posted at Real Clear Politics
September 29, 2014
 
New Republic 
 
How Liberalism Lost its Way:  The Religious Roots  of an Ideology
 
By _David Marquand_ (http://www.newrepublic.com/authors/david-marquand) 
 
 
Inventing the  Individual: the Origins of Western Liberalism by Larry  
Siedentop
Liberalism: the Life of  an Idea by Edmund Fawcett
 
All over the Atlantic world, political liberalism  has fallen on evil days. 
In the U.S., the creed of Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D.  Roosevelt and John F 
Kennedy has become a sin that dare not speak its name. In  last year’s 
German election, the Free Democratic Party—the  embodiment of the country’s 
liberal tradition and the second party in coalition  governments for most of 
the postwar period—won less than 5  percent of the popular vote and is no 
longer represented in the federal  parliament. In the 2011 Canadian election, 
the Liberal Party—for decades a dominant force—suffered a  catastrophic 
defeat. The Radical Party of the Left, today the closest  approximation to a 
liberal party in France, is little more than a pimple on the  body politic. In 
Britain, the Liberal Democrats, heirs of the Liberal Party of  Lloyd George, 
Keynes and Beveridge, have clambered into bed with a  market-fundamentalist 
Conservative Party and endured a huge slump in the opinion  polls. 
As Edmund Fawcett and Larry Siedentop show in  different ways, the travails 
of political liberalism reflect a profound crisis  of the liberal 
world-view. To put it crudely, it is no longer clear what  liberalism means. 
Its core 
value is freedom—freedom for  unconstrained individuals to choose for 
themselves. Freedom, however, is a  notoriously slippery word. Freedom as a 
source of human flourishing is one  thing; freedom to ignore the common good 
and 
exploit others is quite another.  Positive freedom, or freedom “to,” is not 
the same as negative freedom, or  freedom “from.” The great Liberal 
government of 1905-15 curbed the negative  freedom of the privileged in order 
to 
enhance the positive freedom of the  dispossessed. 
Much the same is true of choice and  the individual. Choices can be bad as 
well as good. There is a world of  difference between individuals of flesh 
and blood, shaped by lived traditions  and shared histories, and the 
abstract, egocentric, disembodied individual  posited by the neoliberal 
orthodoxy of 
our day. Yet today’s liberals seem  strangely reluctant to distinguish 
between good and bad choices, to make clear  how they envisage the individual, 
or to define the proper relationship between  individual freedom and the 
public good. 
At an early stage in the French Revolution, the  great Whig statesman and 
thinker Edmund Burke declared that he was for the  “splendid flame of liberty”
 but not for “solitary, unconnected, individual,  selfish liberty, as if 
every man were to regulate the whole of his conduct  by his own will.” The 
liberty he sought, he added in a pregnant phrase, was  “social freedom.” 
In a similar vein, 70 years later, John Stuart  Mill argued that 
individuality—the quality that made human  beings “noble”—could grow only 
through 
arduous  activity in the public sphere. Fawcett’s workmanlike history of the 
bundle  of ideas and practices that liberals have espoused since the  Spanish 
liberales coined the term after the Napoleonic wars  is an excellent guide 
to liberalism’s rise and fall.  
ADVERTISEMENT
 
