December 20, 2020

THERE'S NO SUCH THING AS INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY:

The Power of Citizens Organized: a review of The Will of the People: The Revolutionary Birth of America by T. H. Breen (Daniel James Sundahl, 12/20/20, University Bookman)

In an elegant and different book, T. H. Breen documents the constructive and stabilizing ways in which communities of ordinary folk who comprise "the will of the people" took responsibility for the actual course of the revolution. Professor Breen asks his reader to consider how a rural countryside minister might use the Bible and his own commonsense notions of civil liberty to propel his parishioners to mobilize and maintain allegiance to the colonial cause. It's a neglected and under-appreciated story, as Professor Breen notes: "the story of those people whose will the republican system was meant to reflect ... a founding people rather than a few Founders." More to the point, Professor Breen suggests that if in fact "ordinary people ... sustained the revolution in [their] small communities," then throughout America "a different understanding of liberty" developed, "one that is now more than ever worth recovering."

Professor Breen adds to his argument the notion that we should therefore attend closely to such sentiments as those voiced by Levi Hart, a Connecticut minister, highly respected, and a sermon titled "Liberty Described and Recommended." Liberty, the good minister voiced to his congregation on a Sunday in 1775, a noteworthy date, is a "positive good." Then with careful and common sense he qualified his enthusiasm thus: "Some people always give in to excess." Therefore liberty is too often understood as the ability and power of doing as we please. One should therefore note that this small Connecticut congregation is a small portion of the "public square" into which "opinion" ventures.

Reverend Hart's opinion for his congregation is wonderfully posed: The liberty of self-indulgence that is an expression of individualism poses a serious danger to civil society. Civil liberty does not mean freedom from all law and government. In fact, such liberty of self-indulgence is akin to mankind in a state of nature--that is, not a form of liberty flourishing in stable communities, which one should note are synonymous to those "little platoons" so admired by a conservative mind like that of Russell Kirk.

Liberty has to be considered and defined with reference to society.

Posted by at December 20, 2020 12:00 AM

  

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