Christianity and Liberty
by
George
H.
Smith
An atheist is rarely asked to write an essay on “religion’s
positive role in society,” but it is fitting that this request came from
the Acton Institute. Lord Acton (1834-1902) was a Catholic, a classical liberal,
and a great historian who devoted his life to the history of liberty.
Acton always stressed this important truth: No one group
or movement, religious or secular, deserves exclusive credit for the theory
and evolution of free institutions. All historians should avoid the unpardonable
sin of “making history into the proof of their theories.” Instead,
the historian should try “to do the best he can for the other side, and
to avoid pertinacity or emphasis on his own.”
Acton is one of my intellectual heroes, and I hope this essay
does justice to his memory. Using some of Acton’s brilliant insights, I
shall briefly discuss some of the important contributions that Christianity
has made to the cause of liberty. Ironically, Acton’s Catholicism and my
atheism give us something in common. In Protestant countries, Catholics and
atheists were often lumped together and branded as subversive minorities whose
doctrines, if permitted to circulate freely, would jeopardize the core values
of a free society.
This “dark myth” was especially popular in seventeenth-century
England, where it found adherents even among some of liberalism’s most
distinguished founding fathers. John Locke, for example, argued that religious
liberty is a “natural right” that should be enjoyed by everyone–except
Catholics and atheists. The doctrines of these minorities, Locke believed, are
incompatible with the moral foundations of a free society (though for different
reasons), so they should be legally suppressed.
Acton attacked this dark myth in two ways. First, he identified
minority rights as a defining characteristic of a free society: “The
most certain test by which we judge whether a country is really free is the
amount of security enjoyed by minorities.” Second, according to Acton,
the history of liberty is inextricably linked to the history of minorities:
“At all times sincere friends of freedom have been rare, and its triumphs
have been due to minorities, that have prevailed by associating themselves
with auxiliaries whose objects often differed from their own.…”
This brings us to Christianity’s first major contribution
to liberty. The early Christians, a despised and sometimes persecuted minority,
fashioned a pro-freedom philosophy that (in Acton’s words) “was really
subversive of the fundamental institutions of the Roman Empire.”
Early Christians–those “enemies of mankind,”
as Tacitus called them – confronted a variety of allegations, including
incest, cannibalism, atheism, and sedition. Christian apologists (from the Greek,
meaning “speech for the defense”) successfully refuted these charges,
and they repeatedly affirmed the loyalty of Christians to the state. But this
was a troublesome issue because Christian obedience was always conditional.
The apologist Origen put the matter well. The Christian will
“never consent to obey the laws of sin.” His first allegiance is to
“the law of nature, that is, the law of God.” The Christian will submit
to secular punishment rather than transgress a divine law.
Moreover, Origen believed that Christians should refuse military
service. Rather than fight Rome’s battles, they should pray for victory.
Even this is ambiguous, however. Christians should pray “on behalf of those
who are fighting in a righteous cause, and for the king who reigns righteously.…”
Whether Rome was always on the side of righteousness, Origen does not say.
Some radical apologists developed a “conquest theory”
of the state in an effort to delegitimize the Roman Empire. Tertullian argued
that “all secular power and dignities are not merely alien from, but hostile
to, God.” Secular governments “owe their existences to the sword.”
All institutions of the Roman government, even its charities, are based on brute
force. This is contrary to the way of Christians, among whom “everything
is voluntary.”
Similarly, Minucius Felix believed that the Romans had acquired
power by “capturing, raping, and enslaving their victims.” John Chrysostom
contrasted the use of force with the Christian community, where “the wrongdoer
must be corrected not by force, but by persuasion.”
The apologists established important precedents that were
cited frequently by later Christian thinkers. The Stoic doctrine of a “higher
law” became a cornerstone of the Christian theory of justice and a formidable
barrier to tyranny and the rise of the absolute state. The theory of a just
war, as discussed by Origen, Tertullian, and other apologists, was also influential.
For example, Hugo Grotius frequently cited the apologists in On the Law of
War and Peace (1625), a seminal work on international law.
Another precedent was set by those apologists who argued
for religious liberty ( “natural right,” as Tertullian called it).
Sebastian Castellio, a contemporary critic of Calvin, collected these pro-toleration
quotations in a book that became a landmark in the Protestant movement for religious
liberty.
