The debate on whether specific religious worldviews or practices are compatible with the modern State, founded on a set of institutions and values that include a certain understanding of human rights, is not a new one. Parliamentary debates on the role of the State in education in the
My analysis is based on parliamentary debates on the role of the State in national education in Prussia, France and the Netherlands during the
The Prussian liberal Rudolf Virchow gave the name
The school was thus a central battleground in all three countries, and, even though the ‘school struggles’ in Prussia, France and the Netherlands neither began nor ended in this period, I would argue that in the parliamentary debates during the
In spite of the different legislative measures involved, these debates were represented in all three countries by the participants themselves as being fundamentally about the constitution of the modern nation-state. But whereas liberals and republicans represented the issue as being about the competing sovereignties of Church and State, only in Prussia did the opposition partially accept this framework; the opposition in the Dutch and French debates consistently represented it as being about the relationship of State and citizens. For example, whereas for the Center speakers in the Prussian debates it is the Church whose rights are being violated (and
For the proponents in these debates of a sovereign mandate of the State in national education, religion, to have a role in the school of the nation, had to be assimilable to a shared national (but also universal humanist) culture, which they termed “modern society” or “modern civilization” or, in Prussia,
Common to the argumentation of liberals in the Prussian or Dutch debates or of republicans in the French debates is the claim that only the State can lead the education of the nation, whatever subordinate role may or may not be left for the Church or religious organizations. This is because the State is the only comprehensive organism or institution that represents the Nation. The sovereignty of the State in the school (whether the common public school, as in France and the Netherlands, or the confessional State school, as in Prussia) is an essential means to realize the goal of national unity: overcoming religious particularism through shaping citizens who have a shared loyalty and a shared vision of the common good.
Speakers in the Prussian and Dutch debates point to confessional zeal as causing divisions in the Nation. Dutch liberals represent these divisions as a hindrance to expanding the benefits of education (inefficient schools) but also as keeping alive the flame of intolerance. According to Prussian liberals such as Virchow and Lasker, the Church admittedly once had a leading role in the shaping of culture/civilization, because its activities were for the benefit of society as a whole. Since it became dominated by “ultramontanism” and religious “particularism”, it is no longer a reliable partner of the State in serving the interests of the Nation. Thus, Virchow states, the Church no longer serves culture/civilization, but its particularist interests: “die kath. Kirche [hat] gegenwärtig keine Kultur-Mission mehr” (
But the greatest threat to national unity is represented in all three countries as “clericalism”, which is defined in the debates as the ambition of the Church to impose its authority on the temporal domain, the domain of the State. The Gallican Church used to defend the sovereignty of the French State, according to republicans such as Ferry or Spuller, but the “ultramontane” Church leaves its proper domain, the spiritual, to meddle with temporal affairs and try to regain its influence over “la société civile”. Liberals in Prussia likewise criticize the Church’s departure from what they describe as its proper sphere of saving souls to “agitate” in the political domain. The constitutional independence of the Catholic Church in Prussia is represented as a potential risk to the State, because, unlike in the past, it is now free to pursue other goals than those of the State (for example, resisting German language policies in the Polish-speaking territories). Dutch liberals such as Kappeyne, while reserving their most explicit criticism for the Catholic Church, see Protestant clergy as having had a similar tendency to want to “rule” in the proper domain of the State. Since for all these speakers, there is no question that the (common) school is the domain of the State and a mirror of the constitution of the Nation, the Church cannot possibly have authority in this domain, in the interests of the unity of the Nation and the sovereignty of the State.
The solution to this problem is presented in the Netherlands and France as the “neutral” school, in Prussia at the very least the subjection of confessional instruction to the supervision of the State in order to exclude polemics from the school. Dutch liberals define the “neutral” school as a non-confessional school that, while acknowledging its Christian inspiration, inculcates “Christian virtues” in universal terms so as to be acceptable to citizens of all persuasions (such as the Golden Rule). For French republicans the school must be “laïc” (religiously neutral). But even in the French debates, it is the supernatural, revelatory claims of Catholicism/ Christianity that make it impossible to allow religion in the school. René Goblet, for example, has no objections to the “doctrine spiritualiste” that has, he says, for generations governed the education of the
The opposition, while recognizing the need for the State to be neutral, objects that a large part of the nation, for various reasons, does not have the option
Majority liberals/republicans respond that the sovereignty of the State in the school does not violate freedom of conscience, but is intended to protect it. This argument relies on a representation of the relation of the individual to religion that presupposes a divide not only between the public and private spheres but also between the religious and the political/civic self of the individual citizen. The Dutch liberal Goeman Borgesius’ definition of “clericalism” expresses most lucidly this presupposition shared by the liberal and republican speakers in all three countries: “Clericalism lays hands not only on the religious, but on the
In short, for liberal and republican proponents of the State’s mandate in education, religion can only play a constructive role in the public sphere if it can be assimilated to a universal humanist culture. If it is based on divine revelation, it must ei-ther remain in the private sphere or submit its activities to the judgment of the State when it enters the public sphere. There is no apparent acknowledgement that the believer’s religious principles may apply to the practice of citizenship.
