The Common Good and Christian Ethics: David Hollenbach, S. J
The Common Good and Christian Ethics: David Hollenbach, S. J
The Common Good and Christian Ethics: David Hollenbach, S. J
CHRISTIAN ETHICS
DAVID HOLLENBACH, S. J.
The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom
C David Hollenbach, S. J.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
The eclipse of the public
The historical roots of the eclipse
Pluralism and the common good today
Public opinion: thou shalt not judge
Problems tolerance cannot handle
Race, poverty, and social isolation in central cities
How big a world?
The need for shared goods
Recovering the commonweal
From wariness to solidarity in freedom
Human relationships as valuable in themselves
Religion in public
Public religion, conflict, and peace
Religion strengthening public life
Christianity in a community of freedom
Reconsidering secularization
A theological argument
ix
x List of contents
Intellectual solidarity
Deliberation, reciprocity, civility
Christian distinctiveness and common morality
Dialogic universalism
Human rights: institutionalizing solidarity
Politics, culture, and religion
Bibliography
Electronic resources
Index
Over two millennia ago, Aristotle set the challenge this book will
address. Aristotle’s aim was to discern fitting goals for a good human
life. At the beginning of the Nicomachean Ethics he argued that a
human life can be judged good when it is shaped by a relatively
consistent pursuit of ends that are themselves good. Thus much of
Aristotle’s moral reflection was devoted to determining the nature
of the good that people should seek. On this basis he wanted to
specify what lifestyles can be called genuinely good patterns of
living. His entire understanding of morality was built upon this
conviction that a good life is one devoted to the pursuit of good
purposes or ends.
One of Aristotle’s most significant conclusions was that a good
life is oriented to goods shared with others – the common good of
the larger society of which one is a part. The good life of a single
person and the quality of the common life persons share with one
another in society are linked. Thus the good of the individual and
the common good are inseparable. In fact, the common good of
the community should have primacy in setting direction for the
lives of individuals, for it is a higher good than the particular goods
of private persons. In Aristotle’s words,
Even if the good is the same for the individual and the city, the good
of the city clearly is the greater and more perfect thing to attain and to
safeguard. The attainment of the good for one person alone is, to be sure,
a source of satisfaction; yet to secure it for a nation and for cities is nobler
and more divine.
Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, b. This is an adaptation of Martin Ostwald’s translation
(Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, ). The Greek polis is translated “state” by Ostwald, but
“city” has been used here to avoid the impression that Aristotle is speaking of the good of
The common good and Christian ethics
Aristotle wrote these words in a context of the Greek city-state (the
polis), a social and political form quite different from the modern
nation-state. So it is not immediately evident what the interdepen-
dence of the good of the individual and the common good would
mean in the contemporary context. It is clear nonetheless that
Aristotle envisioned the larger good realized in social relationships
as superior to the good that can be achieved in the life of a single
person considered apart from the community.
Indeed Aristotle spoke of the common good realized in commu-
nity not only as nobler but as “more divine” than the good of
persons considered one at a time. This religious dimension of the
common good has been echoed throughout much of the later his-
tory of Christian reflection on morality, politics, and what is called
spirituality today. For example, Thomas Aquinas’s discussions of
Christian morality often cited Aristotle on the primacy of the com-
mon good in the moral life. Aquinas’s Summa Contra Gentiles reaf-
firmed Aristotle’s statement that the good of the community is more
“godlike” or “divine” than the good of an individual human being.
Aquinas went on to identify the good to be sought by all persons
in common with the very reality of God. St. Thomas wrote that
“the supreme good, namely God, is the common good, since the
good of all things depends on God.” Thus the good of each per-
son is linked with the good shared with others in community, and
the highest good common to the life of all is God’s own self. For
Thomas Aquinas, therefore, the pursuit of the common good car-
ries out the Bible’s double commandment to love God with all one’s
heart, mind, and soul, and to love one’s neighbor as oneself.
This centrality of the common good in Christian life was echoed
by Ignatius Loyola at the dawn of modernity in the sixteenth
the modern nation-state. Identification of the common good with the good of the modern
nation-state can have totalitarian implications that any use of Aristotle today must avoid.
Also “person” is used where Ostwald uses “man.” Both of these departures from Ostwald’s
translation point to the difficult problems that must be addressed in making a normative
argument for the viability of the notion of the common good today. These problems will
be addressed throughout this book.
Thomas Aquinas, Summa contra Gentiles, , . Again, the translation has been adapted,
using “God” rather than “Him,” from that contained in Basic Writings of Saint Thomas
Aquinas, ed. Anton C. Pegis, vols. (New York: Random House, ), vol. , p. .
Adaptations in the interest of gender inclusiveness will be made as appropriate in citations
throughout this book.
The eclipse of the public
century. Ignatius harked back both to Aristotle and to Aquinas
when he set forth the spirit that should govern the Jesuit order he
was founding. He wrote that all the decisions of his followers should
seek the broader, common good, rather than goals that were less
comprehensive in scope. In the document that lays out his founding
vision of the Jesuit order, Ignatius stated that “the glory of God” is
the goal that should energize all of his followers’ activities. But he
immediately linked God’s glory with the terrestrial reality of the
common good. Indeed the Formula of the Institute of the Jesuit order
came close to identifying the two ideas when it said that all of the
order’s activities should be directed “according to what will seem
expedient to the glory of God and the common good.” This single
phrase sums up much that is central to Ignatius Loyola’s religious
vision.
For the first Jesuits the pursuit of this vision of service to the
common good included obviously religious ministries, such as the
defense and propagation of Christian faith, preaching and other
ministries of the Word of God, and the administration of the sacra-
ments. But it also included tasks that might appear more secu-
lar, such as the education of youth and the illiterate, reconciling
the estranged, and compassionate assistance to those in prisons or
hospitals. Such pursuits were mentioned by Ignatius simply as ex-
amples of ways toward the common good that he identified with
manifestations of God’s glory on earth. So for Ignatius the pursuit of
this-worldly aspects of the common good was an eminent responsi-
bility of Christians and closely linked with their vocation from God.
Ignatius Loyola’s vision of the common good was extraordinarily
expansive in scope. Indeed he saw it as universal, extending well be-
yond the city-state envisioned by Aristotle, the medieval kingdoms
of Aquinas’s understanding or the Renaissance republics closer to
his own time. Ignatius saw the common good as the good of the
This identification can be found in the apostolic letter of Pope Julius III, Exposcit debitum
( July , ) that gave papal approval to the “formula of the Institute” of the Society of
Jesus. It is contained in the contemporary normative documents of the Jesuit order, The
Constitutions of the Society of Jesus and Their Complementary Norms, A Complete English Translation
of the Official Latin Texts (Saint Louis: Institute of Jesuit Sources, ), . Formulas of the
Institute of the Society of Jesus, Julius III, no. , p. .
See John W. O’Malley, The First Jesuits (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, ),
pp. , –.
The common good and Christian ethics
whole of humanity, extending to the ends of the earth. The phrase
“the more universal good” appears repeatedly in the Constitutions
of the Jesuit order as the criterion for decisions in the service of
God and the church. This vision of the more universal common
good made Ignatius’s first followers among the first Westerners
to travel beyond the boundaries of the Europe familiar to most
previous Christian thinkers. It led them to encounters with the cul-
tures of India, China, and the Americas that had been inaccessible
and even unknown. In these missions they sought to bring both
the gospel and European knowledge to these cultures. In their en-
counters with these societies they predictably manifested the same
prejudices as their European contemporaries. But in some notable
instances they rose above these biases with appreciation for the
high achievements of these cultures, seeking to learn as well as
to teach. This was evident in their work of constructing the first
grammars and dictionaries for Europeans of the newly encountered
languages and in their often controversial adaptations of Christian
doctrine and worship in light of indigenous religions. Thus echoing
Aristotle but going well beyond him by stressing the scope of the
common good, Ignatius wrote that “the more universal the good is,
the more it is divine.” Therefore Ignatius’s followers were to choose
ministries that gave preference “to persons and places which, once
benefited themselves, are a cause of extending the good to many
others.” At its best, this pursuit of the more universal common
good was not simply envisioned as the one-directional transfer of
the European vision of the good life to non-European societies. It
was to be characterized by an exchange among understandings of
what truly good lives could look like.
