Dear Chris,
I am answering before I am fully revved up with my morning
coffee, so take this for what it's worth.
Here are a few thoughts in response to your question of
whether Calvin was a "liberal democrat." I will use your
numbering scheme from your points.
First, no well brought up liberal democrat would ever use the
word "men" if he or she meant "people," so right there I would say that Calvin
is not a liberal democrat, based on your (4)
below. On the other hand, maybe Calvin was
interested only in "justice for men," as you say here, and if so, that
puts him in yet another category altogether. And I am curious about
(3), which is about defending "honesty and modesty." Is that for all
people, or is that for women? I wasn't sure what or who the "modesty"
referred to.
Second, some of Calvin's views remind me of the concept
of "the public good," which I often associate with
Catholics, and especially with Aquinas. So maybe Calvin is reflecting
some of Aquinas' thinking on the role of government in protecting the common
good. This would include your public peace (1) and common safety (6),
and maybe also private property (2). It's interesting that these roles of
government in protecting the common good are also reasons for going to war,
in just war theory, including the just war theory attributed to
Aquinas. If you add that thought to your (7) below, about protecting the
boundaries of a country, I'd say Calvin would have been a "common good" and
"just war" advocate in the tradition of Aquinas. He would also be a
defender of "state sovereignty," which is of course commonly believed in today,
although today some people are willing to violate state sovereignty in order to
protect human rights (such as those who subscribe to the Responsibility to
Protect or RTP). So I don't think this makes
Calvin a liberal democrat. What is the readership
of First Things? Whoever those folks are,
they are the types that I was reminded of when I read through your note.
Third, the protection of private property is an interesting
one. There are political groups into that too, are there not?
Someone in addition to liberals and democrats? Is it Libertarians, or are
they into something else? At any rate, you wouldn't find many folks today who
did not believe in the protection of private property, which became one of
the roles of law and government in our tradition.
Finally, in answer to your primary question about (5) below, I
think this is a trick question. You said in your
opening remarks that you had removed all references to religion, and yet your
(5) is all about ethics and justice issues from the Hebrew Bible or Old
Testament. So first of all, that's religion, and religion and government
are mixed in your (5). Second, in response to whether that makes Calvin a
liberal democrat or a conservative, I would say that there are many
conservatives in the US who love to base governmental actions on the Old
Testament. Some even hang the Ten Commandments on the wall. The
trick is that what you've quoted here in your (5) are things related to taking
care of the poor and weak and oppressed, rather than about personal
morality. So my response is that this would
appeal to those who believe in Faith Based Initiatives. They would want
the government to give money to faith-based agencies, especially churches, that
run programs to address those needs. Sometimes the folks who believe in
Faith Based Initiatives are Republicans, such as our former President
Bush.
So, in answer to your question if Calvin was a liberal
democrat or not, I say no. He was a "common good" kind of person.
And he seems, on the surface and based on the quotes you provided here, to
also to have been someone who would have inclined to the just war position, and
even perhaps to the Responsibility to Protect position. So in this case, I
like what you have said here, and it gives me another (good) side of Calvin to
think about.
Happy Christmas Eve Day! Just to give you a hard time,
although I like you so very, very much, I wanted to say that it was one year ago
today --- or tonight, to be precise --- that I sat in the beautiful church where
I did my internship and thought about Calvin's role in the death of
Servetus. I know we've been through that discussion before, and I am only
bringing it up because it's the one year anniversary. Tonight, when I
attend church at my own home church, I will think about other, and better,
things about the birth of Christ, as well as the death and resurrection of
Christ, and what it means for the world and for all people (and not just for
"men," even if "men" ends up showing up in some of our hymns and
readings!).
Blessings and Happy Christmas Eve
Day!
Jane Ellingwood