Truth as the Ground of Freedom: A Theme from John Paul II
Avery Dulles, S.J.
To speak of freedom in an institute named for Lord Acton is
like carrying coals to Newcastle. For Acton, according to Gertrude Himmelfarb,
liberty was no mere social arrangement recommended by convenience but was on
the contrary "the highest ideal of man, the reflection of his divinity."1
Another great historian of the concept of freedom, Mortimer Adler, writes that
"there is perhaps no philosophical idea which has had so much impact on
political action."2 For centuries, he points out, the
world has been divided by rival conceptions of freedom. Whether liberty consists
in doing what one likes or in doing what one ought makes an overriding difference
in practice. A great rift exists between those who absolutize freedom and those
who hold that true freedom can only be freedom in the truth.
The rootedness of freedom in the truth has been a constant
and central theme in the writings of John Paul II. Already in 1964, as a young
bishop at Vatican II, Karol Wojtyla, as he was then called, criticized the draft
of the declaration on religious freedom because it did not sufficiently emphasize
the connection between freedom and truth. "For freedom on the one hand
is for the sake of truth and on the other hand it cannot be perfected except
by means of truth. Hence the words of our Lord, which speak so clearly to everyone:
'The truth will make you free' (Jn 8:32). There is no freedom without truth."3
Again in his first encyclical Redemptor Hominis (1979) John
Paul II quoted the words of Christ, "You will know the truth, and the truth
will make you free." He added: "These words contain both a fundamental
requirement and a warning: The requirement of an honest relationship with regard
to truth as a condition for authentic freedom, and the warning to avoid every
kind of illusory freedom, every superficial unilateral freedom, every freedom
that fails to enter into the whole truth about man and the world."4
In a recent encyclical, Veritatis Splendor (1993), the pope
rejects a series of ethical systems that propose novel criteria for the moral
evaluation of human action.5 Despite their variety, he declares,
these systems are at one in minimizing or even denying the dependence of freedom
upon truth. This dependence, he says, finds its clearest and most authoritative
expression in the words of Christ, "You will know the truth, and the truth
will make you free."
The pope's philosophy of freedom runs counter to the value-free
concept so prevalent in contemporary culture, perhaps especially in the United
States. Many people today would say that freedom and truth are wholly separable,
since anyone is free to affirm the truth and abide by it, to ignore the truth,
or even to deny it and act against it. If freedom were bound by the truth, they
ask, how could it be freedom? In the course of his discussion of freedom and
law in Veritatis Splendor, the pope proposes his answer to questions such as
these.
The Concept of Freedom
Before undertaking to answer these difficulties, we would do
well, I believe, to take a close look at the meaning of the term "freedom,"
which has different implications at the natural and the personal levels.
At the lower level, that of nature, freedom means the absence
of physical constraint. A balloon rises freely when nothing obstructs it; a
stone falls freely when nothing impedes it. A dog is free if it is let off the
leash so that it can follow its impulses. To be free, in this sense, is to act
according to an inner inclination. To be unfree is to have that inclination
frustrated.
At the higher level, distinctive to persons, freedom demands,
in addition, the absence of psychological compulsion. My freedom as a person
is limited to the extent that instinct or passion compels me to act in certain
ways, for example, to flee from danger or flinch with pain.
If my motives could never transcend my individual self-interest
or the collective self-interest of my group, I could never be truly free. I
could always be manipulated and compelled to act in specific ways by fear of
punishment or hope of reward. Just as animals can be drawn by dangling a carrot
or banana in front of their noses, so a child can be induced to behave in certain
ways by the prospect of gratification or the fear of pain. Unable to escape
from the determinism of instinct or appetite, we would be forced to act by threats
and promises.
One of the benefits of training and discipline is to enhance
our zone of inner freedom. By education and exercise we develop the motivation
and character that enables us to resist physical and especially psychological
pressures. Some learn to go for long periods without sleep, to abstain from
food, or to endure intense physical pain without abandoning their resolve. Such
persons have greater freedom than others. They have a larger zone of inner self-determination.
