Glorious St. Joseph, model of all who are devoted to labor, obtain for me the grace to work in the spirit of penance in expiation of my many sins; to work conscientiously by placing love of duty above my inclinations; to gratefully and joyously deem it an honor to employ and to develop by labor the gifts I have received from God, to work methodically, peacefully, and in moderation and patience, without ever shrinking from it through weariness or difficulty to work; above all, with purity of intention and unselfishness, having unceasingly before my eyes death and the account I have to render of time lost, talents unused, good not done, and vain complacency in success, so baneful to the work of God. All for Jesus, all for Mary, all to imitate thee, O patriarch St. Joseph! This shall be my motto for life and eternity. - Prayer of Pius X

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Why I'm Not Voting

The first thing to say is that I’m not thought-out on this issue. I don’t know exactly why I’ve chosen not to vote. But I do have some idea, and I’m actively working on understanding my action better. In this I comfort myself with the fact that I have more reasons not to vote than the average voter has for voting.



Next, I stand among many, many people who choose not to vote. My primary inspirations have been the many abstainers in the Catholic Worker tradition (see Autobiography of a Christian Anarchist by Ammon Hennacy) and the German and Dutch Anabaptists of the so-called radical reformation – the Mennonites and the Amish. But there is also a large amount of non-Christian literature on the topic (see http://www.strike-the-root.com/vote.html), most of which I have not read, but which represents another throng of abstainers (Tolstoy, Thoreau, inter alia) from various points of view.

But why am I not voting?

I am a Christian personalist. This is to say that I am Christian who tries to embody the Sermon on the Mount and the call to see every person as Christ in view of the fact that Matthew 25 says that what we do to the least of our sisters and brothers we do to him, and what we don’t do to the least of them we don’t do to him. This was the driving theology behind the work of Mother Teresa, Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin, and it continues to animate the Missionaries of Charity and the Catholic Workers today. This “personalism” means that I must see in every person “Christ in his distressing disguise,” and I must receive and interact with that person as though she were Christ. And I must extend to the disguised Jesus all of the practices outlined in the Sermon on the Mount. On this, says Jesus in Matthew 25, my salvation depends.

This personalism (and simply my experience) tells me that the only way that people are changed and transformed, as well as nourished, is by real relationships of mutual vulnerability where material, emotional, and intellectual gifts are freely given and freely received, often at great personal cost. The practices of this self-sacrificial, forgiving community (even if its just between two people) are the only context it makes sense to use the word “love”. This sort of vulnerable community is therefore what everyone needs. I guess its goofy, but I’m saying its true that what people, from Hitler to St. Francis need, and what the gospel calls Christians to, is love (defined this way). All change and human transformation depends on it, though paradoxically we cannot have a goal in real relationship other than the friendship itself (i.e., I am not talking about counseling, since there is no mutuality in that.).

This means, I think, that I am committed to a sort of Christian anarchy. I cannot accept or support (by vote) the way that the state and institutions deal with people because they do not deal with them as Christ. They do not see him in his distressing disguise. They see a means to an end. The end is some version of the greatest happiness/ prosperity for the greatest number of people. Concrete the homeless man is not Christ whom I should take into my home and get to know, open up to and eat with. He is a person who has certain needs to be filled so that I don’t have to deal with him anymore, at least not in the state he is in. The state deals with everyone impersonally, as a number, as a project to finish. War is of course the greatest example of this. It so utterly denies Christ in the other, the other becomes so depersonalized, that they become a means to some greater end and hence expendable to that end. The growing world corporation-state is of course just a war with money (which is the most impersonal abstraction), and in practice it cannot be separated from the literal wars our nations fight for money.

But this personalism commits me not just to pacifism and anti-consumerism/capitalism, but also it does not allow me to endorse even a police state or penal system. So Ralph Nader might appear a good candidate for me because he favors retraction of all US overseas military personnel, and crackdowns on corporations. But he still is not going to treat the criminal as Christ. He is not going to forgive the murderer, but punish him. The police state and penal system does not open up forgiveness and true gift-exchange as the solution to sin, and it does not see the lack of the former as the solution to, and the reason for, the latter.

