FIRST, We have granted to
God, and by this our present Charter have confirmed, for Us and our Heirs for
ever, that the Church of England shall be free, and shall have all her whole
Rights and Liberties inviolable. We have granted also, and given to all the
Freemen of our Realm, for Us and our Heirs for ever, these Liberties
under-written, to have and to hold to them and their Heirs, of Us and our Heirs
for ever
Of course, it takes more than a piece of paper to
guarantee freedom - for anyone. The freedom of the Church had been at issue in the great
conflict between King John’s much more accomplished father, King Henry II
(1133-1189, King 1145-1189) and his Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket
(1118-1170), martyred by four of the King's thuggish henchmen (otherwise known
as knights of the realm) on December 29, 1170 - and subsequently (and very rapidly) canonized in
1173. Magna Carta or no, it would
continue to be an issue all over Europe throughout the Middle Ages. Then, with the
Renaissance and Reformation, the situation would only get that much worse for the Church and for its
freedom. In England, Magna Carta or
no, the Church’s freedom would be eradicated completely by Henry VIII and his
successors Edward and Elizabeth, resulting in many more martyrs, the most
famous of whom were St. Thomas Fisher (1469-1535) and St. Thomas More,
(1478-1535), both honored together on the Church’s calendar later this month.
Almost six centuries after King’s John’s signature had
been rather reluctantly affixed to the Magna
Carta, the First Amendment enshrined the freedom of the Church in the U.S.
Constitution. The American situation and perspective were radically different
from medieval England’s, of course. In the medieval case, the Church was one
and universal, the State’s equal at least, a real rival superior at times in power. In the
American case, the Church was divided into different denominations and sects
(some of which enjoyed the privileges of establishment in specific states – the
1st Amendment applying originally only to the Federal Government). It was
religious pluralism, which provided the occasion for the American experiment.
In the Church’s self-understanding, the Church is a
supernatural society, whose nature and purpose transcend that of the State (or
any other social institution). In the American pluralist model, in contrast,
churches are among the many and various voluntary social institutions which are
at the heart of society, and whose autonomy the State is constrained to
respect. Historically, that autonomy has worked to the benefit of the Church,
which has thrived and flourished in the free air of American religious liberty.
And it has worked well for society as well, which has benefited from the freedom of its
citizens to build communities and create a network of familial, educational, and medical institutions (among others), which together have built an authentic American
civil society. An activist, purposive government, which acknowledges its natural
limits (and its inherent lack of transcendent purpose) will only benefit by
recognizing the legitimate space for civil society and its component
institutions, the Church first among them.
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