In determining my own course of action, I cannot dispense with
motives. If choices were completely arbitrary, freedom would be meaningless
and in the last analysis impossible. In my free actions I follow what I apprehend
as good and worthy of being chosen, but the choice is not forced upon me. I
consent to the attraction because my reason approves of it. In acting freely
I experience myself as the source of my own activity and as responsible for
the results. My actions recoil to some degree on myself, and so make me to be
what I am. Thus the freedom to determine one's activity is at the same time
self-determination. The present pope explains this at some length in his major
work, The Acting Person, and in various philosophical essays written
before he became pope.6
In Veritatis Splendor John Paul II quotes St. Gregory of Nyssa
on the royal dignity that pertains to those who have this kind of dominion over
themselves. "The soul shows its royal and exalted character ... in that
it is free and self-governed, swayed autonomously by its own will. Of whom else
can this be said, save a king?"7 According to the pope, freedom does not attain this royal dignity
until it rises to the level of making choices that perfect the dynamism of the
human spirit toward the divine, following motives that solicit its free adherence.
To this effect the pope quotes from Vatican II:
God willed to leave them [human beings] "in the hands of their
own counsel" (cf. Sir 15:14), so that they would seek their Creator of
their own accord and would freely arrive at full and blessed perfection by cleaving
to God. (GS 17; VS §38, p. 61)
As I have said, we possess this freedom only when we go beyond
individual and collective selfishness and reach out to that which reason perceives
as objectively good and true. Our freedom is not diminished but expanded and
fulfilled when we employ it to bring about a true good. This, again, is the
teaching of Vatican II:
Human dignity requires one to act through conscious and free choice,
as motivated and prompted personally from within, and not through blind impulse
or merely external pressure. People achieve such dignity when they free themselves
from all subservience to their feelings, and in a free choice of the good, pursue
their own end by effectively and assiduously marshaling the appropriate means.
(GS 17; VS §21, p. 42)
Because the moral law, as known by reason, does not constrain
us, it leaves us physically and psychologically free either to obey or to violate
it. But if we reject the true good, we inevitably yield to the passions and
instincts of our lower nature and thereby undermine our authentic freedom. To
act freely against the truth is to erode freedom itself.
Michael Polanyi, the great philosopher of science, speaks in
much the same terms as John Paul II. He writes: While compulsion by force or
by neurotic obsession excludes responsibility, compulsion by universal intent
establishes responsibility. ... The freedom of the subjective person to do as
he pleases is overruled by the freedom of the responsible person to act as he
must.8
Lord Acton has been quoted as saying that freedom is "not
the power of doing what we like, but the right of being able to do what we ought."9
As this definition indicates, Acton is concerned not so much with the philosophical
as with the political definition of freedom. Those who have a constitutional
right to do as they ought are politically free, and if they are not physically
or psychologically impeded from following the moral imperative, they are also
free in the philosophical sense of the word.
Freedom and Devotion
In a paper on The Personal Structure of Self-Determination,
from which I have already drawn some ideas, John Paul II makes a further inference,
based on the relational character of the person. Every person, he maintains,
is both a being willed by God for itself and at the same time a being turned
toward others. To be isolated from others is a form of self-imprisonment. We
become most truly human in the measure that we go out of ourselves and give
ourselves for the sake of others. This "law of the gift," as the pope
calls it, is inscribed deep in the dynamic structure of the person as fashioned
in the image of the divine.10 He confirms this insight by
quoting from Vatican II: "The human being, who is the only creature on
earth that God willed for itself, cannot attain its full identity except through
a disinterested gift of self" (GS 24). The citizen serves the common good
out of a free commitment or devotion. Those who love God serve him freely, and
if they refuse that service they undermine the freedom that love has given them.
Those who obey the commandments out of fear are not fully free, but they fall
into even deeper slavery if they disobey God in order to gratify their own impulses.
The truly free person is one who does what is good out of love for goodness
itself.
Thinkers who consider the law of God to be a hindrance to human
freedom have been misled into regarding obedience as a form of heteronomy or
self-alienation, as though God were a hostile power imposing terms on humanity
as a defeated enemy. In fact, God's law proceeds only from benevolence toward
creatures whom God loves. The moral law is intended to safeguard human dignity.
Human freedom and divine law conspire to the same end.
In this connection John Paul II speaks of "theonomy."
Rational knowledge enables us to participate in the light of eternal wisdom,
which is expressed in the divine law. In obeying God's law I incline myself
before His divine majesty and at the same time follow my deepest vocation as
a creature. In the pope's own words,
"Law must therefore be considered an expression of divine wisdom:
by submitting to the law, freedom submits to the truth of creation. Consequently
one must acknowledge in the freedom of the human person the image and the nearness
of God, who is present in all (cf. Eph 4:6). But one must likewise acknowledge
the majesty of the God of the universe and revere the holiness of the law of
God, who is infinitely transcendent: Deus semper maior" (VS §41, p.
65).
