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5 - “The Only True Touchstone of Moral Rectitude”: The Religious Foundations of Morality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2009

Greg Forster
Affiliation:
Trinity International University, Illinois
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Summary

Locke held that politics, although it should not be devoted to any particular religion, must ultimately appeal to God's moral authority. The Letter Concerning Toleration argues that the political community ought not be devoted to a particular religion, so one might think that Locke favors the compartmentalization of religion and politics favored by most liberal theorists today. Indeed, some Locke scholars have endorsed this view. But even the argument of the Letter itself tends against this conclusion, and the whole body of Locke's philosophy is grounded on the opposite premise: that the only kind of moral law worthy of the name is religious moral law. To be a moral law properly so called, a law need not be revelatory – it can be discerned in nature instead – but it must bear God's authority. This is why moral consensus is so difficult to build; it must appeal to moral law grounded in divine authority, but it cannot appeal to any moral laws that are exclusive to one or another particular religion. This chapter and the ones following it show how Locke faced this difficult challenge.

Compartmentalization is the most influential doctrine on religion and politics today, particularly among the intellectual class. Theoretical attacks on it have become somewhat more frequent recently, but these criticisms are often very modest, aspiring only to allow some accommodation of religion in politics rather than to refute compartmentalization outright.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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