But the wisdom from above is pure first of all; it is also peaceful, gentle, and friendly; it is full of compassion and produces a harvest of good deeds; it is free from prejudice and hypocrisy. And goodness is the harvest that is produced from the seeds the peacemakers plant in peace.

James 3:17


Saturday, February 25, 2012

Reflections on Rick Santorum"s View of Faith

Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA)
Former Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) has injected religious concerns and issues into presidential politics in a way that has delighted some, angered others, and raised again the thorny issue of the relationship of religious faith to politics.  Drawing on a speech that Mr. Santorum delivered at the Oxford Center for Religion & Public Life in August 2008 (here) and his Q& A responses (here), a speech he gave at Ave Maria University that same month (here), and a talk he gave recently at Grace Church, Eden Prairie, Minnesota  (here), I would like to  describe Rick Santorum's faith as best I can and then reflect critically on the potential impact of his faith on a Santorum presidency, as unlikely as it seems now that there might ever be one.

In his book, Dynamics of Faith (HarperOne, 2009 [1957]), Paul Tillich defines "faith" as "the state of being ultimately concerned" and writes that, "the dynamics of faith are the dynamics of man's ultimate concern."  When Santorum spoke to the Eden Prairie congregation, he affirmed that Jesus Christ is his saviour, God, role model, teacher, and the center of his life.  He spoke of Jesus as "my friend."  More generally, he often refers to the fact that he encountered God in a deeper way once he entered the United States Senate in 1995.  Thus, personally, Rick Santorum's faith is in Christ.  At Grace Church, he spoke of the importance of grace in his life and of embracing the Cross.  He spoke of the world as broken and fallen and drifting further and further away from Jesus.  In his whole life, Santorum wants to witness for Christ, be faithful to him, and not separate himself from him.

There is more to his faith than Christ, however, and it is here that the true nature of Santorum's ultimate concern becomes harder to track.  In his speech to the students at Ave Maria University, he said that in his upbringing in Western Pennsylvania there were two important influences.  First, he was raised in a "Catholic ghetto," and the Catholic faith stuck with him.  It was this faith that "took off" in the Senate.  At the same time, his parents taught him an inmmigrants' love for America.  He is not just a faithful Catholic Christian.  He is also a faithful son of America.  And this is where things become confusing, because in his public speeches it frequently seems that the boundaries between these two concerns are porous and ill-defined.  God and nation blend to such a degree that they can seem to be two facets of a single ultimate concern.

These two, God and nation, especially seem to coalesce into a unity in Santorum's concept of Christendom, which means apparently any society that gives faithful allegiance to Christ and lives by the "Judeo-Christian" code of morals and values.  Most generally, however, he defines it negatively.  He is painfully aware that Christendom is under attack in America, indeed seems to be all but lost.  The enemy is secularism, which is embodied in many dangerous forms including the mainstream media, academia, left-wing radicals, the ethos of the 1960s, Democrats, Hollywood, the NBA, liberal so-called Christians, evolutionary thinking, atheism, homosexuality, and supporters of abortion.  He believes that Western Europe has already fallen under the influences of secularism, and his is convinced that President Obama intends to take the United States down the same path to secularity.

In his Ave Maria speech, Santorum described the growth of secularism in America in an insidious process that is destroying the nation's traditional values and its connection to its Judeo-Christian heritage.  He states that prideful, vain academia fell first to secularism followed by mainline Protestantism, which he sees as no longer being Christian.  The next domino to fall was American culture, and while he didn't give a precise date to the secularization of culture comments in his Cambridge Center presentation suggest that it was the 1960s, which he equates especially with sexual immorality.  According to Santorum, American politics and governance resisted secularization until the last twenty years or so partly because ordinary Americans still elected their officials.  The nation, in other words, has remained more faithful than academics, some Protestant denominations, and many of the carriers of culture.  His feeling that he didn't really find God until he became a senator and his insistence that many people on Capitol Hill are faithful Christians reinforces his sense of the residual faithfulness of the nation.  Christendom, then, is an all-encompassing concept that covers culture, politics, ethics, and of course religion.  Church and state may not be one, but they should be congruent and share the same faith and moral code.

