My contention is this, that a lot of philosophical debates among Christians might be avoided by agreeing on the necessary (if insufficient) importance of basing our life together explicitly on the Ten Commandments, as we did in our country up until the upheavals of the Sixties.
Jews and Christians could agree on Thou Shalt Not, even in the breach. It's true, notably and regrettably, that there was some divorce, in violation of the Sixth Commandment. But there wasn't no-fault divorce, which came about just as the Commandments were being ripped down. The Commandments were taught in public school to every child; people knew what each commandment signified. Now even our clergy (and I include bishops!) are ignorant of them, and by any metric, moral intelligence and practice have gotten much worse.
Hypocrisy isn't the worst sin, we are discovering, as a moral vacuum threatens us. Don't misunderstand; I am aware that Modernism began before the 60s -- not decades before but at least 700 years before, with William of Ockham, some say.
Our country with its Founding is what it is. Instead of wasting our energy trying to remake it, we should restore the Commandments -- we should make their restoration our keystone, our first object. (Note well that atheists target public manifestations of the Commandments whenever they have the opportunity. It matters. They weren't inscribed in actual stone for nothing.) Republics can work in that imperfect way that every society works; along with monarchies they are one possible way to organize society -- when they are based on the Ten Commandments.
Even our secular state worked, far better than many Catholic countries today. Tony Esolen makes the point that the political progressive of sixty years ago wouldn't have been caught dead defending something like "drag queen story time" because they had a lot more ordinary decency than many a conservative today. They certainly wouldn't have defended it, as some do today, on liberal grounds.
We sense that we need something (but strangely, we seem confused about what) to educate our children better. We lamely mention faulty catechesis and subside at the thought of the energy required to implement it and the resistance we'd find.
Caught up in apologetics, which require a common moral vocabulary, we have almost abandoned reliance on revealed truth. We have cultivated the habit of looking at Revelation as less valid than logic, forgetting that God cannot be illogical or unreasonable, including in His precepts. Worried about the debunkers our children might encounter, we teach them responses to wrong thinking before we have taught them right thinking. We claim to reject relativism, but we ourselves do not accept givens.
We worry that our children will resist eternal truth, since resistance is all around us. If we begin as if they have already been subjected to spurious debunking (the kind that casts doubt on everything), and are in the post-debunked stage, we begin at the wrong end.
This entrenched pedagogical mistake is most committed in the areas of science and morality. Science is the observation, explanation, and description of nature. Other inquiries (into causes) are not natural science, but they are still analysis. These discussions must take place, but the development of the child's scientific mind requires that first he must learn certain facts and habits, and he must learn to reason, before he can arrive at the intellectual ground from which he can discover the relationship of scientific facts to larger questions.
In the area of morality (or "religion" as we might think of it, forgetting that the object of religion is God, Who is Good -- that is, moral), we want to provide our children with explanations that protect them against errors before we provide them with precepts.
When struck by a general decay of morality in the populace, our tendency is to defend from the stance of rationalistic argument rather than to teach from the moral law; we are driven on to it by a thousand eager Masters in Theology, backed by the academic credentials of dozens of institutes dedicated to certifying them, when really we should be stating and memorizing and requiring the memorization of ... the Ten Commandments.
Remember Naaman the Syrian? He scorned the prophet's prescription for cleansing his leprosy -- he didn't expect to be told to dip in the River Jordan -- too simple. But the young servant girl pricked his pride.
We are in the same situation (but worse, because we don't even acknowledge the severity our disease; we don't see ourselves as suffering from moral leprosy). We can't help wanting the remedy for what ails us to be backed by some accredited authority. We aren't comfortable unless it involves a program administered by professionals, for which we would be required to offer payment.
Basic religion was expunged from our common life in 20th century upheavals. We see that. Yet we don't seek to remedy that tragedy by the straightforward means of restoring it. We accept the revolution and assume that a highly developed and abstract but essentially defensive replacement will bring about the desired result for those who are motivated; and those who are not motivated will have to do without, since they don't have the intellectual habits to participate. (We also continually water down the intellectual expression of the moral law in an attempt to package it for the masses, which carries its own risks.) In this way, we abandon the poor.
Today, the most devout and upright person, when asked how to combat moral decay, will respond with some lengthy involved plan that involves an intense inquiry into natural law and/or deep study of Thomas Aquinas; I have seen well meaning proposals for high school curricula that would be more suited to graduate school studies, even if our youth had familiarity with fundamentals, which they do not.
This regrettable method of teaching young people forms the habit of stressing codicils more than fundamental law, of focusing on exceptions over straightforward precepts. In this way, our young people will remain incapable of absorbing what they need most of all: that which is given. Certainly, those outside the scope of this misbegotten effort will remain ignorant of the Ten Commandments; for if the green wood knows not of them, the dry wood hasn't a chance.
Over-complication and manifest disobedience to God's expressed desire in Scripture and Liturgy for us to pass on and teach and love precisely His Law betrays the tradition handed down to us. Those who went before us did and understood what we do not. John Henry Newman, a religious thinker surely not lacking in subtlety and academic learning, put it this way:
"I am a link in a chain, a bond of connexion between persons. He has not created me for naught. I shall do good, I shall do his work; I shall be an angel of peace, a preacher of truth in my own place — if I do but keep his commandments and serve him in my calling" (Meditations and Devotions, 301-2).