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With the intersection of the presidential election in America, the opening on Sunday of the Year of Faith, and the start of a special synod on the New Evangelization, Catholic ecologists should reflect on the place of government in environmental protection, especially when seen through the eyes of faith.
Evangelization is not simply a matter of
conversing with the uninitiated or bringing lapsed Catholics home. It is a way
of life that baptizes the world. Those who perform this baptism are the
baptized. We perform this role in ways that no one else can perform because only
you and I have our unique placement in time and space and have the exact
relationships that we do. For me, this includes seeking to encourage a
Gospel-centered approach in my career as a state regulator. This obviously
comes with challenges and limitations, most especially my own. But it also
comes with rather unique opportunities.
The US EPA’s Region 1, which includes all of New England , has a commendable assistance program called
Effective Utility Management. Its goal is to bring together key members of a
community that fund, operate, maintain, and in any way support a municipal
drinking water supply or wastewater treatment utility. The program includes
developing tools that foster communication, education, trust, sharing
information, and other components that help human beings relate to others so
that they can provide efficient utility services. I like the program because it
is low-cost and focuses on areas that can be uniquely engaged by the regulatory
world. It also mirrors how my team and I and many others at the Department of
Environmental Management prefer to work with our regulated industries—through building
cooperative relationships rather than adversarial ones.
Certainly, it is not always best for government to take this
approach, nor is it one that the general public often appreciates. But even
when such a philosophy is warranted, it may not be implemented. Through their
own presuppositions and because of external expectations, bureaucrats can tend
toward isolation, containing themselves in an introverted worldviews that envisions
the regulated word as abstractions instead of a community of men and women made
in the image and likeness of God. The goal of such detached regulatory
worldviews may be professional objectivity, but it can also result in an
unhealthy division. This prevents the flow of information, the trust needed for
honest assessments, and an authentic desire to love thy neighbor. In the
regulatory sector that I know best, all this can lead to poorly maintained
infrastructure and bad decisions about funding and planning.
Once the ills of such division become apparent, government either
takes enforcement actions or creates systems to work with and support the
regulated community—which in the regulatory world is often referred to as “tech
assist.” Those that perform this assistance are quite often segregated by
organizational fire walls from their colleagues within enforcement sectors.
This division is another artificial construct within environmental regulatory
programs and it defies what it means to be authentically human—at least in how
Catholics understand who we are meant to be, which includes seeking to balance
justice and mercy in our interactions with our neighbors.
Photo: Flicker/Roger Blackwell |
And so in the practical realm of a societal necessity like water
utility management, we find mayors that treat utility crews or town engineers
with disdain, or as if they are their own private workforce rather than
qualified technicians who should be supported and left to manage infrastructure
according to professional standards; we find drinking water or wastewater
treatment system users that expect the arrival of clean water and the removal
of dirty water at monthly costs far less than their monthly cable bill and with
little or no appreciation for the people that provide such services; and we
find utility workers and private contractors who put their own needs first
rather than the good of the community. In other words, we find throughout the
world of government regulation, utility management, and pollution control the
same sins that escaped from Eden .
The reality of original and particular sins prevents governments,
or any assembly, from reaching a sought after good by human activity alone. This
is especially true when bureaucrats reside in cultures that do not support authentic,
sacrificially loving relationships. In such cases, it is unlikely that the
governed or those that govern can maintain the necessary means to protect
society and individuals. This is not necessarily a criticism of government.
Rather, it is an admission that the state is ultimately powerless to fabricate
the relational infrastructure necessary for people and professions to sacrificially
serve the common good. Advocates for paradise-by-government may not accept
this, but a true disposition for civil service cannot be taught, mandated, or
enforced.
Nor does any of this imply that it will be the private
sector that alone will bring us paradise. As the state is limited in its
ability to ennoble a love of neighbor, so are private corporations—and perhaps even
more so. They are, after all, organizations that have as their stated goal
profit rather than service. Again, this is not a judgment of the private
sphere. It is rather an observation.
What must not be forgotten is the happy news that any desire
for relation is already a pre-existing reality in the human soul; neither the
public or private sectors need instill what is already present—potentially or
actually—in their employees and agents. But to lesser or greater degrees, any
such disposition is broken and wounded within all of us.
Unquestionably, because it is the provider of civil service,
the state in particular must encourage, if not assure, an ethic of service,
trust, and relation—and to their great credit, many within government work
diligently and with profound concern for the people and processes they support.
Nonetheless, the true and ultimate attainment of an inner attitude of service is
not an intellectual or political exercise. It is a desire that is born in the human
soul, one achieved in its fullness only through the grace.
There is much good that government and its
workers—environmental and otherwise—can and do achieve. Many of its agents—whom
I know as colleagues and friends—go about their business below the fray of
political influence. They work against great odds to undertake profound
advances in building up the common good. Many of my colleagues take part in
their regulated industry’s professional development; they seek to build
relationships with those that they oversee; they encourage community awareness
and involvement. Such relationship building may be anathema to some
environmental advocates or to many in the general public, who expect a harsh
objectivity that encourages adversarial governance. But to allow humans to be relational
is to allow nature to take its course; and it is to strengthen the foundations
on which government can assist with the construction of society’s greater good.
Simply stated, the forces that build sacrificial
relationships and the role of government are separate realities, but for the
latter to function well, it must be introduced to and ennobled by the good news
of the former.
Photo: Flicker/Catholic Church-England and Wales
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“The Church cannot and must not take upon herself the political battle to bring about the most just society possible. She cannot and must not replace the State.” In asserting that the church and the state are separate entities, however, the Holy Father does not mean that one should be isolated from the other.
“[The Church] cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice,” he continues. “She has to play her part through rational argument and she has to reawaken the spiritual energy without which justice, which always demands sacrifice, cannot prevail and prosper. A just society must be the achievement of politics, not of the Church. Yet the promotion of justice through efforts to bring about openness of mind and will to the demands of the common good is something which concerns the Church deeply.”
In saying this, the Holy Father is speaking of the
sacramental nature of the faith—how grace elevates nature without destroying or
enslaving it. Thus, for Catholics, church and state are not thought of as the
same sort of entity. They are not competing for the same turf. Rather, what the
Church offers is her teachings and the grace of God so that human relations can
rise to the realm of utter sacrifice.
“There will always be suffering which cries out for consolation and help,” the Holy Father tells us. “There will always be loneliness. There will always be situations of material need where help in the form of concrete love of neighbor is indispensable. The State which would provide everything, absorbing everything into itself, would ultimately become a mere bureaucracy incapable of guaranteeing the very thing which the suffering person—every person—needs: namely, loving personal concern.”
As history has shown, when politics and faith do not
dialogue—when one seeks to outdo or repress the other—disorder results, whether
in the form of a theocracy or an atheistic dictatorship. To avoid such extremes,
societies must balance and demand respect between the secular sphere and the offering
of grace. When taken, this path can offer a relation between the government and
the governed that is more communal than confrontational; more supportive of encouraging
true civil service; and more willing to love one’s stranger, and the entire
cosmos itself.
The above includes material from William Louis Patenaude's upcoming book Catholic Ecology: Its Place in Orthodoxy, a Culture of Life, and New Evangelization.