The supreme exemplars of freedom, for John Paul II, are the
martyrs. They are the heroic persons who are so committed to the known good
that they stand up under pressures that would overcome the willpower of most
others. Given the choice between denying their principles and losing their lives,
they freely lay down their lives and thereby give witness to the truth. Jesus,
who freely laid down his life for our sakes, sets the pattern for martyrs.
The martyrs represent an achievement of freedom beyond the
capacities of the great majority of men and women. They inspire us by their
example to rise above the more limited measure of freedom that we can claim
for ourselves. For the theology of freedom it is important to recognize that
the freedom with which we are born is frail and limited. John Paul II compares
it to a seed that must be cultivated. Some degree of freedom is an essential
part of the reflection of God that is constitutive of human nature, but our
freedom is incomplete. Wounded as we are by original sin, we often prefer limited
and ephemeral goods to those what are pure and abiding. We are even tempted
to assert our freedom against our Creator, as if freedom could exist without
regard for truth. God's redemptive action in Christ helps to liberate us from
this illusion. As Paul writes in Galatians 5:1, "For freedom Christ has
set us free" (VS§ 86, pp. 131-32). Since Christ himself is the truth
(Jn 14:6), it is also correct to say that the truth sets us free (cf. Jn 8:32).
Freedom and Law
It is partly in revealing the law that God liberates his people.
Already in the Old Testament, God brought the tribes of Israel out of bondage
and united them to himself through the Sinai Covenant, which contained the basic
precepts of the moral law. That covenant was perfected by the new law of the
gospel, which Scripture describes as an interior law "written not with
ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets
of human hearts" (2 Cor 3:3, quoted in VS §45, p. 70, with additional
references to Jeremiah and Paul).
As a new and interior law, the gospel teaches us both by enlightening
our minds and by instilling a love and affection for the truth. The divinely
given attraction toward the true goal of human existence, which is none other
than God himself, does not impede our freedom of choice, since it inclines us
toward the very thing that right reason would select. The inner instinct of
grace heals our rebellious wills and inclines us to do as God wills. In so doing
it removes an obstacle to freedom-our innate tendency to pursue the immediate
and apparent good rather than the ultimate and true good. It brings us closer
to the final condition of the blessed in heaven, who cannot do other than love
God, but who do so freely because they see how lovable God is.
Freedom and Conscience
In speaking of the interior law of the gospel imprinted by God
on the human heart, I am inevitably raising the question of conscience, which
is a subject of considerable confusion in our day. John Paul II remarks that
the idea of conscience has been deformed by modern thinkers who have lost the
sense of the transcendent and are in some cases atheistic. These thinkers often
depict conscience as a supreme and infallible tribunal that dispenses us from
considerations of law and truth, putting in their place purely subjective and
individualist criteria such as sincerity, authenticity, and being at peace with
oneself (VS §32, p. 53). In opposition to this trend John Paul II shows
in Veritatis Splendor that conscience is an act of intelligence that
adheres to objective norms. The freedom of conscience is secured by its conformity
to truth.
The classical biblical text on conscience, quoted by John Paul
II, is Romans 2:14-16: "When Gentiles who have not the law do by nature
what the law requires, they are a law unto themselves, even though they do not
have the law. They show that what the law requires is written on their hearts,
while their conscience also bears witness and their conflicting thoughts accuse
or perhaps excuse them..." (cf. §VS 57, p. 89).
The meaning of this dense and complex passage is clarified
by a paragraph from Vatican II that John Paul II also quotes:
In the depths of his own conscience man detects a law which he does
not impose on himself, but which holds him to obedience. Always summoning him
to love good and avoid evil, the voice of conscience can when necessary speak
to his heart more specifically: 'Do this, shun that.' For man has in his heart
a law written by God. To obey it is the very dignity of man; according to it
he will be judged (cf. Rom 2:14-16)." (GS 16, quoted in VS §54, pp.
85-86).
According to these authoritative texts, conscience is not a
purely subjective and autonomous principle; it is in no way opposed to the truth
of God's law, which is its ground. Its judgments always presuppose the first
principle of practical reason, the obligation to do good and avoid evil.
