Liberty
Letters

March 9, 2005
Bastiat #20
Bastiat's
Christian Defense of Morality in the
Law
by Steve Farrell
Sometimes secularism sounds legitimate.
One
of the more thoughtful arguments used by proponents
of a secular state, or of a state that mandates the
removal of all religious and moral speech and
symbols from public life, is Frenchmen Frederic
Bastiat's 1840 classic treatise, The
Law.
Periodically, letters come to this writer
encouraging him to read The Law so that his
"eyes may be opened
for certainly religion
and morality have no place in American law," they
claim, "and Bastiat explains why."
The scolders are right; Bastiat's The Law
is a must read. But the scolders are wrong; Bastiat
did not oust religion and morality from public
life; he simply defended their proper use and
denounced their misuse.
Bastiat's opening paragraphs supplied the
foundation upon which The Law rests. Under
the heading "Life Is a Gift from God," he
proclaimed:
- We hold from God the gift which includes all
others. This gift is life -- physical,
intellectual, and moral life.
A rather odd way to begin a "secular" treatise:
Our right to life comes from God; all other rights
proceed from or are a part of that God-given
right.
Bastiat continues: "But life cannot maintain
itself alone. The Creator of life has entrusted us
with the responsibility of preserving, developing,
and perfecting it."
That is, the preservation, the development and
perfection of our God-given right to life is a
religious duty.
And how might God's gift of life be best
perpetuated? Bastiat answers:
- In order that we may accomplish this, He
[God] has provided us with a collection
of marvelous faculties. And He has put us in the
midst of a variety of natural resources. By the
application of our faculties to these natural
resources we convert them into products, and use
them. This process is necessary in order that
life may run its appointed course.
-
- Life, faculties, production -- in other
words, individuality, liberty, property -- this
is man.
It is possible that the non-Bible reader fails
to recognize Bastiat's blatant biblical undertones
about the purpose of life, but nonetheless, this is
what we have. The French philosopher is restating
the scriptural message that God put man on Earth,
endowed him with superior faculties (such as
reason, individual will and a superior intellect),
set him above the beasts (by way of endowment and
commandment) and granted man dominion over the
whole earth (the origin of private
property).
And what was man's charge? Among others: to earn
his bread by the sweat of his brow.
Man must work. Man must provide for himself and
his family. He does this by applying his ingenuity,
his labor, his passion and his ambition to natural
resources. By so doing, each man puts his unique
stamp upon a natural resource -- and providing the
resource was acquired honestly, it becomes his
property; indeed, it becomes part of the definition
of who he is.
A man's life, then, is not simply what resides
in his heart, as important as this is, but how his
heart reflects in his speech, his moral choices and
his labor.
This is not mere theory; this is life as it is.
Making the purpose of life, in part, a test between
man and his environment, between man and the use of
his God-given property -- with this vital
prerequisite: that each man have the freedom to
choose whether to enlarge, sit on, share with
others or squander his inheritance according to his
talents, opportunities, inclinations and moral
convictions.
Without freedom, without property, the test of
manhood is exercised on a playing field that is
less than ideal for human development.
Bastiat moves on to the next issue:
- [I]n spite of the cunning of artful
political leaders, these three gifts (life,
liberty, property) from God precede all human
legislation, and are superior to it.
-
- Life, liberty, and property do not exist
because men have made laws. On the contrary, it
was the fact that life, liberty, and property
existed beforehand that caused men to make laws
in the first place.
What could be clearer? Life, liberty and
property are tightly linked with manhood. These
rights pre-existed in Heaven. They are vital to
God's plan for man on Earth. The fact that they did
not originate with man and man's governments, but
in that higher sphere, makes them inalienable, and
as such, they are superior to all human
legislation. This is the origin of what the
Founders called "the Higher Law."
Therefore, the foundation of all human law rests
on this one solid purpose -- the defense of the
eternal rights God gave to man -- making
government, in essence, a defender of the faith,
or, more specifically, limited to defending this
vital aspect of the faith.
None of this is secular thinking but rather a
political philosophy riveted in theology, which is
no doubt why Bastiat flat out called his purpose in
writing "The Law" his "moral duty."
Bastiat's concern, then, was not that the law
had come from God, for his entire thesis rested
upon the belief that indeed it had; but his concern
lay in the misapplication of God's law in human law
by naïve, corrupt and designing men.
He wrote:
- The law perverted! And the police powers of
the state perverted along with it! The law, I
say, not only turned from its proper purpose but
made to follow an entirely contrary purpose! The
law become the weapon of every kind of greed!
Instead of checking crime, the law itself guilty
of the evils it is supposed to punish!
-
-
moral duty requires me to call the
attention of my fellow-citizens to it.
He is concerned about a counter-morality, one
which uses a new sort of moral argument,
accompanied by the power of the sword, to persecute
and prosecute those who live by the old moral code
and uphold the old laws, whilst it promotes every
form of immorality and protects every form of
criminality.
He is objecting to socialism, communism,
utilitarianism and secularism -- those weapons of
the violent and bloody overthrow of the law called
the French Revolution. Their perversion or
overthrow of the law gave birth to what Bastiat
calls "positive law," a set of laws which, rather
than simply punishing a man for evil deeds
(negative law or justice), proscribes how a man
must act in every possible situation.
In other words, it is a law which compels men
and women to do good (as the state perversely
defines good) -- regulating, over time, all of his
or her affairs; stifling every man and woman's
decisions, speech, religion, career choices (you
name it); opening the door for unlimited government
and absolute tyranny, which is indeed its true
purpose.
Bastiat's solution is to return to the original
purpose of the law and government -- the defense of
man's God-given rights to life, liberty and
property. This is negative law (or mere justice), a
set of laws which punish men for acts that violate
or threaten the rights of others, nothing
more.
Such a law does not tell a man how to act; it
only checks extremes in his vice and leaves him
otherwise free to make a wide range of choices. The
result is limited government and maximum
liberty.
A defense of secularism? Think again. Bastiat's
The Law was a firm testimony against
secularism and all of the politicalisms which
embrace it.
Farrell
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