After writing my modest piece inspired by the
changed rules for royal succession in the UK and the other Commonwealth
“Realms,” came across an interesting article from April 16 by blogger Nate
Orman, “Religious Tests and the British Monarchy.”
To read Orman’s argument in full, It can be found on line at:
In addition to rendering the
royal succession gender-neutral, the 2013 Succession
to the Crown Act also eliminates the prohibition on royal marriages to
Catholics and also reduces the number of those who remain bound by the 1772 Royal Marriages Act from thousands of distant
descendants of George II to only the six royals closest to the throne. At the
same time, however, the new legislation retains the Act of Settlement's requirement that sovereign must
always be Anglican – “a religious test for the British monarchy” that Orman
finds problematic.
He
states at the beginning that the new legislation “made a number of tweaks to
the British monarchy, in large part to make it a rather more liberal
institution.” Presumably, his objection to retaining “a religious test” in the
form of the requirement that the sovereign be an Anglican is rooted in a sense
that this tradition, this "religious test," is ultimately illiberal.
I
agree. It is illiberal. Indeed, according to contemporary liberal ideology, having an
Established Church at all seems certainly illiberal. All of which brings me back to what
I wrote about yesterday – the inappropriateness of judging a pre-modern,
pre-liberal, pre-individualist institution by the canons of liberal ideology.
In this case, in fact, there are two such pre-modern, pre-liberal,
pre-individualist institutions at stake – the monarchy itself and the Church
of England by Law Established. Both institutions, I would argue, serve a socially valuable purpose precisely because they are pre-modern, pre-liberal, pre-individualist and so
are witnesses to values that are likewise pre-modern, pre-liberal, and pre-individualist - in contrast to contemporary society's prevailing liberal individualist
ideology. (How effectively the Church of England may actually do that may be
open to debate. Here I am concerned only with its legal position as the Established
Church and the contribution that the legal institution of religious Establishment
makes as a counterweight to liberal individualist ideology.)
Of
course, as Orman notes, the Church of England is the Established Church only in the UK – and there only in England, not in Scotland or Wales of Northern Ireland. Regarding
the other Commonwealth “realms,” Orman considers it “rather Anglo-centric to
require those other nations to suffer a religious restriction on their monarch
for the sake of a purely English establishment.”
But
how exactly do they “suffer”? And isn't the point of the shared monarch "rather Anglo-centric"? There are a few Commonwealth countries which
actually have their own monarchs and which do not share the same monarch with
the UK (just as there are other Commonwealth countries which are republics).
The 15 “realms” retain the same monarch as the British because of the claims of a very specific history and tradition. They would likely have no monarch at all if they didn’t
have the British one. They value their history and tradition enough to maintain
a connection which is essentially historical and traditional – not based on any
modern, contemporary criteria of liberal constitutionalism. And the mutually
shared monarch’s being head of the Church of England is just one part of that
historical traditional package, regardless of the fact that none of the other
“realms” retains an Established Church. It is, again, utterly anachronistic to judge such an arrangement by the tenets of an ahistorical, anti-traditional,
rationalist liberalism.
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