First Things
The Revenge of Conscience
J. Budziszewski
Copyright (c) 1998 First
Things 84 (June/July 1998): 21-27.
Things are getting worse very quickly now. The list of what we are required
to approve is growing ever longer. Consider just the domain of sexual practice.
First we were to approve sex before marriage, then without marriage, now
against marriage. First with one, then with a series, now with a crowd.
First with the other sex, then with the same. First between adults, then
between children, then between adults and children. The last item has not
been added yet, but will be soon: you can tell from the change in language,
just as you can tell the approach of winter from the change in the color
of leaves. As any sin passes through its stages from temptation, to toleration,
to approval, its name is first euphemized, then avoided, then forgotten.
A colleague tells me that some of his fellow legal scholars call child
molestation "intergenerational intimacy": that’s euphemism. A
good-hearted editor tried to talk me out of using the term "sodomy":
that’s avoidance. My students don’t know the word "fornication"
at all: that’s forgetfulness.
The pattern is repeated in the house of death. First we were to approve
of killing unborn babies, then babies in process of birth; next came newborns
with physical defects, now newborns in perfect health. Nobel-prize laureate
James Watson proposes that parents of newborns be granted a grace period
during which they may have their babies killed, and in 1994 a committee
of the American Medical Association proposed harvesting organs from some
sick babies even before they die. First we were to approve of suicide,
then to approve of assisting it. Now we are to approve of a requirement
to assist it, for, as Ernest van den Haag has argued, it is "unwarranted"
for doctors not to kill patients who seek death. First we were to approve
of killing the sick and unconscious, then of killing the conscious and
consenting. Now we are to approve of killing the conscious and protesting,
for in the United States, doctors starved and dehydrated stroke patient
Marjorie Nighbert to death despite her pleading "I’m hungry,"
"I’m thirsty," "Please feed me," and "I want food."
Such cases are only to be expected when food and water are now often classified
as optional treatments rather than humane care; we have not long to go
before joining the Netherlands, where involuntary euthanasia is common.
Dutch physician and author Bert Keizer has described his response when
a nursing home resident choked on her food: he shot her full of morphine
and waited for her to die. Such a deed by a doctor in the land that resisted
the Nazis.
Why do things get worse so fast? Of course we have names for the process,
like "collapse," "decay," and "slippery slope."
By conjuring images—a stricken house, a gangrenous limb, a sliding talus—they
make us feel we understand. Now, I am no enemy to word-pictures, but a
civilization is not really a house, a limb, or a heap of rocks; it cannot
literally fall in, rot, or skid out from underfoot. Images can only illustrate
an explanation; they cannot substitute for one. So why do things get worse
so fast? It would be well to know, in case the process can be arrested.
The usual explanation is that conscience is weakened by neglect. Once
a wrong is done, the next wrong comes more easily. On this view conscience
is mainly a restraint, a resistance, a passive barrier. It doesn’t so much
drive us on as hold us back, and when persistently attacked, the restraining
wall gets thinner and thinner and finally disappears. Often this explanation
is combined with another: that conscience comes from culture, that it is
built up in us from outside. In this view the heart is malleable. We don’t
clearly know what is right and wrong, and when our teachers change the
lessons, our consciences change their contents. What once we deemed wrong,
we deem right; what once we deemed right, we deem wrong.
There is something to these explanations, but neither can account for
the sheer dynamism of wickedness—for the fact that we aren’t gently wafted
into the abyss but violently propel ourselves into it. Nor, as I will show,
can either one account for the peculiar quality of our present moral confusion.
I suggest a different explanation. Conscience is not a passive barrier
but an active force; though it can hold us back, it can also drive us on.
Moreover, conscience comes not from without but from within: though culture
can trim the fringes, the core cannot be changed. The reason things get
worse so fast must somehow lie not in the weakness of conscience but in
its strength, not in its shapelessness but in its shape.
II
Whether paradoxical or not, the view of conscience I defend is nothing
new; its roots are ancient. In one of the tragedies of Sophocles, the woman
Antigone seeks to give her dead brother a proper burial, but is forbidden
by the king because her brother was an enemy of the state. She replies
to the tyrant that there is another law higher than the state’s, and that
she will follow it because of its divine authority. Not even the king may
require anyone to violate it. Moreover, it requires not only forbearance
from evil but active pursuit of the good: in this case, doing the honors
for her brother.
