Christian Love, Secular Progress, and Holistic Higher Education
Ralph Hancock
Nietzsche once suggested Christianity is vulnerable to appropriation by lofty humanitarian aspirations. Are we falling into that tendency unawares?
âTo be in the world but not of itâ is a familiar characterization of the challenge of the Christian life. Though not exactly scriptural, the formula captures something of the spirit of John 17:15-18:
I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from evil.
They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.
As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.
John teaches that we are sent into the world, just as Christ was sent. But we are not of the world.
Holy writ teaches: âGod loved the world and sent His Son to redeem itâ (John 3:16), but âHis kingdom is not of this worldâ (John 18:36). âThe friendship of the world is enmity with Godâ (James 4:4), and the worldâs âwisdom is foolishness to Godâ (1 Cor 3:19).
To be sure, Restoration Christians (i.e., members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) have always been under command to embrace good wherever and however it is found, whether from directly and authoritatively âotherworldlyâ sources (scripture and prophets) or from sources more tied to this world. We have a vivid sense of being agents unto ourselves, engaging in good causes of our own free will (D&C 58:27-28), endowed with a capacity to understand and produce goodness, a capacity not eradicated by any âoriginal sin.â
But what is this good? And how does it stand in relation to the idols of âthis worldâ? How are we to be agents for good in this world without becoming of this world?
Daniel Mahoneyâs Critique of the Idol of Our Age
This risk of importing the world unknowingly into our moral vision is apparent all around us as we see Christian love interpreted to serve the purposes of moral relativism and boundless self-expression. The world now increasingly identifies âloveâ with non-judgmentalism; that is, the complete denial of enduring moral standards. At the same time, this modulation of morality somehow claims the authority of reason, dismissing all objections to it as âirrationalâ or based on mere âprejudiceâ or âbigotry.â
Reason and religion are thus corrupted together in the worldâs perversion of Christian love.
In an important book, The Idol of Our Age: How the Religion of Humanity Subverts Christianity, Daniel Mahoney, the Augustine Chair at Assumption College in Massachusetts, has well articulated the subversive power of an increasingly prevalent religion of humanity that claims to be the true heir and fulfillment of the Christian ethic of love:
Woefully ignorant of sin and of the tragic dimensions of the human condition, [the religion of humanity] reduces religion to a project of this-worldly amelioration. Free-floating compassion substitutes for charity, and a humanity conscious of its unity (and utter self-sufficiency) puts itself in the place of the visible and invisible Church.⊠Christianity is shorn of any recognizable transcendental dimension and becomes an instrument for promoting egalitarian social justice, usually in the name of an ideological conception of the poor (Pope Francis increasingly clearly fits into this category). One cannot help but ask if Christianity is inherently vulnerable to humanitarian appropriation, as Nietzsche suggested with hostile intent. [French political philosopher] Pierre Manent, with no hostile intent, has argued that the religion of humanity would never âhave attained its empire over our souls if it did not appear as the extension and the consequence, perhaps the effectual truth, of Christianity, of the religion of the neighbor.â Manent suggests that âthe feeling of the same,â the vague but powerful sentiment of a common humanity on the way to full realization in a unified human race, appears to many in the modern democratic world as âthe truly human form, the final form of Christian charity.â
Restoration Christians may imagine that they are invulnerable to this humanitarian subversion of Christianity. Indeed, our firm foundation is in a clear and robust plan of salvation, a plan strongly linked to moral teaching by no means reducible to soft humanitarian compassion too often void of theological substance. Our sustaining of modern prophets, who regularly reaffirm this plan and its complement in moral doctrine, ought to fortify us against the allure of the more vacuous forms of secular humanism.
But the prestige of the âgreat and spacious buildingâ and the âpraise of the worldâ remains powerful among those who wish to appear âright-thinkingâ and desire to walk within circles where paeans to secular progress now replace personal moral rectitude as the highest good.
This is why the subtle, but growing progressive push to transform religion into a kind of theologically vacuous humanitarianism worries meâitâs fundamentally unchristian.
This illusion is all the more seductive because a kind of halfway house seems to be available to those who feel loyalty to true religion but who do not want to be excluded from a wider and more prestigious intellectual sphere; one religious leader referred to these cases as those who seek a residence in Zion with a summer cottage in Babylon.