In its 19th-century heyday, as Fawcett’s history  reminds us, liberalism 
was optimistic, passionate and imbued with strongly held  moral convictions. 
Without using the terms, its proponents were for Burke’s  social freedom and 
for Mill’s vision of human nobility. In France, radicals such  as Clemenceau 
took on the army, an exceptionally reactionary Catholic Church and  an ugly 
wave of anti-Semitism in defense of the unjustly imprisoned Captain  
Dreyfuss, an Alsatian Jew by origin. In Britain, Gladstone made his  
extraordinary 
transformation from High Tory to Liberal messiah because he came  to 
believe that the masses were nobler and more virtuous than the classes. 
Twenty-first-century liberalism is a pale shadow  of its 19th-century 
ancestor. Albeit with some honourable exceptions, the  passion and optimism 
have 
gone. Latter-day Clemenceaus and Gladstones are  nowhere to be seen. Burke’s 
vision of social freedom has virtually disappeared  from the liberal 
repertoire; few now echo Mill’s call for strenuous  self-improvement. For the 
most 
part, today’s liberals see individuals as  free-floating, history-less and 
untethered social atoms, quite unlike the  rooted, flesh-and-blood 
individuals presupposed by their counterparts of  yesteryear. The most obvious 
result 
is that, all too often, the robust moral  convictions of the past have 
withered into a querulous self-righteousness,  strongly tinged with moral 
relativism. 
Why should this be? Siedentop’s study is best  seen as an attempt to answer 
that question. It is a magnificent work of  intellectual, psychological and 
spiritual history. It is hard to decide which is  more remarkable: the 
breadth of learning displayed on almost every page,  the infectious enthusiasm 
that suffuses the whole book, the riveting originality  of the central 
argument or the emotional power and force with which it is  deployed. 
Siedentop takes us on a 2,000-year journey that  starts with the almost 
inconceivably remote city states of the ancient world and  ends with the 
Renaissance. In the course of this journey, he explodes many  (perhaps even 
most) 
of the preconceptions that run through the public culture of  our day—and 
that I took for granted before reading his  book. Inventing the Individual is 
not an exercise in  dry-as-dust antiquarianism, still less in pop-historical 
fun and games.  Siedentop’s aim has a breathtaking grandeur about it: to 
persuade us to ask  ourselves who we are and where we are going by showing us 
where we have come  from. A challenging epilogue suggests that the answers 
are not very  flattering. 
The most insidious preconception on which  Siedentop trains his guns 
derives from the imperious rationalism of the  18th-century Enlightenment. For 
the 
likes of Voltaire, Diderot, David Hume and  Edward Gibbon, the long 
centuries between the fall of the western Roman empire  and the Renaissance 
were a 
slough of superstition, ignorance, credulity,  clericalism and bigotry. “Monk
” and “monkish” were terms of abuse; the  theological speculation that had 
occupied many of the best minds in Europe in  the Middle Ages was dismissed 
as hot air. Not all Enlightenment thinkers echoed  Voltaire’s call to “
écraser l’infâme” (“crush the infamous one”—that is, the Church) but the mood 
it encapsulated was widely  shared and it was expressed with bloodthirsty 
savagery in the later stages of  the French Revolution. 
Yet the Enlightenment’s picture of the past was  not all black. Before the 
darkness of the Middle Ages, Enlightenment thinkers  imagined, the 
pre-Christian ancient world had spawned glittering examples of  rationality and 
freedom. The statues depicting 18th-century statesmen in Roman  togas and the 
classical themes that figured in the paintings of Jacques-Louis  David, the 
iconic French painter during the revolutionary period, all testified  to the 
lure of pre-Christian antiquity. Enlightenment thinkers saw the Middle  Ages 
as a break in humanity’s upward progress—but only as  break, not as a dead 
end. As they envisioned it, the task for their generation  was to resume the 
journey that the ancients had begun. 
Siedentop believes that the essence of this  mindset still survives, to 
ruinous effect. Thanks to it, he argues, our  understanding of modernity is 
deeply flawed. We see ourselves as children of the  Enlightenment and, by way 
of the Enlightenment, as great-grandchildren of  ancient Greece and Rome. We 
talk of the Judaeo-Christian tradition and fail to  realize that in certain 
crucially important respects Judaism and Christianity  are polar opposites. 
Above all, we misunderstand the true nature of the ancient  world and of the 
slow but profound revolution in its social and ideological  assumptions 
that the rise of Christianity procured. The result is that we have  lost touch 
with the moral traditions that lie beneath the surface of our  culture—that 
we no longer know who we are and therefore  can’t help to shape what 
Siedentop calls “the conversation of mankind.” 
In truth, as Siedentop shows, the ancient world  was not in the least like 
the Enlightenment’s understanding of it. Far from  nurturing freedom, 
whether positive or negative, its cultures were shot through  with hereditary 
inequalities of status, opportunity and expectation. Social  roles were rigidly 
prescribed and, in effect, inescapable. Escape would be  self-exclusion from 
the city and that was a kind of living death. 
Patriarchy was fundamental to the social order.  This was ordained by the 
household gods; it was the patriarch’s duty to serve  them and he derived his 
authority from this role. The city was an association of  families, each 
with its own cult, not of individuals. The family heads, who were  by 
definition men, were priests as well as citizens. Women, slaves and the  
foreign-born, on the other hand, were not citizens and could not aspire to  