Antigone’s claim that this higher law has divine authority can easily
be misunderstood, because the Greeks did not have a tradition of verbal
revelation. The mythical hero Perseus had never climbed any Mount Sinai;
the fabled god Zeus had never announced any Ten Commandments. So, although
the law of which Antigone speaks somehow has divine authority, she has
not learned it by reading something like a Bible, with moral rules delivered
by the gods. Nor is she merely voicing the customs of the tribe—at least
not if we are to believe Aristotle, who seems a safer authority on the
Greeks than our contemporary skeptics. Instead she seems to be speaking
of principles that everyone with a normal mind knows by means of conscience.
She seems to be speaking of a law written on the heart—of what philosophers
would later call the natural law.
Now by contrast with the pagan Greeks, Jews and Christians do have a
tradition of verbal revelation. Moses did climb the mountain, God did announce
the commandments. One might think, then, that Jews and Christians wouldn’t
have a natural law tradition because they wouldn’t need it. But just the
opposite is true. The idea of a law written on the heart is far stronger
and more consistent among Jews, and especially Christians, than it was
among the pagans. In fact, the very phrase "law written on the heart"
is biblical; it comes from the New Testament book of Romans. Judaism calls
the natural law the Noahide Commandments because of a rabbinic legend that
God had given certain general rules to all the descendants of Noah—that
is, all human beings—long before he made His special covenant with the
descendants of Abraham. In similar fashion, Christianity distinguishes
between "general revelation," which every human being receives,
and "special revelation," which is transmitted by witnesses and
recorded only in the Bible. General revelation makes us aware of God’s
existence and requirements so that we can’t help knowing that we have a
problem with sin. Special revelation goes further by telling us how to
solve that problem.
The natural law is unconsciously presupposed—even when consciously denied—by
modern secular thinkers, too. We can see the presupposition at work whenever
we listen in on ethical debate. Consider, for example, the secular ethic
of utilitarianism, which holds that the morally right action is always
the one that brings about the greatest possible total happiness. Arguments
against utilitarianism by other secularists often proceed by showing that
the doctrine yields conclusions contrary to our most deeply held moral
intuitions. For instance, it isn’t hard to imagine circumstances in which
murdering an innocent man might make all the others much happier than they
were before. Utilitarianism, seeking the greatest possible total happiness,
would require us to murder the fellow; nevertheless we don’t, because we
perceive that murder is plain wrong. So instead of discarding the man,
we discard the theory. Here is the point: such an argument against utilitarianism
stakes everything on a pre-philosophical intuition about the heinousness
of murder. Unless there is a law written on the heart, it is hard to imagine
where this intuition comes from.
The best short summary of the traditional, natural law understanding
of conscience was given by Thomas Aquinas when he said that the core principles
of the moral law are the same for all "both as to rectitude and as
to knowledge"—in other words, that they are not only right for all
but known to all. Nor is it true, as some suppose, that he was referring
only to such formal principles as "good is to be done," for he
speaks for the greater part of the tradition when he expressly includes
such precepts as "Honor thy father and thy mother," "Thou
shalt not kill," and "Thou shalt not steal." These, he says,
are matters which "the natural reason of every man, of its own accord
and at once, judges to be done or not to be done." To be sure, not
every moral principle is part of the core, but all moral principles are
at least derived from it, if not by pure deduction (killing is wrong and
poison kills, so poisoning is wrong), then with the help of prudence (wrongdoers
should be punished, but the appropriate punishment depends on circumstances).
Our knowledge of derived principles such as "Rise up before the hoary
head" may be weakened by neglect and erased by culture, but our knowledge
of the core principles is ineffaceable. These are the laws we can’t not
know.
Ranged against this view are two others. One simply denies that the
core principles are right for all; the other admits they are right for
all, but denies they are known to all. The former, of course, is relativism.
I call the latter mere moral realism—with emphasis on "mere"
because natural law is realistic, too, but more so.
Not much need be said here about relativism. It is not an explanation
of our decline, but a symptom of it. The reason it cannot be an explanation
is that it finds nothing to explain. To the question "Why do things
get worse so fast?" it can only return "They don’t get worse,
only different."
