Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Canon law, works of mercy, and human dignity
Canon law, works of mercy, and human dignity
Mar 18, 2025 5:11 PM

The gains made in fort by modernity still leave room for ancient wisdom and ancient law. In fact, they demand them.

Read More…

“All human societies face about the same problems,” claim David Friedman, Peter Leeson, and David Skarbek in their fascinating and peculiar book Legal Systems Very Different from Ours. “They deal with them in an interesting variety of different ways. All of them are grownups—there is little reason to believe that the people who created the legal systems of Imperial China, Periclean Athens, or saga-period Iceland were any less intelligent than the creators of the US legal system. All of the systems should be taken seriously, each as one way in which a human society dealt with its legal problems.”1 So also, we could add, their economic problems. In particular, those interested in Christian social and eco-nomic thought today might have more to learn than they would expect from Christian Rome and Byzantium.

Christian Rome was not more or less intelligent than our systems today but it was “very different,” and it is fair to say that it was, in a few important senses, “more Christian.” The economies and polities of the ancient and medieval worlds—too agrarian, too aristocratic, too despotic—are not something we should pine for today. Yet integralists, distributists, and other traditionalists are right that something genuinely positive has indeed been lost in our modern, secular, democratic, and capitalist contexts. Affirming the former does not preclude conceding the latter.

While the importance of the Justinian Code is still acknowledged by legal historians today, there is another half of Roman law that too often remains over-looked, a half that though still present in some churches remains largely lost to our societies on the whole. One way that Christian Rome was more Christian is the role played in its political economy by an alternative legal system to Roman civil law, through a polity-beyond-the-polity—the church’s body of canon law2 and the bishops’ “judiciary right.”3 Due to this, the West retained some political stability after the fall of Rome in the fifth century—its bishops still served a political function. In the Eastern Roman Empire, which persisted another millennium until the fall of “New Rome” (Constantinople) in 1453, church and state negotiated the coexistence of Roman civil law and ecclesiastical canon law through the principle of symphonia, which though plex and sometimes fraught cannot be reduced to the caricature of caesaropapism (imperial domination over the church).

Rather, the episcopal courts of canon law served and were legally recognized as alternatives to the magisterial courts of civil law. As Fr. John McGuckin notes, “In the later Byzantine era, even in the larger cities, episcopal courts came to be preferred by the people to the civil alternative of a hearing before the magistrate, not only because the penalties were less severe for the offenders, but also for their deeper sense of pastoral care.”4 The Apostle Paul referred to a “law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus” that “has made [us] free from the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8:2) and “the law of Christ” that is “fulfill[ed]” when we “[b]ear one another’s burdens” (Gal. 6:2). The church, even before the conversion of Constantine, developed that evangelical law into a legal system in its own right, aimed at the effective administration in society not of justice—which is the role of the state and civil law—but of mercy. This administration extended to a network of social services, in part sponsored by the state, but almost entirely managed, according to established canons and historic precedent, by the church and its bishops.

Yet today, if I may generalize, even in many churches that retain their own bodies of canon law, canonical standards of discipline—and thus of mercy—are often disregarded, minimized, or only selectively applied, amounting to an institutionalization of what Dietrich Bonhoeffer called “cheap grace”5 and the undermining of the rule of law within these ecclesiastical polities. As a result, we have in practice, if not also in theory, in many contexts lost not only a sense of the “cost of discipleship” with which Bonhoeffer was concerned. We have also and no less tragically lost a rationally organized system of mercy plement our various justice systems throughout the world and to advance not only mon good but the kingdom of God.

Moreover, while many churches still have ministries of mercy—and in many cases, for better or worse, still receive state support if not outright sponsorship—these, if I may generalize again, tend to be viewed as secondary to state social services. In practice, they remain too far removed from the good government of a polity of mercy that in the ancient church embodied what Pope Paul VI referred to as “full-bodied humanism” that aims for “the fulfillment of the whole man and every man.”6 The church in Christian Rome developed just that sort of humanism, grounded in the inviolable principles of human dignity and the rule of law and in the theological dogma that the whole human person, created in the image of God, needs salvation, for “that which [Christ] has not assumed He has not healed; but that which is united to His Godhead is also saved.”7

In that catholic and holistic spirit, the ancient church saw ministries of mercy as essential to its own constitution; and its dioceses and parishes acted as hubs for almsgiving, medical care, alternative and restorative criminal justice, discipleship in Christian virtues, and more. We may rightly point out any number of ways that premodern economics, politics, and medical science fall short of the achievements of our modern, liberal democratic mercial societies. But before we take a victory lap around the ruins of the past, we ought to acknowledge that despite all these genuine riches today, we are yet poorer for the law we lost.

This editorial appears in the Journal of Markets and Morality, vol. 24, no. 2. To subscribe, go here.

