Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Should morality be legislated?
Should morality be legislated?
Feb 24, 2026 2:36 AM

An act’s immorality is not sufficient to justify prohibition or regulation through state coercion. A moral government aimed at mon good will recognize its basic purpose, scope, and limitations.

Read More…

Should governments legislate morality? It depends on how we define our terms.

If “legislate morality” is simply defined as “making laws that are moral,” then it is obvious that we should legislate morality.

But if “legislate morality” entails basing laws solely on an act’s morality or immorality, then we should not legislate morality. Yet it mon to argue that there should be laws against certain behaviors because they are wrong.

Because people widely disagree about what is moral, the acts that different people argue should be prohibited or punished by the government are wide-ranging, including:

GamblingSmokingPaying workers below $15 an hourDivorceSame-sex marriageUsing single-use plasticsHaving only men on a corporate boardConsuming pork

Regardless of whether any of these acts are, in fact, immoral, we ought not justify laws against them solely on that basis. Some immoral acts should indeed be illegal, and the fact that an act is morally wrong may be a relevant consideration for the law. But an action’s immorality is not a sufficient condition to justify making that action illegal. Not all immoral acts should be punished by the government.

Equating the concepts of morality and legality – exactly matching human law to the natural law – is one of the surest paths to an immoral society that threatens human flourishing. Here are six reasons why this approach to “legislating morality” must be avoided.

1. The government is incapable of correctly prehensively codifying morality. Morality is real and objective, but people have imperfect grasps of that objective reality. People consequently disagree on most moral questions and make many errors in discerning right from wrong. Governments are likewise fallible and regularly enforce false moral views. Laws change, so if a government enforces mostly true moral views at one time, it may enforce the wrong views after a change in leadership. Moreover, because the virtuous course of action differs greatly based on specific circumstances, it may not be possible, even theoretically, to make a list of laws that accurately represents what is moral or immoral in all situations. Contemporary virtue ethicists term this problem the “uncodifiability of ethics.” Philosopher John McDowell explains: “If one attempted to reduce one’s conception of what virtue requires to a set of rules, then, however subtle and thoughtful one was in drawing up the code, cases would inevitably turn up in which a mechanical application of the rules would strike one as wrong.”

Even if correctly codifying ethics were theoretically possible, plishing this in practice would be an insurmountable task for any person or government. Any government that equates legality with morality will therefore inevitably implement some false views of morality. People will be punished for doing certain morally right things and also forced to do some things that are morally wrong.

2. Any government that attempts to enforce prehensive moral code will be far too intrusive in the personal lives of its citizens. Moral questions pervade every area of life, including those that are most personal and private. If an act’s immorality is a sufficient condition to justify a law against it, then it follows that the government would have the justification to regulate any number of areas, including arguments with spouses, personal exercise routines, attendance of one’s children’s sports games, which conception of god one prays to, and even our innermost thoughts and intentions. Such a government would abolish privacy and make life miserable for its citizens.

3. Laws that attempt to enforce morality have negative unintended consequences. In the United States, for example, the prohibition of alcohol is widely regarded as a failure due to its unintended consequences. Restaurants and other businesses closed, organized crime increased, and thousands of Americans died from poorly produced liquor. The failure of Prohibition demonstrated that even if alcohol is immoral and harmful, a law prohibiting it can be even more harmful.

All laws have unintended consequences, and any big change to society will have ripple effects. Lao Tzu observed over 2,500 years ago that “[t]he more prohibitions and rules, the poorer people e … The more elaborate the laws, the more mit crimes.” The world is imperfect, we are incapable of making it perfect, and if we use government to try to force it to be perfect, we will end up making things even worse than before.

4. A proper respect for our fellow citizens should lead us to afford them some amount of autonomy and freedom to make decisions for their own lives – and even to make mistakes. This is because every human being is endowed, equally, with intrinsic value and dignity. The United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights lists dozens of “inalienable rights of all members of the human family” that make no distinction “on the basis of the political, jurisdictional or international status of the country or territory to which a person belongs.” One of these is the right “to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance,” which gives room for some actions that many people consider immoral. It even protects what Christians consider the greatest sin, which is blasphemy of the Holy Spirit.

We should always desire others to behave morally and seek to have a positive influence on them. Yet it is not always within our rights to forcibly stop someone from sinning. Some sins are between the individual and God – not between the individual and the government. Augustine wrote that “[t]he law which is made to govern states . . . [leaves] unpunished things which are avenged nonetheless by divine providence.” To appoint government to punish all moral wrongdoing is to seat government in the throne of God, as God alone has the right and ability to give each person what they deserve.

5. A flourishing society requires grace and forgiveness. Rather than recording and punishing all mistakes, love demands that we learn to live with each other’s imperfections and be quick to forgive. We recognize in every sphere of our lives that it is seldom wise to hold others to a standard of perfection. Whether it be our friends, significant others, children, or employees, it is not always beneficial to correct them for everything we perceive as an error. Often it is best not to judge and instead love others the same regardless of their imperfection. In Christianity, God is the ultimate exemplar of grace and forgiveness, choosing not to condemn humanity but remember their sins no more. Surely, the government needs to punish many crimes, but an ethical government will not tally every moral ing of its citizens.