Mere moral realism is a much more plausible opponent, because by admitting
the moral law it acknowledges the problem. Things are getting worse quickly—plainly
because there isn’t anything we "can’t not know." Everything
in conscience can be weakened by neglect and erased by culture. Now if
mere moral realists are right, then although the problem of moral decline
may begin in volition, it dwells in cognition: it may begin as a defect
of will, but ends as a defect of knowledge. We may have started by neglecting
what we knew, but we have now gone so far that we really don’t know it
any more. What is the result? That our contemporary ignorance of right
and wrong is genuine. We really don’t know the truth, but we are honestly
searching for it—trying to see on a foggy night—doing the best that we
can. In a sense, we are blameless for our deeds, for we don’t know any
better.
All this sounds persuasive, yet it is precisely what the older tradition,
the natural law tradition, denies. We do know better; we are not doing
the best we can. The problem of moral decline is volitional, not cognitive;
it has little to do with knowledge. By and large we do know right from
wrong, but wish we didn’t. We only make believe we are searching for truth—so
that we can do wrong, condone wrong, or suppress our remorse for having
done wrong in the past.
If the traditional view is true, then our decline is owed not to moral
ignorance but to moral suppression. We aren’t untutored, but "in denial."
We don’t lack moral knowledge; we hold it down.
III
Offhand it seems as though believing in a law we "can’t not know"
would make it harder, not easier, to explain why things are so quickly
getting worse. If the moral law really is carved on the heart, wouldn’t
it be hard to ignore? On the other hand, if it is merely penciled in as
the mere moral realists say—well!
But this is merely picture thinking again. Carving and penciling are
but metaphors, and more than metaphors are necessary to show why the suppression
of conscience is more violent and explosive than its mere weakening would
be. First let us consider a few facts that ought to arouse our suspicion—facts
about the precise kind of moral confusion we suffer, or say we suffer.
Consider this tissue of contradictions: Most who call abortion wrong
call it killing. Most who call it killing say it kills a baby. Most who
call it killing a baby decline to prohibit it altogether. Most who decline
to prohibit it think it should be restricted. More and more people favor
restrictions. Yet greater and greater numbers of people have had or have
been involved in abortions.
Or this one: Most adults are worried about teenage sex. Yet rather than
telling kids to wait until marriage, most tell kids to wait until they
are "older," as we are. Most say that premarital sex between
consenting adults is a normal expression of natural desires. Yet hardly
any are comfortable telling anyone, especially their own children, how
many people they have slept with themselves.
Or this one: Accessories to suicide often write about the act; they
produce page after page to show why it is right. Yet a large part of what
they write about is guilt. Author George E. Delury, jailed for poisoning
and suffocating his wife, says in his written account of the affair that
his guilt feelings were so strong they were "almost physical."
As to the first example, if abortion kills a baby then it ought to be
banned to everyone; why allow it? But if it doesn’t kill a baby it is hard
to see why we should be uneasy about it at all; why restrict it? We restrict
what we allow because we know it is wrong but don’t want to give it up;
we feed our hearts scraps in hopes of hushing them, as cooks quiet their
kitchen puppies.
As to the second example, sexual promiscuity has exactly the same bad
consequences among adults as it has among teenagers. But if it is just
an innocent pleasure, then why not talk it up? Swinging is no longer a
novelty; the sexual revolution is now gray with age. If shame persists,
the only possible explanation is that guilt persists as well.
The third example speaks for itself. Delury calls the very strength
of his feelings a proof that they did not express "moral" guilt,
merely the "dissonance" resulting from violation of an instinctual
block inherited from our primate ancestors. We might paraphrase his theory,
"the stronger the guilt, the less it matters."
Clearly, whatever our problem may be, it isn’t that conscience is weak.
We may be confused, but we aren’t confused that way. It isn’t that we don’t
know the truth, but that we tell ourselves something different.
IV
If the law written on the heart can be repressed, then we cannot count
on it to restrain us from doing wrong; that much is obvious. I have made
the more paradoxical claim that repressing it hurls us into further wrong.
Holding conscience down doesn’t deprive it of its force; it merely distorts
and redirects that force. We are speaking of something less like the erosion
of an earthen dike so that it fails to hold the water back, than like the
compression of a powerful spring so that it buckles to the side.
