Let's begin with a multiple choice test. Who said, "At the heart
of liberty is the right to define one's own concept of existence"?
Was it (a) Albert Camus; (b) Jean-Paul Sartre; (c) Justice Kennedy;
or (d) all of the above?
The correct answer is (d); in one way or another, each of them
said it. I don't believe that is a coincidence.
The quotation, of course, comes from the Supreme Court's
decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.1 But it could just as easily have come
straight out of Sartre's Being and Nothingness, or from one
of Camus's novels. In fact, it would be difficult to find a more
succinct summary of the existentialist message than Justice
Kennedy's "[a]t the heart of liberty is the right to define one's
own concept of existence."
Much has been written about that sentence. Some suggest that it
is a window on the Supreme Court's jurisprudence. Others dismiss it
as just another bit of overblown judicial rhetoric, a throw-away
line in the midst of a long opinion. I would like to suggest that
it is both. It is certainly overblown rhetorically. (This is, after
all, the same justice who once brooded that he didn't know if he
were "Caesar crossing the Rubicon, or Captain Queeg cutting his tow
line.") But just because Justice Kennedy sometimes gets carried
away, it doesn't follow that his hyperbole should be disregarded.
Like the rest of us, he reveals something of himself in his
throw-away lines. Few people have read Einstein. But every
McDonald's clerk will tell you that "all things are relative." Most
people don't read Kierkegaard, but many still remark on the need
for a "leap of faith." So, too, with Justice Kennedy. It may be
difficult to imagine him sitting up at night drinking espresso and
reading Kafka. But his thinking may still be-and evidently
is-strongly influenced by the Americanized, pop version of
existentialism that the late Allan Bloom referred to as "nihilism
without the abyss."
In a real sense, there is no such thing as a throw-away line in
a Supreme Court opinion. Every society has a public philosophy,
whether articulated or not. It is made up of the predominant
assumptions about the great ideas-about God and man, about the
nature of society and the state, of freedom and responsibility, and
so forth. It is the medium through which we discuss the issues of
the day. America's public philosophy is uniquely influenced by
Supreme Court decisions. Much of the current American vocabulary of
"rights," for example, derives ultimately from opinions of the
Warren Court. And that Court's social teachings regularly turn up,
a generation later, in the opinion polls.
A critical aspect of a society's public philosophy is its
anthropology, its implicit understanding of who we are and what
makes us tick. To take a simple example, in the same way that any
McDonald's clerk will tell you that "all things are relative," any
American will tell you that "all men and women are created equal."
This is a particularly important facet of America's public
philosophy, and one that differs significantly from, say, Saudi
Arabia's or even England's public philosophy. Lines like Justice
Kennedy's thus do more than just offer us a glimpse of his
thinking. For better or worse, they also shape our public
anthropology. They teach us who we are.
My thesis is that there are two very different public
anthropologies contending for place in America's public philosophy,
and that the debate over religion in public life is best understood
as a manifestation of the contest between these two competing
anthropologies.
In the first anthropology, human beings come with a built-in
thirst for the transcendent. They may not know who, or even if, God
is, but they have a natural desire to find out. It is a desire that
may be repressed or even ignored. But nevertheless it is natural to
human beings to wonder about and search out the possibility that
there is a God. In the words of Abraham Maslow, "spiritual life
is...part of the human essence. It is a defining characteristic of
human nature...without which human nature is not full human
nature." This is not a new idea. It is a common point of all world
religions, and is also firmly rooted in the classical Western
tradition. It is, for example, vintage Aristotle. But if it is not
merely new, it is also not merely old. It is a prominent feature of
Personalist philosophy, as well as of Vatican II and the United
Nations Declaration on Human Rights. And if the Gallup polls year
after year are to be believed, it is the anthropology accepted by
the vast majority of Americans.
What is more, according to this anthropology our religious
impulse is intimately bound up with our social impulse. We are born
with the desire for community. While each of us is unique, we
humans are nevertheless social creatures, eager to form families,
gather in clans and tribes, display our arts, and commemorate with
ritual the great events of life. This, once again, is vintage
Aristotle. It is book one of the Politics. (In fact, the
English word "idiot" derives from the Greek, idiotes,
meaning a private person, that is, one who does not participate in
the life of the polis. Aristotle, in other words, wouldn't
hesitate to describe post-modern, autonomous, self-seeking loners
as idiots. And, as usual, he would be right.)
Thus, according to the first anthropology, human beings come
with a built-in thirst for the transcendent and a built-in desire
to live in community. They therefore require freedom to do two
things: first, to search with authenticity for the transcendent;
and second, to express in the full measure of their humanity-in the
arts, in public worship, and in political discourse-what it is they
believe they've found. In short, because the religious impulse is
natural to human beings, religious expression is natural to human
culture.