This brief historical sketch indicates that service to the common
good was central to the normative vision of the good life through
For example, in Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, nos. and . See John W. O’Malley,
“To Travel to any Part of the World: Jerónimo Nadal and the Jesuit Vocation,” Studies in
the Spirituality of Jesuits , no. ().
On the exchanges between the early Jesuits and non-European cultures, see Jonathan
D. Spence,The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci (New York: Viking, ); Andrew C. Ross,
A Vision Betrayed: The Jesuits in Japan and China, – (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books,
); John W. O’Malley, Gauvin A. Bailey, Steven Harris, T. Frank Kennedy, eds., The
Jesuits, Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, – (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, ).
Constitutions of the Society of Jesus, no. .
The eclipse of the public
much of Western thought, from classical Greek moral philosophy,
to medieval European Christian theology, to a form of early modern
Christian spirituality in its initial encounter with the global realities
that have become so central in contemporary consciousness. Oddly
enough, however, one rarely finds a definition of the common good
in these earlier sources, despite the fact that the concept was so
central for them. We can, however, give a general description of
what the term often meant to them by contrasting it with several
terms that are currently in use.
The common good for these earlier authors was clearly different
from the largely economic and utilitarian concept of the general
welfare. The notion of general welfare, as ordinarily understood
today, sums up the economic welfare of the individual members of
the society into one aggregate sum. The gross national product, for
example, is frequently taken as an indicator of the general welfare
in this way. As has often been noted, however, this kind of utili-
tarian standard pays little or no attention to how this overall sum
is distributed among the members of the society. Indeed the GNP
could be growing at a rapid pace while some members of society
grow poor or fall into destitution. This general welfare thus need
not be common to all the members of society. This aggregative good
can increase while the well-being of some or many of a society’s
members declines.
The concept of the public interest is often used today as an
alternative to this aggregative notion of general welfare. The idea
of the public interest builds upon the modern commitment to the
fundamental dignity and rights of all persons. Protection of these
rights is thus seen as in everyone’s interest. Public institutions and
policies that will secure these rights for all persons are thus seen
as helping realize the interests of everyone. Understood this way,
the public interest is a disaggregative concept. It breaks down the
public good into the effects it has upon the well-being or rights of
I here rely in part on the helpful discussions of the meaning of the common good in
Patrick Riordan, A Politics of the Common Good (Dublin: Institute of Public Administration,
), esp. chap. . See also Drew Christiansen, “The Common Good and the Politics of
Self-Interest: A Catholic Contribution to the Practice of Citizenship,” in Donald Gelpi,
ed., Beyond Individualism: Toward a Retrieval of Moral Discourse in America (Notre Dame, IN:
University of Notre Dame Press, ), pp. –.
The common good and Christian ethics
the individuals who make up society. Thus, it too lacks the richer
understanding of the common that is implicit in many of the authors
who shaped the premodern tradition of the common good.
The recently revitalized idea of “public goods” is perhaps the
closest contemporary analogue to the idea of the common good in
more classical sources. A public good can be described as a good
that is present for all members of a relevant community if it is there
for any of them. More technically, it is “non-rivalrous in consump-
tion.” This means that the enjoyment of this good by some people
does not mean that it cannot be enjoyed by others. A beautiful
sunset or a clean environment does not become unavailable to one
person because it is being enjoyed by someone else. Second, a public
good is “non-excludible.” Its benefits cannot easily be confined to
just some people by excluding others from these benefits. The clean
air of a healthy environment, for example, is not like bottled oxygen
that may be available to some but not others. If it is there for all, it
is there for everyone; if it is present for anyone, it is present for all.