Rick Santorum speaking at Ave Maria University, 2008
Mr. Santorum believes that a spiritual conflict is taking place in America between Christendom and secularity and that he is a combatant, almost a gladiator in that war.  As he said at Ave Maria University, Satan is attacking America.  He told the students that God needs them to be soldiers of faith, and he assured them that victory was certain.  At the Cambridge Center, he stated in his opening remarks that he saw evidence of "a very great divide in American politics" in which the nation "is wrestling with its own Judeo-Christian identity."  He went on to brand the Democratic Party as a key agent of secularization, and he has a deep-seated mistrust of President Obama whose political agenda, he believes, is "a more secular, government-driven, top-down, elitist culture, which is more reflective of what we're seeing in Western Europe."  Mr. Santorum believes himself to be at war in what is a "life struggle here in America."

Santorum rejects the idea of multiculturalism, which he identifies with the values and attitudes of Western Europe.  Multi-culturalism teaches that Western culture is not superior to other cultures and may even be inferior to them.  In a recent article entitled, "Multiculturalism Threatens America," he recounts how his grandfather left fascist Italy and migrated to the coal mines of Pennsylvania in order to live in America, a land of equality.  But now, he writes, "As a result of multicultural relativism, however, we are seeing the American aspiration eroded, our common purpose lost, and a 're-appearing tyranny and oppression' that is not only poised against us abroad but is also pointing its dagger at us here at home."

The struggle is not, moreover, just in America.  If the agents of secularity are the domestic enemies of American faithfulness, Islam is its external enemy.  At the end of the Q&A session at the Cambridge Center, Santorum  criticized President George W. Bush for failing to identify Islam as America's enemy.  President Bush and his State Department refused to acknowledge that Muslims are a people motivated by faith, and they are in a religiously-motivated holy war directed against America.  Santorum specifically identifies, in the article on multiculturalism cited above, Muslim communities in America as being a danger because they resist assimilation into the nation.  He stated at the Cambridge Center that it was part of his task to warn the American public of the dangers of Islam.  It was not a politically popular thing to do, "but I'll continue to talk about it."  It was on this note that he ended that presentation.

At the end of the day, Rick Santorum places his faith in Christ, which drives him to seek and to fight for God's will.  As he understands it, God wills that America be restored to its place in Christendom and that it reclaims its Judeo-Christian heritage.  He feels that in this struggle he must be a spiritual person who is honest, stands on his principles, speaks forthrightly for what he believes, and takes public policy positions consistent with his faith. This is what motivates him to run for the presidency. He wrote in the article on multiculturalism, "Because we are an optimistic people, Americans generally do not face up to challenges until we absolutely must. In a brewing crisis, we need a leader who has the political courage to speak the truth not only about our enemy but also about ourselves; a leader who has faith in all we are as a people, to inspire America and keep her free, safe and good."  Santorum's faith is intense and driven.  In his chat with the Grace Church congregation, he said that his personal faith journey "has been through fire."  He has had to stand up and fight for what he believes is right at some sacrifice to himself and his family.  He feels himself frequently attacked and deliberately misunderstood especially by the mainstream media.

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Rick Santorum wears his faith on his sleeve.  It matters deeply to him.  It also matters to the rest of us because he has become an increasingly significant political voice over the last few months. The most recent set of national polls (here) show Santorum leading the Republican field by an average of 5.2%.  If he does become president, furthermore, his profound reliance on his faith, which is what motivates him to seek office, will be an important factor in how he governs.  It will inform the policies he pursues, his style, and his attitudes—things that matter to the rest of us.

Viewed theologically, Santorum's faith displays certain potentially troubling characteristics.  To begin with, it is intensely dualistic.  There are various kinds of dualism, and the type that Santorum articulates is often called "moral" dualism, which traces its roots to ancient Persia's belief the god of good and the god of evil are engaged in a cosmic battle.  A dualistic worldview of this type thus divides reality into two distinct camps, one good and the other evil.  There is no overlap.  Humans have to choose sides, and they can't be allied with both.  Indeed, all of reality is divided into categories of good and evil.

