|

|
ARTICLES
OF
INTEREST
APRIL 2010 |
Orthodox North continues a series of various articles of relevance to modern Christians.
(Please email your comments to: feedback at orthodoxnorth.net.
I'll post a few each month at the bottom of the page. Please include
your name, city and state. I'll include only your first name and last
initial to preserve your privacy. Barb)[Note: All previous articles may be
viewed from the "Articles
Archive" page.] |
Manhattan
Declaration - Religious Liberty
|
 |
In the last three months, we have
been examining the Manhattan Declaration.
"The Manhattan Declaration
began as a statement and has become a movement." See the "Articles
Archive" tab for last month's article.
This month and for the next month, we'll
continue our study. You may also refer to the website link below. |
Manhattan Declaration: A Call of Christian
Conscience
Drafted October 20, 2009
Released November 20, 2009
Religious Liberty
The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is on me, because
the LORD has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me
to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and
release from darkness for the prisoners. Isaiah 61:1
Give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's. Matthew 22:21
The struggle for religious liberty across the centuries has been long
and arduous, but it is not a novel idea or recent development. The
nature of religious liberty is grounded in the character of God Himself,
the God who is most fully known in the life and work of Jesus Christ.
Determined to follow Jesus faithfully in life and death, the early
Christians appealed to the manner in which the Incarnation had taken
place: "Did God send Christ, as some suppose, as a tyrant brandishing
fear and terror? Not so, but in gentleness and meekness..., for
compulsion is no attribute of God" (Epistle to Diognetus 7.3-4). Thus
the right to religious freedom has its foundation in the example of
Christ Himself and in the very dignity of the human person created in
the image of God—a dignity, as our founders proclaimed, inherent in
every human, and knowable by all in the exercise of right reason.
Christians confess that God alone is Lord of the conscience. Immunity
from religious coercion is the cornerstone of an unconstrained
conscience. No one should be compelled to embrace any religion against
his will, nor should persons of faith be forbidden to worship God
according to the dictates of conscience or to express freely and
publicly their deeply held religious convictions. What is true for
individuals applies to religious communities as well.
It is ironic that those who today assert a right to kill the unborn,
aged and disabled and also a right to engage in immoral sexual
practices, and even a right to have relationships integrated around
these practices be recognized and blessed by law—such persons claiming
these "rights" are very often in the vanguard of those who would trample
upon the freedom of others to express their religious and moral
commitments to the sanctity of life and to the dignity of marriage as
the conjugal union of husband and wife.
We see this, for example, in the effort to weaken or eliminate
conscience clauses, and therefore to compel pro-life institutions
(including religiously affiliated hospitals and clinics), and pro-life
physicians, surgeons, nurses, and other health care professionals, to
refer for abortions and, in certain cases, even to perform or
participate in abortions. We see it in the use of anti- discrimination
statutes to force religious institutions, businesses, and service
providers of various sorts to comply with activities they judge to be
deeply immoral or go out of business. After the judicial imposition of
"same-sex marriage" in Massachusetts, for example, Catholic Charities
chose with great reluctance to end its century-long work of helping to
place orphaned children in good homes rather than comply with a legal
mandate that it place children in same-sex households in violation of
Catholic moral teaching. In New Jersey, after the establishment of a
quasi-marital "civil unions" scheme, a Methodist institution was
stripped of its tax exempt status when it declined, as a matter of
religious conscience, to permit a facility it owned and operated to be
used for ceremonies blessing homosexual unions. In Canada and some
European nations, Christian clergy have been prosecuted for preaching
Biblical norms against the practice of homosexuality. New hate-crime
laws in America raise the specter of the same practice here.
In recent decades a growing body of case law has paralleled the decline
in respect for religious values in the media, the academy and political
leadership, resulting in restrictions on the free exercise of religion.
We view this as an ominous development, not only because of its threat
to the individual liberty guaranteed to every person, regardless of his
or her faith, but because the trend also threatens the common welfare
and the culture of freedom on which our system of republican government
is founded. Restrictions on the freedom of conscience or the ability to
hire people of one’s own faith or conscientious moral convictions for
religious institutions, for example, undermines the viability of the
intermediate structures of society, the essential buffer against the
overweening authority of the state, resulting in the soft despotism
Tocqueville so prophetically warned of.1
Disintegration of civil society is a prelude to tyranny.
As Christians, we take seriously the Biblical admonition to respect and
obey those in authority. We believe in law and in the rule of law. We
recognize the duty to comply with laws whether we happen to like them or
not, unless the laws are gravely unjust or require those subject to them
to do something unjust or otherwise immoral. The biblical purpose of law
is to preserve order and serve justice and the common good; yet laws
that are unjust—and especially laws that purport to compel citizens to
do what is unjust—undermine the common good, rather than serve it.
Going back to the earliest days of the church, Christians have refused
to compromise their proclamation of the gospel. In Acts 4, Peter and
John were ordered to stop preaching. Their answer was, "Judge for
yourselves whether it is right in God's sight to obey you rather than
God. For we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard."
Through the centuries, Christianity has taught that civil disobedience
is not only permitted, but sometimes required. There is no more eloquent
defense of the rights and duties of religious conscience than the one
offered by Martin Luther King, Jr., in his Letter from a Birmingham
Jail. Writing from an explicitly Christian perspective, and citing
Christian writers such as Augustine and Aquinas, King taught that just
laws elevate and ennoble human beings because they are rooted in the
moral law whose ultimate source is God Himself. Unjust laws degrade
human beings. Inasmuch as they can claim no authority beyond sheer human
will, they lack any power to bind in conscience. King’s willingness to
go to jail, rather than comply with legal injustice, was exemplary and
inspiring.
Because we honor justice and the common good, we will not comply with
any edict that purports to compel our institutions to participate in
abortions, embryo-destructive research, assisted suicide and euthanasia,
or any other anti-life act; nor will we bend to any rule purporting to
force us to bless immoral sexual partnerships, treat them as marriages
or the equivalent, or refrain from proclaiming the truth, as we know it,
about morality and immorality and marriage and the family. We will fully
and ungrudgingly render to Caesar what is Caesar’s. But under no
circumstances will we render to Caesar what is God’s.
Drafting Committee
Robert George
Professor, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University
Timothy George
Professor, Beeson Divinity School, Samford University
Chuck Colson
Founder, the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview (Lansdowne, VA)
Copyright 2009 Charles Colson, Robert George, Timothy George
431, 811
signatures in support...and growing!
Next Month: What Next?
|
|
To:
Previous Orthodox Articles
NOTICE: Individuals, Churches or
Orthodox organizations may submit articles for publication directly
to: info at orthodoxnorth.net
All articles will be reviewed and may be declined at the
discretion of Orthodox North.
|
|