Now, to be sure, Iâm not against humanitarianism, and you shouldnât be either. After all, humanitarian efforts aimed at the relief of suffering and the distribution of material goods are one authentic expression of Christian charity. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gladly and effectively participates in the work of humanitarian relief, often side by side with other faith groups as well as with non-religious organizations. Such work for the relief of human suffering is unquestionably an essential part of the Christian life.
The expression of Christian charity in the work of material relief only becomes problematic when solicitude for physical needs and personal self-expression begin to eclipse, if not entirely exclude, a higher moral and spiritual perspective. For the true Christian, the Saviorâs admonition to sell all one has and give to the poor must live alongside His later rebuke to those who said, âWhy this waste? This perfume could have been sold for a high price and the money given to the poor.â
The true Christian must understand that Christ didnât simply dedicate His ministry exclusively to healing the sick or providing food to the massesâHe did much of that, of courseâbut He also taught, wept, traveled, suffered, parried with Pharisees, cleansed the temple, participated in religious ordinances and rituals, and founded a faith that would continue to proliferate to the present day.
This is why the subtle, but growing progressive push to transform religion into a kind of theologically vacuous humanitarianism worries meâitâs fundamentally unchristian. More and more, however, I see rhetorical shifts within the intellectual class of my own faith traditionâand those of other traditionsâthat suggest a kind of reimagining of religion as merely a vehicle or means to carrying out a political social justice end. An effective tool for delivering humanitarian work sans any genuine connection to rigorous religiosity. Without questioning the faith of undoubtedly well-meaning church members and thinkers, itâs nonetheless important to identify these rhetorical shifts and consider their impact on any faithâs core aims to remain focused on lived faith and the essential teachings of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Modernizing of the Restoration?
An instructive discussion of the place of humanitarian causes, and, more generally, of distinctively modern ethical concerns within Restoration Christianity is a recent interview at the âFaith Mattersâ website with Patrick Mason, Leonard Arrington Chair of Mormon Studies at Utah State University and author of Planted: Belief and Belonging in an Age of Doubt.
Mason is a believer. And, in some ways, he presents himself as a simple, ordinary believer in the sense that he was raised in the Church of Jesus Christ, and never had a âfaith crisisâ such as professed by many today who hold themselves out as âthoughtful,â ânuanced,â or âenlightenedâ believers. Rather, he presents his conversion as supported by revelatory moments and overall, as he says, âorganic,â not agonized.
And so it is from the standpoint of a securely âplantedâ and believing Latter-day Saint that Mason considers the question of the Church in the 21st Century.
Masonâs central premise in considering the Churchâs future is that the institution was born âmodern,â and so came without all the premodern baggage that burdened many older religions. Mason enthusiastically embraces a modern framing of the Churchâs teaching and in fact goes a step further by distancing himself at the outset somewhat from many of the Churchâs founding teachings and characterizing himself as open to the new possibilities arising for young members maturing in the Church of the 21st century.
Rather than âgrasp for the respectability of pre-modern religion,â Mason invites us to look at the Restoration as a 19th-century phenomenon, as grounded, not in fixed ideas or ideals but in âthe century of progress,â and to see its teachings as resonant with a modern openness to âscience,â âdemocracy,â and especially the open possibilities of âprogressâ itself. Certainly, on the surface, this is an admirable sentiment. A kind of openness to the unfolding of revelation and progress can be positive.
But Mason also seeks to include in this modern openness to progress âthe Restorationâs notion of the human person.â Now, the notion of personalism, the idea of personal dignity as fundamental to an adequate ethical and spiritual worldview, is a venerable theme with roots both in Immanuel Kantâs modern ethical theory of moral autonomy and in 20th-century appropriations of the legacy of Roman Catholic moral philosophy and theology.
Rich and instructive debates have sprung up within schools of personalist philosophy from its beginnings, in particular debates on the status of the individual human being in relation to the common good of collective bodies such as family, political community, and church, and these debates are far from exhausted today.
But Patrick Mason identifies personalism with modernity and modernity with individualism: for him, it seems, the dignity of the person means âmoving away from society as the basic unit, and the idea that the individual exists to serve something greater than that, whether it be the family, or the community, or the church, or something like that.â Thus, one canât help but read Patrick Masonâs key for interpreting the Restoration as modernityâs fundamental commitment to âthe individualâ as defined by, well, the individual.