While prepared to defend their confessional identity when necessary, both Catholic and Protestant speakers consistently depict the conflict as being, not between the confessions, but between Christianity and “modernism” (“heathenism” in Prussia). They depict the danger of the “neutral” school not in the risk of their children coming into contact with the other confession, but in the risk of their children being damaged by the worldview they ascribe to “modernism”, which, they argue, has socio-ethical consequences. By “modernism” they do not mean “progress” as such; on the contrary, “progress” has in principle a positive valence with them no less than with their opponents. In fact, French Catholic speakers, including royalists, insist on their right to identify themselves with “modern society”. The harm they see in “modernism” as a worldview is that it cannot provide a foundation for morality because it is, they claim, based on a materialist, naturalist presupposition, which, they argue, logically leads to egoism, the right of the strongest, violence and finally nihilism (social democracy is cited in the Dutch and Prussian debates as the logical consequence of the “modern” worldview). It will destroy the faith of their children and thus not only their eternal but also their temporal happiness and wellbeing, but it will also, they warn, destroy the foundations of society and the State. A recurring argument is that ethics and thus education is never neutral, and a neutral State does not have the moral authority to choose an ethical foundation for education in the school. As Chesnelong argues in the French Senate: “Au nom de qui [...] donnera-t-il à cette morale une autorité qui en assure à la fois l’efficacité et le respect? [,..L]’Etat n’a aucune autorité pour décréter un code de morale” (Sénat 1886a:126).
In all three countries they argue that Christianity has a crucial role to play in State and society, and they represent this role as ethical (not sacral). Without Christianity, they claim, the State has no ethical foundation and society founders. Christianity, with its orientation towards God and one’s neighbor and teachings of self-denial and respect for authority, gives dignity and motivation to the individual, they explain, and thereby guarantees the stability and security of States and societies. When they contrast their beliefs to the beliefs they ascribe to “modernism/heathenism”, they do so in terms of “Christianity” and not Catholicism or Protestantism. There is arguably even a certain repristination of Christianity in the discourse, in that they point to Christianity’s influence in shaping civilization by combatting inequality, tyranny and slavery, “barbarism”, etc. through the love of Christ and the gospel. What is crucial for them, moreover, is that Christianity can only have this influence insofar as it is “positive”, i.e. based on truth claims founded on divine revelation, such as the belief in a personal God, the Trinity, the deity of Christ, life after death, judgment, and the gospel based on the cross and resurrection as historical facts. The term “positive Christianity” is used by both Catholics and Protestants in the Prussian and Dutch debates to distinguish from Christianity as associated with theological liberalism;4 in the French debates the term is rarely used, but Catholic speakers’ representation of Christianity is similar. They represent supernatural, revelatory religion and a relationship with a personal God as having authority in people’s lives to shape their ethics in a way that no naturalist or even spiritualist morality can have. Since education led by the neutral State cannot be based on “positive Christianity”, then it is all the more necessary, they argue, that parents have equitable access to alternatives so that they still have the freedom to raise Christian citizens.5
In the Prussian debates the Catholic speakers and their allies do not go into the same detail as is done in the other two settings to explain the consequences of “modernism/heathenism” for society and the individual. Their focus is primarily on the dangers of “heathenism” for the relationship between the State and citizens. If the State is sovereign in the school, even with regard to religious instruction, and there is no other equitable option for parents (no
None of the opposition in these debates (with the exception of Prussian Conservatives), not even Catholic royalists in France, demand or even express a wish for a return to the Christian
A common feature of the discourse in all three sets of debates is that, while the confessional speakers still depict the nation as being (overwhelmingly) Christian, their representations of religion and the role of the Church do not fit into the paradigm of a national or State religion. They speak of religion and the Church as representing claims that can be accepted or rejected—and citizens are entirely free to reject them. The Catholic Church only has authority over its own members, Catholics remind their hearers, and they insist that those who object to its authority are always at liberty (and should be honest enough) to leave the Church. The Church is thus separated from the State but is also no longer identical with society (as in the ‘sacral society’ of pre-modern Europe). It returns—in the discourse!—to being the ‘ecclesia’ (a group of persons who assemble in obedience to the proclamation of the Word, in order to go back into society and live it out as citizens; cf. Verduin 1976). They thus argue for freedom for all citizens to compete in the shaping of society—yes, they insist, even social democrats, though they believe their influence will destroy society—, as long as religious citizens and organizations have the same freedom as the rest to be a source of renewal in society. This is true of Catholic discourse even in the Prussian debates, in spite of ambiguities that remain about the role of the Church.
To summarize, what is common to the discourse of the confessional speakers in all three countries (though certainly with different points of emphasis and different degrees of explicitness) is the concern, while continuing to assert the Christian foundations and identity of their culture/civilization/nation, to prevent religion from being assimilated to culture and thus being instrumentalized or marginalized by the State. For them, religion can only be a source of renewal in society if it remains a voice that, while shaping culture, remains in a certain sense independent of culture (transcendent) and free to be counter-cultural if the way culture is shaping is harmful for individuals, society and the State.
What are the consequences in their discourse for the role of the State in society? According to Catholic and orthodox Protestant speakers—but also the minority of liberals and republicans who shared their concerns with regard to the “omnipotent State” and freedom—, the State is responsible, not to shape society/culture, but to ensure that competition between visions of the common good—agonism—follows
In the French debates one virtue that has a prominent place not given in the other two settings—although not entirely absent—is “patriotic unity”, which both Catholics and dissenting republicans insist is the only kind of unity that can be aspired to in a society based on the principles of freedom and equality. To quote Bardoux, a dissenting republican
The speakers demanding a pluralist education system demonstrate in their discourse that they do not consider agonism as necessarily harmful for society or a threat to the State. (On this point a minority of liberals and republicans in the Dutch and French debates explicitly agree, some even arguing that it is a sign of a healthy democracy.) While some royalists in the French debates could be interpreted as regretting agonism in society, they argue that, though the Revolution is to blame, there is no just solution, now that this disunity has been introduced, except on the basis of freedom and equality (cf. Boyer, Bourgeois and Baudry d’Asson in 1879).
They hold themselves to the values of respect for authority, regardless of who is in power, respect for the constitution and obedience to the law, as well as non-violence and commitment to the democratic (parliamentary) process. According to Wolterstorff, “[a] liberal democracy survives as long as those who lose the vote think it’s better to lose the vote than destroy the system. Its survival does not depend on making anybody shape up to anything other than the formal requirements of the system itself” (2012: 50-51). They demand of themselves and their opponents the willingness to place oneself in the other’s shoes, listen to the other’s reasons, and expose one’s own reasons—according to Stout (2004) and Galston (2002), postures that respond to the requirements of civility and public reason in democratic discourse. They require from the State that it should respect and enforce the constitutional freedom and equality of all citizens, based on the presumption (until otherwise proven) that they are mature, responsible citizens. In their discourse, all these values—respect for authority and one’s neighbor, freedom and equality as human beings, individual responsibility—find their reason and motivation in Christianity (the connection is at various points explicitly made in the French and Dutch debates), so that they see no reason why they must adopt a “modern” worldview in order to be able to adapt to “modern society”; their own religion provides them with all the resources they need.
In the history of Europe up to this period, a “perfectionist” view of the State, at least in practice, had tended to dominate, whether based on traditional Christendom or modern humanist ideals—even though the idea of the “protectionist” State began to develop already in the wake of the European ‘wars of religion’ (Wolterstorff 2012: 1ff). The debates I am analyzing suggest that the tendency towards the “perfectionist” State was still alive and well in the
The discourse of Prussian Catholics does not demonstrate this shift as clearly as that of Catholics in France and the Netherlands (the latter complemented by that of orthodox Protestants), even though significant elements are present. The Center in Prussia chose, according to themselves as a matter of political realism, to defend what they argued was the status quo regarding the role of the Church, instead of demanding the freedom of instruction (
Catholic and orthodox Protestant speakers in all three sets of debates were not demanding a monopoly of culture, but rather were proposing solutions to enable competing worldviews to exist together on the basis of freedom. These solutions represented different degrees of “organized uncertainty” and only in the Netherlands were there by the late 1880s enough liberals prepared to accept this “organized uncertainty”.6 In their beleaguered position, “organized uncertainty” was (had become) for Catholics and orthodox Protestants as political minorities an acceptable solution to the problem of a heterogeneous society with competing visions of the common good. But for the majority of liberals in Prussia and republicans in France it was not yet thinkable; for the majority the only safe solution was the privatization of religion.