David Friedman, Peter Leeson, and David Skarbek, Legal Systems Very Different from Ours (self-pub, 2019), 1.For the various canon laws of the ancient church, see NPNF 2 14.Alexander Schmemann, The Historical Road of Eastern Orthodoxy (London: Harville Press, 1963), 95.John McGuckin, The Ascent of Christian Law: Patristic and Byzantine Formulations of a New Civilization(Yonkers: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2012), 277.See Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship (New York: MacMillan, 1963).Pope Paul VI, encyclical letter Populorum Progressio, March 26, 1967, § 42. See also Pope Benedict XVI, encyclical letter Charitas in Veritate, March 6, 2009, § 8.Gregory Nazianzus, Epistle 101: “To Cledonius the Priest against Apollinarius,” in NPNF 2 7:440.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Apple Watch: Forbidden Fruit?
Over at Think Christian today I examine some of the moral implications surrounding the announced release of the new Apple Watch. In the background of my thinking was a TEDxPuget Sound talk by Simon Sinek that focuses on identifying the “why” of organizations. It’s important to ask the “why” of our consumption as well, which is why I want to know of moral justifications for purchasing something like a $10,000 gold Apple Watch. Please pass along your suggestions in ments...
Women Of Liberty: Isabel Paterson
“If there were just one gift you could choose, but nothing barred, what would it be? We wish you then your own wish: you name it. Our is liberty, now and forever.” Isabel Paterson came to influence the likes of Ayn Rand and William F. Buckley, but her early life was rough and tumble. One of nine children, Paterson had only two years of formal education but loved to read. Her father had a difficult time making a living and...
The FCC’s Attack on Religious Liberty
What are we to think of net neutrality? No, seriously, that’s not a rhetorical question—I just can’t remember which side I support. I’ve written about net neutrality at least a half-dozen times (including an explainer piece) and yet for the life of me I can never remember which is the most pro-freedom, pro-market side. Is it opposing neutrality, supporting neutrality, being neutral on neutrality? Opposed, I think. I’m pretty sure it’s opposed. Perhaps that type of confusion is why so...
Vatican Endorses Military Force to Stop ISIS
In a first for the United Nations’ Human Rights Council, 70 countries signed a joint statement specifically addressing the plight of Christians and other minorities in the Middle East. But the Vatican is asking that even more be done for persecuted believers in that region. The Vatican’s top diplomat at the United Nations in Geneva has called for a coordinated international force to stop the “so-called Islamic State” in Syria and Iraq from further assaults on Christians and other minority...
Clergy, Innovation, and Economics
This is a bit second-hand (a source drawing from another source), but I still think the following tidbit on the modern history of clergy and scientific and technological development and discovery in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries from Nassim Taleb’s Antifragile is notable: Knowledge formation, even when theoretical, takes time, some boredom, and the freedom es from having another occupation, therefore allowing one to escape the journalistic-style pressure of modern publish-and-perish [sic, probably intentionally] academia to produce cosmetic knowledge, much...
The Real War on Christianity
In the Middle East, the Islamic State is crucifying Christians and demolishing ancient churches, write Bethany Allen-ebrahimian and Yochi Dreazen at Foreign Policy. Why is this being met with silence from the halls of Congress to Sunday sermons? Every holiday season, politicians in America take to the airwaves to rail against a so-called “war on Christmas” or “war on Easter,” pointing to things like major retailers wishing shoppers generic “happy holidays.” But on the subject of the Middle East, where...
Russia and Ukraine: An Exceptional Love Affair?
In a meeting with young historians last fall, Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed the annexation of Crimea (RT described this delicately as “the newly returned” Crimea) and reminded them that “Prince Vladimir [Sviatoslavich the Great] was baptized, and then he converted Russia. The original baptismal font of Russia is there.” Matthew Dal Santo, a fellow at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, uses a public exhibition of art in Moscow (Orthodox Rus. My History: The Rurikids) to...
Who Will Bring Jesus and Justice To Poor Whites?
Being “missional” and showing a concern for justice for the poor have e issues of increasing concern among American evangelicals. Yet the focus tends to tend to be on urban minorities instead of the largest percentage of Americans living under the poverty line. If you want to hear crickets in a room full of educated, missionally minded, culture-shaping evangelicals, says Anthony Bradley, ask this question: “What are you doing to serve the needs of poor white people?” Even though lower-class...
John Stonestreet On Religious Persecution, Restrictions Of Liberty
In today’s Christian Post, Breakpoint’s John Stonestreet says it is “bogus” to claim “others have it worse” when es to religious persecution as a way of denying claims of the loss of religious liberty here in the West. Now, let me first state the obvious: Nothing happening here or elsewhere in the West can remotely pared to what Christians in the Islamic world undergo on a daily basis. Our first and second response should be to pray for them, and...
Last Day: Free Download of ‘A Vulnerable World’
Today is the last day you can get a free copy of Acton’s latest monograph, “A Vulnerable World: The High Price of Human Trafficking” by Elise Hilton. Visit Amazon before midnight to download. For more information about the monograph and human trafficking, visit Vulnerable.World. Pope Francis has called human trafficking “an open wound on the body of contemporary society.” This monograph discusses both the economic and moral fall-out of modern-day slavery. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved