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The Gift of Medieval Christendom to the World
1 September 2002
The West is very remarkable and unique in the world.
The West has relieved human suffering to a unprecedented degree;
the West has developed freedom to a unparalleled level, both in
freedom of coercion by other men and in freedom of opportunity
to rise above one's original station in life. This is demonstrated
by an incredible standard of living where even its "poor"
are rich by global standards. It is also seen in the full political
rights of all and the accepted idea of equality of all-including
women and minorities. It is most obviously seen in the elimination
of slavery-that universal plague of mankind that still persists
in the world today. Can anyone dispute the fact that untold millions
who could, would cherish the opportunity to move here; while those
who live here and have the freedom to leave, stay here?
The key question is "Why?" What is it about
the development of the West that made it so remarkable and unique?
Why in the West are all people important? What is the ultimate
source of these ideals of freedom, equality and limited government?
What was the defining ideological force that uniquely shaped the
West's political development, especially in its formative medieval
period?
I believe the best and really only answer to all
the above questions is the gradual assimilation of Judeo-Christianity
in the West. By arguing that humankind is "made in the image
of God", medieval thinkers developed the idea of the dignity
of the individual, not something arbitrary-man-given, but a reality,
inherent in every person-God-given. This gradual assimilation
of this ideal, for example, gave rise to the Cortes' in Spain,
the Reichstag in Germany, the Estates-General in France and the
Parliament in England. It gave rise to bills of rights, to limits
over the powers of kings (i.e. weak governments), to property
rights, to taxation by consent, to the development of common law
and to that great document of freedom, the Magna Carta.
No man, including the king, was better than all others.
How can we know if this is true? We must look at
the indisputable historical facts without the fear of being labeled
ethnocentric. Where in the modern world do we find freedom? Freedom,
as we know it, can be found in Europe-before and after the totalitarians,
in England, Canada, the United States, parts of Latin America,
and parts of the Pacific rim. It is never found in the ancient
world, though Athens and the Roman Republic came closest. It is
never found in the rest of the modern world. Freedom is unique
to the areas of the world that have been touched by Christianity.
I argue that the development of medieval political
structures with their limiting of the power of the governments
and the resulting freedom for commerce, and the freeing or releasing
of human energy coincides with the assimilation of the ideas of
the dignity of the human being-"created in the image of God".
This was a gift of the spread of Christianity in Europe or as
many call it "Christendom".
Most world history books identify all the characteristics
used in my argument but, in my opinion, fail to give them the
significance they deserve. These books do not really give an explanation
of the coincidence of Christianity and the freedom that follows
it around.
(I know the Enlightenment gets all the credit for
the what I have said about freedom. But, where on the globe did
the Enlightenment arise? In a vacuum or in Christendom? And again,
the key question is "Why? Why did the Enlightenment spring
up in Christendom?") Don McLeroy Member, State Board of Education
dmcleroy@cox-internet.com |