The concept of public goods, however, lacks an important ele-
ment present in earlier conceptions of the common good. These
public goods are largely seen as extrinsic or external to the re-
lationships that exist among those who form the community or
society in question. This is easiest to see when the community is
an intimate one like a family. The goods shared in a family include
the house they live in and the income they share. In a family that
is functioning well, these goods are non-rivalrous in consumption
and non-excludible. But there is more to a good family or friend-
ship than the sharing in such extrinsic goods. The relationships of
concern or affection among siblings and friends go deeper than
the sharing of such goods. These positive relationships are, in fact,
preconditions for such sharing. There are analogies to relation-
ships of this sort in less intimate societies like cities or states, where
the relationships are better characterized by the presence or ab-
sence of mutual respect. The quality of such relationships among
a society’s members is itself part of the good that is, or is not,
For a concise discussion of public goods, see Inge Kaul, Isabelle Grunberg, and Marc A.
Stern, “Defining Global Public Goods,” in Kaul, Grunberg, and Stern, eds., Global Public
Goods: International Cooperation in the st Century (New York and Oxford: Oxford University
Press, ), pp. –.
The eclipse of the public
achieved in it. One of the key elements in the common good of a
community or society, therefore, is the good of being a community
or society at all. This shared good is immanent within the relation-
ships that bring this community or society into being. Aristotle, for
example, understood the polis as an assembly of citizens engaged
in debate about how they should live together. The relationships
of reciprocal interaction among citizens brought this community
into being and went beyond the general welfare achieved by their
economic exchanges or the public good of the architecture of the
forum where they conducted their debates. Similarly, for Thomas
Aquinas the common good included the bonds of affection and
even love that linked people together in communities. Throughout
this book we will be seeking to clarify the relevance of the varied
ideas of general welfare, public interest, public goods, and the com-
mon good immanent in mutual human relationships to some of the
major issues we face in public life today.
This is evident in the way Thomas Aquinas assumed that the religious practices of
non-Christians should only be publicly tolerated within Christendom when intolerance
would do greater harm than that caused by the public presence of the non-Christian
rites themselves. See Summa Theologiae -, q. , art. . Citations of the Summa Theologiae
are from Summa Theologica, vols., trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province
(Allen, TX: Christian Classics, ). It should be noted that Aquinas did think that such
toleration was often called for. His reasoning in support of such tolerance, however, is very
different from the liberal defense of tolerance. It is also very different from the Catholic
position officially adopted at the Second Vatican Council.
The common good and Christian ethics
between Catholics and Protestants, and among different kinds of
Protestants as well, led to sharply conflicting conceptions of what a
good society should look like. In fact these conflicts led to overt reli-
gious war and persecution. The sixteenth- and seventeenth-century
wars of religion were caused in significant measure by efforts to pro-
mote ideas of the social good narrowly based on particular religious
understandings. These religious understandings of the common
good were matters with a depth that would admit no compromise
by those who held them faithfully. These sixteenth-century reli-
gious visions of the good society were the roots of “irreconcilable
latent conflict.” When these latent conflicts came to the surface,
the consequences were very bloody indeed. For example, when the
Peace of Westphalia finally ended the Thirty Years War in ,
to percent of the population of the Holy Roman Empire had
perished from war-related causes.
This memory of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century strife has
marked Western historical imagination with a deep suspicion
toward all proposals to base social life on convictions about the
good life. Visions of the full human good, especially religious
visions, have come to appear as sources of division, not unity.
Political theorists often appeal to the religious wars that followed
the Reformation for historical, experience-based evidence of the
dangers that lurk in any attempt to base public life on ideas of the
common good. They fear that the outcome of pursuing strong
ideas of the common good will be war between groups that hold
competing ideas of the good life, oppression of those holding mi-
nority views of the good by those in the majority, or straightforward
It is worth noting that in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as today, conflicts with
religious dimensions often have political and economic causes that are at least as impor-
tant as the religious disagreements that become the rallying points for the participants.
This can raise questions about whether religious tolerance will resolve such conflicts or
whether other solutions to the economic and social causes must be found. If the latter is
the case, such conflicts need to be viewed in a larger context than the liberal commitment
to tolerance can provide on its own.
See Rawls, Political Liberalism, pp. xxv–xxvi.
Geoffrey Parker, The Thirty Years’ War (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, ), p. .
For example, John Rawls states that “the historical origin of political liberalism, and lib-
eralism more generally, is the Reformation and its aftermath, with the long controversies
over religious toleration in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.” Political Liberalism,
p. xxiv.