Here is how it works. Guilt, guilty knowledge, and guilty feelings are
not the same thing; men and women can have the knowledge without the feelings,
and they can have the feelings without the fact. Even when suppressed,
however, the knowledge of guilt always produces certain objective needs,
which make their own demand for satisfaction irrespective of the state
of the feelings. These needs include confession, atonement, reconciliation,
and justification.
Now when guilt is acknowledged, the guilty deed can be repented so that
these four needs can be genuinely satisfied. But when the guilty knowledge
is suppressed, they can only be displaced. That is what generates the impulse
to further wrong. Taking the four needs one by one, let’s see how this
happens.
The need to confess arises from transgression against what we know,
at some level, to be truth. I have already commented on the tendency of
accessories to suicide to write about their acts. Besides George Delury,
who killed his wife, we may mention Timothy E. Quill, who prescribed lethal
pills for his patient, and Andrew Solomon, who participated in the death
of his mother. Solomon, for instance, writes in the New Yorker that
"the act of speaking or writing about your involvement is, inevitably,
a plea for absolution." Many readers will remember the full-page signature
advertisements feminists took out in the early days of the abortion movement,
telling the world that they had killed their own unborn children. At first
it seems baffling that the sacrament of confession can be inverted to serve
the ends of advocacy. Only by recognizing the power of suppressed conscience
can this paradox be understood.
The need to atone arises from the knowledge of a debt that must somehow
be paid. One would think such knowledge would always lead directly to repentance,
but the counselors whom I have interviewed tell a different story. One
woman learned during her pregnancy that her husband had been unfaithful
to her. He wanted the child, so to punish him for betrayal she had an abortion.
The trauma of killing was even greater than the trauma of his treachery,
because this time she was to blame. What was her response? She aborted
the next child, too; in her words, "I wanted to be able to hate myself
more for what I did to the first baby." By trying to atone without
repenting, she was driven to repeat the sin.
The need for reconciliation arises from the fact that guilt cuts us
off from God and man. Without repentance, intimacy must be simulated precisely
by sharing with others in the guilty act. Leo Tolstoy knew this. In Anna
Karenina there comes a time when the lovers’ mutual guiltiness is their
only remaining bond. But the phenomenon is hardly restricted to cases of
marital infidelity. Andrew Solomon says that he, his brothers, and his
father are united by the "weird legacy" of their implication
in his mother’s death, and quotes a nurse who participated in her own mother’s
death as telling him, "I know some people will have trouble with my
saying this but it was the most intimate time I’ve ever had with anyone."
Herbert Hendin comments in a book on the Dutch affair with euthanasia,
"The feeling that participation in death permits an intimacy that
they are otherwise unable to achieve permeates euthanasia stories and draws
patients and doctors to euthanasia." And no wonder. Violation of a
basic human bond is so terrible that the burdened conscience must instantly
establish an abnormal one to compensate; the very gravity of the transgression
invests the new bond with a sense of profound significance. Naturally some
will find it attractive.
The reconciliation need has a public dimension, too. Isolated from the
community of moral judgment, transgressors strive to gather a substitute
around themselves. They don’t sin privately; they recruit. The more ambitious
among them go further. Refusing to go to the mountain, they require the
mountain to come to them: society must be transformed so that it no longer
stands in awful judgment. So it is that they change the laws, infiltrate
the schools, and create intrusive social-welfare bureaucracies.
Finally we come to the need for justification, which requires more detailed
attention. Unhooked from justice, justification becomes rationalization,
which is a more dangerous game than it seems. The problem is that the ordinances
written on the heart all hang together. They depend on each other in such
a way that we cannot suppress one except by rearranging all the others.
A few cases will be sufficient to show how this happens.
Consider sexual promiscuity. The official line is that modern people
don’t take sex outside marriage seriously any longer; mere moral realists
say this is because we no longer realize the wrong of it. I maintain that
we do know it is wrong but pretend that we don’t. Of course one must be
careful to distinguish between the core laws of sex, the ones we can’t
not know, and the derived ones, which we can not know. For example, though
true and reasonable, the superiority of monogamous to polygamous marriage
is probably not part of the core. On the other hand, no human society has
ever held that the sexual powers may be exercised by anyone with anyone,
and the recognized norm is a durable and culturally protected covenant
between man and woman with the intention of procreation. Casual shack-ups
and one-night stands don’t qualify.
