Freedom of Religion and the Secular State
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Focusing on the intersection of religion, law, and politics in contemporary liberal democracies, Blackford considers the concept of the secular state, revising and updating enlightenment views for the present day. Freedom of Religion and the Secular State offers a comprehensive analysis, with a global focus, of the subject of religious freedom from a legal as well as historical and philosophical viewpoint. It makes an original contribution to current debates about freedom of religion, and addresses a whole range of hot-button issues that involve the relationship between religion and the state, including the teaching of evolution in schools, what to do about the burqa, and so on.
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Reviews for Freedom of Religion and the Secular State
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A fantastic book on the topic of separation of church and state. The book basis the majority of it's examination of the issues on concepts originally put forth by John Locke and John Stuart Mill, as well as existing case law in several countries. The issues covered include:A Short History of Religious IntoleranceHobbes, Locke, and their Legacy: Models of the Modern StateReligious Impositions and EndorsementsReligion-Based Morality and the Secular StatePersecution, Accommodation, and Conscientious ObjectionPrivate Power, Religious Communities, and the StateReligious Freedom and the Interests of ChildrenReligious Freedom and Freedom of SpeechI highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in this subject matter or who is concerned about the theocratic leanings of some modern political establishments.
Book preview
Freedom of Religion and the Secular State - Russell Blackford
Introduction
Religious freedom is not just one liberal freedom among others. As Rex Ahdar and Ian Leigh remind us, it is the prototypical liberal freedom, a cornerstone of modern political rights.¹ At the same time, however, its nature is disputed. Exactly when should we say that people possess religious freedom? When should we say that the freedom has been denied? Importantly, how does it relate to modern notions of secularism – and to other key freedoms such as freedom of speech?
Each day, we see passionate struggles over the concept. Patients refuse life-saving medical care – for themselves or their children – and invoke religious freedom in their defense. If a sick child dies after her parents deny her standard treatment, should the parents be criminally liable? Rival litigants strive to keep evolutionary biology out of the high-school science curriculum, or try to make sure it is taught. Strangely enough, both sides to this dispute invoke freedom of religion. Heated debates take place over concepts of blasphemy, over female dress, over religious displays on public land, over laws that enforce religious moralities. Churches seek exemptions from urban planning codes, claiming a freedom that others construe as religious privilege. Indeed, the very same churches and communities that claim to be marginalized can be seen by others as powerful and oppressive.
If religious teachings encounter severe criticism, or religious leaders receive scorn or mockery from their opponents, is that an exercise or a violation of religious freedom? What if a government tries to disarm a violence-prone apocalyptic sect? Is this a legitimate activity to protect citizens from harm, or an illegitimate encroachment on religious exercise? What if a government agency or a private corporation prevents its employees from wearing turbans on the job – or burqas, or yarmulkes, or conspicuous crosses? In all these situations, both sides of the debate may claim that they favor true
religious freedom. Neither side will admit to being opposed to freedom of religion, but surely both cannot be right. Religious freedom can’t be all things to everybody, yet quite opposed policies are often pursued in its name.
In what follows, I consider religious freedom in historical and philosophical perspective. Somewhere at the core of the concept lies the fear of overweening government power, used to impose a favored understanding of the world – or another, transcendent, world – or to persecute those with a different understanding. As John Locke complained in the seventeenth century, the secular sword of government has been wielded to destroy unwanted doctrines, faiths, and sects. As Locke knew well, many heretics have been imprisoned, tortured, and often burned at the stake.
Historically, disagreement with the state’s preferred religion has often been met with ruthless force. As we look back, we see that this was sometimes successful; other times, it proved to be futile. Inevitably, it brought human costs, and in many times and places these were on a grand scale, as with the thirteenth-century Albigensian Crusade, in which hundreds of thousands of people died, many of them openly massacred. Even this was dwarfed by the European wars of religion in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. For the sake of one or another religious orthodoxy, men (and sometimes women) have been driven to terrible acts of destruction and cruelty.
