On Two Wings by Michael Novak

McWilliams, Wilson Carey

BOOKS One nation, including God On Two Wings Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding Michael Novak Encounter Books, $23.95, 229 pp Wilson Carey McWilllams Michael Novak is an...

...In that letter, Jefferson does emphasize that Carr should cultivate virtue, defined as devotion to "the interests of your country, the interests of your friends and your own interests also," all pursued with "the purest integrity and the most chaste honor...
...BOOKS One nation, including God On Two Wings Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding Michael Novak Encounter Books, $23.95, 229 pp Wilson Carey McWilllams Michael Novak is an intellec- tual paladin, ingenious and learned, contentiously em-pyreal and remarkably prolific, with some twenty titles in print on American public life and Catholic social thought...
...The Constitution and the laws rely primarily on interests, just as Jefferson did in his letter to Peter Carr...
...Following that teaching, Jefferson's draft of the Declaration asserted that humans are created "equal and independent," before political second thoughts led to the amended text...
...More important, virtue, in Jefferson's understanding, comes down to "interest," albeit of an enlightened sort...
...Americans, Toc-queville found, justified almost everything they did by reference to the principle of "interest rightly understood...
...Recognizing the implicit conflict between what Tocqueville was to call the "spirit of liberty" and the "spirit of religion," the Framers knew they walked a political tightrope...
...And while Tocqueville valued "interest rightly understood" as a check on simple selfishness, he also saw the danger that, over the years, America's public philosophy would weaken the language-and hence the practice-of faith and duty in civic life...
...But like many a debater, Novak carries his case to extremes, exaggerating the religiosity of a largely rationalistic generation preoccupied with this world...
...At the same time, the Bible speaks of righteousness rather than rights (let alone, natural rights...
...His contemporary target seems to be Michael Zuckert, Notre Dame's distinguished political theorist...
...He loves his country, and-as its critic or its advocate-he wrestles to bring America to speaking terms with God...
...Novak argues that the moral reasoning behind the Declaration-especially, the belief in human equality-derives from biblical religion, and so it does...
...Even where they were public-spirited or altruistic, Tocqueville noted, Americans were inclined to "honor their philosophy"-the self-seeking individualism of Enlightenment liberalism-rather than themselves...
...In all its seasons, however, there is a consistency to Novak's work...
...While Jefferson, as Novak reminds us, praised Jesus' moral code as "sublime and benevolent," he disdained "mysticisms" and "artificial systems," including belief in Christ's divinity, the Trinity, the Resurrection, Original Sin, or atonement...
...From the beginning, Novak contends, the balance of the republic has depended on its second "wing": American democracy cannot soar without religion...
...The Constitution, moreover, lacks even the ambiguous religiosity of the Declaration...
...Although Novak trumpets the achievement of the Framers, he recognizes that, relying on religion, they left it without public nurturance...
...The civil theology of the Declaration of Independence, as Novak observes, is carefully ambiguous...
...In On Two Wings, Novak celebrates the religious, specifically biblical, dimension of the American founding, arguing against thinkers who stress its roots in Locke and Enlightenment liberalism...
...And in American history, just as Novak argues, biblical religion has been the culture's alternative voice, a counterweight to the claims of individualism and self-interest...
...In one response to such objections, Novak points to the founders' virtually unanimous expectation of a future life and judgment, telling us that Jefferson, writing "in the silence of the night," trembled when he reflected on God's justice...
...The Framers valued religious pluralism, just as Novak contends, but they did so in the expectation-a correct one, for the most part- that pluralism would teach any single denomination that it could not hope to rule, and that the "marketplace of ideas," like markets generally, would lessen attachments to any particular idea...
...Over the years, Novak has moved politically from the left-center (Choosing Our King) via populism (The Rise of the Unmeltable Ethnics) to somewhere on the right, especially as a champion of the spiritual dimensions of capitalism...
...So it has, and whatever its faults, Michael Novak's book has the towering virtue of helping Americans to rediscover that indispensable voice...
...Those who designed our laws were determined to create a secular regime in which religion would be confined to the private sector and to the states, which-from political necessity if not choice-were allowed religious establishments...
...For the founding generation, prudence alone counseled respect for religion: In Common Sense, even Tom Paine cast his argument in biblical terms...
...In that passage, however, Jefferson says nothing about nocturnal silences, and his trembling-about slavery-was for "my country," not for himself...
...On this central point, Novak is clearly right...
...He was worrying not about the fate of individual souls in the next life, but about that of a nation in this one...
...But in the first place, Jefferson never refers to "faith," and the only more or less Christian text he recommends to Carr is Paradise Lost...
...And the laws teach...
...Even the most secular and deistic among the Framers were the products of a culture permeated by biblical teaching, and the great majority of Americans, with varying sophistication and intensity, were devoted to Christianity...
...It presumes that human beings naturally have obligations...
...By contrast, Locke held that human beings are equal only in possessing equal rights, that they are born free, with slight if any obligations to others or claims on them...
...Another example of Novak's tendency to gild the lily: He devotes almost a page to Jefferson's letter to the young Peter Carr in 1785, arguing that it reveals a belief that "faith stimulates and enlivens the conscience...
...The result, they hoped, would be a religion subordinate to law, a safe buttress for a politics of liberty...
...Yet, in the last analysis, liberty was their lodestar...
...It does not invoke or mention God, and there is no citation from the Bible, as far as I know, in any of The Federalist Papers...
...the Framers saw religion as an invaluable support for public life, but they were mostly indifferent or hostile to the spiritual, transcendent dimensions of faith...
...Wilson Carey McWilliams, a regular Commonweal contributor, teaches political philosophy at Rutgers.ilosophy at Rutgers...

Vol. 129 • February 2002 • No. 4


 
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