Considering distinctive Restoration teaching on divinity and humanity in the light of this modern principle of the human person as âindividual,â Mason arrives at the insight that we are ânot just creations of God created in His image, but we are actually gods.â (He also uses the more familiar phrase, âGods in embryo.â) â[T]his is the core of our theology.â He proposes that we âspin it outâ in its implications âfor every aspect of our life, for our politics, our economics, our gender relations,â etc. Mormonismâs âthird centuryâ will be constructed by taking this central modern and Restoration insight and running with it: âGodâs given us this gift, and now Heâs saying, âAll right, yâall, figure it out, and go do something with it.'â
By pursuing the implications of this modern, individualistic reframing of the human person, of the divinity of the individual, âthe new generation is going to rediscover the Restoration for themselves,â Mason predicts.
But Mason does appear able to in fact predict, at least a little, what must be the direction of this new modern and progressive gospel. Mason clearly is not just waiting to find out; in some way he is helping to preach the emerging new gospel already.
What, then, shall we do, according to this vision of 3rd-century Mormonism? Well, to have a real impact in the 21st century, Mason proposes that we overcome the old language of âsaints and gentiles,â the old division between the Church and the world. To define a community in the old-fashioned way risks being âexclusive and destructive to some group.â We must avoid any âoppositional identityââapparently including not being âof the world.â
Later, Masonâs interviewers seem ready to dispense with old-fashioned, baptism-centered missionary work in favor of inclusive humanitarianism. Mason pushes back, coming down in favor of the Church continuing its missionary efforts. But he meets them halfway (at least) by proposing that we go ahead and continue what we have âtraditionally doneâ and then âlayer on top of that a new kind of mission, a mission to the world that isnât just focused on getting them baptized.â
We are right to tell students that the Lord âis fitting you for a world that needs you.â But is the world the best judge of just how it needs the Lordâs disciple-scholars?
âJust being baptizedâ sounds pretty unexciting in this context, to be sure, and so Mason proposes to âflip that script, and actually figure out what other peopleâs questions areââquestions like ecological justice, refugees, multicultural communities, social and political issues, and mental illness. By accepting a kind of social justice, progressive humanitarianism script, we are of course accepting many of the worldâs definitions and framingsâsome of them explicitly politicalâof the problems and challenges of the human condition.
Rather than teaching or preaching faith and repentance, we need to listen to how others connect to God, Aubrey Chaves suggests, and Patrick Mason agrees. This apparently is what it means to put âthe individual,â or the god (in embryo) at the center of our theology: we should accept how the gods around us understand their own divinity (and identity), and not impose our own understanding (or perhaps Godâs understanding). As Mason puts it, with his gift for articulating a faith with a progressive accent that is still recognizably a faith tradition, âhearing Godâs voice by blending those things [the Church and the world] together rather than putting them at odds with one another.â
Let me say that Professor Mason and his interviewers are quite right that the gospel is expansive and open-ended, that we should stand ready to be surprised by developments in the Churchâs mission in the 21st century, and that we can learn much by listening to people who do not share our basic beliefs and by exploring ideas that seem to stand outside the gospel. But clearly this is something different from subtly interpreting the Restoration in the light of modern individualism and thus appearing ready to relegate fundamental beliefsâsuch as Christâs teachings and admonishments regarding the preeminence of ordinances âto the status of increasingly outdated notions from another century or wholesome residues of a tradition that we are ready to move beyond.
Again, to his credit, Mason recognizes the difficulty of sorting out what belongs to our culture from what comes from God â âthe billion-dollar question,â as he says. But clearly he is pretty confident concerning what is merely âculturalââwhat counts as the âbaggage of patriarchyâ for exampleâand what is essentialâwhat is modern and progressiveâin the faith tradition. It is quite interesting then, to hear Masonâs reflections on the problem of cultural influenceâthe problem, we might say, of this worldâs tendency to invade and colonize our understanding of what it means to follow Christ: âWe canât even see it, because weâre swimming in it.â Remarkably, and perhaps ironically, he seems unconcerned about the possibility that modern progressive individualism may in fact be that ocean.