Finally, around the seventeenth century, Western governments began a long process in which they slowly stepped away from religious impositions and persecutions. Here, then, is the beginning of religious freedom – in essence a freedom from persecution or the imposition of another’s religion. From this process grew the modern secular state and the turn toward liberalism.
Liberal Democracies
The process continues, and the outcomes to date have been patchy. The concept of religious freedom is still fiercely contested, even in the relatively secular nations of Europe, North America, and the developed world in general. Many citizens of those countries argue, on various grounds, that their freedom of religion is endangered or incomplete. In others, such as prominent nations in the Middle East, Western ideas of religious freedom, including the freedom to change religions or reject religion entirely, are not even given lip service.
I do not aim, in this study, to investigate freedom of religion on a global scale. That is a huge topic, and I can do no more than touch on some aspects here and there, where relevant. Perhaps another occasion will arise. Instead, I shall focus on the intersection of religion, law, and politics in contemporary liberal democracies. In particular, I will explicate a concept of the secular state, revising and updating John Locke’s views from the seventeenth century. Even this limited task has endless ramifications, and it’s not helpful that the concept of liberal democracy is itself a blurred and contested one.
On some strong conceptions there may be no pure liberal democracies. A conception like that will be far too narrow for my needs, but we can identify some necessary features. The concept includes at least some system of popular elections, together with various protections from the arbitrary or oppressive exercise of government power. Though governments are elected and responsive to the views of the people governed, that does not entail that they exercise a tyranny of the majority. Rather, there are limits to what governments may legitimately do, even with majority support: limits that offer a zone of protection for minority interests. These limits or protections may include written constitutional provisions, but the strongest may be rather less formal. They may involve widely understood political principles that guard the liberty of citizens. For example, there is a principle in modern Western societies that punishments should not be inflicted arbitrarily, but solely in accordance with generally applicable laws that are enforced through procedurally fair processes.
Again, whether by constitutional provisions, political principles, or a mix of both, the reach of government power may be limited in various respects. In particular, it may be established or understood that only certain kinds of justifications ought to be offered for coercive laws. At one extreme, it might be thought that no society is truly a liberal democracy unless it enacts coercive laws only in compliance with John Stuart Mill’s harm principle. This is essentially the idea that an individual’s liberty may rightly be abridged, through the exercise of social or political power, only in response to acts that cause certain kinds of harm to others.² At a later point, I’ll elaborate and defend the harm principle, or at least a version of it that seems faithful in spirit to Mill’s account. However, no country in the world would be a liberal democracy if this required rigorous adherence to the harm principle. All jurisdictions enact at least some coercive laws that are justified to the public on other grounds – even if those laws and grounds are controversial within the jurisdictions concerned.
Strict application of the harm principle would be too purist as a necessary condition for liberal democracy. Nonetheless, the latter idea involves at least some acceptance of reasonable social pluralism by those with the power to enact or enforce coercive laws. The liberal
part of liberal democracy
implies a degree of restraint by the apparatus of the state. It will be reluctant to impose any template, or narrow set of templates, for the good life. Instead, the assumption is made that many ways of life are at least tolerable, and perhaps even valuable. No attempt should be made to suppress them by means of fire and sword, as Locke would have put it: that is, by the state’s coercive power. While the governmental apparatus of a liberal democratic society will be used for a variety of ends, including the deterrence of certain behavior, most ways of life are accommodated to the extent that social peace allows.
Thus, even though no modern society adheres strictly to the harm principle, not just any society qualifies as a liberal democracy. To do so, it must combine a democratic process for choosing the government of the day with significant reluctance to restrict the liberty of citizens (and others legitimately resident in the jurisdiction) to act as they wish with the resources available to them. Moreover, where individuals’ personal lives and life plans are at stake, including their ability to express themselves freely, have consenting sexual relations, and make reproductive decisions, the state apparatus of a liberal democracy is particularly solicitous of freedom of choice, unless a compelling reason can be found to do otherwise.³ Whereas many other political arrangements involve the coercive imposition of a comprehensive view of reality favored by the state, liberal democracies aim to provide a framework in which people with many differing views can live in harmony, or at least with mutual forbearance.
It seems to follow that no political formation meeting the minimal requirements to qualify as a liberal democracy would be motivated to persecute citizens (and relevant others) on the ground of religion. But as I’ll explore in the following chapters, life is not so simple.
What is Religion, Anyway?
To this point, I have been using the words religion
and religious
as if they are unproblematic, but that is not so. We may question whether what we know as religion is a unitary phenomenon: is Christianity really the same sort of thing as Buddhism, for example, and are non-literalist forms of Christianity the same sort of thing as those which treat the Bible as historically and scientifically accurate? Are any of the well-known modern religions really the same kind of thing as ancient polytheism, or even more ancient forms of spirit worship? Do theistic religions and non-theistic ones really belong in the one category?
Many scholars and courts of law have struggled with the concept of religion, and there is no perfect definition either for the purposes of the law or for those of scholarly fields such as anthropology. In Lecture II of the series that constitutes The Varieties of Religious Experience, William James doubted that an exact definition was possible,⁴ while Frieder Otto Wolf has recently suggested that the concept of religion is most deeply imbued and tainted by Euro-centrism and naïve assumptions derived from an often unilaterally simplified Christian tradition.
He adds:
It is, indeed, doubtful that there is any meaningful common denominator between the everyday magical practices
of an indigenous tribe, Judaic obeisance to the commandments of God to be found in the Tora, the practice of Sunni Islam based on the Qur’an, of Sufi mysticism, of Jainism, of Shintoism, or of Buddhism.⁵
Robert Wright indicates that there is (arguably) no specific concept of religion in hunter-gatherer societies, since their various spirits and gods are seamlessly continuous with the observed phenomena of nature. Such societies’ religious
beliefs and rituals are tightly interwoven into everyday thought and action, and are not clearly distinguished from a non-religious sphere of activity.⁶ Charles Taylor makes essentially the same point: in the oldest societies, religion was so ubiquitous that it was not even noticeable as a separate sphere.⁷
Does this mean that freedom of religion
is a meaningless expression (along with such expressions as secularism,
which seem to contrast with religion in some way)? If so, what were the historical disputes about – the struggles between monotheistic religions and pagan polytheism, for example, or those within Christianity? Untold millions of people have fought, killed, or died, tortured or been tortured, in the name of religious correctness. Or so it appears. Was there nothing that these events had in common? More generally, should we confess that that we don’t know what we’re talking about when we use such words as religion
or such expressions as religious persecution,
religious freedom,
and even comparative religion
? Surely that can’t be right.
No matter what definition is adopted, there will probably be marginal cases. Still, the concept is not so vague as to be useless for the practical purposes of social and legal policy in contemporary liberal democracies. James’s efforts in Varieties of Religious Experience provide one good starting point, and a more modern one can be found in Taylor’s monumental study, A Secular Age.
With considerable misgivings, James settled on a loose definition, for his purposes, referring to the feelings, acts, and experiences of individuals in solitude "so far as they apprehend themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider the divine."⁸ As he acknowledged, this definition then raises a question about what is meant by the word divine.
The divine,
he concluded, shall mean for us only such a primal reality as the individual feels impelled to respond to solemnly and gravely, and neither by a curse nor a jest.
He then felt it necessary to add that religion involves a special kind of happiness in the absolute and everlasting.
⁹ Moreover, even this is somewhat vague, and James took a slightly different tack at the beginning of Lecture III, where he characterizes the life of religion
in its broadest and most general terms
as consisting in the belief that there is an unseen order, and that our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting ourselves thereto.
