Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Restoring character: Moral communities as a path to common virtue
Restoring character: Moral communities as a path to common virtue
Jan 13, 2026 8:43 PM

“It is the evacuation of depth, stability, and substance of culture where we witness the death of character.” –James Davison Hunter

Christians and conservatives have long despaired over the “loss of American values,” decrying the erosion of public virtue and the disintegration of morals. As researchers likeCharles Murray and Robert Putnam have duly confirmed, the fabric munity life and civil society is continuing to fray across America.

In Yuval Levin’s latest book, The Fractured Republic, he finds the solution in cultivating “cohesive and attractive subcultures, rather than struggling for dominance of the increasingly weakened institutions of the mainstream culture.” By pursuing such a path, he argues, restraining power at the top and unleashing it at the bottom, we can begin to rebuild that missing middle. “These institutions—from families to churches to civic and fraternal associations and labor and business groups—can help balance dynamism with cohesion and let citizens live out their freedom in practice,” Levin writes.

Yet the content and substance of that pursuit also matters, and here, we ought to think carefully how we leverage that freedom, both where it exists and when new e. In his book, The Death of Character: Moral Education in an Age of Good and Evil, sociologist James Davison Hunter addresses this as it relates to education, noting that our character crisis is rooted in our culturalshift from a focus on virtues grounded in eternal truths to a modernistic abyss of slippery and subjective “values clarification.”

Given ourcurrentapproach to moral education, we have plenty of struggles even within those existing “mediating institutions.” First and foremost, there lacks a mitment to the sacred. Even in munities, we’ve opted for an ambivalent embrace of “values,” which, as Hunter notes, are merely “truths that have been deprived of manding character.” As well intended as our values-speak has been, the effect has not been a restoration of character, but rather a reduction of “truth to utility, taboo to fashion, conviction to mere preference.”

Which leads to Hunter’s grim diagnosis. “A restoration of character as mon feature within American society and mon trait of its people will not likely occur any time soon,” he laments. “The social and cultural conditions that make character possible are no longer present and no amount of political rhetoric, legal maneuvering, educational policy-making, or money can change that reality. Its time has passed.”

Those “social and cultural conditions,” Hunter believes, have been replaced with the familiar Enlightenment-heavy, inclusivist fantasies, wherein our role is not to foster a distinct moral imagination and framework but to encourage individuals to “clarify” what is right and wrong for themselves. Despite the claims of “diversity,” this serves to enable surface-level disparity while prohibiting any sort of meaningfulparticularity.

“Particularity is inherently exclusive,” Hunter reminds us. “It is socially awkward, potentially volatile, offensive to our cosmopolitan sensibilities. By its very nature it cuts against the grain of our dominant code of inclusivity and civility.” Thus, when we proceed with our cultural project of “inclusivity” and “tolerance,” any distinct lines mitments or obligations soon e blurry. “When the particular cultures of conviction are undermined and the structures they inhabit are weakened, the possibility of character itself es dubious,” Hunter writes.

So if the inclusivist approach leads to vacuous conformity, and if,as Levin reminds us, the struggle for a differentsort of dominance undermines the ways in which character and civil society are actually formed, how do we proceed?

Hunter answers:

Morality is always situated—historically situated in the narrative flow of collective memory and aspiration, socially situated within munities, and culturally situated within particular structures of moral reasoning and practice. Character is similarly situated. It develops in relation to moral convictions defined by specific moral, philosophical, or religious truths. Far from being free-floating abstractions, these traditions of moral reasoning are fixed in social habit and routine within social groups munities. Grounded in this way, ethical ideals carry moral authority. Thus, it is the concrete circumstances situating moral understanding that finally animate character and make it resilient.

As for how we form and fosterthose munities,” it begins with a mitment to freedom and diversity from top to bottom. From there, we proceed with faithfulness in those localized spheres. As Christians, we have thecourage and confidence to step forward, boldly and confidently, elevating what we believe to be eternal truths about the good, the true, and the beautiful.

If we truly believe what we say we believe, we should have the confidence to put it to the test—to elevate truth peting visions and philosophies of life. But even though this is likely to result in vibrant diversity, we should remember that peting moral philosophies, while diverse in plenty of importantways, may actually help us reach a range mon virtues.

By stretching back to the sacred, we may, in fact, create mon, meaningful moral vocabulary that actually satisfies:

It is in this light we need to consider again the mitment to create a universal and inclusive moral vocabulary capable of satisfying everyone. Its consequences, as we have seen, are not salutary for moral education and they are dubious for democracy. Thus, if one is to create greater space in our public culture for differences in munities to exist, it is essential to abandon the high priority we give to mitment.

To do so does not mean the sacrifice of mon public life defined monly held moral ideals. But instead of monality in our moral discourse at the expense of particularity, one monality through particularly. Certainly the humanist, the Jew, and the Christian who join in condemnation of racism will differ over whether humanist, Jewish and Christian conviction provide the most trustworthy reasons for their agreement, yet each provides thick moral arguments that preserve the most mitments of the other. We will most certainly discover other moral agreements about integrity, fairness, altruism, responsibility, respect, valor—agreements too numerous to mention. But these agreements will be found within moral diversity not in spite of it. Where disagreements remain, they can be addressed through a substantive engagement that enhances rather than undermines democracy. [emphasis added]

Without this kind of fearless, substantive engagement, we will continue down our present path, regardless of the policies from on high.

