We would have to define what we mean by “State” and also explain what it would mean for such things to be “upheld.”
Here is a quote from Pope Leo XIII
speaking on this very issue:Man’s natural instinct moves him to live in civil society, for he cannot, if dwelling apart, provide himself with the necessary requirements of life, nor procure the means of developing his mental and moral faculties. Hence, it is divinely ordained that he should lead his life-be it family, or civil-with his fellow men, amongst whom alone his several wants can be adequately supplied.
But, as no society can hold together unless some one be over all, directing all to strive earnestly for the common good, every body politic must have a ruling authority, and this authority, no less than society itself, has its source in nature, and has, consequently, God for its Author. Hence, it follows that all public power must proceed from God.
While this is a generally broad statement, it does have certain important guidelines. As you can see, no specific form of State is demanded by natural law, but for society to promote (a better term than ‘uphold’) the common good, there must be some in authority to help guide this process. This is how the Church interprets Romans 13:1-7.
If the State is defined as a libertarian might define it, that is: a series of manufactured relationships, whereby murder and extortion (among other things) are given moral sanction, then I would say that I’m not particularly concerned about what the State allegedly is/is not doing to uphold Natural Law or the Common Good. It’s mere existence in such a case would be contrary to both of those things.
I am speaking in terms of
theory, you are speaking in terms of
practice. Before we can judge a system in practice, we must have a theoretical basis established first.
For example, we cannot say that just because kings x,y,z have acted as tyrants that monarchy itself is an invalid form of rule. Same can be said for democracy.
Ironically though, in the ideal Libertarian state, murder and extortion are literally “virtues” (there is no such thing as vice in Libetarianism), and when the citizens perform them they are living the ideal Libertarian lifestyle.
I believe you, too, would agree, that if the State was accurately described there, then sodomy is probably at the end of our list of what we should be worried about.
It would not be at the top of the list, but not necessarily at the end. When grave sins like that are given moral sanction, they have a strong influence on affecting all other aspects of society (e.g. it becomes a very slippery slope into moral degeneracy as a whole). That’s why there is such a strong push to legitimize homosexual acts, because once that is accepted, then there really isn’t any consistent way to oppose any number of other sins.
Ultimately, I believe that’s why dismissing libertarianism out of hand is problematic - not because we disagree about certain moral concerns, but because we have a set of clashing interpretations about what is actually occurring in reality.
The Church is smarter than any political scientist. It does not dismiss anything “out of hand”. What is “occurring in reality” to Secularist though is that there is no such thing as objective right/wrong, no such thing as Natural Law, and even no such thing as God. If that is “reality” for a political scientist, then their theoretical claims are going to lead to disastrous conclusions and consequences.
Consequently, I’m fine with people arguing against libertarianism in a factual manner (saying they disagree with the way libertarians analyze the actions of this ‘State’), but I don’t think it’s correct to say that libertarian values aren’t Catholic values.
There is a wide chasm between Catholic values and libertarian “values”. Some goals do overlap, but in terms of “values” they are very different. For example, Catholicism and Libertarianism are both opposed to a ‘big government’ that controls too much of people’s lives, but Catholicism and Libertarianism have two very different rationale for their opposing that. Catholicism opposes it on the grounds of Natural Law (e.g.
subsidiarity), while on the other hand Libertarianism opposes it on the basis of man-made philosophies teaching that true ‘freedom’ means being able to do almost whatever you want and that government ‘naturally gets in the way’ of realizing that ‘freedom’.
With regards to human life, the highest value to a libertarian IS human life, as an end in and of itself and not as a means to other ends. With this, the Church has no disagreement. The Church does not, for example, kill others in order to promote the faith, nor does it do so in order to tend to the needy.
Libertarianism is a utilitarian philosophy, meaning good is strictly a function of usefulness. Thus, the highest value for them is not at all human life in general, but the advancement of the well being of the individual in specific. In Libertarianism, literally nothing is to stand in the way of the individual doing whatever they please. This is why Libertarians have no problem with abortion, child abandonment, pollution, defamation, extortion, etc, etc. Now not all Libertarians would agree with that list, but that’s because they’re not true Libertarians in their heart and instead are following Conscience directed by Natural Law.