[1] On the first page of Meilaender's book, The Way that Leads
There, he dedicates the work to Jonathan, Charlotte, Miriam, and
Veronika, and just beneath their names he offers a quotation from
Augustine-Ibi vacabinums et videbimus, videbimus et amabimus,
amabimus et laudabimus[1]--"We shall be still and see,
shall see and love, shall love and praise." These lines
guide Meilaender's work though the pages that follow-particularly
the work of seeing rightly. The quotation comes from
Augustine's City of God, and this vision of a life lived towards
God determines Augustine's--and Meilaender's--view of the virtuous
life. That is to say, it describes "the way that leads
there."
[2] In his preface Meilaender makes his affection for this
Augustinian perspective clear, identifying Augustine as his ongoing
"conversation partner" (rather than the object of historical
analysis). "When I ask myself what it is about Augustine that
makes him seem so apt a conversation partner," he notes, "I usually
conclude that it is his ability to 'worry' about things." And
then, quoting Roger Rosenblatt, Meilaender suggests that the best
teaching is "being overheard as one worries aloud about a
subject."[2] And "if that is the
criterion" says Meilaender, "Augustine seems to me to get high
marks as a teacher. The reader is also invited to be
still and see, as Meilaender, assuming the role of the teacher,
"worries" too, alongside his conversation partner Augustine, about
"some questions that never go away."[3]
[3] But this conversational approach to writing-this "worrying"
out loud as it were--is more than just a good pedagogical
idea. As Meilaender draws more and more people into the
conversation-theologians both living and dead-he expands his
worrying into a kind of round table discussion that transcends the
bounds of history. Serving as both host and moderator
Meilaender appropriates Augustine's wisdom on how to handle
disagreement. "We should, Augustine thinks, love our own
opinion…not because it is our own, but because it is
true. And if we love it for that reason, we should love any
other true opinion for the very same reason"-a lesson, Meilaender
suggests, "that if taken to heart will make us less possessive
about our views."
[4] But this kind of 'listening in' does not alone give
Meilaender's method its importance. Rather it is that
his 'method' is, itself, an expression of the intermingling of the
two realms, or, as Meilaender prefers to describe it, the two
cities. "We should anticipate and expect that in the
institutions of any society the two cities-formed by their
contrasting loves will be inextricably intermingled," Meilaender
explains. "That anticipation may in fact help us achieve a
certain political wisdom."[4] We learn neither to
expect too much of the civil realm, nor to fear the discord of
competing convictions.
[5] But just how these two cities (and the two loves associated
with them) are to be properly intertwined in our everyday choices
becomes for Meilaender the overarching question that shapes this
book. And by his conversational "method," which unreservedly
finds its ground in God and employs the language of the Christian
tradition, Meilaender provides us with a demonstration of the kind
of intermingling that is the object of his study. .
[6] Indeed, this mixing of the two cities is inevitable
according to Meilaender, given our human need for some ground of
meaning. He demonstrates this by drawing on an example from
Rawls, who succeeds in employing the very "comprehensive doctrines"
that he simultaneously rejects as inappropriate to public
discourse.[5] In a footnote that
Meilaender describes as "ad hoc and (unwittingly) laden with
normative commitments," Rawls reveals his personal convictions
regarding a woman's right to choose.[6] Meilaender observes
that "those who profess neutrality often turn out to be intensely
committed to views that rely on deeper metaphysical or normative
commitments."[7] Thus it is an illusion
to think that the separation of the "inner" and "outer" person can
successfully produce an integrated self capable of decision, or
that we can, by such an arrangement avoid
confrontation.
[7] In his discussion of the Church, Meilaender makes his
position on the intermingling of the two cities
clear. Ultimate convictions cannot and should not be repressed
in the face of pluralism. The Church, he writes, "bears
witness precisely by entering with its own distinctive language
into public argument and debate."[8] And as part
of that Church, Meilaender does just that in this book, which
invites his readers into a distinctively Christian conversation
even as it is itself a part of the public discourse. The Way
That Leads There is an expression of Meilaender's own Christian
identity-an outward expression of his inward (ultimate)
faith. And so his method thereby demonstrates what this
intermingling of the two cities looks like in a given
instance.
[8] But life has many dimensions, and in all of them this
intermingling exists. Worrying it out remains a complicated
business. Meilaender relies on Augustine and his other
conversation partners to help him, working his way through desire,
duty, politics, sex, and grief. One wonders if these are
perhaps the loci for a Christian ethics class. The book would
I think make a good text for a class already conversant in the
Christian tradition.
[9] And, given Meilaender's service on the President's Council
for Bioethics, one cannot help but notice that the book also
addresses many of the underlying issues associated with our modern
moral complexities. His juxtaposition of discussions on sex
and grief raise interesting possibilities. In the matter of
sex, he "corrects" Augustine's singular emphasis on the good of
procreation, arguing that it emerges from a distorted view of the
person that takes rationality, but not relationality, into
account. With Augustine's insistence that sex
rightly aims at procreation, it is not far-fetched for us to fall
into viewing children as products, Meilaender suggests.[9] It is a recognition of the (also
ultimate) 'unitive' good in human sexuality, predicated on the
presupposition that we are relational beings, that provides the
barrier to in vitro fertilization. At the same time however,
this full recognition of the unitive good suggests that not every
instance of sex need aim at the birth of children. But,
Meilaender writes, "The implications of such a correction of
Augustine's understanding go far beyond a consideration of
contraception alone. Indeed, correcting Augustine in this way
is necessary if we are to make sense of the deepest reasons for
concern about new reproductive technologies."[10] Meilaender does not pursue
this in depth here, though it seems likely that one reason for his
"worrying" over the proper mingling of the cities-of the right
relationship between our ultimate and penultimate concerns-is the
result of his work on the President's Council. For
there he must try to see these matters rightly beginning with his
(ultimate) Christian convictions, and then considering the
questions from within the (penultimate) context of a very public
discourse that speaks for the 'state'.
[10] This is a fascinating, probing, and well-informed
book. A pleasure to read, I found it pulled me
into the conversation that Meilaender was leading. It seems to
me a deeply personal book as well. Like Augustine his teacher,
Meilaender combines his theologizing and his faith. Identities
sometimes blur as ideas are extrapolated and examined in the
contemporary context. But Meilaender's method employs conversation
rather than careful historical description. And it is this
conversation that we are invited to join. Besides, as
Augustine (and Meileander) say-the truth is simply the
truth. True ideas belong to no one in particular; and this
book is a treasure trove of true ideas to be enjoyed by pilgrims
along The Way That Leads There.
© March 2008
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 8, Issue 3