http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\04\06\story_6-4-2011_pg3_4

Wednesday, April 06, 2011

COMMENT: Evolution of liberalism -Ralph Shaw

The liberal quest was for an open, tolerant and more equitable society in which 
individuals could pursue their goals and interests free from religious 
(Catholic) control and as little interference as possible from the secular 
authorities

February 22, 2011 (e-mailed March 01, 2011)The same as many other '-isms', 
liberalism, at the outset, appears to be a confusing jumble of ideas. That it 
has something to do with liberty, i.e. freedom and equality, seems obvious but 
a concise definition is hard to find. Fishing the internet, the best rendition 
this writer came across was on a Christian religious website. It crisply 
defines liberalism as a free way of thinking and acting in public and private 
life. Implicit within this definition is the suggestion that liberalism is 
essentially a secular ideology at variance with religion in some respects at 
least.

In liberal thinking, the individual is sovereign in the private sphere and 
accountability is only for conduct that affects society. In matters that 
concern his own self only the individual has absolute independence. According 
to J S Mills, liberty comprises the following three: liberty of conscience, 
i.e. liberty to think, feel and form independent, uninfluenced opinions and 
sentiments on all subjects including the moral and the theological. Liberty of 
tastes and pursuits, i.e. behaviour, however foolish, perverse or wrong, may 
not be censored as long as it does not affect other members of society. Liberty 
to gather and unite. A person's private life, or that part of it which affects 
others with their free and voluntary consent, is not an area in which society 
may freely intrude. A liberal is perceived as an open-minded, tolerant and 
progressive person, which is fine, but some aspects of liberal theory certainly 
stand in stark contrast to a God-given way of life.

Liberalism is also a political and economic doctrine. Politically speaking, its 
fundamental beliefs are opposition to absolutist rule and equal rights for all. 
In the economic arena, liberals originally advocated a laissez faire approach 
to economic affairs but in a complete reversal of beliefs, late 19th century 
liberals started advocating an active role for the government in the economy so 
as to bring about a welfare state. According to scholar Fareed Zakaria, 
democracy succeeded in only those societies where liberalism preceded efforts 
at democratisation. He also says that in the less developed regions of the 
world, liberal autocrats rather than democrats have been instruments of change 
and progress.

Liberalism began in Europe as a reaction against religious and secular 
oppression. During the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church defined as its mission 
the saving of souls for the Kingdom of God. This, it deemed, was done best by 
teaching and upholding 'correct belief'. The Church was the one and only 
official interpreter of the Will of God and correct belief was whatever the 
Church construed as the Divine Will. As the singular interpreter of Divine 
Will, the Catholic Church demanded absolute conformity from the populations 
under its religious yoke. The Church orthodoxy, as the Church saw it, had 
Divine sanction and any attempt to deviate from orthodoxy was to be rejected 
and punished. Since the Church and the medieval European states were partners 
in the defence of Christendom, the Church called upon kings and princes to 
counter any threats to its authority by troublesome freethinking individuals 
and ensure compliance with its doctrines. The secular authorities usually 
complied with the wishes of the Church in enforcing religious conformity.

Secular oppression resulted from the peculiar European social structure. 
European society was divided into nobles, feudal lords, free commoners and 
serfs. Mercantilism and industrialisation that would iron out much of these 
social inequities and give rise to a vibrant middle class were still in the 
future. The European mediaeval social system was, in reality, an informal caste 
system of sorts, less rigid than the Indian caste system, but as demoralising 
to those at the raw end of the deal. One's social status was more or less 
ascribed at birth and there was little hope for those from the lower rungs of 
the social ladder to advance up the ladder. The Church preached equality but 
the social reality was far from the egalitarian ideal.

The liberal struggle originally started against these two oppressive features 
of mediaeval European society, namely ascribed status and religious conformity. 
Liberals saw themselves as champions of individual freedom. The terms liberal 
and liberalism did not come into widespread use until the late 18th and early 
19th centuries but liberalism as a struggle against arbitrary authority started 
with the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century. The liberal quest was 
for an open, tolerant and more equitable society in which individuals could 
pursue their goals and interests free from religious (Catholic) control and as 
little interference as possible from the secular authorities. The liberal 
struggle started to take took form with the weakening of the mediaeval social 
order. The European Renaissance and the Scientific Revolution contributed to 
the transformation of European culture to a less rigid and more tolerant form 
but the Protestant Reformation was, perhaps, the most influential event in the 
rise of liberalism.

Martin Luther, the German priest who started the Protestant Reformation, was no 
liberal for sure but his teachings challenged 'correct belief' as taught by the 
Catholic Church. The Church taught that faith and good deeds were both 
essential for salvation. That forgiveness for bad deeds could be purchased by 
making a payment to the Catholic Church - an indulgence - was also an article 
of faith and a widespread practice in the Catholic world. Martin Luther and his 
dissident followers opposed indulgences and held that salvation came through 
faith alone. Whatever the theological merits of the reformers' dissenting 
arguments, their challenge, nonetheless, was to Church orthodoxy and was the 
first step in combating the authority of the Church. Religious conformity 
demanded compliance regardless of individual conscience. Reformist priests, on 
the other hand, encouraged people to hold views contrary to Catholic doctrine. 
Freedom of thought, eventually, led to the idea that all people, including 
laymen, priests, nobles and commoners are equal and have inalienable rights 
such as the right to life, liberty and property. However, in keeping with the 
secular bias, the rights were defined as natural rather than God-given. The 
right to be free from rule without one's consent and to overthrow any 
government that did not protect life, liberty, and property were enunciated as 
individual rights by liberal philosophers. Liberals argue that western progress 
was primarily the result of liberal thinking. Whether this model is applicable 
to the Muslim world is another story.

The writer is a freelance columnist. He can be reached at [email protected]




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