The eclipse of the public
tyranny. In Rawls’s words, “A public and workable agreement on a
single and general comprehensive conception [of the good] could
be maintained only by the oppressive use of state power.” Thus a
public regime based on a positive moral commitment to tolerance
came to be seen as the only reasonable alternative to continued
religious war. The memory of post-Reformation religious conflicts
remains deep in the Western psyche today and it is reinforced by
contemporary conflicts that have explicitly religious dimensions.
Because of these historical experiences, the notion of the com-
mon good seems very dangerous to many political theorists in
the West.
This suspicion is not limited to ideas of the common good that are
based on Christian religious convictions. It extends to understand-
ings of the common good found in the Western political tradition
known as civic republicanism. This republican tradition is repre-
sented by thinkers as religiously different from Thomas Aquinas
as were Cicero, Machiavelli, and Rousseau. These thinkers envi-
sioned personal well-being and the well-being of the republic as
inseparable. Being a good person required fulfilling one’s responsi-
bilities as a citizen for the public good. Indeed personal virtue and
good citizenship were often identified in republican thought. This
was an appropriation of Aristotle’s understanding of the bonds be-
tween fellow citizens as the most honorable forms of friendship.
And very recently Hannah Arendt sought to retrieve this high es-
timate of citizenship by identifying genuinely human action with
Rawls, “The Idea of an Overlapping Consensus,”Oxford Journal of Legal Studies (),
–, at . See Rawls’s more recent formulation of this idea in his Political Liberalism,
pp. –. Rawls acknowledges that basing the institutions of society upon a “conception
of justice that can be understood as in some way advancing the common good” (usually
the common good understood in religious terms) need not lead to religious war and
persecution. As he understands the idea of the common good, however, such a society
will not treat all its members as free and equal citizens but, at best, as entitled to have
their good taken into account and to be consulted in the formation of policies. He sees
such a society as based on a “reasonable consultation hierarchy” and distinguishes it
from a democratic society as understood in liberal terms. This, however, is not the only
way to conceive of the role of the common good in a free society, as I will try to indicate
below. See Rawls, Political Liberalism, p. , and Rawls, The Law of Peoples (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, ), pp. –.
Aristotle writes that “friendship seems to hold states together” and that “concord is friend-
ship among fellow citizens” in Nicomachean Ethics, a and b. “State” is Ostwald’s
translation of polis. Aristotle himself, of course, raised the question of how large a polis
could be before this kind of unity becomes impossible. See Nicomachean Ethics, b– a.
The common good and Christian ethics
the kind of communication and argument about public affairs that
takes place among fellow citizens.
This civic republican tradition, however, carries dangers that
bring it under the same kind of suspicion as is directed at religious
conceptions of the common good today. For Rawls, any compre-
hensive conception of the good life, whether religious, philosoph-
ical, or moral, carries the same dangers as became evident in the
wars of religion. So we must abandon the notion that political life
can achieve the kind of strong community for which the republican
tradition hopes. Pursuit of such communal bonds in political life
carries a high danger of conflict. It may also require repression or
oppression. This is the “dark underside” of republicanism pointed
out by Jean Bethke Elshtain, despite her sympathies for the no-
bility of its understanding of citizenship. The civic virtue that has
often moved people and nations to great actions together has had
one glaring problem historically: it has frequently been “armed.”
From republican Sparta, to Plato’s ideal republic at Athens, to
Machiavelli’s exhortations to Lorenzo de’Medici on the usefulness
of fear in governing Florence, to Rousseau’s elevation of the general
will over that of the individual, there has been a notable tendency
to identify the common good with political control and military
victory. Civic virtù becomes a close relative of military valor. So the
same fear that rises from the memory of religious wars is brought
to the surface by talk of republican virtue. The same apprehension
arises about the high place it grants to the idea of the common good.
