Anselmian Moral Theory and the Question of Grounding Morality in God

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Anselmian Moral Theory and the Question of Grounding Morality in God Gregory Sadler Quaestiones Disputatae, Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2014, pp. 78-92 (Article) Published by The Catholic University of America Press For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/578491 No institutional affiliation (28 Jun 2018 05:34 GMT)

Anselmian Moral Theory and the Question of Grounding Morality in God Gregory Sadler When we ask the question whether morality must be grounded in God, it is be understood. First, the question might focus upon whether or not God is the ultimate - - of morality. In fact, some might go so far as to wonder whether a minimal starkest way of putting the second manner in which the original question might a mistaken project, and if so, a third manner of asking the original question reference must continue to be made, is required for morality to be adequately question in a fourth way by asking whether a person requires practical engage- moral life. Within the broad currents running through the Catholic intellectual rality depends on God. Among them is Anselm of Canterbury, who makes question about the relationship between God and morality. One of the goals Gregory Sadler, Quaestiones Disputatae, Vol. 5, No. 1 (Fall 2014) 78

GREGORY SADLER 79 at-present less-often-discussed thinker solidly within the Catholic intellectual tradition. The four earlier-distinguished manners of framing the question writings pertaining to this query whether morality is dependent upon God. employ a systematic moral theory, 1 by contrast to many other Christian think- 2 Instead, his theory has corpus of work. 3 A second goal is to use this question about the relations bear on a dynamic common in our own times and culture, drawing out and question; for Anselm cannot only agree that in theory, a minimal morality supplies us a number of cogent reasons for thinking that it falls short of monk Anselm into a potential dialogue partner who has something to say 1 Vita Anselmi 1.8, trans. R.W. Southern 2 Anselm on multiple matters in moral theory. For earlier Scholastic authors and differ- Anselm and a New Generation 3 S. Anselmi Cantuariensis Archepiscopi opera omnia Memorials of Saint Anselm M Monologion P Proslogion DV De Veritate CDH Cur Deus Homo De Libertate Arbitrii DCD De Casu Diaboli DCV De Conceptu Virginali DI De Incarnatione Verbi DC De Concordia DA Liber Ex Dictis Beati Anselmi DHM Liber Ansemi Archiepiscopi de Humanus Moribus per Simultudines

80 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY both to modern and contemporary secularist moral theorists and to those continuing within the Catholic intellectual tradition. ing the question of whether morality is dependent upon God. Talking about ory, 4 - third and fourth part address what Anselm would see as shortcomings of the third part what guidance and assistance Anselm thinks Christianity pro- part, we shall look at the indispensable role Anselm accords to God and to Christianity, understood not only as belief or practice, but as community and I. God as the Ultimate Source of Goodness imagination or possibility), is ultimately and in some manner grounded upon God. Ontologically, God is the origin of all created being, as well as the ulti- these attributes (for instance, justice, wisdom, or truth), human participation 4 G. Stanley Kane, Anselm s Doctrine of Freedom and the Will 1981); Dom Robert Pouchet, La Rectitudo chez saint Anselme ennes. 1964); Katherin Rogers, Anselm on Freedom Faith and Reason 29; Phillipe Delhaye, Quelque aspects de la morale de saint Anselme, Spicilegium Beccense The Cambridge Companion to Anselm Downside Review 421 (2002).

GREGORY SADLER 81 Throughout his works Anselm consistently depicts God as the ultimate source of all being to such degree that like a number of other Chris- 5 God creates all beings, indeed the totality of created being, ex nihilo. 6 God not only endows in their being. 7 He is also the source of all truth and rectitude in beings. 8 essentia Being. 9 He sesses being, is from God, from whom all justice (and no injustice) has being [est]. 10 The relationship between Creator and created being is so intimately - in seipsis). 11 Created beings are most true, most good and just are most what they are and ought to be as they 12 For humans, this presumably encompasses not 13 In terms of his metaphysics, Anselm is a Christian Platonist, en- 14 God is being itself, from which all other beings possess their being by way of participation, as well as through 15 For each of these attributes, God does not simply have, but rather is, that attribute whereas 5 M 5, p. 18, DCD 1, p. 234. 6 7 M 13, p. 27. 8 DV 10, p. 190 and 13, p. 199. Cf. also CDH 2.17, p. 123. 9 10 DC 1.7, p. 258 11 M 9, p. 24 and 31, p. 49 12 13 On this distinction, cf. DCV 1, p. 140. 14 The Neoplatonic Metaphysics and Epistemology of Anselm of Canterbury Analecta Anselmiana Metaphysics, Quaestiones Disputatae 15