¹⁰
Writing mainly of the Abrahamic traditions of the West, but with perceptive comparisons to Buddhism, Charles Taylor explains religion in terms of belief in an agency or power that transcends the immanent order – by which he means the operations of the natural world. For Taylor, religion relates to the beyond,
to an otherworldly order of things, but not in just any way. He posits three specific dimensions. First, religion asserts that there is some higher good or ultimate end beyond ordinary human flourishing. Second, it includes the possibility of personal transformation, to ensure that the higher good is achieved. This, in turn, involves the existence of a transformative and transcendent power. Third, the religious account of our possible transformation involves a sense of human life extending beyond this life.
¹¹ Taylor’s analysis is easily applied to Christianity, where the crucial transformation involves salvation through Jesus Christ (however this is explained by different theological systems).
Taylor claims that the political organization of pre-modern societies was connected to, based upon, or guaranteed by some kind of adherence to, or faith in, the otherworldly order. As far as it goes, this is plausible, though it needs to be qualified (and soon will be). His project is to describe and explain the historical change from political and social structures founded on religion to the modern Western state, where religiosity (or otherwise) is largely private, and governments pursue goals that are purely worldly or secular (I’ll use these words interchangeably); where religious belief is, at least to some extent, in decline; and where, in any event, religion is neither forbidden nor compulsory.
For Taylor, the central issue is how religion became a mere option, a sort of menu item, after such a long history of dominance in societies where disbelief seemed virtually unthinkable. By contrast, I am concerned with neither the intrinsic plausibility, or otherwise, of religion nor how irreligion became a live alternative; my real concern is the relationship between religion and state power. Nonetheless, I find Taylor’s understanding of religion useful. We can work with its key ideas: an otherworldly order of things and an otherworldly dimension to human lives; an ultimate good that transcends worldly kinds of flourishing; the possibility of spiritual transformation, such as the Christian idea of salvation; and the existence of transcendent and transformative powers, such as the Abrahamic God.
As already mentioned, this conception of religion is very apt as a description of Christianity, so much so that Wolf might consider it tainted by Christian thinking. It might prove less useful when applied to certain other religions that have a presence within liberal democracies. However, most of the dimensions described by Taylor are recognizable in the well-known religions of ancient and modern times. In particular, the well-known religions seem to involve an order that transcends the natural, or immanent, one, something otherworldly. Again, they involve some kind of power connected with this otherworldly order, as well as a relationship between the otherworldly order and our own lives and conduct. This is not unlike James’s ideas of happiness in the absolute and everlasting
and harmonious adjustment to the unseen.¹²
Note, however, that much in the ancient polytheistic traditions deviates from Christianity. Not only was pagan polytheism syncretic and, in its fashion, tolerant; it often placed far less emphasis on personal transformation. Jonathan Kirsch explains this well in the context of ancient Rome, where the priestly ceremonies were never intended to meet the citizens’ intimate spiritual needs.
Instead, they were meant to earn divine favor: the life and health of the emperor, the safe arrival of grain ships from Africa and victory in battle for the Roman legions against the barbarian tribes threatening the border provinces of Western Europe and the armies of the Persian Empire.
Thus, the ruling classes of Rome regarded the traditional religious rites as a civic duty and an essential component of statecraft.
¹³ Though otherworldly powers and agents were invoked, it was for communal purposes, rather than to enhance the spirituality of the individual. This is typical of the ancient state religions, though not of the various mystery cults that multiplied and prospered in antiquity.
Accordingly, it is something of a distortion to think that ancient Rome was founded on faith in an otherworldly order. There was certainly a connection, but transcendent powers were invoked by the state mostly as an adjunct to its concern with success and prosperity in this world.
Religion in the Courts: The Scientology Case
From time to time the courts have faced the issue of what counts as a religion, or better, What, for legal purposes, is a religion?
Not surprisingly, they have struggled to produce an uncontroversial definition. In considering the issue from an American perspective, Kent Greenawalt argues for a flexible and context-sensitive approach, though he also emphasizes that there are many systems which are indisputably religious, and that we are not without appropriate information when we make our judgments. We can start with undoubted or paradigm examples of religions, then determine how closely an arguable instance of religion resembles these.
¹⁴ When we identify some things as undoubtedly religious, we don’t apply a theoretical definition; rather, we look to certain elements of belief, practice, and organization:
These may include a belief in God or gods; belief in a spiritual domain that transcends everyday life; a comprehensive view of the world and human purposes; a belief in some form of afterlife; communication with God or gods through ritual acts of worship and through corporate and individual prayer; a particular perspective on moral obligations that is derived from a moral code or from a conception of a divine nature; practices involving repentance and forgiveness of sins; religious
feelings of awe, guilt, and adoration; the use of sacred texts; and organization to facilitate the corporate aspects of religious practice and to promote and perpetuate beliefs and practices.¹⁵
The High Court of Australia has provided an especially influential and oft-cited case, one which looks closely at such elements. In Church of the New Faith v. Commissioner of Pay-Roll Tax (Vic) ("the Scientology case"),¹⁶ five members of the court considered whether the Church of the New Faith, that is Scientology, was a religious institution.
If so, it was exempt from pay-roll taxation in the state of Victoria. With some reservations about how the question had been framed in the lower courts, the High Court judges accepted that their task was one of determining whether or not Scientology was a religion, or at least whether the set of beliefs, practices, and observances that were in evidence on the record could be properly described as a religion.¹⁷
This, in turn, required the judges to frame a legal understanding of religion.
In the event, all five of them held that Scientology was a religion for such purposes as pay-roll tax exemption, though they produced three separate judgments with somewhat different reasoning. Each of these drew upon decided cases from the US Supreme Court to construct a relatively expansive concept of religion, certainly not confining it to monotheism or even to belief in a god or gods. Mindful of the tolerant or syncretic practices of some actual (and incontrovertible) religions such as Hinduism, the judges did not insist that a religion, to qualify as such, must claim to be the one true faith to the exclusion of all others.
Acting Chief Justice Mason and Justice Brennan emphasized that their task was not an academic exercise in comparative religion but an inquiry into legal policy.
¹⁸ This required them to consider the essential features or indicia of religion that had attracted legal freedom or immunity in Western countries such as Australia. They identified a legal policy of maximum freedom for citizens to respond to abiding and fundamental problems of human existence: our destiny; the meaning of our existence; and the explanation for the existence of the phenomenological universe. Having noted the availability of reason-based approaches, involving science, philosophy, and other secular disciplines, they distinguished religious approaches to these problems:
For some, the natural order, known or knowable by use of man’s senses and his natural reason, provides a sufficient and exhaustive solution to these great problems; for others, an adequate solution can be found only in the supernatural order, in which man may believe as a matter of faith, but which he cannot know by his senses and the reality of which he cannot demonstrate to others who do not share his faith. He may believe that his faith has been revealed or confirmed by supernatural authority or his reason alone may lead him to postulate the tenets of his faith. Faith in the supernatural, transcending reasoning about the natural order, is the stuff of religious belief.¹⁹
For Mason and Brennan, then, legal policy protected freedom of belief in a supernatural (or otherworldly) order, where these beliefs were used to address fundamental problems of human existence. After further discussion, their judgment settled on two criteria, which it described as belief in a supernatural Being, Thing or Principle
and the acceptance of canons of conduct in order to give effect to that belief.
They observed that these criteria might vary in their relative importance between different religions. Indeed, the tenets of a religion might give primacy to one particular belief or one particular canon of prescribed conduct. Likewise, religions and individual adherents of a religion might differ in intensity of belief or intensity of commitment to canons of conduct.²⁰
Justice Murphy took a broad and pragmatic view of what should be accepted as a religion for legal purposes. While noting that some so-called religions were merely hoaxes, he added that this should be the legal conclusion only in extreme cases. On his approach, the categories of religion were not closed, but he provided a non-exhaustive list of sufficient, rather than necessary, grounds for an institution or other such body to be accepted as religious. Thus, any organization that claimed to be religious should be accepted as such if: (1) its beliefs or practices revived or resembled those of earlier cults; (2) it claimed belief in a supernatural being or beings, such as gods or spirits, whether they were visible, invisible, or abstract; or (3) it offered a way to find meaning and purpose in life. He specified that, The Aboriginal religion of Australia and of other countries must be included.
