Fidelity, Faith and Natural Law
I'm honored today to welcome John Wijngaards to my blog today. He's the author of Amrutha: What the Pope's Man found out about the Law of Nature. (Click here for my review of Amrutha)
Founder of the website http://www.thebodyissacred.org/, Dr John Wijngaards draws on his background as a spiritual writer, professional journalist and international college lecturer in this novel, a beautiful tale of spirituality, sensuality and ethics, spanning multiple cultures. I found the whole concept of Natural Law truly fascinating as I read Amrutha and asked the author if he'd be willing to tell us more. So, over to you Dr Wijngaards, with my thanks.
Founder of the website http://www.thebodyissacred.org/, Dr John Wijngaards draws on his background as a spiritual writer, professional journalist and international college lecturer in this novel, a beautiful tale of spirituality, sensuality and ethics, spanning multiple cultures. I found the whole concept of Natural Law truly fascinating as I read Amrutha and asked the author if he'd be willing to tell us more. So, over to you Dr Wijngaards, with my thanks.
Misapplying ‘Natural Law’ . . .
John Wijngaards
Natural Law? Why bother about it you
may think. And why make it the principal target of my novel AMRUTHA: What the Pope’s man found out about
the Law of Nature, as people keep asking me. Is ‘Natural Law’ not just a piece of moldy
philosophy we can safely leave rotting in the attic? Unfortunately, no. We
can’t. Misunderstood, socalled ‘Natural Law’ turns into a hazard to our
spiritual wellbeing.
Philosophy is not an arcane past-time
indulged in by spectacled men who squabble
over obscure questions in the closets of dusty old libraries. Philosophy underlies education, commerce,
politics and religion. Get your philosophy wrong and you will pay a heavy
price.
I have always been distrustful of
‘Natural Law’ as applied by Church authorities. I remember how it was
disastrously applied to issues such as the castrati and slavery. But it was Pope
Benedict XVI’s address at Regensburg in 2006 that alerted me to its continuing
danger. This in spite of the fact that I agree with what Benedict XVI said
about the need of coupling faith and reason.
Assent to faith should be guided by
reason, and its contents probed and plumbed with the help of reason. No one may
claim a monopoly on reason, in particular the modern sciences who tend to
reduce all reality to what is perceived by the senses. The Pope was right to
decry ‘a reason which is deaf to the divine and which relegates religion to the
realm of sub-cultures’. But does the ideology of the Pope himself stand up to
scrutiny? We need to examine more fully what Anthony Carroll calls ‘the
unfinished project of correlating or aligning faith and reason in our
post-secular age’.
For, in spite of claiming not to
wish to return to a time before the Enlightenment, and in spite of concessions
he promised in his discussion with Jürgen Habermas, our Pope defends a
philosophy that has its roots in Aristotle (384-322 BC) and that culminated in
the thought of Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274). The main thrust of the Pope’s
Regensburg speech was to affirm that Europe, and the Christian faith, should
hold on to Greek thinking. We should resist ‘de-hellenisation’ which, he
affirmed, has assaulted the Church in three waves. The Pope, in fact, proposed
Aristotelian and Thomist metaphysics as a mode of ‘universal thinking’ that has
been sanctioned in Christian tradition and that could convert today’s secular sceptics.
I believe he is mistaken.
An Imprimatur on Greek philosophy?
The
Pope believes that the inspired Scriptures somehow have stamped divine approval
on Greek philosophy. This is clear from his Regensburg speech, but also from
the Encyclical Fides et Ratio (1998) which
he wrote for John Paul II as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith.
It is true that the Book of Wisdom,
which was written in hellenist Alexandria, draws on Greek thinking when stating
that the Creator can be known from power and beauty in nature (Wisdom 13,1-9).
Paul knows this argument (Rom 1,29) and quotes some Sophist texts when
addressing philosophers on the Areopagus in Athens (Acts 17,23-31). But does
this prove an endorsement of Greek philosophy? Are such arguments not rather an
adaptation to the hellenistic audience? The Pope himself cites the Qur’an in
his address. Are we to understand by this that he commends the Qur’an as an
inspired writing?
The Old Testament expression ‘I am
who am’ or simply ‘I am’ (Exodus and Isaiah) do not constitute, as the Pope
claims, an almost Socratic attempt to overcome and transcend mythical thinking
about God. The expression means that God is the one who is there, who is
powerfully present, who shows his presence in deeds, mainly by liberating his
people.
The New Testament was written in
Greek and we do find allusions to Greek philosophical thinking. But may we really
maintain that Greek thought and revealed faith have been inextricably linked? The
first lines in John’s Gospel read: “In the beginning was the Word (logos) and the Word (logos) was God, etc.” The Pope points
out that ‘logos’ could also mean ‘reason’. Yes, but rarely so, for instance in
Plato and Aristotle. In ordinary Greek speech it simply meant ‘word’. It does so here as its reference to the
creation story implies. “God said:
‘Let there be . .