82 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY - If all things that are good are so ultimately (though not immediate- all thereby participate in the same manner that is, some merely less and some more. As discussed in more detail below, Anselm distinguishes between amination of modes of truth similarly leads down a similar path, since truth ness of the will. 16 While justice in (or as) God is not only a unity so simple - 17 - - theory, with its uncompromising emphasis upon justice in the will, would II. The Emancipation of Morality from God A modern or contemporary secular interlocutor might concede that in the basing morality upon some conception of God in the manner just discussed, Christian God from the scene, and thereby translate central categories and concepts of Anselmian moral theory into an entirely humanocentric, natu- critical portrayals of Anselm by certain Christian thinkers, he might appear a - doctrine, it is more typically in terms of metaphysics and epistemology than 16 DV 12, p. 193 17 - Saint Anselm Journal 5, no. 1 (2009).

GREGORY SADLER 83 moral theory. 18 And yet, merely perusing selected passages from his treatises In Monologion, be argued for by appealing to Scripture, but rather each point be asserted compel, and directness of truth might clearly set out. 19 Proslogion seemingly would require none other for demonstrating itself, and which alone would 20 Cur Deus Homo 21 - ity. 22 If describes the entire Anselmian project, including his moral theory, it ought to be recalled that this formula is not scriptural, by Augustine. In fact, uses Anselm makes of Scripture typically fall into three 18 Reason and Revelation in the Middle Ages - Archives d Histoire doctrinale et littéraire du Moyen A ge Fides Quaerens Intellectum as a Model for Christian Philosophy, The Saint Anselm Journal 4, no. 1 (2006). 19 M prologus, p. 8. 20 P prooemium - - maius quam cogitari possit 21 CDH praefatio rational argumentation about certain of its topics. 22 Letters, as opposed to his treatises, where Anselm does make such scriptural appeals, not least since he usually writes to

84 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY - way to better understand a matter in process of being reasoned about; or, it has worked out independently. 23-24 (i.e., De Veritate, De Libertate Arbitriis, and De Casu Diaboli goodness, the relationship between rationality and free will, how weakness - and embody deep and lasting desires on the part of Anselm (and his fellow monks) to penetrate and progress further into Christian faith, life, and community through application of the endowment of human reason. But again, nally possessed, arguing that these are mere historical and cultural contingen- by his use of reason now stand independently of any entanglements with, the rational mean- application of human reason, sola ratione 23 - ratione] that we cannot show to be clearly in soning and Scripture in no manner contradicts it since Scripture, just as it opposes - of ours [nostro sensui proem, Ep. 77, DI 1, CDH, and papal decisions, e.g. in Ep. 65. 24 DV praefatio

GREGORY SADLER 85 - justice in De Veritate 25 For what he or she ought to will. It also requires that he or she will this for the right other. This in turn entails that, in that process of willing, a person actually for which actions ought to be done and which not, or what goods ought to be will itself, and its capacity for self-determination. In De Libertate, we learn further that when the will lacks this fundamental self-orientation of justice, this occurs because the person wills some other (actual or apparent) good incompatible with maintaining justice in the than justice. 26 an initial distinction between will-as-instrument and will-as-use ed to include will-as-inclination. De Casu distinguishes between two fundamental orientations of the will. The one, always present, is the will-to-happiness, commoda). The other, not always present, is the will-to-justice, directed towards justice, which includes but transcends proper ordering of the other goods. 27 Perhaps Anselm has supplied us with all the basic tools needed to on. Fortunately, we are endowed with a faculty needed to determine these 28 allowing good from the non-good, and the more good from the less good. 29 Moral 25 DV 12, p. 194. 26 27 DCD 12, p. 255. 28 29 M 68, p. 78.

86 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY ings. 30 and orientations of the will, be emancipated from the theocentric framework III. The Need of Morality for some Divine Revelation in moral theory, worked out by Christian thinkers, perhaps one originally deepen rational understanding. But once that understanding has been se- just as well - 31 and still more impropriety of language concealing the truth but rather to seek the proper 32 tation of Anselmian moral theory, and I shall shortly raise four sorts of problems. Prior to that, I want to stress a broader point, namely that many important moral matters resist being reduced to concepts or propositions adequately (let alone entirely) understood or applied in complete detachment 30 DA 17. 31 DCV 4, p. 144. One might read something like this into his discussion with Vita Anselmi 1.30. 32 DCD 1, p. 235

GREGORY SADLER 87-33 biography, or treatises. 34 or practice in these matters, although for reasons of space I discuss only one here. First, there are key concepts whose adequate understanding on our part requires retaining a theological dimension or reference. Second, there - 35 - of particular cases, where action and concrete choice occur. by Anselm that are essentially denatured by attempts to strip away any theological elements or references, three particularly interesting ones would be maintained for its own sake, Anselm introduces a risk of turning justice the things that one ought to will, and the reasons for which one ought to will those things, one could certainly glean from his works all sorts of rules, rea- morality stemming partly from classic pre-christian sources but much more 33 Vita Anselmi 34 alty and integrity, truth and lies, narrated in Vita Anselmi 35 - Prayers, and with respect to St. Elphege in Vita Anselmi 1.30, 2.11, 2.18.

88 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY an ongoing project and product and a continuity of generations of Christian 36 - is, for each person, to will what God wills that person to will. 37 This requires and cooperate with just what it is that God wants them to will. It also bears implications for ways in which we coordinate our own wills with those of of God and neighbor will will nothing but what God wills or another person wills as long as this is not contrary to God. 38 So, on the one hand, the our own wills. - which regarded at least some modalities of pride as morally good) as one propria voluntas, best (but inadequately) translated in and to will what it ought to in fact, in order for the will to be as free and as full as it could and should be it must align itself with and under the di- 39 The paradigmatic case of propria voluntas 40 36 37 38 Ep. 112, p. 270. This theme of concordia Letters. Cf. in particular Ep. 143 and Vita Anselmi 39 CDH 1.11, p. 68. Cf. also CDH 2.10, p. 111. 40 DCD 4, p. 242. Cf. also P 3, p.103 and DI 4, p. 18.

GREGORY SADLER 89 legitimate spouse and some [would-be] adulterer. 41 The Anselmian perspec- - man submits his will to another man, it is still autonomous will if it is against God. 42-43 We also ought not which we understand rectitude, teaches that this rectitude is to be kept out of 44 and into deeper and deeper relation with God, as he tells us in Monologion posse et velle 45 heart, whole soul, and whole mind. 46 any locus in the moral landscape, since God himself is not only a good, but a - is not only a good among other goods, but the highest good and the source stand, and in order to more fully participate in justice, rectitude, rationality, 41 DHM 2, p. 40 42 DI 10, p. 27. 43 - indicates. 44 DC 1.6, p. 257. 45 M 68, p. 79. 46 of brotherly charity in your actions than to wish to choose contemplation alone by despising the prayers and the need of others, Ep. 345, p. 74.

90 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY minds to God. And, if they intend to do so fully, they will not only need to IV. Relation with God, and the Capacity to Understand Morality One mistake in moral matters consists in attempting to precipitate out a - has been rightly restored within moral theory, would be to reduce the needed enabling human moral reasoning to attain its full scope and potential, by pro- - Nor, as far as generation of more adequate moral understanding goes, is it interaction. For Anselm, we cannot come to really know God, our neighbor, - and His will to us, particularly by collaborating in remaking us into creatures manner, through a broad, ongoing Christian tradition and community of - -

GREGORY SADLER 91 of the use of the mind, 47 contemplation bears fruits not only for practice, but also for good discernment, and for further direction of the mind. 48 Third, right conduct, as well the rational creature for willing rightly. So, one should not say that someone has right understanding if he or she does not will rightly in accordance with it. 49 50 effects not only of original sin but also of personal sins, since we are imper- 51 ulous manner through the mediation of the saints or yet more directly from 47 Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 81 (2008), p. 100. 48-49 50 volendum optanda], memory to the remembering of things that should be remembered, thought to the thinking of things that should be thought upon, understanding to distinguishing what is to be willed or remembered or thought. Disorder of the will has intellectual nor possess [justice] unless it is understood [non intellecta], DCV 8, p. 149. One can - not understood, DCV 8, p. 149. 51 DC 3.4, p. 267.

92 ANSELMIAN MORAL THEORY God Himself. 52 other human beings. - De Concordia, where he writes is a grace, preaching, hearing, understanding what is heard, and rectitude of willing are all instances of graces. Human collaboration with God takes place precisely through the mediation and contribution of other human collaborators. 53 This in turn calls to be understood in terms of historical communities, institutions, and traditions of moral inquiry. Anselm located his own moral life and understanding within such a continuity and communion, and for logical source for, a preceptor and guide about, and our gracious collaborator in, morality. Marist College 52 - - reason what is best tasting [sapidum rectitude alone pursues what one understands to be what ought to be pursued. DHM 132, p. 89. Anselm also writes of it being a miracle when God restores justice 53 tion-bringing seeds, p. 271.