Christian critiques of the Roman Empire became less common
after Constantine issued the Edict of Milan (313), which established religious
liberty as a fundamental principle of public law. Before long, Constantine was
bestowing special favors on the Christian Church. His Christian successors continued
this policy until Theodosius revoked the Edict of Milan during his despotic
reign (379-95). This emperor established orthodox Christianity as the official
religion, outlawed pagan worship and rituals, and decreed severe penalties for
heresy.
Thus did a church born in opposition to the state become
its friend and ally. Lord Acton commented:
“Christianity, which in earlier times had addressed itself to the masses,
and relied on the principle of liberty, now made its appeal to the rulers,
and threw its mighty influence into the scale of authority.”
Even after the church abandoned the principle of liberty,
it sometimes functioned as a protective buffer between the state and the people.
“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the
things that are God’s” – these words of Jesus suggested a sphere
in which the church reigns supreme, a sphere immune to state power.
Ambrose, Bishop of Milan from 340-97, fiercely defended this
principle. No friend of religious liberty, Ambrose nevertheless believed in
the independence of the church: “Palaces belong to the emperors, churches
to the priesthood.” He also believed that the church could call secular
rulers to account. “Thou art a man,” said Ambrose to Theodosius after
this despot had ordered a brutal massacre in Thessalonica. Threatened with excommunication,
Theodosius submitted to Ambrose’s demand for public penance. As this astonishing
story was recalled in later centuries, it did more to limit state power than
volumes of theory.
The case of Ambrose illustrates a central theme in Acton’s
history of liberty. For centuries after the fall of the western Roman Empire,
the church was the only institution with the authority to challenge the power
of feudal lords, monarchs, and emperors. Church and state contended for power,
and if either had achieved total victory, “all Europe would have sunk down
under a Byzantine or Muscovite despotism.”
According to Acton, neither church nor state favored liberty,
but, while competing for allies, they granted various immunities and privileges
to towns, parliaments, universities, guilds, and other corporations. Eventually
these institutions were able to resist the power of both church and state –
and so there evolved a decentralized system of power unknown to the ancient
world and the East. Institutional barriers to arbitrary and absolute power,
long advocated in theory, now existed in fact. Individual liberty was a happy
by-product of this system.
The conflict between church and state also inspired theories
with radical implications. For example, during the eleventh century, Pope Gregory
VII challenged the power of Emperor Henry IV and other secular rulers during
the “Investiture struggle.” In The Dictatus Papae, Gregory
decreed that the pope “may depose Emperors” and “may absolve
subjects of unjust men from their fealty.”
This right of revolution was limited, because it applied
only to secular rulers, not to the pope himself who (as Gregory put it) “may
be judged by no one.” Nevertheless, the seed had been planted, and it began
to grow immediately. Manegold of Lautenbach, while defending Gregory’s
claim of papal supremacy, compares the secular ruler to a swineherd who has
been employed for a specific purpose. If this swineherd exceeds his delegated
authority, he should be dismissed “ignominiously from his task.”
The ruler, Manegold argues, has a compact with his subjects
to “defend them from the tyranny and unrighteousness of others.” When
rulers betray this trust, “no fidelity or reverence ought to be paid them.”
Tyrants lose all their “authority and dignity” and should not be obeyed.
This type of social contract theory would bear fruit in later
centuries. After the Reformation, both Catholics and Protestants developed their
own theories of revolution. Around 1640, Sir Robert Filmer (who would later
achieve fame as a target for John Locke) complained that the principles of absolute
monarchy were under attack from two camps – radical Catholics and radical
Protestants. As Filmier put it: “Monarchy hath been crucified, as it were,
between two thieves. …”
Filmer’s complaint became a major theme for Thomas Hobbes,
a champion of absolute monarchy, who devoted over half of Leviathan (1651)
to attacking the traditional ideas and institutions of Christianity. Throughout
history, as Hobbes correctly noted, this religion had stubbornly resisted the
absolute state in theory and in practice. Churches and other institutions that
stood between the individual and the state were like “worms in the entrails
of a natural man.” Hobbes knew his enemy well.
In conclusion, I would like to reinforce a point I made earlier.
Throughout history, the love of liberty has transcended religious controversies.
This is good news indeed. If an atheist who values liberty meets a Christian
who values liberty, this common ground gives them a reason to value each other.
George H. Smith is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute
for Humane Studies, and resides in southern California. He is the author of
two books, Atheism: The Case Against God, and Atheism: Ayn Rand and
other Heresies.