²¹
With some expression of trepidation, Justices Deane and Wilson sought to develop a conception of religion from empirical observation of accepted religions. They identified four or five indicia that they considered helpful in deciding whether a set of ideas or practices amounted to a religion for the purposes of the law: (1) ideas and/or practices involving belief in the supernatural (a reality extending beyond what can be perceived by the senses); (2) ideas relating to humanity’s nature and place in the universe, and its relationship to the supernatural reality; (3) acceptance by the adherents that the ideas require or encourage them to observe standards or codes of conduct, or to participate in practices with supernatural significance; (4) the adherents forming an identifiable group or groups; and possibly, (5) their perception of the collection of ideas and/or practices as constituting a religion.²²
All three judgments identified a supernatural element in religion, though Justice Murphy placed less emphasis on this: in particular, he would have been prepared to identify a religion wherever he saw an organization that considered itself religious and offered teachings about life’s meaning or purpose. Perhaps he was correct, for the practical purposes of the law, to extend religion
that far. Nonetheless, it appears plausible that the central cases of religion involve an otherworldly or supernatural order, much as described by Taylor and by most of the judges who have contributed to existing case law. If so, we can distinguish thoughts and worldviews that are confined to this world, however counterintuitive some of its elements and mechanisms may turn out to be when examined scientifically, from those that also describe another order of things. The latter are central to the phenomenon of religion.
For somebody socialized in a pervasively religious society, such a distinction might not be clear, but it is adequate for the purposes of public policy in liberal democracies. Even if the hunter-gatherers described by Wright, and alluded to by Taylor, do not distinguish a specifically religious sphere of life, contemporary legislatures and courts can take note of, and attempt to protect, their belief in transcendent agents and powers.
Religion and its Conflicts
Religions are not merely systems of belief that postulate the existence of an otherworldly order, complete with transcendent agents and powers. Importantly, these agents and powers make demands and produce transformations. They typically require worship, and they often set comprehensive standards for a believer’s conduct and way of life. Some religions may, admittedly, divorce everyday questions of how to lead a good life from questions of how to propitiate the gods, leaving the former to philosophical inquiry, the secular law, and shared social understandings. Such was often the case with ancient polytheisms. But most religious systems include codes of morality. These are often comprehensive and burdensome, sometimes impossibly so. Moreover, they may cause the believer difficulties if compliance with them violates the secular law, raising questions about the legitimacy and wisdom of coercing conscience. A different set of questions arises if religious believers argue that the secular law ought to enforce their moral code, even on non-adherents.
Issues relating to religious freedom stem from the combination of religion’s otherworldly claims; its supernaturally mandated standards of conduct; its typical concern with the transformative power of the other world; and its rejection, or at least deprecation, of what it sees as merely worldly standards of human flourishing. These aspects can place religions in conflict with individual non-adherents, with the state, and with each other. Such conflicts defy resolution, since rival claims about another world and its manifestations in this world are not easily verified or falsified.
In observing this, I don’t claim that religious beliefs lie entirely outside of scientific investigation, or that religion can always (or even usually) be reconciled with our knowledge of the immanent order. On the contrary, advancing scientific and humanistic knowledge may, over time, render some religions quite implausible. If a religion makes sufficiently specific claims about how the other world interfaces with this world, it may become open to outright scientific refutation. Science already investigates very small, very distant, and very ancient events, drawing conclusions about mechanisms that are not directly observable. In doing so, it reasons about the effects of these events on present-day, medium-sized things that fall within our sensory range.