So much for the first anthropology. Its main competition today
comes from a vulgarized form of existentialism. According to this
view, human beings come with no built-in thirst for anything
transcendent. Rather, people come with a built-in affliction of
fear and alienation. And they require freedom not to go questing
for some nonexistent transcendent but, as Sartre put it, to define
their own lives through their own actions, freefrom any distressing
claims of morality or eternity. Religion, in this view, is at most
one among many possible hobbies available to the enlightened, if
angst-ridden, individual. As we will see, this pop version of
existentialism appears to have captivated a number of Supreme Court
justices.
Which anthropology a government accepts determines what sort of
religious liberty it permits. A government that holds the first
anthropology, which is that the religious impulse is natural to
human beings, will let a thousand flowers bloom. It will take no
position on who God is. (That is, after all, beyond its competence,
because it is only the state.) But it will nonetheless welcome
religious expression-from all traditions-in public culture. And its
own cultural offerings will reflect the society in which it finds
itself, including that society's religious dimensions. In short, it
will recognize freedom of religion.
Jersey City, New Jersey, under Mayor Bret Schundler, is a good
example. The city puts up a creche for Christmas, a menorah for
Chanukah, and proclaims Ramadan with a sign, and celebrates the
Hindu New Year, in addition to hosting scores of other cultural
events. (The American Civil Liberties Union is, of course, suing
the city. My organization, the Becket Fund, is defending it.)
By contrast, a government that has fallen into the second, let
us call it Sartrean, anthropology will take a very different track.
It will seek to protect its alienated, atomized, individual
citizens from unwanted and distressing religious claims. It will be
largely indifferent to private expression of religion but hostile
to public expression of it. Indeed, it will tolerate public
religion at all only as one item in a longer list of allegedly
similar things.It will grant freedom from religion.Such a
government will behave, in other words, exactly like our Supreme
Court.
Perhaps the only constant in the Court's tangled religion clause
jurisprudence is its insistence that the government must be neutral
not only among the individual religions but also between religion
and what the Court calls irreligion. Now, it is difficult
rhetorically to argue against neutrality. Neutrality sounds too
neutral to ever be offensive. But "neutrality between religion and
irreligion" paints with too broad a brush. It fails to distinguish
between two very distinct ideas: the theological question of who
God is and the anthropological question of who we are. It thus ends
up requiring the government to treat religion, not as a natural
human trait, but merely as one possible private choice. In the
process the Court does much to shape-I would say "distort"-our
public anthropology.
The Court's privatization of religion has been relentless and
cuts across all categories of its otherwise disparate religion
clause jurisprudence. For example, the Court now considers tax
exemptions for religious organizations to be constitutional only so
long as similar tax exemptions are provided to other, allegedly
similar but secular entities. Thus, in Texas Monthly, Inc.
v. Bullock,2 the Court struck
down a state sales tax exemption for religious publications. The
plurality wrote "when government directs a subsidy exclusively to
religious organization that is not required by the Free Exercise
Clause," that effort violates the Establishment Clause.3 Later, in Jimmy Swaggart Ministries v.
Board of Equalization of California,4 the Court ruled that tax exemptions for
religious organizations were constitutional if they were "part of
the general exemption for nonprofit institutions." Taken together,
if the cases demonstrate the Court's determination not to permit
tax benefits to religious organizations qua religious
organizations, but only as one among many types of charity.
The same principle holds true for other types of public
benefits. The Court has made clear that they may go to religious
organizations only if they are offered by the government to a wide
class of beneficiaries, both religious and secular, and end up
aiding the religious organizations only because of the intervening
private choices of individuals. So, for example, in Witters
v. Washington Department of Services for the Blind, the
Court permitted the state of Washington to issue a vocational
tuition grant to a blind man who intended to use the money to
attend a Bible college. The Court approved the scholarship because
it was not given directly to the college, but only to Mr. Witters,
who was free to apply it either to religious or secular colleges.
Similarly, just this past June, in Agostini v.
Felton, the Court held that the Establishment Clause did not
prevent New York City from providing Title I remedial instruction
to disadvantaged children inside parochial school buildings. The
Court held that so long as the same remedial instruction was
offered both to public and parochial school children it was
constitutional, because it was the children's families that chose
to send them into parochial school, not the state. Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor likened such cases to a federal worker donating his
government paycheck to his church. Once again, the principle is
neutrality: so long as the government gives a benefit to its
citizenry according to a religion-neutral criterion, it is
acceptable if some of those private citizens choose to use the
benefit at religious institutions.
