Date: 2006-04-03
Tocqueville's Influence on "Deus Caritas Est"
Interview With Samuel Gregg of Acton Institute
GRAND RAPIDS, Michigan, APRIL 3, 2006 (Zenit.org).- The social philosophy of a
19th-century Frenchman, Alexis de Tocqueville, may have contributed to the
thinking of Benedict XVI and parts of his encyclical, "Deus Caritas
Est."
So says Samuel Gregg, director of the Center for Academic Research at the Acton
Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty.
Gregg shared with ZENIT how the encyclical's warning against the state's
temptation to be an all-encompassing bureaucracy corresponds with what
Tocqueville called "soft despotism."
Q: Who was Alexis de Tocqueville? Why is his thought notable?
Gregg: Count Alexis de Tocqueville is perhaps one of the most important social
philosophers of modern times.
Born in 1805 into one of the oldest French aristocratic families, Tocqueville
grew up in the shadow of the French Revolution -- a revolution, I might add,
that guillotined several of his relatives.
Despite this, Tocqueville recognized that there was no going back to the ancient
régime. He was, however, appalled by the ferocity of the violence unleashed by
the Revolution, especially against the Catholic Church.
Another paradox is that though Tocqueville was a practicing Catholic, we know
from his correspondence that he struggled with the question of faith for his
entire life.
What Tocqueville did not, however, question was the pivotal role played by
Christianity in creating and sustaining societies that aspire, as John Paul the
Great once wrote, to be both free and virtuous.
In terms of books, Tocqueville is most famous as the author of "Democracy
in America," a text that many regard as containing the most enduring
insights into democracy's promise and its challenges.
The book draws heavily from observations made by Tocqueville during his visit to
the United States in 1831 and 1832, in which he traveled the length and breadth
of the country.
"Democracy in America" is especially penetrating when it comes to
describing Christianity's role in grounding the young American republic in basic
moral principles that helped to prevent this free society -- with the obvious
and terrible exception of slavery -- from degenerating into anarchy upon which
it is so easy to establish dictatorship.
Q: Why do you think Tocqueville influenced the thought of Benedict XVI,
especially in "Deus Caritas Est"?
Gregg: St. Augustine's "City of God" was a background influence on
Tocqueville's thinking, and Benedict XVI has never disguised St. Augustine's
profound effect on his own work.
But more concretely, there were several occasions before his election as Pope
when Joseph Ratzinger mentioned his admiration for Tocqueville's thought.
In a 1992 speech, for instance, Cardinal Ratzinger described Tocqueville as
"the great political thinker" and remarked that Tocqueville's
"'Democracy in America' has always made a strong impression on me." He
also underlined Tocqueville's insistence that democracies cannot sustain
themselves without widespread adherence to "common ethical
convictions," which, in America's case, had been provided by Christianity.
As far as "Deus Caritas Est" is concerned, I'd suggest a particularly
Tocquevillian influence may be found in Paragraph 28. Here, Pope Benedict
underlines the folly of allowing the state to absorb all social activity and
letting it evolve into an all-encompassing bureaucracy that is incapable of
discerning people's deeper moral and spiritual needs.
In "Democracy in America," Tocqueville suggested that democracies were
especially susceptible to this temptation and could develop the characteristics
of what is called soft despotism.
This despotism, Tocqueville argued, was one in which the democratic state slowly
but surely suffocated all the independent and spontaneous initiatives arising
from that complex of free associations we often call "civil society"
-- associations that are, in most situations, far more effective in addressing
people's problems than bureaucracies.
Q: How does "Deus Caritas Est" explain the collective charitable and
humanitarian work of the Church as distinct from mere social services?
Gregg: "Deus Caritas Est" makes it very clear that Christian charity
must address the whole of the human person and not just our material needs if it
is to be distinctly Christian. The Church's charitable work, the encyclical
explains, also expresses the fact that the pursuit of justice is always
inadequate unless it is accompanied by love.
Lobbying for larger government projects or dispensing welfare checks won't
relieve, for example, the pain associated with unfaithfulness,
substance-dependency and other forms of self-destructive behavior.
These difficulties demand prolonged personal assistance, a dedication that
relies heavily upon our choice to love those in need, in a very tangible way.
In this light, we should not be surprised that the encyclical is very critical
of those who argue that poverty will be solved simply by creating just social
structures.
Those who think this way, Benedict contends, have fallen for the great
materialist lie that man lives on bread alone and, to that extent, are no
different from Marxists.
For this type of thinking is to deny, the encyclical states, all that makes us
distinctly human -- our moral and spiritual dimension, and especially our need
for love. Justice is important. It's even a virtue. But it can't substitute for
Christian love.
Q: Given what the encyclical says about the importance of work done by
charitable institutions and each individual, do you see the encyclical as a call
for Christians to increase their efforts to help the poor?
Gregg: On one level, Benedict XVI is certainly asking Christians to do more to
assist those in need. There is always more each of us can do.
But the real challenge posed by the encyclical to Christians is to ensure that
Christians' charitable work remains unashamedly Christian. This means, as the
encyclical stresses, that it can never be allowed to develop into mere political
activism.
Politics, for Catholics, ultimately concerns the common good, but it can't
encompass the whole of the common good and we all know of instances when
political activity has done enormous harm to the common good.
An associated challenge identified by "Deus Caritas Est" is the
perennial temptation for Christian charitable work to become secularized in its
motivations and methods.
That's why Pope Benedict emphasizes that Christian charities must be
"credible witnesses to Christ."
On a practical level, this accent on being manifestly Christian means that
Christian charities cannot act in ways that contradict the Truth revealed by
Jesus Christ and imparted to the world by his Church.
In heavily secularized environments with strongly secularist expectations, this
is an everyday challenge for Catholics, but it is a cross that we should not be
afraid to embrace.
Q: As the Church responds to Pope Benedict XVI's call for a deeper awareness of
the communal dimension of the Church's charitable efforts, what are some
practical suggestions for applying the principle of subsidiarity?
Gregg: For Catholics, the principle of subsidiarity is rooted in the Church's
conviction -- and, I'd note, the natural law insight -- that if we are to
flourish precisely as human beings ought to flourish, then we need to be able to
make free choices for the Truth and to act accordingly.
In that way, we literally achieve the self-mastery, or what St. Paul calls the
liberty to which Christians are called, that reflects our choice to live in the
truth known through faith and right reason.
Subsidiarity involves helping people to achieve this end, but without literally
taking over the lives of those we are attempting to assist.
To take over another's life is to exercise our own soft despotism over people
who, like everyone else, are called upon to exercise to the best of their
ability their innate capacity for rational free choice for good and against
evil.
And soft despotism is no substitute for community. It is in fact deeply
dehumanizing.
One practical suggestion arising from this would be for Christian charities to
consider which of their projects conform to this aspect of subsidiarity and to
identify and reform those which do not.
Another, perhaps more challenging suggestion is for Christian charities to ask
themselves whether their own activities are excessively reliant upon government
funding.
Not only does such funding often limit the ability of Christian charities to
make their own choices about how best to help the poor, but it's no secret that
such funding increasingly comes with strings attached -- strings that in some
hyper-secularist contexts often require funding recipients to act in ways that
directly contradict the Church's moral teaching.
Once we start down that path, our capacity to witness to Christ is compromised.