6. A state that legislates prehensive moral code will hinder the development of virtue and character. Virtue, a necessary condition of a flourishing society, does not appear ex nihilo. It requires practice and cultivation. Moreover, the highest degrees of virtue cannot be forced upon someone, but are shaped by one’s own choices and values. State-enforced morality strips actions of their moral worth, replacing proper motivations with fear of punishment. Thomas Aquinas even cautioned that overly restrictive laws would lead to an increase in wrongdoing: “[human law should] not lay upon the multitude of imperfect men the burdens of those who are already virtuous, viz. that they should abstain from all evil. Otherwise these imperfect ones, being unable to bear such precepts, would break out into yet greater evils.”

Psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg’s six stages of moral development provide a helpful framework for how people grow in their moral decision-making. Early in life, children base moral decisions on avoiding punishments and receiving rewards by following “rules imposed by authority figures.” As children develop in virtue, they move on to better motivations for their decisions, eventually reaching the highest state of functioning, which Kohlberg defines as following “one’s self-chosen ethical principles of conscience,” which take into account “the perspective of every person or group that could potentially be affected by the decision.” By attempting to punish all moral wrongdoing, a paternal government will influence more people to be stuck in the early stages of moral development and never mature into virtuous citizens who freely choose the good. The moral character of the nation will consequently decline.

For these reasons, the fact that an action is immoral is not by itself sufficient to justify a law prohibiting that action. A moral government aimed at mon good will not always enforce morality, but be limited in its purpose and scope.

Does this mean there is nothing we can do about immorality in society? Certainly not! The government is only one of many institutions in society, each of which have different purposes and proper functions. Churches, schools, businesses, nonprofits, families, and other institutions each have their own key roles in cultivating and promoting virtue. If these institutions work together in harmony, operating at their best within their proper spheres, our society can be both free and virtuous. But if we sacrifice freedom to get virtue, we will end up with neither.

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
The digital divide in the developing world
A key barrier to economic growth in the developing world is reliable access to the global information network: the Internet. A UN-sponsored study, “Information Economy Report 2005” by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, (PDF) shows that one of the features of the digital divide between the developing and the developed world has to do with the cost of high-bandwidth Internet access. The report says “that the smaller, e Internet markets in developing countries, particularly in Africa, have...
Maimonides: Healing is a basic religious duty
A good story on Moses Maimonides in this weekend’s Washington Post, “The Doctor Is Still In: Medieval Rabbi-Healer Maimonides Linked Body, Soul.” A key contention is that Jewish doctors like Maimonides “associated healing with basic religious duty.” The main source for the article is author Sherwin Nuland, whose most recent book is on Maimonides. While Nuland caricatures Christians in opposition to Jewish religious interest in healing, the perspective is a valuable one. The article does note that beyond Nuland’s interest...
‘Addio, Dolce Vita’
That’s the title of this week’s survey of Italy in The Economist. The news for Italy is quite depressing. Its economic growth is the slowest in Europe, behind even France and Germany, its productivity is down while its wages are up, and a massive demographic crisis looms. The survey is extensive, covering the structural, political and even cultural impediments today’s Italy faces. These include a tendency to blame Europe and China for Italian woes, an over-reliance on small- and medium-sized...
The true cost of everyday low prices
A consensus has developed among activists on the left that Wal-Mart is bad for America, and particularly bad for the poor, not only in America (where wages are supposedly driven down) but also abroad (where suppliers allegedly abuse and exploit their workers). Check out this litany of social harms alleged to be caused by Wal-Mart. The organization piled that list – Wal-Mart Watch – even has a “faith resource guide” that pastors can use to whip up anti-Wal-Mart sentiment within...
Chafuen on Latin America’s problem
What, exactly, was the point of the recent Summit of the Americas in Argentina? President Bush’s participation there seemed to plish little more than to excite street mobs and vandals. And then there was Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, doing his best Fidel impersonation as he led opposition to a U.S.-backed free trade agreement. Alejandro Chafuen, president of the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, uses the occasion of the summit to succinctly catalog the ills that plague Latin America. “With few exceptions,”...
How to win enemies in Brussels
Every now and then e across something in the news that makes you want to laugh and weep at the same time. Today’s International Herald Tribune contains one such article. Titled “Poles on ramparts of EU culture war”, it relates how the newly-elected Polish members of the European Parliament are causing so much rancor in Brussels. Their crime: being Christian, pro-economic growth, and friendly to the United States. It turns out that some of the new members of the European...
Free trade is simple
Hans Mahncke, an International Law and Trade scholar at Hong Kong’s Lion Rock Institute, takes to task recalcitrant NGOs in a recent TCS article (Tech Central Station no longer active). The essential sticking point is the inability to reform the WTO: The WTO is plagued by two major faults. On the one hand, its rules have grown plex, feature too many loopholes and allow for too much discretion on the part of those who actually understand them. On the other...
Politics 101
The first lesson of Politics 101: When in trouble, look to your base. That’s what House Speaker Dennis J. Hastert is apparently doing, in his recent push to make sure the lighted tree put up in December on the U.S. Capitol be returned to its name of the last decade, the “Capitol Christmas Tree.” Its name had been the stunningly interesting and descriptive “Holiday Tree.” You can expect any court cases involved over so-called “Christmas” trees to find the primarily...
Instant classics
This made me think of this. If the British pany were really smart, they’d just negotiate a price to use the Book-A-Minute Classics. The versions are a bit different, though. Here’s Dante’s Inferno: “Some woman puts Dante through Hell. THE END.” These are really quite good. I especially like the War and Piece classic. ...
Acton Portuguese articles now available
For those of you who are fluent in Portuguese, from a Portuguese speaking country, or who are just interested in Português, please check out our newly updated Portuguese language section. We have many translated articles, papers, editorials, interviews, and a whole catalog of biographies from “In The Liberal Tradition.” ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved