dialectic he thinks they can or do accept and Christianity as the best interpretation of that universally acceptable dialectic and the best solution "in principle" for the problem of intolerance. Christianity is a useful tool of social justice.43 Like all rationales for toleration, Niebuhr's aims to convince the widest possible number of hearers on behalf of the widest possible number of people needing toleration. But if toleration is always based on belief, as this essay contends, and Niebuhr has eliminated the convictions of orthodox Christianity, then on what beliefs) is his toleration based?
TOLERANCE AND THE LIBERAL TRADITION
Niebuhr's theory of religious toleration displays a greater commitment to a secularized understanding of the liberal tradition than to the Christian tradition. Its argument is a staple of Enlightenment argumentation for toleration.44 It almost always demonstrates indifference or hostility to the contested alternatives of faith or practice. Although Niebuhr says that tolerance is not indifference, there is a good deal of orthodox theology about which he is indifferent. Secular liberalism sometimes attempts to force us to check our "comprehensive" or tradition-based standards at the door to the public square. Niebuhr is trying to convince us to leave them at home, but he follows the same line of reasoning.
Niebuhr presents a view of individuals and communities as free to choose and to bracket their conclusions with regard to other individuals and communities. While we have some discretion in the application of our commitments, communities of faith and their members are not "unencumbered" as they make their way in the world. We do not choose the dictates of conscience. We cannot simultaneously indwell truth received from authority outside the self and also choose autonomously what we will regard as true. Only late in the game did he recognize that the Catholic Church, for example, could not simply adopt his view of toleration:
Since the Church lives by these claims [concerning truth and the mediation of grace] and wins the obedience of the faithful by their power, it is useless to seek an accommodation on this issue. One must simply be grateful that in the modem world no one forces us to accept the Catholic faith, and be appreciative of the spirit of charity and the wisdom of pragmatic adjustment to the new culture which the Church generates in spite of claims which logically would lead to fanaticism.45
Although Niebuhr underlines the relevance of Christian redemption for modem society and sees the second coming and the resurrection of the body as "symbols" of redemption in social history, the church as described in the New Testament has little place in his thought. William Wolf suggests that for Niebuhr "some elements in the Renaissance and modem secularism have been `hidden churches' in emancipating man from ecclesiastical sinfulness."46
Niebuhr's modem and unencumbered view of the self is due in large part to his existential epistemology. In his early writing, he frequently distinguishes his theology from the absence of transcendence in theological liberalism. His own treatment of divine transcendence, however, is almost exclusively in terms of individual experience. Niebuhr claims no authority for his observations and recognizes no ultimate authority apart from personal encounter with God.47
Ronald Stone also notes Niebuhr's affinity for James Madison's federalist vision of public life?48 Madison wanted a strong federal government as a means of offsetting the potentially destabilizing power of "factions" with a more centralized balance of power. Michael Sandel has traced the historical development of federal centralization and its cost to other communities, including communities of discourse.49 Niebuhr is sympathetic to this configuration of power. In spite of his efforts to apply theology to public life, Niebuhr's work actually helped to undermine the church's prophetic calling. His first three books were on "religion," viewed as a necessary component of civilization and public life. This utilitarian view of religion lends itself to the classical liberal political position. Here the church's social mission is not the transformation of the social order into conformity with the biblical vision of freedom, justice, community, and peace. Niebuhrian realism instead limits its mission to the religious support of a secular liberal agenda and its understanding of freedom and justice.50
Sandel has shown that the liberal ideal of religious liberty in recent Supreme Court rulings does not give the same protection to believers as unbelievers. This formulation does not comprehend the difference between choices based in personal discretion, on the one hand, and those based in tradition, grace, or authority on the other.51 It does not even see choices based in the latter framework as free choices and therefore does not see them as authentic.52 Sandel notes that the priority of the right over the good comes from a vision of the self as unencumbered by any choices it does not make for itself. In this vision, the self is that which makes associations rather than being made by them. Encumbered selves therefore do not enjoy the same status. The strongest encumbrances are religious since, in the understanding of several religious traditions, we do not choose God, God chooses us. As Kenneth Craycraft observes, the Court "has assumed that state 'neutrality' toward religion is essential to protecting all selves, but the only selves they recognize as legitimate are 'unencumbered' ones, those who impugn the legitimacy of religious truth that 'imposes' itself upon the mind or soul."53 The unencumbered self, says Sandel, "is denied ... the possibility of membership in any community bound by moral ties antecedent to choice; he cannot belong to any community where the self itself could be at stake."54 The Court favors nonreligion or secularism to religion.
MURRAY AND DISTINCTIONS
Religious toleration as defined above moves between the boundaries of the theological, the social/ethical, and the political. It deals with truth and error, with behavior towards co-religionists and religious opponents, and with the coercive power of the state. Many arguments for religious toleration fail to distinguish between these questions. In previous eras, theologians simply declared, "Error has no rights," forgetting that humans do have rights. Others pleaded that the wheat and the tares must be left to grow up together, ignoring the question of the state's responsibility for order and justice. Secularists, on the other hand, have often rejected any relationship between theology and public life and, in the extreme, have acted as if good and evil have equal footing before the law.
Niebuhr commits a similar confusion of categories. He assumes that unless belief in the finality of any truth in the theological realm is suspended, spiritual pride will translate immediately into coercion. The most important problem with this aspect of his theory may be that it ignores entirely the distinctions between church, society, and state.
In an obvious allusion to Niebuhr, John Courtney Murray criticizes the methodology of "ambiguists." The basic error of the ambiguists is their undifferentiated structure of morality. Issues of public policy can only be stated in terms of "paradox" fraught with "dilemmas" and forever caught in an inextricable mix of "creative and destructive possibilities" for the ambiguists. This is because, according to Murray, they equate public and private morality: "In point of sheer method there is no reason why the ambiguist should not make use of a conceptual scheme to guide his analysis of political fact, and to furnish the terms for his statement of moral issues, and to determine the style of his theory in favor of his solutions. Every moralist does this."55
Reinhold Niebuhr is probably best known for his ethics of "Christian realism." He often criticized those who tried to construct public policy from the raw material of the Sermon on the Mount and emphasized the inevitability of coercion. But as Murray notes, while the moral ambiguists easily dispense of the fundamentalists and the secular liberal views for their utopianisms, they are equally one-dimensional in their definition of human nature.56 Niebuhr tries to ground toleration solely in the theological dimension, his understanding of human nature; his existential dialectic is the only adequate foundation for toleration.
Toleration focuses primarily on individuals and religious communities and only marginally on the power they have over others through the state. It does not ask by what right groups have such control over the state. Yet in the final analysis, the free exercise of religion is a juridical question. Only the state has the power to coerce. Religious liberty is immunity from coercion. (Simply framing the question as an issue of "liberty" rather than "toleration" moves the focus more clearly into the political realm.) A more adequate treatment than Niebuhr gives would have to ask how such immunity, along with positive empowerment, can be secured in the political realm.57 For Niebuhr, the issues involved in the transition from "tolerance" to "liberty" are not even on the horizon.
Murray, however, has clearly defined the ends involved in this move. First, what the church requires from the state is freedom.58 Second, Murray's concept of human dignity provides a principle of freedom at the level of personal confession and private practice of diverse or dissenting religious convictions. It is a violation of human dignity to force any individual to subscribe to a creed with which he or she does not agree.
At the level of the public practice of religion and its social implications, however, things become more complicated. Following through on the conclusion of the first section, above-that religious toleration/liberty is based in belief-how should Christian communities justify toleration? How do we justify tolerating public manifestations of beliefs we believe to be false and harmful to civic life, assuming these manifestations do not undermine public order? "Human dignity" cannot be given free reign to function as an autonomous principle if there is any danger of compromising our theological convictions concerning human rights and duties before God.
Murray here affirms two things concerning human sociality. First, the human person is "the subject, foundation, and end of the entire social life." But second, the person exists in the presence of God, and the juridical order flowing from human nature cannot be separated from the moral order before God any more than the person can be divided. It is through some grasp of this understanding of human nature that societies have come increasingly to recognize all people as free and equal.59
In the event of any reading of "human dignity" in Murray that could be used to justify the public celebration of falsehood, we can turn instead to another facet, Murray's constant emphasis on the virtue of wisdom in jurisprudence. The historical and the political are never the realm of the ideal. In view of the historical situation and our need for peace and unity, however thin the basis, it is indeed best to allow "as much freedom as possible, as much coercion as necessary."60 The purpose of the state is in no small measure concerned with the compromises of our fallen existence.
To the extent that it appeals to what all people everywhere should be able to understand, the justification of religious liberty I can take from Murray has the possibility for a widespread consensus. It does not pretend to appeal to every actual rationality. To the extent that it recognizes the real odds for such a consensus in a pluralist society, it is simply another modus vivendi accommodation. Whatever the political consequences for Christians of various stripes, a limited reading of human dignity has more theological integrity than an expansive understanding that will inevitably drift from any mooring in natural or revealed theology.61 For Christians, the principle of religious liberty for beliefs and practices we oppose morally should find its justification in our desire to protect what we value as much or more: a context of civil peace, the removal of stumbling blocks to belief, our convictions about the dangers of establishment to church and state alike, the communal integrity of the church, and many other concerns. The arguments for religious liberty we advance in public may not be identical, and there is no hypocrisy in seeking consensus in this way. Though we should not hide our theologically based justifications, we cannot expect others to accept or even understand them. We must not, however, betray our public convictions by underwriting a secular version of the liberal tradition.
Inasmuch as religious toleration relates to our apprehension of the truth, it depends not on skepticism, doubt, "humility," or any suspension of our faith commitments, but on belief. Toleration, where it exists, always depends on "having," rather than "not having, the truth."
Kelly Alvin Madden is an analyst with the International Ministries of Campus Crusade for Christ.
Footnotes:
John Murray Cuddihy, No Offense: Civil Religion and Protestant Taste (New York: Seabury, 1978), 25-47.
2This is the title of Chapter 8 in Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nature and Destiny of Man: A Christian Interpretation, vol. 2: Human Destiny (New York: Scribner's, 1943), 213-43 (hereafter, ND2).
3Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nature and Destiny of Man: A Christian Interpretation, vol. 1: Human Nature (New York: Scribner's, 1941), 203 (hereafter, NDI).
4ND2, 213. SIbid., 219. 6Ibid., 214.
71bid., 215, 213, 219. 8NDI, 200-1. 9ND2, 243,239, 222. i*Ibid., 239 n. 25. "Ibid., 243.
12Reinhold Niebuhr, The Children of Light and the Children of Light and the Children of Darkness: A indication of Democracy and a Critique of Its Traditional Defense (New York: Scribner's, 1944), 134-5 (emphasis added).
13ND2, 236.
14Reinhold Niebuhr, Essays in Applied Christianity, ed. D. B. Robertson (New York: Meridian, 1959), 236.
15ND2, 219.
16Niebuhr, Children of Light, 30.
17ND2, 238, 219.
"Peter P Nicholson, "Toleration as a Moral Ideal," in Aspects of Toleration: Philosophical Studies, ed. John Horton and Susan Mendus (New York: Methuan, 1985), 159-62.
19See especially Niebuhr, Children of Light, 130 and Reinhold Niebuhr, An Interpretation of Christian Ethics (New York: Seabury, 1935), 139.
20J. Budziszewski, True Tolerance: Liberalism and the Necessity of Judgment (New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1992), 269.
2TIbid., 226. 221bid., 10.
23Richard Tuck, "Scepticism and Toleration in the Seventeenth Century" and Alan Ryan, "A More Tolerant Hobbes?" in Justifying Toleration: Conceptual and Historical Perspectives, ed. Susan Mendus (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 8, 21-60.
24ND2,235 IL 18.
2ihy, No Offense, 25-47.
2,Tdm Cod bray Religious LIberty: Catholic Struggkes wi* Pun, ed J. .Law Hooper (: John Kw;1993).
rrN, Children of Light, 136-7.
2sCited in ND2, 236.
29A. L. Morton, The World of the Ranters: Religious Radicalism in the English Revolution (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1970), 59; cf. 45-69.
3ND2, 239 n. 25.
3'David L. Smith, Oliver Cromwell: Politics and Religion in the English Revolution, 1640-1658 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991), 58.
32ND2, 233,235.
33"All human knowledge is tainted with an 'ideological' taint. It pretends to be more true than it is. It is finite knowledge, gained from a particular perspective; but it pretends to be final and ultimate knowledge" (NDI, 194).
34Edward John Carnell, The Theology of Reinhold Niebuhr (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1951), 239.
35ND2, 217-8, referring to Paul Tillich, The Interpretation of History (New York: Scribner, 1936), 169, 170.
6arnell, Theology of Niebuhr, 240.
37Tillich, Interpretation of History, 170 (emphasis added). 38Carnell, Theology of Niebuhr, 241.
39See, for example, Matt 5:1-12; 18:23-25; Luke 7:41-43; 18:9-14.
4For example, John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion II.ii. 11; II.vii.3.
4'Michael Polanyi, Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962), 271.
42Stanley Hauerwas, "The Democratic Policing of Christianity," Pro Ecclesia 3 (1994), 227, 229.
43 See ND2, 220.
44"What is toleration? It is a necessary consequence of our being human. We all are products of frailty: fallible, and prone to error. So let us mutually pardon each other's follies. This is the first principle of the law of nature, the first principle of all human rights" (Voltaire, quoted in Karl Popper, "Toleration and Intellectual Responsibility," in On Toleration, ed. Susan Mendus and David Edwards [Oxford: Clarendon, 1987], 18).
45 Reinhold Niebuhr, "A Plea for Tolerance," Atlantic Monthly 210 (August 1961), 76. William John Wolf, "Reinhold Niebuhr's Doctrine of Man," in Reinhold Niebuhr: His Religious, Social, and Political Thought, ed. Charles W. Kegley and Robert W. Bretall (New York: Macmillan, 1956), 248-9.
"See Gustave Weigel, "Authority in Theology," in Reinhold Niebuhr: His Religious, Social, and Political Thought, 2:368-77.
"Ronald H. Stone, Reinhold Niebuhr: Prophet to Politicians (Washington, DC: University Press of America, 1981), 167.
49See Michael J. Sandel, "The Political Theory of the Procedural Republic," in Reinhold Niebuhr Today, ed. Richard John Neuhaus (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1989), 27-32 and Democracy's Discontent: America in Search of a Public Philosophy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996).
5*Gary J. Dorrien, "Communitarianism, Christian Realism, and the Crisis of Progressive Christianity," Cross Currents 47 (1997), 364-78. See also George J. Williamson, "A Niebuhrian Critique of Niebuhrian Thought," Andover Newton Quarterly 15 (1975), 182-95.
5'Michael Sandel, "Freedom of Conscience or Freedom of Conscience or Freedom of Choice?" in Articles of Faith, Articles of Peace, ed. James Davison Hunter and Os Guinness (Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1990), 74-92.
52See the reference to the work of Charles Taylor in Kenneth R. Craycraft Jr., The American Myth of Religious Freedom (Dallas: Spence Publishing, 1999), 4.
53 Ibid., 5-6.
5Michael Sandel, "Procedural Republic and Unencumbered Self," Political Theory 12 (1984), 87. See also Susan Mendus, Toleration and the Limits of Liberalism (Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1989).
55John Courtney Murray, We Hold These Truths: Catholic Reflections on the American Proposition (New York: Sheed & Ward, 1960), 282.
561bid., 285.
5?On the transition from toleration to respect for the person, see Susan Mendus, ed., Justifying Toleration: Conceptual and Historical Perspectives (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988) and John Courtney Murray, Religious Liberty: Catholic Struggles with Pluralism, ed. J. Leon Hooper (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox, 1993), 229-44.
581bid., 212. Murray suggests that other Christian communities use the same rationale as the Catholic Church (see John Courtney Murray, "Religious Liberty and Development of Doctrine," The Catholic World 204 [1967], 281).
59Murray, Religious Liberty, 238-9. Murray states here that he is building on something begun by Pius XII and John XXIII.
60"Let there be as much freedom, personal and social, as is possible; let there be only as much coercion and constraint, personal or social, as may be necessary for public order" (ibid., 145; see also 239).
6'Witness this drift, in spite of the authors' intentions, in Robert N. Bellah et al., Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life (New York: Harper & Row, 1985), 142.

 

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