Humanism and the Academy
BYU professor J. Spencer Fluhman, in a recent devotional address, âThe University of Kingdom of God,â notes that universities have drawn back from the promotion of âmoral, ethical, or spiritual development,â from âfostering public morality or human flourishing in a broad senseâ; instead, âacademic disciplines ⊠have drawn narrow lines around intellectual inquiry . . . â
He holds that Brigham Young University âwill not and cannot divorce itself from the big questions of human experience . . . questions of human flourishing or morality or even holiness.â Quoting Elder Neal A. Maxwell, he observes that the prioritizing of the âbig questionsâ involves recognizing âthe supernal truth [of the redeeming presence of our loving Father-God] which, along with His plan of happiness, reigns preeminent and imperial over all other realities.â
Fluhman also affirms, this time quoting Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, that this broader inquiry is inseparable from the cultivation of virtues of the soul: âYour soul must be oneâintegrated, intact, and whole.â
All this is quite well said and in fact profoundly important in understanding BYUâs proper role in higher education. But, disappointingly, when venturing some examples of such an educational ideal, Fluhman seems rather noncommittal concerning any moral vision that might inform higher education and adopts a more humanitarian perspective that would be perfectly at home in the more narrowly secular educational institutions he at first critiques.
In inviting students to join in the work of building Godâs kingdom, or to âchange the world,â he states:
God . . . is fitting you for a world that needs you. There are always problems afoot that will demand our very best and then some. From poverty to racism to ecological collapse to rampant inequality to sexual violence to poor healthcare to religious freedom to deficient educationâthis world groans under the weight of our collective failures.
There is nothing, or little, to object to in Fluhmanâs list of concerns. In fact, his vision of a holistic education at BYU, which takes the form mainly of the relief of material suffering and the advancement of other recognizable humanitarian and political causes, might well be considered the official position of the university.
The grounding work of personal moral reformâso essential to the gospel of Jesus Christâis often whatâs absent from the humanist aspirations of other institutions of higher education.
Speeches by university leaders in recent years sometimes tend to translate BYUâs uniquely religious educational mission into humanitarian outreach, moving seamlessly from praise of our soulful view of the life of the mind to a commitment to good works, especially good works that mobilize technological advances in order to make peopleâs lives better materially. Of course good works of practical utility are a vital expression of a Christian education, but increasingly we at BYU seem simply to identify the educating of the whole soul with a commitment to and technological capacity for sharing material improvements.
It is notable that in the repeated translation of holistic education into humanitarianism, the questions of the mindâs elevation and the soulâs redemption are sometimes set aside; in Fluhmanâs speech, for instance, such concerns might be discerned only obliquely in what some might see as an anodyne reference to âreligious freedom.â To be sure, those who see education from Elder Maxwellâs and Elder Hollandâs perspective have every reason to embrace worthy efforts to relieve others, often working alongside secular humanitarian partners. But what then of the distinctive contribution of disciple-scholars?
As Elder Maxwell notes, in one of the sermons cited by Fluhman, â[E]ver acknowledging Godâs redeeming hand is very important, but, alas, so doing is diminished by the unwise mortal reliance on âthe arm of fleshâ (2 Ne. 4:34; D&C 1:19).â We are right to tell students that the Lord âis fitting you for a world that needs you.â But is the world the best judge of just how it needs the Lordâs disciple-scholars? Does it need something more than, something beyond the ever-present and legitimate concern for material sufferingâdoes it need disciple-scholars who can first and foremost deliver salvation to the soul?
In the Maxwell Institute address that Fluhman quotes, Elder Holland warns against âbracketing oneâs personal faith, its truth claims, and moral judgmentsâ in such a way that âno one knows exactly where authors are coming from ideologically.â
Elder Maxwell again:
If one chooses to live out his life without God, however, it will be as if he had been sentenced to remain a permanent resident in an airport transit loungeâconsigned there, briefly and expectantly, to mingle with the ever-changing, lonely crowds. Somehow, in that forlorn situation, even being granted a cot and a hotplate in the corner of the transit lounge would not ease either the sense of anomie or futility.
Someday, in the search for wholeness in thought and behavior, we shall see much more clearly how orthodoxy âis our reward, not solely our goalâ (Paul L. Holmer, C. S. Lewis, The Shape of His Faith and Thought, p. 115).
In our enthusiasm for progressive and humanitarian causes, are we preparing our students, our neighbors, and ourselves to âchange the worldâ in a spiritual sense; that is, by offering it the reward of right belief, and right action, as an alternative to the spiritual suffering of a âlife without Godâ?