Because we can’t not know that sex belongs with marriage, when we separate
them we cover our guilty knowledge with rationalizations. In any particular
culture, particular rationalizations may be just as strongly protected
as marriage; the difference is that while the rationalizations vary from
culture to culture, the core does not. At least in our culture, such sexual
self-deceptions are more common among women than men. I don’t think this
is because the female conscience is stronger (or weaker) than the male.
However, sex outside marriage exposes the woman to greater risk, so whereas
the man must fool only his conscience, she must fool both her conscience
and her self-interest. If she does insist on doing wrong, she has twice
as much reason to rationalize.
One common rationalization is to say "No" while acting "Yes"
in order to tell oneself afterward "I didn’t go along." William
Gairdner reports that according to one rape crisis counselor, many of the
women who call her do so not to report that they have been raped, but to
ask whether they were raped. If they have to ask, of course, they probably
haven’t been; they are merely dealing with their ambivalence by throwing
the blame for their decisions on their partners. But this is a serious
matter. Denial leads to the further wrong of false witness.
Another tactic is inventing private definitions of marriage. Quite a
few people "think of themselves as married" although they have
no covenant at all; some even fortify the delusion with "moving-in
ceremonies" featuring happy words without promises. Unfortunately,
people who "think of themselves as married" not only refuse the
obligations of real marriage but demand all of its cultural privileges;
because rationalization is so much work, they require other people to support
them in it. Such demands make the cultural protection of real marriage
more difficult.
Yet another ruse is to admit that sex belongs with marriage but to fudge
the nature of the connection. By this reasoning I tell myself that sex
is okay because I am going to marry my partner, because I want my partner
to marry me, or because I have to find out if we could be happy married.
An even more dangerous fudge is to divide the form of marriage from its
substance—to say "we don’t need promises because we’re in love."
The implication, of course, is that those who do need promises love impurely;
that those who don’t marry are more truly married than those who do.
This last rationalization is even more difficult to maintain than most.
Love, after all, is a permanent and unqualified commitment to the true
good of the other person, and the native tongue of commitment is precisely
promises. To work, therefore, this ruse requires another: having deceived
oneself about the nature of marriage, one must now deceive oneself about
the nature of love. The usual way of doing so is to mix up love with the
romantic feelings that characteristically accompany it, and call them "intimacy."
If only we have these feelings, we tell ourselves, we may have sex. That
is to say, we may have sex—if we feel like it.
Here is where things really become interesting, because if the criterion
of being as-good-as-married is sexual feelings, then obviously nobody who
has sexual feelings may be prevented from marrying. So homosexuals must
also be able to "marry"; their unions, too, should have cultural
protection. At this point suppressed conscience strikes another blow, reminding
us that marriage is linked with procreation. But now we are in a box. We
cannot say "therefore homosexuals cannot marry," because that
would strike against the whole teetering structure of rationalizations.
Therefore we decree that having been made marriageable, homosexuals must
be made procreative; the barren field must seem to bloom. There is, after
all, artificial insemination. And there is adoption. So it comes to pass
that children are given as a right to those from whom they were once protected
as a duty. The normalization of perversion is complete.
V
When ordinary rationalization fails, people revert to other modes of
suppression. We often see this when an unmarried young woman becomes pregnant.
Suddenly her conscience discovers itself; though she was not ashamed to
lift her skirts, she is suddenly ashamed to show her swelling belly. What
can she do? Well, she can have an abortion; she can revert to the mode
of suppression called "getting rid of the evidence." Once again
conscience multiplies transgressions. But she finds that the new transgression
is no solution to the old one; in fact now she has something even more
difficult to rationalize.
Think what is necessary to justify abortion. Because we can’t not know
that it is wrong to deliberately kill human beings, there are only four
options. We must deny that the act is deliberate, deny that it kills, deny
that its victims are human, or deny that wrong must not be done. The last
option is literally nonsense. That something must not be done is what it
means for it to be wrong; to deny that wrong may not be done is merely
to say "wrong is not wrong," or "what must not be done may
be done." The first option is hardly promising either. Abortion does
not just happen; it must be performed. Its proponents not only admit there
is a "choice," they boast of it. As to the second option, if
it was ever promising, it is no longer. Millions of women have viewed sonograms
of their babies kicking, sucking their thumbs, and turning somersaults;
whatever these little ones are, they are busily alive. Even most feminists
have given up calling the baby a "blood clot" or describing abortion
as the "extraction of menses."