As James Madisonwell understood, “the causes of factioncannot be removed.” Whether at a political or cultural level, we’d do well to control and balance the effects rather than “vexing” and peting belief systems through presumptuous, controlling monopolies on moral development.

It’s time to step boldly forth into what Hunter calls a “difficult pluralistic quagmire,” which may, if we’re lucky, pave a path to genuine monality.

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
How to Understand GDP
What is Gross Domestic Product (GDP)? The definition is rather straightforward: GDP is the market value of all finished goods and services, produced within a country in a year. But that’s not very useful in trying to understand the concept. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, they mend thinking ofthe economy as a giant supermarket, with billions of goods and services inside. At the checkout line, you watch as the cashier rings up the price for each finished good...
How to Understand the Folk Marxism of Trump Supporters
The phenomenon that is Donald Trump and his presidential campaign can only truly be understood when you recognize his basic appeal: he’s bringing a brand of folk Marxism to an entirely new audience. Before we unpack what this means, we must first understand what it does not mean. Folk Marxism is not Classical Marxism, much munism. Marxism has so many varieties that even Karl Marx once said, “what is certain is that I myself am not a Marxist.” Folk Marxism...
Is America Too Religious to Be Socialist?
Since its development as a political movement in the 1700s, socialism has spread to numerous nations, especially in Asia and Africa. Yet even when the U.S. government began adopting socialist policies (see: the New Deal), Americans tended to reject any direct connectionsto socialism. Why is that? One possible answer may be that America is simply too religious. As Andrew R. Lewis and Paul A. Djupe of FiveThirtyEight explain: To understand the relationship between socialist values and religion, we used the...
7 Figures: NPR/Harvard Survey on Patients’ Perspectives on Health Care
A new survey by NPR and Harvard University reports the self-reported experiences of health care consumers across the country, in states that have (New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon) and have not (Florida, Kansas, Texas) expanded Medicaid, and in one (Wisconsin) that did not have to expand Medicare. Here are seven figures you should know from the report: 1. When asked about its effects on the people of their state, more than a third (35 percent) of adults say they believe national...
Race, mass incarceration, and drug policy
With the 2010 publication of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Ohio State University law professor Michelle Alexander, the conversation about America’s exploding prison population singularly became focused on the intersection of race, poverty, and the War on Drugs. According to the narrative, the drug war disproportionately targets blacks in lower munities as a means of social control via the criminal justice system similarly to the way Jim Crow controlled blacks in the early...
Video: Michael Matheson Miller on Technocracy and The Global Political Consensus
The 2016 Acton Lecture Series continued on March 3rd at Acton’s Mark Murray Auditorium with an address by Acton Research Fellow and Producer ofPoverty, Inc.Michael Matheson Miller. Miller’s topic for the day was “Technocracy and The Global Political Consensus.” Many of our current political and social challenges center around the fundamental question of what it means to be a human being, and our understanding of what it means to live an authentic human life. The answers to these questions will...
Alabama Church Pays Off Payday Loans
About twenty years ago I made some terrible choices and found myself in a serious financial bind. The amount I needed wasn’t much — about $200 — but without it I wouldn’t have been able to pay my rent. I took out a payday loan that cost me $30 every two weeks. It took about eight weeks to get clear of the loan, resulting in a cost of $120 to borrow $200 for two months. Was I fooling myself thinking...
Most Americans Donate Little or Nothing to Charity
Most Americans believe that it is very important for them to be a generous person. Yet almost half did not give to charity in the past year, and less than a quarter gave more than $500. That’s the latest findings in a new Science of Generosity survey. An even more disconcerting discovery is that quarter of Americans were neutral on the importance of generosity and 10 percent disagreed that generosity was not a very important quality. As David Briggs of...
Hail, GMO Cassava!
Oh, dear! GMO cassava can potentially feed millions on the African continent? Heaven forfend![/caption]If you grew up outside the African and South American continents you can be forgiven for thinking cassava is the latest variation of salsa music or perhaps the funky new energy beverage trendy hipsters are drinking these days. In Africa, however, 500 million individuals recognize cassava as a dietary staple much like the rest of the world enjoys potatoes and rice. Native to South America, cassava was...
Working for Our Neighbor: A Lutheran Approach to Vocation and Economic Life
“If you are a manual laborer, you find that the Bible has been put into your workshop, into your hand, into your heart. It teaches and preaches how you should treat your neighbor.” –Martin Luther Christian’s Library Press has now released Working for Our Neighbor, Gene Veith’s Lutheran primer on vocation, economics, and ordinary life. The book joins Acton’s growing series of tradition-specific, faith-work primers, whichalsoincludes Baptist, Wesleyan, Pentecostal, and Reformed perspectives. Veith, who describesMartin Luther as “the great theologian...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved