April 5, 2003
RIGHT OUT OF CONSERVATISM:
The special relationship between Blair and God: The Prime Minister’s religious faith is acknowledged but it masks a remarkable doctrinal elasticity (Peter Oborne, 4/05/03, The Spectator)There is no doubting the sincerity of the Prime Minister’s faith. But it is accompanied by arrogance. Unluckily for those who believe that Mr Blair will one day convert to the Church of Rome, he occasionally lays claim to the kind of direct relationship to Christ that is more readily associated with the Protestant than with the Roman Catholic Church. He once, in casual conversation, identified the Saviour with New Labour. ‘Jesus was a moderniser,’ he asserted.It may be the Prime Minister’s evangelical confidence that he enjoys a direct, unmediated connection with God which enables him to lay claim to be a Christian while neglecting Church teaching. The area where this disjunction is most apparent today is the war in Iraq. Tony Blair’s apologists, such as Matthew d’Ancona, have yet to explain fully how religious belief can be at the core of the Prime Minister’s conduct of the war at a time when pretty well every Church leader, from the Pope to the Archbishop of Canterbury, has been opposed to it all along.
The great religious figures of our age feel a repugnance for this war because they understand that at the heart of Christianity is a set of moral absolutes or rules: in the context of Iraq the most relevant of these is the biblical injunction ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ Tony Blair’s readiness to propound fresh doctrines of his own has been a striking feature of his premiership in all sorts of areas. He has occasionally brooded in public about the balance between natural law and utilitarianism. On two occasions he has even claimed that he is more attracted to the stern and immutable imperatives laid down by natural law than to clumsy calculations about the greatest good of the greatest number. But natural law comes down heavily against this war in Iraq, just as it does against abortion.
Ultimately the argument for invasion is a pragmatic one. It boils down to the utilitarian criterion that coalition forces will ultimately kill fewer Iraqis than will Saddam. The Iraq imbroglio threatens to illustrate in the starkest way possible the pitfalls of utilitarianism: that it is not merely wrong to break with the rules of religion, but doing so can have all sorts of unintended and undesirable consequences.
It is characteristic of those who feel that they have an unmediated line to the Lord that they think that they can make the law themselves. Tony Blair rewrote the rulebook for the Labour party. And this is what he and George Bush are doing in Iraq: their readiness to ignore the procedures of international institutions such as the United Nations is a manifestation of the same sort of arrogance. According to the precepts of natural law, the humility and discipline of religion express a wisdom that is deeper than individual men and women can readily understand. These are boundaries which, as Mr Blair may be about to discover, are impertinent to transgress.
One of the truly inexplicable marvels of the age is the pathological hatred of a significant portion of the British Right for America and seemingly for Britain's own former greatness. They seek to yoke England within the EU, a surrender of sovereignty that the great conservative Brits from Oliver Cromwell to Edmund Burke to the Duke of Wellington to Benjamin Disraeli to Winston Churchill to Margaret Thatcher would sooner have died fighting than have accepted. But, as if that's not bad enough, to side with all the Leftist clergy--and pretend that they are preaching Christian orthodoxy on the war and that Tony Blair and George Bush are being bad Christians--is really beneath contempt. Mr. Oborne's solemn pronouncement that UN approval is required for war is antithetical to the sovereignty of his own nation and smacks of the one worldism for which the Right has always properly excoriated the Left. This is just one more example of how Tony Blair is more conservative than at least a significant segment of the British Right. Posted by Orrin Judd at April 5, 2003 11:27 PM
I guess a lot of the British Right has never gotten over Suez.
Posted by: M Ali Choudhury at April 6, 2003 9:28 AMAli:
Ha! You know, I bet you're right.
