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  August 15, 2004
 
 
 
 

The Necessity of Restraint

 
 

Has change in a worldview, changed the court?
This article was published originally in Southern Partisan Vol. XXI, Oct. 2001

When asked what form of government had been agreed upon and adopted by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Benjamin Franklin is reported to have replied, "a republic…if you can keep it." In determining what he might have meant by the second part of that phrase, it is helpful to examine the words of John Adams when commenting upon the utility of the same document. Adams said, "This Constitution was intended for a moral and religious people, it is wholly inadequate for the governance of any other."

If the institutions of government do not seem to be working properly; if the " Blessings of liberty" are not being preserved by this generation for the benefit of posterity; if the "union’’ is becoming less rather than more " perfect"; if "justice" seems less " established"; if our "domestic" affairs are less "tranquil"; if our defense is less "provided for", then perhaps we need to examine our situation in light of Adams prescription that we need to be a "moral and religious people". What did he mean and how does his comment relate to the role of the judiciary? Do the courts need to reflect moral and religious values in carrying out their mission? If Ben Franklin were here today, would he congratulate us on our success in keeping the republic we inherited?

The men who adopted the Declaration of Independence and who drafted the Constitution shared a worldview primarily based on the doctrines of Christianity. This worldview acknowledged the fallen nature of man and his proclivity towards evil actions and usurpations. This view also included the understanding that what was true about man’s nature individually was also true collectively. That is to say, if government’s powers were not limited and enumerated, those in power would tend to use their authority to aggrandize their own power and influence to the detriment of the people’s liberty. They recognized, therefore, the need to establish an orderly system of government that would take into account the truth of Lord Acton’s famous admonition that, "…power corrupts; and absolute power corrupts absolutely".

After significant debate, both public and private, the system settled upon was one that recognized and took into account this Christian worldview. The separation of powers among the three branches of the federal government, along with certain checks and balances on the actions of each, was designed to allow each branch to hold the others accountable to their constitutional mandate. This system of institutional restraint had the preferred effect of encouraging the selfrestraint of each branch.

Since the Constitution itself claims to be the supreme law of the land, all branches of government –President, Congress and the Supreme Court are subordinate to it. In cases where laws enacted by Congress or state legislatures have been inconsistent with the Constitution, we have traditionally looked to the judiciary, particularly the Supreme Court, for application of the Supremacy Clause. Judicial review, although not explicitly called for in the constitution was recognized as implicitly required by the Supremacy clause itself. For example, Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut, who later went on to become chief justice of the Supreme Court, declared on January 7, 1788, in a speech before the Connecticut state convention:

This Constitution defines the extent of the powers of the general government. If the legislature should at any time overleap their limits, the judicial department is a constitutional check. If the United States go beyond their powers, if they make a law which the constitution does not authorize, it is void, and the judicial power, the national judges, who to secure their impartiality are to be made independent, will declare it to be void. On the other hand, if the states go beyond their limits, if they make a law which is an usurpation upon the general government, the law is void, and upright and independent judges will declare it to be so.

While setting forth and defending the necessity of judicial review, it is interesting that Ellsworth rests the success of such a system on the necessity for judges to be "upright". This word is laden with the overtones of worldview. Where do we find the standards for uprightness? Where is "upright" defined? Although I am confident that the vast majority of those gathering to hear his address that cold January day in Connecticut understood what he meant, I am much less sure today that our culture could agree on what "upright" means to us. In a culture where "is" doesn’t mean "is", "sex" doesn’t really mean "sex", and "lies" are not really "lies" if they are about the sex life of the chief executive, how do we agree on the moral values that should be used by our judges?

As individuals, our worldview will dictate the values that we consider essential and worthy of emulation. The same is true for a people, a culture, a country. The worldview in America has been gradually shifting away from the Christian worldview of the founders. Even men who profess to be Christians have often espoused policies that are antithetical to those that would be recognizable to the founders. This shift away from a biblical worldview has had its effect upon the Supreme Court’s view of its own role and authority. By the 1930s, for example, this shift was so pronounced that Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, a practicing Baptist, was comfortable in characterizing the Supreme Court as a " continuous constitutional convention".

The willingness of the people of America and of the coequal branches of government to accept the concept of judicial lawmaking has given the court a wide latitude in its ability to make decisions that have far reaching and significant effects on American society. Justice William Brennan, who served on the court from 1956 to 1990 as one of the twentieth century’s most influential justices, stated in a 1995 speech that the Supreme Court Justices "…are the last word on the meaning of the Constitution…" Perhaps one of the most blatant examples of the disappearance of selfrestraint on the part of the Supreme Court was in 1958, in the case of Cooper v. Aaron, when it claimed that its interpretations were as much a part of the Supreme Law of the Land as the specific statements of the Constitution, treaties, and laws passed by Congress.

The decisions of the Supreme Court since that time have shown little inclination on the part of the Court to adopt any form of selfrestraint on its power, authority and reach. Neither the President nor the Congress has shown much inclination to institutionally restrain the Court. The Court has clearly, and erroneously, claimed that its rulings are supreme, equal to the Constitution. All this has occurred contemporaneous with a cultural drift away from the biblical underpinnings that Adams and Franklin declared to be necessary for the preservation of republican constitutional govern ment.

If constitutional government is to be preserved then, it is up to the citizens to understand the Constitution and to seriously participate in the civic life of the country, electing representatives who evidence that they are cognizant of, and committed to, its underlying biblical principles. The Constitution is not a sacred document. But it was based on one. Americans need to understand and apply the doctrines of the one to peaceably enjoy the " Blessings" that the other seeks to preserve.

by Michael A. Peroutka

 

 

 

 

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