The principle may be best seen, however, in the Court's
religious display cases. In two badly splintered decisions,
Lynch v. Donnelly and Allegheny County v.
ACLU, the Court held that government display of religious
symbols is permissible only when their context makes clear that the
government is in no way favoring religion. In the lower courts this
has come to be known as the "plastic reindeer rule," that is, a
rule requiring Christmas Nativity scenes to be festooned with
plastic reindeer, candy canes and other trinkets. Indeed, the lower
federal courts have taken this analysis one step further, and are
busily striking down municipal seals, emblems, and mottoes
containing religious symbols. The Tenth Circuit recently struck
down a city seal that contained, among other things, a
cross.5 Likewise, the Seventh
Circuit has struck down two city seals, one reading "God Reigns,"
the other displaying a cross.6 Indeed,
that court even granted the plaintiffs legal standing in part
because they could not bear to look at religious displays, that is
because of a worsening of their existential angst.
The Supreme Court is protecting, under the Free Speech Clause,
private religious expression in open public fora, but only
barely. In Capitol Square v. Pinette, the Court ruled
that the Ku Klux Klan had the right to erect a cross in a public
square open to other unattended displays. Nevertheless, a majority
of the Court was unwilling to make that rule absolute and held open
the possibility that religious speech in a public forum could
sometimes be constitutionally discriminated against if there was
too great a risk that the private speech would be mistaken for the
government's own views.
What is more, challenges to public religion, and only
challenges to public religion, enjoy relaxed standards of what is
called standing. The doctrine of standing permits suit only by one
whose ox has been gored. Thus, as a general rule, taxpayers may not
sue to change policies they disagree with-except for religion. Any
taxpayer is permitted to sue to claim that the government is
violation of the Establishment Clause. In effect, the Court has
deputized the entire citizenry in its mission of privatization.
And, in the name of neutrality, the Court has gutted the Free
Exercise Clause, effectively leaving only the non-establishment
principle in play.
Some individual justices have tried to take privatization even
further. Justice John Paul Stevens in particular has compiled a
remarkable voting record. In his nearly 22 years on the Supreme
Court he has voted in favor of finding an establishment of religion
in almost every Establishment Clause case he has heard. The only
exceptions have concerned the constitutionality of Title VII and
cases concerning limited, neutral benefits. He has also written
some amazing individual opinions. In Board of Educ. of Kiryas
Joel School Dist. v. Grumet,7 he opined that one of the things that was
wrong with a public school district composed exclusively of Hasidic
Jews was that it aided Hasidic Jewish parents in raising their
children in their faith. Justice Stevens has even gone so far as to
suggest that moral convictions are an unconstitutional basis for
legislation. Thus, he has written that a legislative preamble
declaring life to begin at conception violates the Establishment
Clause, because it "endorses the theological position that there is
the same secular interest in preserving the life of a fetus during
the first 40 or 80 days of pregnancy as there is after
viability-indeed, after the time when the fetus has become a person
with legal rights protected by the Constitution." Webster v.
Reproductive Health Services.8There is an old joke: "Why are Baptists
opposed to sex? Because it might lead to dancing." In the same way
Justice Stevens appears to be opposed to establishments because
they might lead to religion.
The privatization of religion is accomplished even more crudely
when the idea reaches the lower, bureaucratic levels of government.
Many are fond of telling horror stories of how evangelical children
are oppressed by public school teachers. Indeed, entire direct mail
campaigns have been built around such stories. And they are, of
course, sad. But what is even sadder-and sometimes funny-is how
these stories really are not limited either to Christians or even
to schoolchildren. Rather, privatization of religion shows itself
to be an equal opportunity oppressor of believers of any sort. My
favorite example is one that Perry Mason might have called the Case
of the Sacred Parking Barrier. Of course, it could only have
happened in California.
For many years, behind the tea garden in Golden Gate Park there
stood an abandoned parking barrier. And for many years parkgoers
complained that the parking barrier was an eyesore and tried to get
it removed. Bureaucracy being what it is, however, the parking
barrier remained. Until one day a New Age group discovered the
parking barrier and began to worship it. Whereupon the park
officials decided they had an affirmative constitutional obligation
to remove the parking barrier lest public property be worshiped and
the separation of paganism and state be breached. (Just think of
the implications if this precedent were to hold up. The government
would have to remove anything people began to worship. Then we
could solve all sorts of problems just by worshiping Congress,
provided we could keep a straight face.)
The Case of the Sacred Parking Barrier illustrates well the
basic principle of public existentialism: that religious expression
of any sort-even parking barrier worship-must be banished from
public life, not because any particular religion is out of favor,
but because religion generally is offensive.
