Let’s look at Thomas More in light of the OP. Thomas is a fascinating person. There is a lot about him that is not known by the general Catholic population or even the Anglican population, not because it’s a state secret or a Church secret. It’s the usual thing. The lay faithful are rarely interested in the hidden lives of our saints. We seem to be attached to the externals.
Let’s begin with a little known fact. Thomas More was a professed member of the Franciscan Brothers of Penance, today known as the Secular Franciscan Order. He was professed under the pre-Vatican II rule and constitutions. This is important for a number of reasons.
- The rule said that it was immoral for a layman to make oaths to a monarch or to pledge allegiance to a nation.
- The rule said that the laity had a moral duty to obey the pope as much as the clergy and vowed religious do.
- The rule said that the members of the secular order had a moral obligation to obey Francis on all the above.
After completing your formation you solemnly promise to obey the rule. This has not changed. Parts of the rule were changed by Paul VI in 1978, just before he died. But More lived long before this. He was bound by this rule under several penalties: a) dismissal from the Franciscan Order, b) grave sin of disobedience to St. Francis and c) excommunication for supporting a king that was in conflict with the Church.
Thomas was obedient to the Church first, then to the state. But that is only part of what we can learn from his life.
Thomas did vocally denounce the oath. However, his Franciscan superior told him to be silent. The superior feared that Thomas would put his family and the entire Franciscans community in danger. It was the superior’s hope that if the oath was met with silence, rather than open hostility, Henry VIII would blow off the silence. Unfortunately, Henry wanted Thomas by his side, because Thomas was trusted and Henry was not. He allowed others the benefit of silence, but not Thomas. However, once his trial was over, Thomas did vocalize his moral conviction on the oath. He went to his death proclaiming that the State did not have the right to usurp the Church and the moral law.
He and John Fisher worked behind Henry’s back to sabotage Henry’s annulment trial, because they knew that it was a sham. It was a case of the state wanting to change moral law to suit its ends. Fisher and More teach us that the State may not do this and that the citizen has the right to sabotage the state’s efforts. What the citizen may not do is endanger the the lives of the innocent. Whatever, he can do legally, clandestinely and under the radar, that will not do harm to the innocent, is allowed, as long as it’s moral. You can’t steal from the King do impoverish him so that he can’t take his case to court. That’s a “NO no.”
Thomas answerers the question of tolerance of unjust and immoral laws in his famous work, Utopia. Which by the way, is not a Socialist treatise as some people say. The story comes out of the common life lived by the Third Order Franciscans of the time. But that’s material for another thread. In Utopia, More uses allegory to show us that we must imitate the Passive Will of God.
God condemns evil. At times God intervenes in human history for the good. However, he does not do harm when he intervenes. Shooting the US Congress to stop them from enacting evil laws is not what God has in mind. That would be doing harm to avoid an evil. Using the means that are available to us in order to stop evil laws is a moral duty. More shows us how God uses the means available to him to stop evil, without doing harm to man’s dignity and freedom.
Bl. John Paul II spoke about this in Evangelium Vitae.
**Democracy cannot be idolized to the point of making it a substitute for morality or a panacea for immorality. Fundamentally, democracy is a “system” and as such is a means and not an end. Its “moral” value is not automatic, but depends on conformity to the moral law to which it, like every other form of human behavior, must be subject: in other words, its morality depends on the morality of the ends which it pursues and of the means which it employs. **
Every law made by man can be called a law insofar as it derives from the natural law. But if it is somehow opposed to the natural law, then it is not really a law but rather a corruption of the law.
Bl. John Paul is echoing what More had said more than 500 years ago and Aquinas before him. This is not new to Christendom. We do not owe allegiance to the corruption of law. When the secular state corrupts the exercise of law, we have the right to rebel and to use whatever legal and moral means are at our disposal to stop the state, just as God who intervenes in human affairs for our good, without doing harm to our nature and our dignity.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF