In and interview the other day, JD Vance bought to attention the concept of the Ordo Amoris, the idea that within Christianity, as it was traditionally understood, there is a legitimate ranking of our love. Vance was speaking in the context of U.S. politics, primarily with the idea being that "Charity begins at home" which meant by implication that governments have their primary duty to their own citizens and then to rest of the world.
Vance got a lot of push back, from the usual suspects but also from a significant number of Christians of all denominations. It's this group that interests me as my interest is in the self destructive nature of modern Christianity. i.e Christian Buddhism. So I thought it worthwhile to look at their approach to the subject.
If we divide the parties in this discussion to self, kin and stranger, the objection of the Christian Buddhists is that by prioritising the self, and by extension kin, we are are, in fact being selfish and leaving the the dregs of Christian love to strangers. Christian love, they argue should be based upon need and not proximity to self. Self care is equivalent to selfishness and we all knows what Christianity thinks about selfishness. Implicit in this line of reasoning is that self-care is wrong in a world of competing needs. At the extreme end, you have the modern Christian thinkers, who see the "stranger" as the face of Christ and therefore anyone who who deprioritizes them is deprioritising Christ. Then of course are all the radical Balthasarians, Bathrians with their vague moralising bromides about encounter and radical love, poverty and self-giving.
I begin to tune out.
The big idea that these guys have is that the poor--especially illegal migrants--are a kind of spiritual litmus test which gives you a chance to prove your Christian bona fides. The more you give, and support them the better the Christian you are. And it helps if they're really repulsive. Because we all know how Christ went to the margins and loved the unlovable. Illegal gang members with a history of savage violence and crime are particularly high on totem pole of Buddhist Christian love. Love them by inviting them into your home and with your family and your are a true disciple of Christ. Prudence, common sense and some hesitation are all example of the failure to commit fully to Christ when he presents himself as the "encounter" with the repulsive migrant. The problem is that how the "encounter" ends in the parable of the Good Samaritan is not how it sometimes ends in real life.
Total commitment to the migrant even at the expense of the self is the name of the game. And not only does this form of Christianity aim at self-denial but it also agitates against policies which discriminate against the migrant and urges people toward government polices which subordinate all other interests to them.
Despite some of the more sensational aspects of illegal immigration such as the gangs and the violence the reality is that most illegal migrants who come to a country are not criminals but people simply seeking a better economic life. They are simply the poor and the question then is, what duty sort of duty of care does a Christian actually have towards them.
Now, I am not a official spokesman for anyone but in my opinion, it really depends on the circumstances. There are no hard and fast rules.
In Mathew 22:34-40, a clear hierarchy of love is established. First love God, then love your neighbour as you love yourself. Note, the neighbour and yourself is established as an equivalent. Contrary to many who supported Vance he's not way down the list. One of the things that characterised pre-Christian societies is their strong family based networks. What made Christianity so radical to the ancient world is that its love extended outside the family circle even to the repellent. And there's plenty of passages in scripture where neglect of the poor is punished quite severely by God. "Nearest and dearest" taking "priority" is the wrong way of looking at it.
Now the concept of the "self" is an interesting one since different cultures view the self differently. In some of the more Nordic countries and the Anglosphere, the self is seen as a quite autonomous with a limited number of obligations to others. The individual is seen more as an "elementary particle". On the other hand, in much of the rest of the world, the self is not seen as "autonomous" but as someone who intermeshed with the wider community with lots of legitimate obligations toward them. Christianity is pretty big on making sure you fulfil your legitimate obligations. Christianity takes a dim view on such things as children abandoning their parents, on not paying for works undertaken by others and parental neglect.
In other words when you love your neighbor as yourself, your "self" should be understood as a self with obligations. A father, for example, is not a an autonomous self but an individual with real duties and obligations to his wife, kids and other family members. A man can't just ditch these if he doesn't feel like it. They're real obligations which he is committed to, even if someone poor comes along. It helps if we like the ones who we are obligated to but like has got nothing to do with it. It's all about the love.
In other words, for the Christian, the poor are another legitimate obligation onto the self.
Now, given that most men have finite resources the issue in the face of all these competing interests becomes one of "resource management" and how to achieve the optimal result i.e. the virtue of prudence. As mentioned before, in pagan days, resource allocation was purely driven by "natural sentiment", so resources were allocated to those whom we felt a natural affinity to, but Christianity is quite explicit in rejecting this view. Christianity demands that we help those in need even if we don't have a natural inclination towards them. But it doesn't compel us to be stupid or self-destructive.
The Christian Buddhists are right in that a Ordo Amoris which puts the poor on the bottom is the wrong way to look at Christian Charity but where they err is the utter abandonment "prudence" when it comes to resource allocation. Their altruism becomes pathological when it neglects to recognise all other legitimate and binding competing interests which compete with the "poor", seeing the poor as the only metric by which to judge our actions. Mix that in with a notion which praises self-sacrifice and you've got a recipe for self-destruction in service of the "poor".