Paul, as we have seen, describes conscience as an unwritten
law inscribed by God on the human heart. St. Bonaventure spells out this relationship
more explicitly. In a text quoted by John Paul II he writes: "Conscience
is like God's herald and messenger; it does not command things on its own authority,
but commands them as coming from God's authority, like a herald when he proclaims
the edict of a king. This is why conscience has a binding force."11
In the history of Catholic theology, John Henry Newman is outstanding
for having clarified the relationship between conscience and God. Conscience,
he writes in his Letter to the Duke of Norfolk, is the voice of God in the nature
and heart of man.12 In his Grammar of Assent Newman speaks
of conscience as "our great internal teacher of religion."13
It "teaches us not only that God is but what He is; it provides for the
mind a real image of Him, as a medium of worship."14 Newman then goes on to explain how it discloses God as lawgiver,
judge, and rewarder. In a justly famous paragraph he declares: "Conscience
is the aboriginal Vicar of Christ, a prophet in its informations, a monarch
in its peremptoriness, a priest in its blessings and anathemas."15
Newman contrasts this true and traditional conception of conscience
with what he calls its modern counterfeit. While some philosophers attack the
very concept of conscience as a primitive and irrational force, the popular
mind, in advocating the rights of conscience, really seeks to assert human self-will,
without any thought of God at all. Conscience thus becomes "a license to
take up any or no religion." For Newman, on the contrary, conscience is
a stern monitor and is essentially bound up with the acknowledgment of God.
"Conscience has its rights because it has duties."16
Building on passages such as these, John Paul II is able to
show that, far from being a power to make one's decisions autonomously and creatively,
conscience binds us to the law of God, to whom conscience is responsible. He
then goes on to remark that conscience is neither adequate nor infallible as
a source of moral guidance. Because it attests to a higher intelligence and
will to which it is subject, it arouses a concern or anxiety to find out what
course of action is here and now required of the individual to do good and avoid
evil.
Conscience impels one to seek authoritative direction. Newman
eloquently points out the providential role of the Church is supplying this
need. In his Letter to the Duke of Norfolk he writes:
All sciences, except the science of Religion, have their certainty
in themselves; as far as they are sciences, they consist of necessary conclusions
from undeniable premises, or of phenomena manipulated into general truths by
an irresistible deduction. But the sense of right and wrong, which is the first
element in religion, is so delicate, so fitful, so easily puzzled, obscured,
perverted, so subtle in its argumentative methods, so impressible by education,
so biased by pride and passion, so unsteady in its flight, that, in the struggle
for existence amid the various exercises and triumphs of the human intellect,
this sense is at once the highest of all teachers; yet the least luminous; and
the Church, the Pope, the Hierarchy are, in the Divine purpose, the supply of
an urgent demand. 17
Conscience, therefore, is in no way opposed to the use of external
sources of traditional and revealed wisdom. It seeks help from authority in
forming its judgments. Far from being an exception to the general rule that
freedom is oriented toward objective truth, the experience of conscientious
decision-making confirms the rule that, as the pope expresses it, the freedom
of conscience is never freedom from the truth but always and only freedom in
the truth (VS §64, p. 98).
Freedom and Vocation
I have tried thus far to establish that freedom is meaningless
and self-destructive if it is not used in the service of what is truly good.
A freedom that dispenses itself from concern with truth could only be a false
and illusory freedom. But it does not follow that the whole course of our life
is prescribed in advance by an objective order of truth that excludes any originality
and creativity on our part. In most situations we are faced with a choice between
several competing goods. Just as I am free to order peas or carrots at dinner,
or to wear a plain or striped shirt, so, on a larger scale, I am at liberty
to choose any occupation, profession, or walk of life that is honorable in itself
and consonant with my abilities and temperament. It would be a mistake to imagine
that there would be only one acceptable course of action. Without prescribing
everything in advance, God invites us to make creative decisions, in consonance
with the moral law.
In this connection one must consider the idea of vocation.
God may invite us, without compelling us, to do more than duty requires. In
his meditation on the call of the rich young man at the beginning of Veritatis
Splendor John Paul II points out the distinction between obedience to the commandments,
which is required for salvation, and a particular vocation, which may enable
an individual to attain more perfect freedom. Many spiritual writers hold that
the rich young man, whom Jesus urged to give away his goods to the poor, was
not strictly required to perform this generous act. He could presumably have
saved his soul by continuing to observe the commandments, as he had been doing
for years. Ordinarily, at least, the vocation to the life of the evangelical
counsels does not come as a command but as a gracious invitation. Although we
cannot achieve perfect freedom without accepting the highest possibilities opened
up to us by God's grace, we are morally free to do all that God does not forbid.
The Free Society
Up to this point I have focused on the freedom of the individual.
In the final section of this paper I should like to turn to the free society.