The only option even barely left is number three: to deny the humanity
of the victims. It is at this point that the machinery slips out of control.
For the only way to make option three work is to ignore biological nature,
which tells us that from conception onward the child is as human as you
or me (does anyone imagine that a dog is growing in there?)—and invent
another criterion of humanity, one that makes it a matter of degree. Some
of us must turn out more human, others less. This is a dicey business even
for abortionists. It hardly needs to be said that no one has been able
to come up with a criterion that makes babies in the womb less human but
leaves everyone else as he was; the teeth of the moral gears are too finely
set for that.
Consider, for instance, the criteria of "personhood" and "deliberative
rationality." According to the former, one is more or less human according
to whether he is more or less a person; according to the latter, he is
more or less a person according to whether he is more or less able to act
with mature and thoughtful purpose. Unborn babies turn out to be killable
because they cannot act maturely; they are less than fully persons, and
so less than fully human. In fact, they must be killed when the interests
of those who are more fully human require it. Therefore, not only may their
mothers abort, but it would be wrong to stop the mothers from doing so.
But look where else this drives us. Doesn’t maturity also fall short among
children, teenagers, and many adults? Then aren’t they also less than fully
persons—and if less than fully persons, then less than fully humans? Clearly
so, hence they too must yield to the interests of the more fully human;
all that remains is to sort us all out. No, the progression is too extreme!
People are not that logical! Ah, but they are more logical than they know;
they are only logical slowly. The implication they do not grasp today they
may grasp in thirty years; if they do not grasp it even then, their children
will. It is happening already. Look around.
So conscience has its revenge. We can’t not know the preciousness of
human life—therefore, if we tell ourselves that humanity is a matter of
degree, we can’t help holding those who are more human more precious than
those who are less. The urge to justify abortion drives us inexorably to
a system of moral castes more pitiless than anything the East has devised.
Of course we can fiddle with the grading criteria: consciousness, self-awareness,
and contribution to society have been proposed; racial purity has been
tried. No such tinkering avails to change the character of our deeds. If
we will a caste system, then we shall have one; if we will that some shall
have their way, then in time there shall be a nobility of Those Who Have
Their Way. All that our fiddling with the criteria achieves is a rearrangement
of the castes.
Need we wonder why, then, having started on our babies, we now want
to kill our grandparents? Sin ramifies. It is fertile, fissiparous, and
parasitic, always in search of new kingdoms to corrupt. It breeds. But
just as a virus cannot reproduce except by commandeering the machinery
of a cell, sin cannot reproduce except by taking over the machinery of
conscience. Not a gear, not a wheel is destroyed, but they are all set
turning in different directions than their wont. Evil must rationalize,
and that is its weakness. But it can, and that is its strength.
VI
We’ve seen that although conscience works in everyone, it doesn’t restrain
everyone. In all of us some of the time, in some of us all of the time,
its fearsome energy merely "multiplies transgressions." Bent
backwards by denial, it is more likely to catalyze moral collapse than
hold it back.
But conscience is not the only expression of the natural law in human
nature. Thomas Aquinas defined law as a form of discipline that compels
through fear of punishment. In the case of human law, punishment means
suffering the civil consequences of violation; in the case of natural law
it means suffering the natural consequences of violation. If I cut myself,
I bleed. If I get drunk, I have a hangover. If I sleep with many women,
I lose the power to care for anyone, and sow pregnancies, pain, and suspicion.
Unfortunately, the disciplinary effect of natural consequences is diminished
in at least two ways. These two diminishers are the main reason why the
discipline takes so long, so that the best that can be hoped for in most
cultures is a pendulum swing between moral laxity and moral strictness.
The first diminisher is a simple time lag: not every consequence of
violating the natural law strikes immediately. Some results make themselves
felt only after several generations, and by that time people are so deeply
sunk in denial that even more pain is necessary to bring them to their
senses. A good example of a long-term consequence is the increase of venereal
disease. When I was a boy we all knew about syphilis and gonorrhea, but
because of penicillin they were supposed to be on the way out. Today the
two horrors are becoming antibiotic-resistant, and AIDS, herpes, chlamydia,
genital warts, human papilloma virus, and more than a dozen other sexually
transmitted diseases, most of them formerly rare, are ravaging the population.
