Normally
we try — we really do — not to get too deep into those deep philosophical
questions. Last Thursday’s piece on the
natural law, “Let’s Be Reasonable,”
was about as deep as we think we can get away with . . . once in a while.
What
happens, however, when somebody asks a good question about a deep posting that,
to answer, you have to get even deeper?
And you’re up against a deadline to get the next posting up on schedule?
No need to resist these Temptations, My Girl. |
Ok, but . . . is the “natural
law” natural? Or is it supernatural? And I don’t mean merely in the sense that
every natural thing rests in God dependently, I mean, is the natural law
supernatural in being a direct action of God to impress His law on the human
heart?
This
is an excellent point. This is the sort
of thing that used to be covered in Philosophy 101 classes, but things have
gotten a little away from philosophical basics as Academia has turned into an
extremely expensive job training program for people who won’t find jobs anyway
because computers are doing all our work and (increasingly) our thinking for
us.
So
much for the commercial. Now for the
message, so put on your hip waders. It
gets really, really deep from here
on.
Well . . . not what we meant by "supernatural". . . . |
Every
human being therefore has an “analogously complete” capacity by her or her own
nature itself to acquire and develop the natural virtues of temperance,
fortitude, prudence, and — above all — justice just because he or she is human.
We say “analogously complete” instead of
“identical” because human beings are analogs
of each other, not clones, and every
human being is as human, and is human in the same way, as all other humans.
This
is the first principle of reason expressed as “the principle of identity”: that
which is true is as true, and is true in the same way, as everything else that
is true. Interestingly, people who base
the natural law on faith instead of reason always seem to end up thinking that
“ungodly” people — those who disagree with the godly — are not quite as fully
human, or human at all, in comparison with the godly, i.e., the ones making the determination of godliness. As Msgr. Ronald Knox explained in Enthusiasm (1950), to the enthusiast,
the ungodly have no rights. The godly
may do whatever they like to the ungodly and it becomes right because the godly
have great faith.
"Nature" is what we are. "Supernature" is an add-on. |
This
capacity defines us as human, and that is why the natural rights of life,
liberty, and private property are “inalienable.” You cannot
deny the means of acquiring and developing natural virtue — the exercise of
natural rights — without denying the essential humanity of whoever is denied
the legitimate exercise of rights.
(Criminals are a separate issue, and we won’t get into that, at least
today.)
It
necessarily follows, then, that every child, woman, and man who is, was, or
ever will be has the full spectrum of natural rights. This is because each and every human being by
definition has the “same” natural (by nature) capacity to acquire and develop
natural virtue, and must be permitted
to do so. This in turn means that each
and every human being must be
permitted the legitimate exercise of the natural rights of life, liberty, and
private property.
The exercise of rights results in acquiring and developing virtue. |
“Socially
determined” primarily means that the exercise of any right, regardless how
absolute, is limited by the demand that others not be harmed, by specific
circumstances, and the demands of the common good. Many people get this confused, either assuming
that because rights are held
absolutely, they are also exercised
absolutely (individualism), or that because rights are exercised in limited fashion they are also held in limited fashion (collectivism). No — natural rights are held absolutely, but exercised in a limited way.
Returning to our main point,
it is therefore correct to say that the natural law that
gives the general norms of human behavior are a gift of God only in the sense
that existence itself — human nature — is a gift of God. The natural law is part of the package deal of
being a human being in the first place.
Now for the fun part. The case is
otherwise with the supernatural law.
At
first, things sound the same. Every
human being has the analogously complete capacity to acquire and develop the
supernatural virtues of faith, hope, and charity that fulfill and complete — but
do not replace — the natural virtues.
This
gives us the first difference between the natural law, and the supernatural
law. We become more fully human beings by the acquisition and
development of the natural virtues, but we become more fully children of God by the acquisition and
development of the supernatural virtues.
The questions we’re now ready
to answer, however, was, “Is the natural law
supernatural in being a direct action of God to impress His law on the human
heart?”
Quick
answer: No.
Not what we meant, but at least it's pretty. |
· God
builds the capacity to acquire and develop natural virtue into every human
being as part of human nature.
·
God infuses — or impresses,
if you will — the capacity to acquire and develop supernatural virtue into
every human being as something in addition to — above — human nature.
That
is why the natural virtues are called natural, and the supernatural — “above
nature” — are super-natural. We have the capacity for the natural virtues just
because we’re human, but we have the capacity for the supernatural virtues
because God is love and wants not slaves, but children.
That
is also why it is profoundly wrong to try and enforce your personal opinion of
God’s supernatural law on others. That
is based on faith and translates into lex
voluntas: “law is will.” Enforcing
God’s law is up to God, not human beings.
You cannot legislate acts of faith, hope, or charity, regardless of the
strength of your faith.
"Old things, but in a new way." |
Human
beings being “political animals,” we act in accordance with our own nature (the
natural law) to organize into a social order to carry out the business of
living and acquiring and developing virtue.
There must be human laws, of course, but that does not mean that
everybody and his brother can enforce them.
No,
enforcing even human law is the job of duly constituted authority, sanctioned
by the State to keep order. Only in
extreme circumstances are we morally permitted to take the law into our own
hands, and even then we must be prepared at times to suffer the consequences
for the sake of maintaining the common good inviolate.
Even
bad laws need to be obeyed if they do not force us personally to do wrong.
Is
that, however, the end of the matter? By
no means. When bad laws exist, we are
under a moral obligation to organize with others and carry out acts of social
justice to replace the bad laws with good laws, not simply shrug our shoulders
and accept evil because we feel helpless individually.
But
that’s a subject for another day.
#30#