So, Colin, you really want child molesters running around and terrorists blowing us up? First, this Christian personalism entails that safety is a non-issue. Christian perfection is achieved in martyrdom, not in living a long life of comfort. Second, this is the only way to really make the world safe: when those of us who have love are willing to enter into relationships with those who do not, and are maybe even willing to see thereby that we lack something (or many things) that they have. Only then will we all be remade. Concentrating the need for love in prisons and shelters will not work. Opening our houses and lives to prisoners, strangers, and enemies will make them our friends.

Of course, this is hopelessly idealistic. But it is the way of Jesus. I don’t think that I am called to make the world a more nearly just place if thereby I am unable to follow what Jesus says. He tells me to live seeing everyone as him, and not to tell other people to do otherwise, and so I cannot vote for any candidate on offer. As Hennacy says, to vote is to lift your neighbors arm to strike the other, and thus to deny the Sermon on the Mount. Voting is always coercing another's action without any relational resources in place.

Further, I don’t think I can support the lesser of two evils (say, Obama), and then later, when he tells me to shop, or go to war, or testify against Jesus in his distressing disguise, dissent from those very practices I voted for. I cannot vote for Obama and then be a conscientious objector. There is no integrity in that.

Of course, this position will make no sense to utilitarian calculus. It may or may not secure the more nearly just world. But it may: we simply will never know because we will never try. My action does not seek to be effective, it seeks to be faithful.

I am of course, hopelessly compromised. I pay taxes. I drive a car from time to time. I get a pay check from Duke University that gets its money from investing in multi-national corporations. My wife works for the City of Durham for crying out loud. And in a million other ways I contribute to the system that I stand against. I don’t always have patience for the homeless, I don’t always give the time and money and emotional gifts that I could. It is this stuff, if anything that would commit me to voting.

But I am trying to progress along the road of virtue. I confess these sins to my priest. I am trying to get to a life of voluntary poverty that would take care of a number of these compromised practices. I am trying to spend some time in real relationships with the poor. And I am looking to the Saints to figure out what to do next. I am trying to be faithful.

That is why I’m not voting.

C

4 comments:

JR said...

I'll play devil's advocate. I agree with most of your premises, but I have to say that I don't see that some of the conclusions are necessary:

1.) "I am committed to a sort of Christian anarchy" - Maybe, but I think it is too much to claim that "the state" is impersonal. You might as well say "the church" is impersonal. It is also not a necessary precondition of the state that it be utilitarian (albeit that ours largely is). Part of the Christian witness must surely be that in every organizational relationship we inhabit we occupy we also find the premise for each interaction in seeing Christ in the other. That point is independent of the organizing rule (and there will always be one... a bishop can be a bastard too). A Christian can find Christ in the other equally well in state-sponsored slavery as in a liberal democracy. So, my first point is that "states" don't interact with people. PEOPLE interact with people. The sinfulness of institutions (like "the state") is derivative of the sinfulness of every human interaction, even if we can more easily hide behind "the state" when responsibility is doled out. I maintain that a nation cannot sin because nations have no ontological status; they are an organization of people and no more. We can rail against the idolatry implicit in nationalism, but we should keep this distinct from the notion that the nation-state is actually some THING in the eyes of God.

2.) "He is not going to forgive the murderer, but punish him." - I'm still not clear why a Christian community will have no discipline or punishment. In your beloved Anabaptist communities, do they not practice shunning? Is not denial of communion a punishment? If a brother is possessed of the desire to kill his neighbor is it not an act of love to bind him until the mood passes (for both him and his neighbor)? For goodness sake, what is the sacrament of penance? So, you'll have to point out to me more clearly how Jesus is a witness against discipline generally, and prisons particularly (as I said earlier, Matthew 25 presumes their existence).

Is it not more the problem that those who have committed crimes are not forgiven by and reconciled to the community even after they have served the socially agreed "penance"? We should be personalists with prisoners. Visit them, love them, be reconciled to them. But I don't think personalism negates the possibility of prisons.

Some more thought should be put into the sacramentality of this logic. For example, if the eternally unrepentant can be denied communion, the very foundation of reconciliation/forgiveness, how does this jive with your all-consuming personalism?

3.) "I don't think I can support the lesser of two evils (say, Obama), and then later, when he tells me to shop, or go to war, or testify against Jesus in his distressing disguise, dissent from those very practices I voted for"

- Um, what power does Obama have over you directly? He can't make you do any of those things. Further, voting for a president is not the same as voting for his future mistakes (um, Bush!!!). Obama is already implicated in these things, but you can equally well vote for a man that you think has more sympathy for how you think the world should be. And I think you can totally vote and be a conscientious objector! There's plenty of integrity in that, maybe more than in not voting, because you are actively participating in the political system while bearing witness to its failings. Why is there no integrity in that? There is far less integrity in being a conscientious objector and using petroleum, I think.

