|
Second, we have a White House in crisis. Regarding President Clinton,
let me just say this: He has publicly apologized for his sin and
asked for forgiveness. I'm certain we accept that. He certainly
needs our prayers, and it's not our place to doubt his motives.
Whether he should resign, or be removed from office, or remain as
president is beyond the goal of my remarks here. As a pastor, I
have no opinion on the matter. But neither can we talk about tonight's
topic and simply ignore events in Washington. The best I can do
is say honestly that my remarks are not directed at any particular
candidates or officials. They are directed to all of them
and to each of us, because we each share in the responsibility of
electing them.
Those are the preliminaries. Now let's move on to the substance.
I have three observations, and each relates to the other.
I've always had an interest in history because it tells us so much
about ourselves. History is to culture and community, what memory
is to individuals. A man with amnesia loses a good part of his identity.
A people who neglect their history have exactly the same problem.
History teaches us about the best and the worst in ourselves. And
one story from Greek history has always been a classroom favorite
because it's so heroic and dramatic. It's the story of Thermopylae.
Thermopylae is a narrow mountain pass. It's the place where the
Spartan King Leonidas and 300 of his men held off a Persian invasion
in 480 B.C. long enough for the Greek city states to rally their
forces and eventually defeat the invaders at the Battles of Salamis
and Plataea. Leonidas and every one of his men died fighting in
the pass. But they bought just enough time to make the critical
difference. I've never been to Thermopylae, but I've been told that
you can find an inscription in the pass, to this day, which reads:
"Go tell the Spartans, thou who passeth by, that here obedient
to their commands we lie."
There's a reason why this story has survived 2,500 years in our
imaginations. Leonidas and his men made subsequent Greek victory
possible. He promised to place his life between his people and their
enemies, and he kept that promise. It's an example of how history
can turn on the character of a single leader. In fact, that's what
history is. History is a record of the encounter between character
and circumstance.
Americans of my generation, of course, grew up meeting King Leonidas
as a cartoon lion on Saturday morning TV, along with "Underdog"
and "The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show." Sic transit gloria mundi. But
my point here, my first observation, is not that our elected officials
should emulate dead Greek war heroes. Rather, I mean that personal
character does matter tremendously as a foundation for public leadership.
We all instinctively know this. But in the late 1990s, an army of
political consultants would like us to believe otherwise.
Let me give you one example. In the debate over whether to censure,
or even impeach, President Clinton, some have argued that we need
to put aside our alleged puritanism and judge him on the basis of
his managerial performance alone. The logic goes like this: We don't
ask about the sexual escapades of our auto mechanics, or gardeners,
or surgeons, or stock brokers. We judge them strictly on the quality
of the job they do for us. A president is just another professional
whom we hire on temporary basis. If he gets the country running
smoothly and profitably, his private life is nobody's business but
his own.
This is bad reasoning on several levels. And not only bad, but
dangerous. First, it demeans the office of the presidency by reducing
it to the equivalent of contract labor. Second, it demeans the national
community by equating it with a business enterprise. Anyone who
takes even a quick look at the Declaration of Independence, the
Constitution or "The Federalist Papers," understands that the Founders
had a lot more in mind than a good commercial environment. America
began as an experiment in ideas and ideals. High ideals. It's entirely
appropriate that a president be held to higher standards of sobriety,
decorum, self-sacrifice, personal conduct and moral character than
the owner of a hamburger franchise. And that higher standard of
conduct should apply to anyone in public leadership but especially
to elected officials, in whom the people have invested their trust.
Over the past 17 years, writers James Kouzes and Barry Posner have
been studying the 20 most common characteristics of admired leaders.
In every one of their surveys since 1981 in every part of
the globe, and in every type of organization honesty has
ranked as the single most essential quality in a leader. The reason
is obvious. Duplicity kills trust, and trust is vital to building
and sustaining community life. According to the authors, "If people
are going to follow someone willingly, whether it be into battle
or into the boardroom, they first want to assure themselves that
the person is worthy of their trust. They want to know that the
would-be leader is truthful and ethical." Real leadership
including the kind required by public office can never be
described in terms of mere professional skill. It's always a blend
of both character and competence. This is why competence ranks only
fourth in leadership-quality studies. It's valuable and necessary.
But it can't make up for a lack of personal moral character.
My second observation flows from the first. Personal moral character
will either determine the choices we make and the actions we take
. . . or it will be corrupted by those choices and actions. In other
words, there's no way of insulating who we are from what we do.
The political leader who claims to be "personally opposed" to abortion
and then votes to protect a so-called right to choose abortion,
is complicit in the destruction of innocent human life. In doing
it, he places his soul in very grave jeopardy. I could probably
find a more elegant way of saying that, but we've just seen that
honesty is the best policy so we might as well employ it
starting now.
Catholics believe that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is a "Gospel
of life." We believe that this Gospel is not only a complement to
American political principles, but also the cure for the spiritual
confusion now disrupting our public discourse. What that means in
practical terms is this: We can't simultaneously commit ourselves
to human rights, while destroying the weakest among us. Nor can
we practice the Gospel of life only as a private piety. American
Catholics must live it courageously, as a matter of public witness
and civic responsibility or we'll lose it even as a matter
of private principle.
We need to remind ourselves that real democracy is often very impolite.
And real pluralism is not a tea party: Real pluralism always involves
a degree of conflict. It demands that people of faith will work
tirelessly to advance their deeply held beliefs by every legal,
ethical, non-violent method available to them. This is what it means
to be leaven in society. If we're leaven, we need to offer our culture
the whole Gospel, even when the message is unpopular. That's our
vocation as believers. Every person baptized in the Catholic faith
is a member of the "people of life," and every one of us, without
exception, is sent by God to evangelize the world.
