Christianity:
Mother of Political Liberty
by
P. Andrew Sandlin
"Liberty
has not subsisted outside of Christianity." Lord Acton
The
most liberating political force in the history of mankind has been
Christianity (Jn. 8:36). Christianity branched from the trunk of
godly Old Testament Hebrew religion, and the ancient Hebrew commonwealth
(before the era of the kings [1 Sam. 8]) was arguably the most libertarian
society in the history of mankind. Christianity inherited from Old
Testament faith the bedrock belief in the sovereign, transcendent
God Who stands above and judges all humanity, including its systems
of civil government. The political order is never ultimate.
The
Ancient World
Christianity
shattered the unity of the ancient, pagan world. The source of that
unity was the state, usually identified with society itself, at
the head of which was a great political ruler, a king or emperor,
thought to be a god or god-like. The unity of the ancient, pagan
world consisted of the divinization of the temporal order in the
form of the state.
Christianity
recognized "another king" (Ac. 17:7). While by no means
anarchists, the early Christians recognized that no earthly authority,
especially political authority, could be ultimate. Godıs authority
is ultimate.
In
clarifying orthodox Christology (the doctrine of Jesus Christ),
the Council of Chalcedon (A.D. 451) laid the foundation of Western
liberty. Jesus Christ alone is both divine and human, fully God
and fully Man, the unique link between heaven and earth. He is the
only divine-human Mediator. This decision dramatically repudiated
every divinization of the temporal order. No state, no church, no
family, no man could be God or God-like.
This
recognition set patristic Christianity on a collision course with
classical politics. Early Christians were savagely persecuted not
because they worshipped Jesus Christ, but because they refused to
worship the Roman emperor. Polytheistic societies encourage the
worship of deities. What they resist is the exclusion of all deities,
particularly the state, except the true Deity, the God of the Bible.
The
Medieval World
In
the medieval world, the Latin Church became a countervailing force
in society, checking and limiting the authority of the state. In
fact, much of the time, the churchıs size and strength far exceeded
that of any particular state. Lord Acton was correct to suggest
that the practice of political liberty in the West arose largely
from this medieval church-state conflict. In addition, the medieval
world, despite its many defects, supported a large measure of political
liberty in fostering several human institutions besides the church
which claimed the allegiance of man: the family, the guild, the
feudal lord, and so forth. This meant that the state had to share
its authority with other equally legitimate human institutions.
No human institution may exercise ultimate authority.
The
Modern World
Constitutional
limitations on political power, out of which arose the practice
of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century constitutional democracies,
started in Christian England with the Magna Carta. England also
delivered the first successful assault against the evil doctrine
of the divine right of kings during the Puritan Revolution in the
first half of the seventeenth century, and in 1688-89 during the
Glorious Revolution of William and Mary it nailed the coffin shut
on this long-lived threat to political liberty. The founding of
the United States was the greatest experiment in political liberty
to that time, and it operated self-consciously on certain distinctly
Christian premises. The Founders, for example, recognized the Biblical
doctrine of original sin and human depravity, and therefore fashioned
a system of civil government that divided decision making among
several branches and did not vest any single branch of civil government
with too much power. Second, they argued that the role of civil
government is to secure the rights of "life, liberty, and happiness,"
with which God as Creator endowed all men. Third, recognizing the
Biblical doctrine that civil government should protect minorities
(Ex. 23:9), they drafted a constitution to which they attached a
Bill of Rights, thus inhibiting tyranny arising from quick political
change at the whim of democratic opinion.
Political
liberty as reflected in the separation of powers, as well as checks
and balances; the role of the state in protecting life, liberty,
and property; and the constitutional protection of the rights of
minorities < all these were bequeathed to the modern world by
Christianity.
Whither
the West?
Today
the West languishes under the violence of abortion and euthanasia,
the scourge of homosexuality, the poverty of materialism, the coercion
of socialism, the stranglehold of "public" education,
the chaos of judicial activism, and the injustice of a forced racism
and sexism. These tyrannies are all the direct result of the abandonment
of Biblical Christianity. The Western world has increasingly accepted
the proposal of that first modern political liberal, Jean Jacque
Rousseau: the state will emancipate you from responsibility to all
non-coercive human institutions like the family, church, and business,
if only you submit yourself to the coercion of the state. Modern
man has been willing to trade away responsibility to the family
and church and business for subjugation to an increasingly coercive
and violent political order. We are returning to the classical,
pagan world in which the coercive state is the unifying principle
for all of life.
The
most vicious, violent, and murderous political regimes in the history
of mankind have been non- or anti-Christian: the primitive pagan
humanism of ancient Egypt, Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome, and
the sophisticated secular humanism of revolutionary France, the
Soviet Union, Red China, Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and other
modern secular states. Humanism is and always has been a recipe
for political terror and tyranny.
The
only hope for the return of political liberty and the free society
it fosters is a return to orthodox, Biblical Christianity. Christianity
is not merely a matrix in which political freedom flourishes; it
is the only foundation on which to build a free society.
August
17, 2000
P. Andrew Sandlin is Executive Vice President of the Chalcedon
Foundation [www.chalcedon.edu]. He has written hundreds
of scholarly and popular articles and several monographs.
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