This is what I mean;
You are well aware of the generosity which our Lord Jesus Christ had, that, although he was rich, he became poor for your sake, so that you should become rich through his poverty.
I will give you my considered opinion in the matter; this will be the right course for you as you were the first, a year ago, not only to take any action but also even to conceive the project.
Now, then, complete the action as well, so that the fulfilment may -- so far as your resources permit -- be proportionate to your enthusiasm for the project.
As long as the enthusiasm is there, the basis on which it is acceptable is what someone has, not what someone does not have.
It is not that you ought to relieve other people's needs and leave yourselves in hardship; but there should be a fair balance- your surplus at present may fill their deficit, and another time their surplus may fill your deficit. So there may be a fair balance; as scripture says: No one who had collected more had too much, no one who collected less had too little.
2 Corinthians 8:9-15
You can quote other bits which come to the same conclusion but the stand out feature of this text is a balance needs to be struck between competing needs. And note there is no obligation for "heroic" self-destruction.
9 comments:
"Virtue without order is no virtue at all "
But it must be remembered that “prudence” in its common modern meaning is not at all the same as the traditional Catholic cardinal virtue “prudentia”. This is a big theme in the works of Thomist theologian Josef Pieper. The modern prudence is safety first, especially as regards material things. Whereas according to Pieper, for St Thomas prudent actions are actions appropriate to objective reality, natural and supernatural, the ultimate reality of course being the Way, the Truth and the Life that is Christ. So the rich young man in Mk 10 would have been prudent to sell all that he had, give it all to the poor, and follow Christ. This is essentially what St Thomas, St Paul, and so many other saints did do. Heroic virtue is not demanded of all people in all circumstances, but it is demanded of particularly gifted individuals, and possibly nations, if they “would be perfect”, and it is more Christ-like than non heroic virtue.
In my opinion this does not have anything to do with allowing floods of poor economic migrants into a country. These poor can just as well be helped in their own countries, and in very many cases would be better off in their own countries with their own cultures.
I agree. If I were to define Prudence, it would be acting in a way that God would want me to act given the circumstances. The key point being "the circumstances" which always modulate the appropriate Christian response. So what might be right in one set of circumstances may not be in others.
The issue that I have with a lot of modern Christian theological currents is the underlying implicit assumption that "heroic" virtue should be normative, which it clearly is not. "Heroic" in this instance meaning self-sacrificial to the point of self-destruction.
One interesting thing is putting the violent criminal as in the place of the robbed and beaten traveler, as if criminals weren’t part of that story already: they attacked the guy the Good Samaritan helped!
And it’s not just about helping these people either, we have to help them in the prescribed way which shows it’s not about helping them at all (for example my understanding is that Christian organizations who volunteered to help migrants were forbidden to “proselytize”, e.g. spread the gospel). The “help” we give them must involve compulsion or force or it doesn’t count; taxes seized by force (not voluntary donations), toleration of criminal violence (and the concurrent evil of punishing the defense of self or others, in NYC they even as I recall they at least discussed charging a man with illegal possession of a weapon after he wrestled away the knife the other fellow was stabbing him with), legally privileging others in hiring (also force, woe betide those who do not follow policy). Their “charity” is force, their “kindness” does not extend to victims of violence. If your child is beaten or worse at school by the ill raised children of newcomers the fault lies with you.
I am convinced this is moral blindness. We want to say their hearts are in the right place, but if confronted with facts about anything else they cannot endure them.
"we have to help them in the prescribed way"
Exactly. There's never any discussion about what is appropriate "help", it's always open borders migration. And if you question it, malice is always attributed to you. It's not just their moral blindness, but the sanctimoniousness in which they have the "discussion".
The more I dwell on this the more I am convinced that this is not a "moral blindess" issue as a not wanting to see.
I agree that is a matter of prudence, but prudence can cut both ways. Prudence doesn't mean the "tougher" position is always to be favored over the more altruistic one, it depends on the circumstances. Some of the plans that the Trump administration have put forward--like "mass deportations" of 10 million people or more people or using military bases to temporarily house deportees--are really unworkable and have their own moral problems attached to them. There's huge logistical hurdles here. Many of the illegals have been in the US for years and are largely integrated into American society and it is arguably much less socially disruptive just to give them some kind of legal status. For decades illegal immigration was tolerated by the US business elite. The illegals didn't really "break the law" in a straightforward sense--they made a deal with US businesses where they got to live in the US off the books, in exchange for low pay and poor working conditions that would otherwise not have been permitted, and Congress tolerated this arraignment for decades. This is where the USCCB is coming from in calling for comprehensive immigration reform.
All the gnashing and wailing about "migrant" crime and assimilation is baloney. MAGA is trying to fit EU-style right-wing populism into a very different set of conditions. You are Australian and therefore might not appreciate the differences between the two situations.