These fears lead to suspicion that any notion of the common good,
Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition: A Study of the Central Dilemmas Facing Modern Man
(Garden City, NY: Doubleday Anchor, ), esp. pp. –. Arendt writes that the
polis as the sphere of human action “properly speaking, is not the city-state in its physical
location; it is the organization of the people as it arises out of acting and speaking together,
and its true space lies between people living together for this purpose, no matter where
they happen to be” (). Thus the question of whether the Greek idea of the polis is viable
today is a question of the possibility of genuine communication and argument about the
public affairs of a nation or a world as large, diverse, and complex as ours.
See Rawls, Political Liberalism, p. .
Jean Bethke Elshtain, “Citizenship and Armed Civic Virtue: Some Critical Questions on
the Commitment to Public Life,” in Charles H. Reynolds and Ralph V. Norman, eds.,
Community in America: The Challenge of Habits of the Heart (Berkeley: University of California
Press, ), pp. –, at . Elshtain develops these ideas in an extended feminist
meditation on the idea of civic virtue and war in her Women and War (New York: Basic
Books, ).
The eclipse of the public
whether based on religious or secular-philosophical grounds, will
lead to trampling upon the freedom and dignity of those who do
not share it. Within this historically formed imaginative framework,
respect for equal dignity appears possible only by standing on guard
against the imposition of values we do not already hold. A certain
wariness sets the agenda for how we deal with diversity and plural-
ism. This wariness is a deep bias imprinted on the contemporary
social imagination by some of the major currents in the modern
social and political history of Europe. The question this leaves open,
however, is whether this imaginative predisposition fits the contours
of the history that is unfolding today. We will argue below that it
does not.
Michael Sandel, Liberalism and the Limits of Justice (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, ), p. .
The eclipse of the public
This is a relatively new situation for the West in general and
for the United States in particular. Pluralism and group conflict,
of course, have been around for a long time. The novelty today
is that consciousness of pluralism has become routine. Cultural
and religious differences are taken for granted as a part of the
way things are and will remain in the future. In post-Reformation
Europe, knowledge of religious differences between Protestants and
Catholics was real, but such disagreements were not simply ac-
cepted as here to stay. Believers hoped for conversion or victory
over their religious adversaries at an unspecified future date. Sim-
ilarly, in the days of the Cold War before the tumultuous events
of , Westerners could map the globe into the free world, the
Communist world, and those regions over which the other two blocs
contended for influence. Within this framework one could envision
the common good as the expansion of Western values through-
out the world. Such a shared vision of the good society of the
future followed from the principle that freedom is better than
tyranny. Alternatively, Marxists in the Eastern bloc could project
the common good as the international victory of socialism. The
end of the Cold War has destroyed these simplifications and made
the picture much more complex.
Several years ago Francis Fukuyama predicted that the end of
the ideological conflict of the Cold War would lead to the “end
of history,” with Western liberal democracy spreading across the
globe and making future politics peaceful but boring. This now
seems naive to say the least. The rise of ethnic and religious conflict
on the international stage has uncovered latent differences among
peoples that seem to go at least as deep as the formerly contend-
ing Western and Marxist ideologies. For example, awareness of
the presence of Islam as a major political force in the world has
grown rapidly in the West, thanks to the visibility of the Ayatollah
Khomeini, Muamar Khadaffy, Saddam Hussein, and most espe-
cially in light of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in
New York that led the United States and its allies into full-scale war
in Afghanistan. In the face of this Islamic resurgence, the France
Francis Fukuyama, “The End of History,” The National Interest (Summer, ) , .
Fukuyama has developed this article at book length inThe End of History and the Last Man
(New York: Free Press, ).
The common good and Christian ethics
that gave the West the revolutionary principles of liberty, equal-
ity, and fraternity has been unsure whether Muslim girls should
be permitted to wear religiously prescribed head-coverings in
French schools. Agonizing conflicts in Northern Ireland, the former
Yugoslavia, and Central Africa have also raised new questions
about the possibility of harmony among people with different tra-
ditions about the meaning of the good life.