citizenship; the public realm of argument and debate that set the city’s course 
 was 
not for them. In Athens, arguably the ancient world’s most famous city  state, 
full citizens comprised only about a tenth of the population. 
The next stage in Siedentop’s argument is  the most explosive. He shows 
that the gravedigger of antiquity’s implacable  nexus of practices and beliefs 
was precisely the Christian revelation that  Enlightenment thinkers scorned. 
What the historical Jesus believed and taught is  uncertain, though he 
patently thought that the world was about to end and  that the marginalized 
poor 
had at least as good a chance of entering the Kingdom  of Heaven as the 
rich and powerful. The real significance of his life lay in his  death and its 
aftermath. For his followers, as Siedentop puts it, Christ’s  crucifixion 
and the Resurrection that they believed had followed it were “a  moral 
earthquake,” a “dramatic intervention in history.” For St. Paul, the  true 
architect of the Christian religion, that intervention was inherently  
egalitarian 
and individualistic. The fatherhood of God implied the brotherhood  of man 
and (an even more revolutionary implication) the sisterhood of woman. 
Irrespective of their social roles, all  individuals—slaves as well as the 
free, women as well  as men—were equal in the sight of God. The 
inegalitarian  integument of ritual, heredity and prescription that had held 
the ancient 
city  together was replaced by an egalitarian union of all in the “body of 
Christ.”  God’s grace was available to everyone, sinners included: souls 
were equal. 
In a striking passage, Siedentop suggests that  the scenes of Christ’s 
Passion and Resurrection painted on the walls of medieval  churches “testified 
that the immortal soul, rather than the immortal family, was  the primary 
constituent of reality.” The doctrine of the incarnation lay at the  heart of 
Christian egalitarianism. The deity was no longer remote and  awe-inspiring, 
like the Jewish Yahweh was. God was within us and “us” meant all  of us. 
To followers of this world-view, the elaborate,  God-given taboos that 
governed daily life among the Jewish people were  not just pointless; they were 
also offensive. God was no longer tribal. He  was universal. The multiple, 
local gods of pagan Greece and Rome—and, for that matter, the similarly 
multiple gods of the  barbarian invaders who overwhelmed the increasingly 
decrepit western Roman  empire in the 5th century—were swallowed up in that  
universality. 
The “moral earthquake” that Siedentop depicts  with elegant economy was a 
long-drawn-out affair. The egalitarian individualism  that lay at the heart 
of the Christian revelation did not prevail all at once.  (Indeed, it has 
not prevailed completely even now: inequalities proliferate and  patriarchy 
survives.) Pagan habits and customs also survived, sometimes in  Christian 
garb. The festival of the winter solstice was reprogrammed as  Christmas; the 
practice of praying to local saints and their relics mimicked  local pagan 
cults. 
After the emperor Constantine’s conversion to  Christianity in the 4th 
century, bishops were often drawn from the ranks of  urban notables, 
reminiscent 
of the notables who had dominated city life in pagan  times. Later, bishops 
and abbots were apt to see themselves as secular lords,  occasionally even 
leading armies into battle. Sometimes, Church offices were  bought and sold; 
in Rome, the papacy became “the plaything of aristocratic  families.” A 
huge gulf separated the princes of the Church, such as powerful  bishops and 
the abbots of rich monasteries, from ordinary laymen. 
Yet, all this said, Siedentop’s “moral  earthquake” transformed 
mentalities and sentiments—the  deep-seated habits of the heart that make 
cultures 
what they are—across Europe. In the hands of medieval canon lawyers, by  
definition churchmen, the static, pre-Christian notion of natural law gave 
birth  
to the still evolving (and still revolutionary) notion of natural rights. 
The  centralization of the medieval Church, carried out by a series of 
reforming  lawyer popes, helped to spawn the nation state. The creation of 
universities, in  many ways medieval Europe’s most astonishing achievement, led 
to 
the emergence  of “a new social role, the intellectual”, and created 
protected spaces for  transformative thinking, argument and debate. 
Appropriately, John Wycliffe, the “morning star”  of the English 
Reformation, was for a time master of Balliol College, Oxford. By  the early 
15th 
century, philosophers and canon lawyers, Siedentop writes, had  established the 
“roots of liberalism”: 

... belief in a fundamental equality  of status as the proper basis for a 
legal system; belief that  enforcing moral conduct is a contradiction in 
terms; a defense of  individual liberty, through the assertion of fundamental 
or 
“natural” rights;  and, finally, the conclusion that only a representative 
form of  government is appropriate for a society resting on the assumption  
of moral equality. 

These roots were planted and watered  by churchmen, imbued with the 
egalitarian moral intuitions that had been  fundamental to the Christian 
message 
since the days of St. Paul. The great  question is whether these intuitions 
can flourish in the secular societies of  the 21st century.  
Siedentop thinks that they can but only if we  are willing to recognize 
that secularism and Christianity share a common  ancestry: that they can and 
should be allies instead of enemies. Failing that,  liberalism will have no 
defenses against the double threat it now  faces: a morally empty 
utilitarianism on the one hand and an asocial  individualism on the other. To 
put it at 
its lowest, its capacity to meet that  challenge is far from self-evident.

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