. and it happened’.” The Logos
is God’s plan (Hebrew dabar, ‘word’) to
create us and communicate with us, a plan that unfolded with creation and
became flesh in Jesus Christ.
The point of this sketchy analysis
is to show that while Scripture no doubt affirms rationality, it does not
endorse Aristotelian metaphysics as a necessary ingredient of Christian faith,
which brings me to Thomas Aquinas.
Talk of ‘being’ and
‘nature’
When the Church in the Middle Ages
was in dire need of a consistent system of thought to express its beliefs,
Aquinas was the genius who did the job. He discovered Aristotelian thought in
the translated works of Muslim scholars and he successfully adapted it for use
in Christian theology. Aquinas was indeed a master mind. Not only could he hold
vast quantities of data in his memory, he managed to mould these into a logical
whole not less impressive than the majestic Gothic cathedrals that began to
adorn Europe.
Central to Aristotelian/Thomist
thought is that each object has a ‘nature’ that expresses the substance or
essence of that kind of object. A horse has the nature of being a horse.
Accidentals of colour, size, height, etc. do not change a being’s nature. That is why a grey, an Arab, a palomino and a Shetland pony all
share the same nature. They are all horses. In more general terms, there is a
pyramid of natures, from inanimate beings to plants, then to animals, to human
beings, to angels and finally to God. Each has its kind of nature.
A being’s nature is universal and
fixed. The natures of original beings have been fixed by the Creator. Birds
have wings by nature, so they fly. Pigs cannot fly. Flying goes against their
nature, or to put it differently: goes against the natural law for pigs. Once
you accept this premise, the main task of theologians is to define everything’s
nature: the nature of a sacrament, the nature of the Church, etc. and by
analogy the nature of God.
Pope Benedict recommends this ‘philosophy
of being’ as the ideal bridge between faith and reason:
“Set within the Christian
metaphysical tradition, the philosophy of being is a dynamic philosophy which
views reality in its ontological, causal and communicative structures. It is
strong and enduring because it is based upon the very act of being itself,
which allows a full and comprehensive openness to reality as a whole,
surpassing every limit in order to reach the One who brings all things to
fulfilment.” (Fides et Ratio § 97).
The problem is that Thomist
philosophy no longer matches the real world as we have come to know it. Pigs do
fly. The Pope’s failure to recognise the misfit damages Christian life.
Natural law and sexual
ethics
Take the question of marriage. Thomists
define openness to conception as belonging to the nature of the marriage act. When Cardinal Ratzinger joined the
Congregation for Doctrine, Pope Paul VI decreed that ‘each and every marriage
act must remain open to the transmission of life’. The Pope declared the use of
contraceptives which render procreation impossible ‘intrinsically evil’ (Humanae Vitae, 1968, §14), that is: they
go against the nature of marriage as established by God. In this view,
contraceptives may not be used as a means to space the planning of children.
They are not even allowed to women who need to protect themselves against
drunken husbands infected with AIDS.
But what is this assessment of the
nature of marriage based on? Originally men and women had intercourse without
even being aware of its link to the procreation of children, as anthropology
has documented. In the course of thousands of years marriage arose as a social
institution with a multiplicity of forms. Its main purpose was to give
stability to families and to protect common property. Marriages were polygamous
or polyandrous. Trial sex before marriage was common. What was natural or
unnatural in all such marriages?
Rather than ascribing a fixed,
unchangeable nature to marriage, why
not accept marriage as a dynamic, complex, interconnected reality, always
somehow original between specific partners, with unique biological, social,
cultural and psychological aspects?
Again and again the Pope’s philosophy
betrays reality. Sex is forbidden to gays and lesbians by ‘natural law’ (Persona Humana 1975; reaffirmed in 1986, 1992 and 2003). A woman’s
nature bars her from ordination (Mulieris
Dignitatem 1988). The Pope says violence ‘goes against God’s nature for God
is reason’. What reason? The burning of heretics under the Inquisition was
justified with refined Thomist sophistry. The ‘common good’ (bonum commune) of scaring the public
away from heresy was said to overrule mercy for the individual. The same
‘common good’ argument has been invoked in our own day to refuse communion to
Catholics who are divorced and remarried even though they are reconciled with
the Church, to refuse priests who have left the priestly ministry permission to
marry in church, and to deny victims of clerical child abuse their full rights.
We are responsible for our sexual
behaviour, like for everything else we do in life. But the rules of what is
right or wrong may not be based on an arbitrary interpretation of an imaginary
‘Natural Law’. They must be based on the informed judgment of our reason, that
is: of our conscience. And this is the whole thrust of my book AMRUTHA. Read
and enjoy!
John Wijngaards
I would add that I did indeed read and enjoy, both this article and the novel Amrutha. Thank you so much for visiting my blog today. And here's a link for Amrutha on Amazon. Enjoy.
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Ann