4.) I don't think that voting necessarily presupposes a utilitarian calculus. What I think is overlooked is that you and I are situated in a particular political sphere, one in which (contrary to the history of the church) the reins of the government are in some small part given directly to the citizens (via the vote). Now, it seems to me that the personalist view also requires us to enter into genuine political discourse with our neighbors (Christian and non) and participate in that common life.

Perhaps the greatest myth so far perpetrated in all of this is that a vote for one presidential candidate is supposed to encapsulate your entire view of the cosmos (abortion, healthcare, ontology, metaphysics, and all else). But that is reductionism, and a sort of conceptual violence. Perhaps we should consider that being a personalist is first to recognize that to bear witness to the politics of the cross is to participate more broadly in the political process rather than trying to reduce it all to a national election. It is not clear, for example, why personalism means that you are abstaining from a vote on the County Soil and Water Conservation officer. Is there too much violence in that office? The personalist would seem to be obligated to more political engagement rather than less (especially at the local level), because he/she must be concerned with the details of life together at a local level.

One can only guess that if we were more actively engaged in political debate at the local level about how to structure our lives, the US would be less homogeneously Republican and Democratic and there might actually arise some more interesting notions of how to govern. The proliferation of local parties/candidates for all offices and even a healthily recurrent restructuring of the offices themselves (do we have a Commissioner of the Environment? a community natrualist? experiment with gift economies?) is just one way that the political debate might be more faithful.

That's all I got for now.

Adam VW said...

I apologize in advance for what will unfortunately be a hit-and-run comment; the GRE looms large.

By way of a place marker for future conversation, I think it would be interesting to talk more about agency and habituation into the virtues (or vices)along the lines laid out by St. Thomas as it relates to voting. This will help narrow the telos questions surrounding voting (e.g., how does it participate in the g/Good, if at all?) as well as help us more consciously draw from one of the best moral theologians of all time.

That's it for now. Sorry for the brevity.
-adam

Adam VW said...

And, just to add to that, I want to make sure our talk about voting (especially in relation to virtue epistemology and the g/Good) includes a discussion of how, when one votes, one typically votes for a slate of people (and positions) about which one knows little or nothing; what might such mean about what one is doing (or potentially doing) by facilitating the accomplishment and pursuit of such unknowns? I want to make sure our discussion about what voting is/does extends beyond that of presidential elections alone.

Perhaps, also, though this may be a dead end vis-à-vis the "complicity argument," it might be useful to explore what guilt one may accrue in enabling (to borrow some psycho-babble) a particular candidate in his/her a pursuit of inevitable and even conscious vice. Might voting, in certain cases, implicitly facilitate the candidate's own self-destruction; and, if so, can the Christian assist in that? (I sense trouble with this suggestion but wanted to put it out there)

__REV__ said...

Interesting discussion.

First, on the matter of discipline and "punishment" as JR alluded to, the church is not in the punishment-discipline business, but rather in the reconciliation-discipline business. The two approaches are radically different.

Secondly (though related) is the helpful distinctions of Romans 12 thinking vs. Romans 13 thinking. I've had this discussion a billion times with "my church" and I largely agree with Colin.

The Romans 12 world is incompatible with the Romans 13 world. Constantine and his legacy has irreparably damaged "Christendom" (even look at the word! Wow!) and its left to those willing to reform to carry on the Jesus kingdom banner.

To the extent that a Romans 12 kingdom of Jesus person shouldn't vote, hmmmm, thats interesting, I'll have to think more about C's point... but to the extent that the Romans 12 kingdom of Jesus person shouldn't simultaneously be the Romans 13 kingdom of the world person is a strong point.

Colin obviously pointed out his own push back: we pay taxes, we have driver's licenses, etc. Some things are simply unavoidable and are actually a part of our kingdom of Jesus responsibilty to live in submission to the kingdom of the world government. So yes its OK for me to drive 30 mph in town and stop at red lights.

The Romans 12 vs. Romans 13 tension is a wonderful one. But the early church managed to embody it - even based on a letter written during NERO Caesar's reign! Hurray for "power under!"

REV