To venture beyond the narrowness of conventional, secular education, to love God with all our minds in a way that opens us to the âbig questions and to âsupernal truths,â it seems we will also have to see beyond the unmoored humanitarian vision that we share with the secular world and understand from whence that humanitarian vision must spring.
Safe Places
Another recent BYU devotional address, Eric Huntsmanâs âHard Sayings and Safe Spaces: Making Room for Struggle as Well as Faithâ also raises timely and important questions concerning the Restoration Christianâs engagement with the contemporary world, its ideologies and sensibilities.
Professor Huntsman is certainly right that we must âmake room for struggleâ; that is, open our hearts in order to provide loving encouragement to those who struggle to accept the doctrines and the moral demands of the gospel. Certainly, as he says, we should never abandon anyone within our circle of influence to face such struggles alone. But much depends on the shape of the âspaceâ in which we come together, or the moral and spiritual atmosphere of this room into which we welcome those who struggle spiritually and morally (as we all do, in some way).
But in a world where Christian love itself is increasingly interpreted as in the service of a secular and relativistic individualism, it is important to emphasize truth at least as much as tolerance, virtue at least as much as equality.
What makes a space âsafeâ? The term âsafe spaceâ is hardly a neutral or unburdened one in todayâs culture. As Huntsman notes, this term is used in âbroader societyâ in connection with âtrigger warnings, . . . microaggressions, . . . or the need to shield ourselves from difficult language and ideas.â âSafe spacesâ in this current acceptation means a space free from all political arguments that contradict my feelings and from any potentially inconvenient moral judgment, a place where I can assert my identity and cling to my own mode of self-expression without fear of being contradicted. In this sense, the language of âsafe spaceâ presupposes a morality of extreme individualism: I am what I am and I must not be exposed to any suggestion that I ought to be other than what I am.
To be sure, Huntsman seems to distance himself from the currently accepted meaning of the term. âI do not necessarily use it in the same sense as some in our broader society use it,â he states (emphasis added). Most importantly, he delimits his definition of safe spaces by the proviso: âWithout diluting the doctrine or compromising our standards . . .â
Although he stipulates this wise qualification twice, using exactly the same language, he never really discusses how a âsafe spaceâ structured in terms of or informed by authoritative doctrine and moral judgment would be different from the secular-individualist and morally nonjudgmental spaces defined by the contemporary ideology of identity politics. And, in fact, it is all too easy for the language of Christian love to be put in the service of more secular ideologies of extreme individualism or identity politics.
The difficulty in pursuing a Christian ethic of love as distinct from the contemporary ethic of extreme individualism lies precisely in our conception of the human person. âJesusâ interactions were always tailored to the understanding and needs of the individual,â Huntsman says. This is true. The challenge of Christlike love is to open ourselves fully to the reality of individual human persons different from ourselves, but without for a moment losing sight of the eternal truths that ground and guide our love, our care, and our service. In other words, we first must love God, who tells us that if we really love Him we will keep His commandments. Our âtailoringâ will be very different according to whether our âsafe spaceâ is built within a framework of genuine Christian doctrine and morality or whether it obeys the extreme individualist logic of secular âsafe spaces.â
A space that is maximally âsafeâ forâthat is, conducive toâgenuine growth towards real sainthood, Christian discipleships, and abundance of life, will be quite different from one that is designed to flatter and not to correct every demand expressed by âthe natural manââespecially in a political and ideological environment that sometimes puts a premium on certain claims of victimhood or entitlements and social prestige associated with those claims. Of course, there are true victims who deserve attentionâbut, sadly, there are some who leverage the market of attention for their own ends.
Professor Huntsmanâs use of the term âsafe spaceâ does not necessarily imply acceptance of the secular understanding of that space. Still, the choice of terms is consequential and reinforces a certain emphasisâa rhetorical shift.
Church leaders have warned against severing tolerance from truth. Of course Professor Huntsman gives excellent counsel when he reminds us that we indeed need to overcome prejudices, to listen open-heartedly to those who struggle, and to recognize our equality as sons and daughters of God. But, while he grants that âaccepting does not mean that we condone, agree with, or conform to [othersâ] beliefs or choices,â it does mean that âwe allow the realities of their lives to be different from our own.â
But just what does it mean to âallowâ for the ârealityâ of such differences? Is there no common moral and spiritual reality that stands above our own individual conceptions of our own lives? To be sure, we must tolerate differences that we do not fully understand and may in any case be powerless to change, but do we really want to grant that those who are struggling with âhard sayingsâ inhabit a different moral and spiritual reality than the one defined by the truths that we believe in and stand for?