Moral dualism normally comes with other concepts, most notably exclusivism, a battlefield mentality, and a rejection of compromise.  If the universe is sharply divided into spheres of good and evil, then there is only one or the other.  It follows that if Christianity is good all other forms of belief that do not conform to Christianity are evil.  Mr. Santorum thus considers mainline churches to no longer be Christian because they do not conform to his understanding of the Christian faith.  By the same token, there can be no such thing as a "liberal Christian," because liberals believe things antithetical to the Christian faith as he understands it.  In his speeches, he habitually divides people, policies, ideas, and political parties into the categories of Christendom (good) and secularism (evil).  And it follows from his exclusivism that Santorum considers himself to be involved in a great battle between good, embodied in his Judeo-Christian heritage, and evil, embodied in secularism in all of its manifestations.  Santorum has used the metaphor of fighting in the arena to describe his political style.  And from all of this it follows that when it comes to the fundamentals of his faith he cannot compromise.  He must stand up for what he believes.

That is to say, Mr. Santorum shares the marks of the tea party adherents whose unwillingness to compromise has brought Congress to a standstill and seriously weakened the federal government's ability to govern.  If he remains true to his principles, a Santorum presidency is likely to be short on compromise and long on seeking to impose his theocratic agenda on the nation as best he can.  Now, with his pre-tea party experience in Washington, he may be better able to govern than the tea party faction has thus far, but the rhetoric we have heard during the Republican primaries suggests otherwise.

But, let's back up to the word, "theocratic."  It sounds incendiary, but in fact it is a good name for Santorum's stated philosophy of government, which is to restore America's Judeo-Christian heritage and return the nation safely to the fold of Christendom.  According to Wiktionary, the word "theocracy" means either rule by God or by government under the control of a church or state-sponsored religion.  Santorum wants to restore the rule of God over America, and in doing so he would certainly sponsor his understanding of faith as much as possible as president.  "Christendom" is a political term.  It means the place or area in which Christianity rules.  Christian prayer would return to the schools.  Christian religious displays would be permitted on public property.  As president, Santorum would pursue a pro-life agenda and, apparently, work to end the use of contraceptives.  These are theocratic measures, and he would govern as theocratically as the realities of American politics will allow.  He says so repeatedly, and we should believe him.  The ideas of the Judeo-Christian tradition and Christendom as Santorum uses them, furthermore, encompass all that is good.  They are, strictly speaking, imperial categories.  There is nothing good outside of them, and they do not recognize the validity or value of any beliefs, values, attitudes, or behaviors they do not encompass.

It is important to understand, moreover, that Santorum identifies the larger set of Republican policies with God and faith as well.  He says that the Republican Part is the party of faith, thus his whole conservative agenda is equally a part of his theocratic agenda.  We are already seeing what this means in Wisconsin, Virginia, and other states where the tea party Right won control of state government.  It means little short of a crusade to repeal the social, economic, and political program of the Democratic Party and, in a sense, to return America to 1928.  Again, the word "crusade" is the correct label for the political agenda that tea party governance pursues, the kind of governance Mr. Santorum advocates.  A crusade is a war on evil—in this case, the evil of secularism.  It is a war on the agents of evil, that is the long list of "secularists" given above.

Thus, another key characteristic of moral dualism is the tendency of moral dualists to demonize their opponents, considering them as enemies rather than merely as opponents.  Mr. Santorum cannot believe that President Obama is also a man of faith because his belief system is liberal.  Instead of accepting the president's description of his own personal conversion to Christianity, Santorum states that the president joined an influential church on Chicago's south side in order to further his political agenda.  More largely, he believes that Democrats plan to turn America into a secularized state after the model of Western Europe.  Liberal churches are no longer churches at all.  While it is his right to believe all of these things personally, it will make it much more difficult for him to govern all the people when he believes that so many Americans are carriers of the evils of secularism.  How will he find sufficient common ground with Democrats to govern given his demonic view of them?  How will he compromise when compromise is necessary to get things done?  How can he find common ground with enemies with whom he has nothing in common so that there is no place that can be called "common ground"?  These are important questions.