What exactly does that mean for Catholic elected officials? It
means they have an obligation to root their public service in their
faith particularly on issues regarding the sanctity of life.
It also means that those who don't, create grave scandal, thereby
leading others into serious moral jeopardy. Every political leader
is accountable for his or her exercise of power. Appeals to party
policy, majority will or pluralism can never excuse a Catholic public
official from defending the right to life.
The same applies to each of us as citizens. Voting is a creative
act of participation in building the public community. Therefore,
every vote does matter because it's an exercise of power and of
moral character, for which we're responsible. We get the elected
officials we deserve. Their virtue or their lack of it
is a judgment not only on them but on us. Because of this, we need
to understand that every political choice we make, also affects
the persons we are. Private conviction is not a separate universe
from public life. It's the soil from which public action should
flower. When we claim to believe one thing, but act in a contrary
political manner, we choose a kind of schizophrenia. We contradict
ourselves. And the result is the sort of confusion we find in Washington
and other centers of public life today.
That leads to my third and final observation. High moral character
is even more important today in our public officials than it was
100 years ago. Therefore we need to be more, not less, attentive
to the standards we apply to ourselves, and to those who represent
us.
Most of us here tonight will remember Marshall McLuhan's famous
comment that "the medium is the message." We live in an era when
image and personality often eclipse traditional debate in deciding
who wins or loses an election. The elected leader has become our
primary medium of political meaning; the embodiment of our hopes
and perceived needs. And that means the leader is also the message.
Therefore the personal character of a mayor or governor or president
is often more influential not less influential in
creating society's wider political climate than at anytime in the
past.
Here's another factor. The moral foibles of a Ulysses S. Grant
or Rutherford B. Hayes a century ago might scandalize Washington
or even hurt national policy. But when and if they took place, they
would occur within a very widely shared Jewish-Christian consensus
which would contain the damage and provide the moral vocabulary
for correcting it. We have nothing like that consensus today. Virtually
any behavior can be, and is, justified as a private matter, or an
issue of personal conscience.
What we do have, of course, is lots of information. We're a knowledge
society with a tidal wave of information. We have so much information
from so many new devices and technologies that it's clogged up,
and broken down, our ability to make sense of much of daily life.
And this incoherence of data our inability to organize experience
fast enough to make satisfying sense out of it reinforces
the role of the leader in bringing meaning out of confusion.
Finally, we have television. TV has worked a global cultural revolution
well beyond Mao Zedong's wildest dreams but maybe a little
differently from what he had in mind. Author Neil Postman talks
about American politics and TV in a brilliant little book called
"Amusing Ourselves to Death":
"In a world of television and other visual media, 'political knowledge'
means having pictures in your head more than having words ." As
a result, says Postman, "Any serious candidate for high political
office in America [today] requires the services of an image manager
to design the kinds of pictures that will lodge in the public's
collective head."
Complicated ideas and arguments have no place in a political commercial.
There's no room for them. And anyway, they're unwelcome. In fact,
political TV advertising is deliberately crafted to address the
psychological not the intellectual needs of the viewer.
They're a kind of instant therapy. That's why TV political ads don't
want to provoke intelligent questions. Just the opposite. They want
to pitch quick and easy answers.
"In the shift from party politics to television politics," says
Postman, "we are not permitted to know who is best at being president
or governor or senator, but whose image is best at touching and
soothing the deep reaches of our discontent . . . Like television
commercials, image politics is a form of therapy, which is why so
much of it is charm, good looks, celebrity and personal disclosure.
It's a sobering thought to recall that there are no photographs
of Abraham Lincoln smiling; that his wife was in all likelihood
a psychopath; and that he was subject to lengthy fits of depression.
He would hardly have been well suited for image politics. We do
not want our mirrors to be so dark and so far from amusing. [In
effect,] just as the television commercial empties itself of authentic
product information so that it can do its psychological work, image
politics empties itself of authentic political substance for the
same reason."
All this has a profound impact, of course, on the nature of our
public life. Our problems seem intractable and huge. Our institutions
seem remote and depersonalized. And the lack of substance in our
political discourse, compounded by the shallowness of television,
has created a culture which is deeply credulous and deeply skeptical
at the same time. This is why we need good leaders like never before.
This is why we urgently need to have our wits about us when we vote
next Tuesday.
Let me leave you with one final thought. George Orwell, the author
of "1984" and "Animal Farm," was never a friend of the Catholic
Church. But he was a man of principle, and he had a measure of political
wisdom which Catholics can readily understand and respect. Half
a century ago, he wrote a brief but powerful little essay called
"Politics and the English Language." I recommend it to you very
highly because it still has relevance in our time. In it, he observed
that "In our day, political speech and writing consist mainly in
the defense of the indefensible." He was talking about the way in
which left and right totalitarian regimes had subverted the meaning
of words, in order to mask their political repression and their
violence against human dignity. But his remarks could very easily
be applied to the vocabulary of America's civil war over abortion,
euthanasia, eugenics and embryo experimentation today.
History matters. And it's now our turn to create it. Unfortunately,
knowing history's mistakes does not prevent us from repeating them
on an even larger scale. In our century, we've seen what can happen
when words become unmoored from their meaning. We cannot afford
political leaders who become unmoored from personal character. We
will not survive a public square which becomes unmoored from right
moral conduct.
Therein lies the importance of the vote we cast next Tuesday. May
God bless our country with leaders worthy of its ideals. Thank you.
|