It is more difficult to see how a society can be directed by truth unless the
convictions of many of the members are overridden, in which case the society
can hardly be called free. John Paul II, acutely conscious of this problem,
offers some important considerations that I shall attempt to summarize.
The free society rests on the supposition that the members
are endowed with inalienable rights. If the rights of individuals were conferred
by the state or by the society, they could be removed by human power, and the
way would be open to tyranny. As the authors of our Declaration of Independence
recognized, the Creator Himself has given human beings an inalienable right
to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, though of course the exercise
of these rights has to be regulated with regard to the common good.
Alluding to the biblical and patristic doctrine that human
beings are made in the image of God, the pope contends that the human person,
as the visible image of the invisible God, is by nature the subject of rights
that no individual, group, class, nation, or state may violate. Where the transcendent
source of human dignity is denied, the way lies open for totalitarianism and
other forms of despotism, in which naked power takes over, so that the interests
of a particular person or group are imposed on the rest of society.18
As the pope goes on to explain, authentic democracy is possible
only on the basis of a rule of law and a correct conception of the human person.
"If there is no ultimate truth to guide and direct political activity,
then ideas and convictions can easily be manipulated for reasons of power ...
In a world without truth, freedom loses its foundation and man is exposed to
the violence of passion and to manipulation, both open and hidden" (CA
§46, p. 18).
But an objection still arises. People are not free unless they
can determine their own form of government and participate in the making of
their own laws. Thus it would seem that if they are not at liberty to deny the
transcendent truth, they are not really free. On a purely political definition
of freedom, we may concede that a people is free to institute slavery or to
adopt a totalitarian form of government, but in so doing they damage or destroy
their own freedom. An abiding freedom requires a consensus based on transcendent
truth. Just as individuals forfeit their own freedom when they try to liberate
themselves from moral norms, so the society surrenders its freedom if it fails
to respect the personal dignity of its members.
The concept of public consensus is not always rightly understood.
According to a widely prevalent view, it is simply a majority opinion, which
may be based on fashion or emotion, or an ideology, based on the self-interest
of a class. John Courtney Murray, in his masterful work, We Hold These Truths,
explains that according to the classical tradition of political thought, consensus
is a very different thing: it is a doctrine or judgment that commands public
agreement because of the merits of the arguments in its favor.19
Public consensus, according to Murray, transcends sheer experience
and expediency; it is basically a moral conception. Those who articulate it
are the ones whom Thomas Aquinas called the "wise" (sapientes)20
and whom George Washington called "the wise and honest."21 The ability to discern what laws and policies best safeguard
the dignity and rights of the citizens depends upon a careful inquiry in which
intelligence is tutored by experience and reflection and guided by an instinct
for the right and the good. The reason of the wise and the good is a responsible
reason, concerned with fidelity to moral principle, and matured through familiarity
with the complexities of the developing human situation.
The consensus, therefore, must be articulated by those who
excel in practical wisdom, but in order to be a real consensus it must also
be accepted by the people. At the basis of the American experiment in ordered
liberty, Murray explains, there are truths. "We the People" hold these
truths and, showing "a decent respect for the opinions of mankind,"
declare them in public documents.22 The American consensus
consists not only in the general principles expressed in the Declaration of
Independence but also in the more specific provisions of the Constitution and
the Bill of Rights. These provisions likewise embody truths, formulated by the
wise and accepted by the people at large.
In the atmosphere of contemporary pluralism, there is a tendency
to overlook the inviolable connection between freedom and truth, as though freedom
implied a right to construct one's own moral universe without accountability
to any higher agency. Václav Havel speaks in this connection of a deep
moral crisis in the post-totalitarian society:
A person who has been seduced by the consumer value system, whose
identity is dissolved in an amalgam of the accouterments of mass civilization,
and who has no roots in the order of being, no sense of responsibility for anything
higher than his or her own personal survival, is a demoralized person. The system
depends on this demoralization, deepens it, is in fact a projection of it into
society.23
Pope John Paul II, from a similar perspective, speaks of a "crisis
of truth" (VS §32, p. 53). All around us, says the pope, the saving
power of the truth is contested, and freedom alone, uprooted from any objectivity,
is left to decide for itself what is good and what is evil (VS §84, p.
129). As he writes in Centesimus Annus:
Nowadays there is a tendency to claim that agnosticism and skeptical
relativism are the philosophy and the basic attitude which correspond to democratic
forms of political life. Those who are convinced that they know the truth and
firmly adhere to it are considered unreliable from a democratic point of view,
since they do not accept that truth is determined by the majority or that it
is subject to variation according to different political trends. (CA §46,
p. 18)
Democracy, as Murray insisted, is more than a political experiment.