Viewed theologically, Rick Santorum has fallen into the trap of placing his ultimate concern in things that are not ultimate.  In Dynamics of Faith, Tillich describes this danger of faith.  It begins with the failure to recognize the fact that there is something about every truly ultimate concern that cannot be grasped and that is profoundly beyond the understanding of the faithful.  Tillich says that faith entails risk and courage—risk because we can never be entirely sure that our ultimate concern is truly ultimate and courage because by our very nature we must take the risk of having faith.  If we are absolutely sure that our ultimate concern is ultimate, we can be sure it is not.  By its very nature, an ultimate cannot be grasped in that way.  Tillich argues that doubt is an important element of faith because we can't be absolutely sure of our ultimate concern.  The presence of at least some residual doubt is an indication that our ultimate concern may indeed be ultimate.  Tillich observes that we must therefore be self-critical of our sense of ultimate concern.  Speaking as a Christian theologian, he says that people of faith must always stand "under the Cross" by hearing criticism and subjecting ourselves to prophetic judgment and doubt (p. 33).

Mr. Santorum, so far as his public pronouncements are concerned, displays all of the traits of a "true believer" who does not doubt the ultimacy of his ultimate concern.  Furthermore, he generally treats a preliminary, finite reality—the United States of America—as an ultimate concern.  He identifies God with nation to the extent of giving his ideal America the name of Christ, Christendom.  Throughout Dynamics of Faith, Tillich repeatedly uses nationalism as a prime example of a finite reality that is frequently treated as an ultimate concern.  He insists that finite realities cannot bear such weight and necessarily collapse, betraying the faithful with their failure.  Tillich calls the act of putting one's faith in a finite reality "idolatry."  He warns of the grave danger especially of turning faith symbols and stories into idols, the Bible itself being a prime example of a finite reality that millions of faithful people treat as if it is God.  Tillich calls this form of idolatry literalism and writes, "Literalism deprives God of his ultimacy and, religiously speaking, of his majesty.  It draws him down to the level of that which is not ultimate, the finite and conditional." (p. 60)

This is what Mr. Santorum has done.  In his failure to be doubtful and critical of his faith and in associating a finite reality with God to the extent that God and nation become an ideological unity, he has turned "God" and "nation" into idols.

He, of course, would disagree, which his right.  The thing is he wants to be president, and his form of idolatry demonizes all who disagree with his theology and his politics, which he sees as one.  These demons, who are not just his enemies but also God's enemies, include liberals, Democrats, mainline Protestants, union members, homosexuals, people who advocate pro-choice positions, Muslims, Western Europeans, academics, members of the mainstream media, and in fact moderate and "establishment" Republicans (RINOs) as well.  And that is a problem because these groups include a lot of good Americans and good people of faith who love their country just as much as Mr. Santorum does.  He cannot accept that fact any more than he can accept the idea that Barack Obama is a born-again Christian.  And that is a problem.

It is also a problem that Mr. Santorum, with his dualistic crusader mentality, does not accept fundamental realities of American life.  First, we are a multicultural nation and draw great strength from that fact.  Second, according to the highest law in the land, the Constitution, the United States is a secular state.  We do not have a state religion or church.  There are no religious tests for holding public office.  The state does not regulate the practice of religion so long as that practice does not violate the civil laws of the land.  Third, tens of millions of Americans are liberals and have a rightful place in deciding what kind of a nation we live in.  They are not enemies of their nation, and they are Mr. Santorum's enemies only because he chooses to make them such.

In sum, a Santorum presidency, would be reactionary, divisive, and manipulative.  The goal of his administration would be to gain theocratic control of the nation and limit to the largest extent possible the power and the voice of his enemies.  The policies and governance of the tea party state governments foreshadow those of a Santorum presidency.