There is, however, a corollary to this principle. It is
well-illustrated by the Strange Case of Michael Last. Mr. Last is a
county employee of Hilo, Hawaii. And he is a committed atheist who
firmly believes that December 25 is a day like any other day and
most certainly should not be a public holiday. So, beginning a few
years ago Mr. Last demanded to be allowed to work on Christmas. The
county agreed, but only on condition that Mr. Last accept extra
pay. (Tough bargainers, these county bureaucrats.) Well, Mr. Last
tolerated that as long as he could. But this year he put his foot
down and demanded that he be paid the normal rate, and not one
penny more. Eventually his superiors woke up and decided that Mr.
Last could work on Christmas and not get paid extra. But then his
union sued. The United Public Workers Union said that because Mr.
Last is covered under their collective bargaining agreement he has
to be paid more whether he likes it or not. So now Mr. Last is in
court fighting his union for the right to work on Christmas without
getting overtime.
There's no telling how all this will work out, but everyone is
taking it quite seriously. And that illustrates the corollary:
Religious expression of any sort must be banished from public life,
except for atheism. Atheists get to be as religious as they
want.
The constant theme that emerges from both the courts and the
bureaucracy is that religion belongs entirely in private. It will
be tolerated in public only when it is clearly presented as just
one among many types of private choice. All this has been
accomplished in the name of neutrality-not merely neutrality among
religions, but neutrality between religion and so-called
irreligion. Now that is far from being the only possible reading of
the First Amendment. In fact, it is not even the most natural
reading of it. And it has drawn much criticism, both from academics
and members of the Court, including three sitting justices. To
date, the criticisms have been historical and textual. But there is
a third basis, an anthropological one-the Supreme Court's
insistence on privatizing religion is built on a flawed conception
of who we are.
If all the Court meant by neutrality between religion and
irreligion were that the government could not take sides in
theological debates, its position would be coherent. After all, who
is the government to decide between Allah and Buddha, between
transubstantiation and consubstantiation? But in practice, at
least, neutrality has come to mean being neutral not only on who
God is, but on who we are. That is, it has come to mean that the
government must pretend it doesn't know whether the people it is
governing possess or lack a religious impulse. And that is
incoherent. The government simply must have a clear idea of just
who it is that it is governing. Imagine the government attempting
to make law while being "neutral" on whether its citizens are
sexual beings. The results would be laughable. It is just as funny
to attempt to make constitutional law under the religion clauses
while pretending not to know whether the American people are
religious.
So, then, the government can take a position on who we are. It
can choose an anthropology consciously, rather than by default.
Which should it choose, the traditional one, or the Sartrean one?
And how should make its decision?
It should choose the traditional one for two reasons. First,
traditional anthropology, unlike the pop existentialist view, has
empirical data on its side. There never has been a culture, ours
included, without religious elements. Indeed, even the most
repressive totalitarian regimes could not succeed in extinguishing
religion. They only drove it underground, and only temporarily at
that. There is, moreover, an impressive body of social science data
suggesting that the spiritual impulse is basic to human psychology.
And it is the majority view of the American people.
Second, choosing the traditional anthropology allows the
government to be genuinely neutral on cosmic questions. To say
human beings thirst for the transcendent is not to say anything
about who-or, logically, even if-the transcendent is. It is merely
to say something important about who human beings are. But that is
not so for the existentialist position the Court has implicitly
adopted. It necessarily assumes that there is no transcendent, but
only alienated individuals who are anguished by false claims of
one.
What would such a change look like? It would look far simpler
than the Supreme Court's current, and by its own admission, tangled
religion clause jurisprudence. As in Jersey City, Nativity scenes
and menorahs, together with Buddhas and proclamations of Ramadan,
could return with dignity to the public square unburdened by an
entourage of reindeer and Frosty the Snowman. Religious expression
in culture would then look like ethnic expression in culture. We do
not entertain lawsuits by individual Serbs, for example, who wish
to complain about Croatian cultural events and demand neutrality on
the grounds of ethnicity. Anglophiles cannot sue to stop St.
Patrick's Day parades. There is no reason why religion should be
treated any differently.
All schools that educate well-including parochial schools, which
educate better and less expensively-could share, in one way or
another, in public education aid. And the government, while
remaining scrupulously above the fray of which religion is true,
could reap the benefit in civic virtue that follows from religious
search and expression.
Finally, Justice Kennedy's rhetoric would change. It would now
sound something like: "at the heart of Liberty is the right to
search for the truth and publicly celebrate the results of that
search."