The EU has low crime rates, and rising crime in the EU (which is still minuscule compared to the US) tends to correspond with immigration. The US has extremely high violent crime rates, worse than any other rich country (Baltimore, St. Louis, Milwaukee, Philly, etc. are as bad as anywhere in Mexico or Brazil). The US would continue to have these high rates of violence even if we deported every single immigrant. In fact, in the US, the presence of immigrants in a community usually indicates less crime. We have high crime due to the "Urban Crisis" that developed between WWII and the 1970s. Every big urban center has racially segregated black ghettos with high concentrations of poverty, and these conditions of segregation and poverty lead to high crime rates. Liberal sociologists like Robert Sampson and William Julius Wilson explain this using "social disorganization theory" of criminology. ("Divergent Social Worlds" by Ruth Peterson is an excellent book explaining this perspective). Racists/eugenicists on the right like Steve Sailer will claim instead claim the "Urban Crisis" is related to purported black genetic inferiority. Regardless, its not Hispanic immigrants committing all this crime (I am sympathetic to Wilson/Sampson and view Sailer as a bigoted crank, but the far-right of all groups should be able to recognize that violent crime in the US is mostly a black ghetto issue). Just because the tabloids cover "migrant crime" does mean its statistically significant. Our cities would not magically turn into Oslo or Zurich if we kicked out all the illegal immigrants, in fact crime might get worse as police resources get rediverted towards handling deportations.
The Hispanics are also mostly Christians (increasingly Americanized low-church Protestants and Charismatics) and speak a European language that uses the Latin script and shares a lot of overlapping vocabulary with English. They are not Muslims who speak Arabic or Urdu. English is also the global lingua franca and is spoken by over one billion people as a second language, including hundreds of millions who never will live in the Anglosphere. Anglo-American culture and language is exported all over the world. Most people in Latin America will probably have basic English proficiency at some point this century, even if they stay put. We are not Hungary or Finland and risk losing our very unique language and culture if too many people immigrate here.
"Prudence doesn't mean the "tougher" position is always to be favored over the more altruistic one, it depends on the circumstances."
That is correct. It really does depend on the circumstances. How you treat a newly arrived migrant is different to how you would treat someone who has been present for a generation.
"For decades illegal immigration was tolerated by the US business elite.There was an all round failure of U.S. leadership and some of them should be punished..... Severely.
You're right, many of the migrants were exploited. I'd be quite in favor of employers of illegal immigrants losing some or all of their citizenship rights. Crudely put: the migrants are a symptom and not the disease. As for the USCCB, they seem more vocal now than when the borders were wide open. As such, they've lost a lot of their public legitimacy and they're seen as part of the problem as well.
You are Australian and therefore might not appreciate the differences between the two situations
I've been to the U.S. twice and to Europe a few times. I appreciate the different circumstances. I know that the immigrant crime issue is overblown prole-feed. But politics in contemporary democracy is not about subtlety and distinction. Anyone looking objectively at the data will see that U.S. crime is a race issue and even within that perspective there are a lot of important qualifying distinctions. But you touch on point which I think is important, and that is cultural destruction. Each migrant is a vector of their own culture and mass migration is one element that changes a society's culture. The success of the U.S. was largely as a result of its Protestant-centric culture. De-Protestantise the culture and you get a different U.S. Trying to get 1950's America back is not going to happen except without a lot of pain. But whether the current situation will be stable in the long term, I'm not sure.
@Anon I want to be as respectful as I can, forgive me if it’s not.
I’m sorry but just no, illegals did break the law in a straightforward sense, they 100% knew that it was illegal which is why they snuck in.
Next many, many of the children of immigrants from Hispanic culture get assimilated into ghetto crime culture. We have massive Hispanic street gangs, criminal organizations, civic corruption, basically the whole Latin scene plus the hood scene. Just because many first gens keep their heads down to not get caught let’s not act like there’s no connection. Or would American citizens pick up the slack if they weren’t here?
Next we absolutely suffer a danger to our culture. If you have a culture which doesn’t care about George Washington, common law, views the civil war as “something about black people way back”, English and Americans literature, etc., but they speak English well enough you can’t say that’s all right then. There’s a break it and bought it quality I’ll grant, but the idea that Hispanic immigration is just some sort of shrug and “you know crime might go up if we get distracted by deportations”, oh come on.
Not to mention the continual pressure on wages, which has many sources but when employers just dump new labor all the time, I mean shoot. Now if they’re actually my Christian brothers and sisters great, but my local mall sells Santa Muerte statues with a handy guide about which ones bring which benefits. I’m sitting here staring at the problem which has been hand waved for years. I have worked alongside and with working class Hispanics for years as well, including at times in their neighborhoods. There neighborhoods are foreign places with high crime and hard eyed men who don’t necessarily have the common good deep in their souls. There is no personal ill will, but we at least need to staunch the flow for five minutes to catch our breaths. Unless there’s something new I don’t want to hear it about “line go up” anymore with immigration. If there’s injustice done to any, repair it, but also consider the injustice done to the American citizen who’s had to live with the fallout of this goofy quasi open border anarchy.
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