It is a spiritual and moral enterprise, depending for its success upon the virtue
of the citizens.24Political freedom is endangered if the
institutions no longer serve the ends of virtue and if the people fail to discipline
themselves. The crisis of society, therefore, is simply that of the individual
writ large. Just as the freedom of the individual cannot stand without personal
adherence to truth, so the free society cannot flourish without a virtuous citizenry,
disposed to live out their identity as children of God and as brothers and sisters
in a common humanity. The general consensus must be nourished not by disordered
passion but by an inner sense of responsibility to a higher law, interpreted
by the wise and honest. Because so many of us live according to purely pragmatic
standards of pleasure, wealth, and power, we are in danger of losing the moral
and spiritual foundations on which our freedom rests.
The contemporary crisis of freedom, therefore, is at root a
crisis of truth. Lord Acton perceived this more than a century ago. John Courtney
Murray reached similar conclusions on the basis of his study of the American
political tradition. In our own day, John Paul II has clearly demonstrated the
inseparable connection between freedom and truth. In the course of his long
career, he has eloquently and forcefully proclaimed the principles that must
underlie every free society, including the American experiment of ordered liberty.
Avery Dulles, S.J. holds the Laurence J. McGinley Chair
in Religion and Society at Fordham University. The author of 18 books and over
600 articles, Reverend Dulles is past president of both the Catholic Theological
Society of America and the American Theological Society. Father Dulles is a
counsultor to the Committee on the Doctrine of the National Conference of Catholic
Bishops. The son of the late John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State to President
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Father Dulles converted to Catholicism in 1940 while attending
Harvard Law School.
Notes:
Gertrude Himmelfarb, Lord Acton: A Study in Conscience
and Politics (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1952), 241.
Mortimer J Adler, Freedom: A Study of the Development of the Concept in
the English and American Traditions of Philosophy (Albany, N.Y.: Magi Books,
1968), 5.
Karol Wojtyla, Archbishop of Krakow, intervention of September 25, 1964,
in Acta synodalia Concilii Vaticani II, Period III, vol 2, pp. 530-32, at
531.
John Paul II, Encyclical Redemptor hominis (Washington, DC.: United States
Catholic Conference, 1979), 36.
Chapter 2 of Veritatis Splendor deals with "The Church and the Discernemnt
of Certain Tendencies in Present-Day Moral Theology,"§§ 28-83,pp.46-127.
Page references in my text will be to the Vatican Press edition, 1993.
Karol Wojtyla, The Acting Person (Dordrecht, Holland: D Reidel, 1979), esp.
106-86; idem, "The Personal Structure of Self-Determination," chapter
13 of his Person and Community: Selected Essays (New York: Peter Lang, 1993),
187-95.
Gregory of Nyssa, De hominis opificio, chap 4; P. 44:135; cf. VS §38,
p. 61.
Personal Knowledge (New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1964), 309.
Quoted by John Courtney Murray, We Hold These Truths (New York: Sheed &
Ward, 1960), 36.
Wojtyla, Person and Community, 194.
Bonaventure, In II Libr Sent., dist. 39, a. 1, q. 3, concl.; cf. Veritatis
splendor, §58, pp. 89-90.
John Henry Newman, Letter to the Duke of Norfolk in Newman and Gladstone:
The Vatican Decrees, ed. Alvan S. Ryan (Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre
Dame Press), p. 128.
Newman, Grammar of Assent (Garden City: Doubleday Image, 1955), 304.
Ibid.
Norfolk,p.130.
Ibid, 130.
Norfolk, 132-33.
John Paul II, Encyclical Centesimus annus, §44 Origins 21 (May 16,
1991): 1-24, at 17.
Murray, We Hold These Truths, chap 4, pp. 97-123, at 105.
Thomas Aquinas, in Summa theologiae, 1-2100.1c, points out that to judge
matters that require extensive consideration of different circumstances is
the task of the wise, who then have the task of teaching the rest of the community.
Murray (We Hold These Truths, p. 111) gives no specific reference. Presumably
he is thinking of Washington's statement, "Let us raise a standard to
which the wise and honest can repair; the rest is in the hands of God"
(Speech to the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia in 1787). Quoted
from A Treasury of Presidential Quotations, ed. Caroline T. Harnsberger (Chicago:
Follett, 1964), 300.
Murray, We Hold These Truths, 106.
Václav Havel, Living in Truth (London: Faber & Faber, 1987),
62.
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