Christian Love and Worldly Progress
To separate tolerance from truth, to emphasize the immediate emotional âsafetyâ of a space over its orientation towards truth, though minor rhetorical pivots, still tend to move the frameworks of faith toward a humanitarian subversion of Christian love against which Daniel Mahoney is warning us. The challenge of maintaining the integrity of the Christian ethic is a permanent one, because there is no simple and general solution to the problem of holding truth and tolerance together, knowing when to speak and when to listen, how to affirm and share truth while being on guard against oneâs own prejudices. I appreciate that thinkers like Mason, Fluhman, and Huntsman are working out these questions in real time. Itâs not easy to get it all perfect.
After all, there is no simple or general answer to the question of the proper balance or integration between our humanitarian efforts in providing material relief and opportunity and our educational, moral, ecclesiastical, and missionary efforts that look to the proper goods of the soul. But in a world where Christian love itself is increasingly interpreted as in the service of a secular and relativistic individualism, it is important to emphasize truth at least as much as tolerance, virtue at least as much as equality. We should not imagine that we can avoid being âof the worldâ simply by serving the world just as it wants to be served, or by reinforcing the worldâs own conceptions of the âequal dignityâ of the individual or the path to human progress.
Elder Neal A. Maxwell, again (âFrom Whom All Blessings Flowâ):
The redeeming presence of our loving Father-God in the universe is the grand fact pertaining to the human condition. Other truths, by comparison, are merely fleeting factoids about which we may be âever learningâ without coming to a knowledge of the grand truths (2 Tim. 3:7). . . .
Thus, ever acknowledging Godâs redeeming hand is very important, but, alas, so doing is diminished by the unwise mortal reliance on âthe arm of fleshâ (2 Ne. 4:34; D&C 1:19). Ah, the arrogant arm of flesh, ⊠Such naĂŻvetĂ©, such triviality symbolize not only the arm, but also the mind of flesh, which misses âthings as they really are, and ⊠things as they really will beâ (Jacob 4:13).
The ideology of secular humanitarianism offers what appears to be an attractive merging of edifying spirituality and worldly ambition, divine aims pursued by the arm of flesh. How conveniently inspiring to learn that our distinctive holistic education puts us on the broad path toward the Great and Spacious building of the worldâs âProgressâ! But the fact that many progressive and humanitarian causes overlap superficially with aims and expressions of Christian love must not obscure the fact that these two conceptions of human purposes, these two spaces of human meaning, are fundamentally different in their orientations.
All proclaim âpeace,â but the question is whether peace begins in a well-ordered soul under God, or in progressive ideologies that promise to combine liberation from moral limits on the individual self and its identity with global prosperity and concord. President Dallin H. Oaks, paraphrasing Christ and quoting Elder John A. Widtsoe, in his 2019 Christmas devotional remarks, teaches that moral and spiritual peace is the only foundation of peace in this world: âThe only way to build a peaceful community is to build men and women who are lovers and makers of peace. Each individual, by that doctrine of Christ and His Church, holds in his own hands the peace of the world.â
Similarly, Elder Holland (again in his Maxwell Institute speech), quoting J. R. R. Tolkienâs Gandalf, provides excellent counsel for living in and improving the world without becoming part of it, without joining its forces: âIt is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till. What weather they shall have is not ours to rule.â
 This article originally appeared at Public Square Magazine,
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About the author
Ralph C. Hancock
Ralph Hancock is Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University, where he teaches political philosophy. He is the author of Calvin and the Foundations of Modern Politics (Saint Augustineâs Press, 2011) as well as The Responsibility of Reason: Theory and Practice in a Liberal-Democratic Age (Rowman & Littlefield, 2011), and the editor of several volumes. He has also translated numerous books and articles from the French, including Pierre Manentâs Natural Law and Human Rights, and has published many articles on the intersection of faith, reason and politics. Dr. Hancock is also co-founder of Fathom the Good Curriculum.