[1] Though I disagree thoroughly with the thrust of Mark Noll's
recent editorial in The Christian Century, there is one
important comfort I derive from it. That comes from the fact
that the essay confirms one of my deeply held beliefs: one
can share with fellow Christians the core of Christian faith and
morals and yet disagree sharply on matters of public policy.
That may seem a banal observation but it is not. It is often
the case that those liberal in theology are liberal in politics
while those conservative in theology are conservative in
politics. Indeed, that is the rule rather than the
exception. But such a correlation brings forth a deep
suspicion that it is politics that is swaying the theology rather
than vice versa. Agreement in politics leads to agreement on
theology, which tends to make theology the handmaiden of politics
in a way that robs theology of its integrity.
[2] Rather, I believe that Christians who share orthodox beliefs
can disagree on politics because there are a number of judgments
one makes as one moves step by step from core beliefs to public
policy options. Each step involves differences in social
ethical principles and their ordering, in political philosophy, and
in how one interprets the present situation. As they move
from the center to public policy, Christians of good will and
intelligence can and do often disagree. Though there are
indeed limits to our tolerance of each other with regard to
political options, we need not make penultimate judgments into
ultimate ones.
[3] Mark Noll is a historian of North American religion of great
intelligence and enormous good will. He is one of the most
gracious persons I know. I respect him deeply as a Christian
and as a scholar. Yet, I arrive at very different conclusions about
voting matters than Noll. (A disturbing thought pops into my
mind that the reader may believe that our difference of opinion
follows from my being a person neither of intelligence nor good
will. But we will not let such a dark thought prevent us from
plunging forward.) So, with all due respect, I would like to
suggest that Mark has reached the wrong conclusions.
[4] First, I think he has reached a mistaken decision not to
vote. (I'm secretly happy that he is not voting because if he
were I think he would vote Democratic.) It seems that he
expects far too much of politics in general and political parties
in particular. I vote for a party because its philosophy and
its proposals go in roughly the same direction as my political
convictions, not because its platform or policies make
comprehensive proposals to address my "particular combination of
issues." Noll expects the parties and their candidates to see
and act upon "the political coherence of this combination of
convictions," which is decidedly his combination of
convictions.
[5] This requirement seems unduly demanding, almost naively
so. Noll demands that a party's proposals fit his very
specific combination of high expectations. But if one
elaborates such a set of expectations high enough, one would never
vote, and it seems that he has reached that impasse. He seems
to ignore the fact that to be effective candidates must get elected
and that parties must field candidates who can. Some of his
expectations-a Marshall Plan for the inner cities, an even more
progressive income tax than we have-seem so infeasible that it
would mean political death for candidates seriously to propose
them. The Clinton administration proposed a comprehensive
health plan whose sharp rejection shook it so severely that it
never proposed anything so bold again. That debacle was
a factor in the Republican victories of 1994.
[6] Perhaps Noll's real quarrel is with the American people, who
set the limits within which the parties and their candidates must
operate. But if that is so, wouldn't it make more sense to
vote for the parties and candidates that stretch the limits that
the electorate set, rather than petulantly blame the parties for
lacking courage? In a diverse and divided electorate,
politics is a game of small gains at best. I find it too
aloof to refuse to engage in the battle for those small gains.
[7] As to the seven issues themselves, Noll might find the two
parties have connected fairly strongly to a number of them, if he
would ease up on his purist demands. Though neither party
addresses all of them in the comprehensive way he wishes, each
party does attempt to grapple with some of them. My scorecard
would indicate that the Republicans would move toward Noll´s
expectations in three of the issues: life, trade, and
religious freedom. Democrats move toward his requirements in
taxes, medicine, and international law. Race would be a
toss-up, with the Democrats maintaining their commitment to strong
forms of affirmative action (quotas, representational schemes,
etc.), and the Republicans proposing stronger support for
faith-based initiatives. None of these party affinities would
be fully satisfying to Noll, but one would think that movement in
the proper direction would be worth voting for.
[8] As for myself, I will have no hesitation in voting.
There are two over-riding issues for me: Iraq and judicial
appointments. While I can certainly understand the arguments
of those who think we should not have gone to war in Iraq, I
nevertheless think it was a necessary decision, given what was
thought to be true at the time and what Saddam Hussein would have
done in due time. Though things have not gone well in the
Sunni parts of Iraq, it has been worth the expenditure of American
life and treasure to get rid of the Hussein regime and to liberate
the Kurds and the Shia. My impression is that in those parts
of Iraq life is getting much better and self-governance is becoming
a reality. It remains to be seen whether we will be
successful in helping all Iraqis establish a decent state, but it
certainly will not happen if we retreat now, as the left wing of
the Democratic party desires. (Who knows where Kerry
stands?) We have to persevere and prevail.
[9] I believe that the judiciary in this country has
increasingly "usurped" the political process. It has
systematically severed the connection between law and its moral and
religious bases, and enshrined a rights-based individualism that
undercuts communal moral commitments. Moreover, it is slowly
denuding the public sphere of religiously-based moral values and
practices. To stem this tide, judges have to be appointed and
elected who will not take it upon themselves to make
policy.
[10] It is not simply that this rights-based secularism will be
enshrined in public law, which is bad enough, but it will
increasingly be imposed upon private organizations, including the
church. There is an authoritarian whiff to secular
liberalism. The Left has always yelped that fascism is coming
to America, but I think it far more likely that a secular elite
will impose its wishes upon the American people without their
consent. We may indeed find that one day we will be governed
by the Harvard faculty instead of the first one hundred names in
the Boston telephone directory. Being from the South I would
prefer to be governed by neither, but I would vastly prefer the
latter to the former.
[11] So I will vote Republican though I have never thought that
George W. Bush is the best candidate the Republicans can put
forward. But there he is, and I will vote for him. Only
the Republicans will persevere in Iraq and appoint non-secularist
and non-activist judges. I would like to take up the rest of
Mark Noll´s list of issues, but that would take up too much
space. Suffice it to say that I believe that he should vote
and that he should vote Republican.