Other long-term consequences of violating the laws of sex are poverty,
because single women have no one to help them raise their children; crime,
because boys grow into adolescence without a father’s influence; and child
abuse, because although spouses tend to greet babies with joy, live-ins
tend to greet them with jealousy and resentment. Each generation is less
able to maintain families than the one before. Truly the iniquities of
the fathers—and mothers—are visited upon the children and the children’s
children to the third and fourth generation.
The second diminisher comes from us: "Dreaming of systems so perfect
that no one will need to be good," we exert our ingenuity to escape
from the natural consequences of breaking the natural law. Not all social
practices have this effect. For instance, threatening drunk drivers with
legal penalties supplements the discipline of natural consequences rather
than undermining it. Nor is the effect always intended. We don’t devise
social insurance programs in order to encourage improvidence, though they
do have this result. It isn’t even always wrong. It would be abominable
to refuse treatment to a lifelong smoker with emphysema, even though he
may have been buoyed in his habit by the confidence that the doctors would
save him. But to act with the purpose of compensating for immorality
is always wrong, as when we set up secondary school clinics to dispense
pills and condoms to teenagers.
Here is an axiom: We cannot alter human nature, physical, emotional,
or spiritual. A corollary is that no matter how cleverly devised, our contrivances
never do succeed in canceling out the natural consequences of breaking
the natural law. At best they delay them, and for several reasons they
can even make them worse. In the first place they alter incentives: People
with ready access to pills and condoms see less reason to be abstinent.
In the second place they encourage wishful thinking: Most people grossly
exaggerate their effectiveness in preventing disease and pregnancy and
completely ignore the risks. In the third place they reverse the force
of example: Before long the practice of abstinence erodes even among people
who don’t take precautions. Finally they transform thought: Members of
the contraceptive culture think liberty from the natural consequences of
their decisions is somehow owed to them.
There comes a time when even the law shares their view. In Planned
Parenthood v. Casey, which reauthorized the private use of lethal violence
against life in the womb, the Supreme Court admitted that its original
abortion ruling might have been wrong, but upheld it anyway. As it explained,
"For two decades of economic and social developments, people have
organized their intimate relationships and made choices that define their
views of themselves and their places in society in reliance on the availability
of abortion in the event that contraception should fail. . . . An entire
generation has come of age free to assume [this] concept of liberty."
To put the thought more simply, what we did has separated sex from responsibility
for resulting life for so long that to change the rules on people now would
be unfair.
Naught avails; our efforts to thwart the law of natural consequences
merely make the penalty more crushing when it comes. The only question
is whether our culture will be able to survive the return stroke of the
piston.
To survive what is bearing down on us, we must learn four hard lessons:
to acknowledge the natural law as a true and universal morality; to be
on guard against our own attempts to overwrite it with new laws that are
really rationalizations for wrong; to fear the natural consequences of
its violation, recognizing their inexorability; and to forbear from all
further attempts to compensate for immorality, returning on the path that
brought us to this place.
Unfortunately, the condition of human beings since before recorded history
is that we don’t want to learn hard lessons. We would rather remain in
denial. What power can break through such a barrier?
The only Power that ever has. Thomas Aquinas writes that when a nation
suffers tyranny, those who enthroned the tyrant may first try to remove
him, then call upon the emperor for help. When these human means fail,
they should consider their sins and pray. We are now so thoroughly under
the tyranny of our vices that it would be difficult for us to recognize
an external tyrant at all. By our own hands we enthroned them: our strength
no longer suffices for their removal: they have suspended the senate of
right reason and the assembly of the virtues: the emperor, our will, is
held hostage: and it is time to pray.
Nothing new can be written on the heart, but nothing needs to be; all
we need is the grace of God to see what is already there. We don’t want
to read the letters, because they burn; but they do burn, so at last we
must read them. This is why the nation can repent. This is why the plague
can be arrested. This is why the culture of death can be redeemed. "For
I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before thee . . . a broken
and contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise."
J. Buziszewski is Associate Professor of Government and Philosophy at
the University of Texas and author of Written on the Heart: The Case
for Natural Law (InterVarsity). An earlier version of this article
was published in William D. Gairdner, ed., After Liberalism (Stoddart).
This article provided by First Things Journal.
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