One does not have to look very hard to find similar divisions
among communities within the United States. The country faces
divisive questions about the meaning of religious freedom today. Do
First Amendment protections of religious freedom extend to per-
mitting Native Americans to use peyote in their religious rites, to
Caribbean immigrants practicing Santaria rituals involving animal
sacrifice, and to those citizens who want to send their children to re-
ligiously affiliated schools with the financial support that vouchers
would provide? Court rulings on such cases have stimulated ef-
forts to pass a “Religious Freedom Restoration Act,” implying that
the first American freedom has been undermined and needs to be
restored. The emergence of new religious movements, “cults” and
even militias in the United States show that at least some Americans
believe that the traditional religious and social institutions of the
country cannot be relied on to help them live good lives. On the
basis of memories of slavery, lynchings, ethnic exclusion, and newly
awakened awareness of historical patterns of abuse and discrimi-
nation, advocacy groups argue forcefully against trusting the tradi-
tional ways of doing things. These traditional ways and institutions
do not protect their well-being or give them a fair chance to live
good lives. Others see these advocates as threats to the republic
and respond in kind. Thus debates about remedies for the effects
of racial discrimination, for example, have been deeply divided on
whether equal protection of fundamental rights should be color-
blind and opposed to affirmative action, or color-conscious and
supportive of affirmative action. In Martin Marty’s words
During the final quarter of the twentieth century many groups of citizens
have come to accuse others of having wounded them by attempting to
See for example, K. Anthony Appiah and Amy Gutmann, Color Conscious: The Political
Morality of Race (Princeton: Princeton University Press, ), and Stephen Thernstrom
and Abigail Thernstrom, America in Black and White: One Nation, Indivisible (New York:
Simon and Schuster, ).
The eclipse of the public
impose a single national identity and culture on all. [An] other set, in
turn, has accused its newly militant adversaries of tearing the republic
apart. They do this, it is said, by insisting on their separate identities and
by promoting their own mutually exclusive subcultures at the expense of
the common weal. Taken together, these contrasting motions produce a
shock to the civil body, a trauma in the cultural system, and a paralysis in
the neural web of social interactions.
In this way, the injustices of the past haunt the present in the United
States today and threaten new conflicts.
Awareness of diversity is thus a prominent fact in daily experi-
ence today. When difference generates conflict, fear grows. And
such fear makes further conflict more likely. This raises the spec-
tre that we have fallen into a downward spiral in which awareness
of differences leads to conflict, which in turn leads to fear, more
conflict, more defensive boundaries, and onward to deepened per-
ceptions of difference. At least this much can be said: in the face
of these tensions we cannot simply presume that there is a good
shared in common by people who are more or less the same, nor
is it obvious that this shared good can be readily identified. Indeed
quite a few social commentators think the hope that we can iden-
tify and pursue the common good is utopian today. Perhaps it is
a nostalgic hangover from time past, when people lived side-by-
side in close-knit neighborhoods and in countries where those who
were significantly different could be kept at a safe distance. We may
be inclined to say: “Once upon a time there was a common life
where what was good for one was good for all. In those days we
could hold town meetings and elect representatives to decide how
to achieve the shared good that benefits all of us. But today, the
best we can hope for is tolerance toward all that makes us different
from one another, and at worst we have to be ready to fight.” Thus
when people disagree about the good life and take it for granted
that this disagreement is here to stay, the hope that they can “know
a good in common that they cannot know alone” seems a rather
thin one.
Martin E. Marty, The One and the Many: America’s Struggle for the Common Good (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, ), p. . Marty uses the term “trauma” to characterize
this set of conflicts over the past several decades throughout this book. See the book’s
index under “trauma.”
The common good and Christian ethics
Pluralism, by definition, means disagreement about what is fi-
nally true and good. A pluralist society is one where people do not
share an understanding of the full breadth and depth of the good
life. Thus almost by definition pluralism seems to make conceiving
of a common good an impossible task. More strongly, it suggests
that we should abandon efforts to encourage people to live in a
way that realizes a common vision lest these efforts perpetuate past
injustices, deepen conflicts, or even precipitate war. Where there is
no shared vision of the good life does it make sense to speak of a
community at all? When people who hold different understandings
of what makes for a good life regard each other warily and with
suspicion, it would be more accurate to speak of a tense juxtapo-
sition of human beings than of a community. Perhaps that is the
best we can hope for. Perhaps the pursuit of a vision of the good life
to be lived in common by all is a dangerous prelude to oppression
and even tyranny.