There are reasons to be grateful for the public life of Jonathan Sacks. His first love was moral philosophy and he returns to it in his new book, Morality: Restoring the Common Good in Divided Times, bringing to bear a lifetime of reading in science, psychology, sociology as well as ethics.
He would not have been out of place in Frankfurt or Berlin in the 1850s, where the great rabbis of German Jewry, of whom Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch was the exemplar, reconciled modernity and Orthodoxy. They built new Jewish Communities in which tradition and citizenship, Kant and Moses were brought together, under the slogan Torah im Derech Eretz — Jewish teaching and respect for the way of the land. It is to the great credit of Rabbi Sacks and Anglo-Jewry that he held the office of Chief Rabbi for 22 years and resurrected that tradition in Britain, so that the voice of the dead could be heard once more.
In the book, Rabbi Sacks defines us as “meaning-seeking beings” for whom relationships are central, and he reveals an Aristotelian turn in seeing happiness as the “expression of the soul in accordance with virtue”. He laments the passing of a ‘Common Good’ in favour of twitter echo chambers, the hateful denunciation of those who disagree, and the apotheosis of self-definition rather than recognising that other people have something to say about whether you are a good person or not.
His statement that “love is the supreme redemption of solitude” is worth repeating. The chapter on self-help being no help at all is instructive, and his critique of multiculturalism and safe spaces is a reasoned refuge from a demented kind of liberalism.
His central thesis is that while there has been a parallel growth in the power and scope of both the state and the market, there has been a simultaneous disintegration of civil society, which is the source of relationships, ethics and happiness. We have never had more things or more rights; and we have never been so unhappy. This paradox is the driving force of the book. It is its greatest strength and its greatest weakness.
In lamenting the disintegration of a shared public culture, Sacks develops certain dualities, between selfishness and altruism, power and morality, contract and covenant — in which the first term has become dominant when the second term should prevail. He particularly identifies politics as “about power and the distribution of resources”, and morality with “civil society”. The problem is that the examples he gives of a covenant are profoundly political, citing the American Revolution and the Burkean Covenant between the generations.
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Subscribe“But the demonic energy of capitalism needs to be constrained, and democratic politics is the traditional way of doing so.”
Demonic? Far from it! Capitalism is the greatest tool of true progress and prosperity ever devised. Like all tools it is a good servant but a bad master. Consider the alternatives to Capitalism and the havoc they have wrought in just the twentieth century, such as the murder of a hundred million or more people.
You CAN have morality without politics. What you cannot have is the reverse, politics without morality. And Pope John Paul II was wrong, a cranky old prelate preaching a structure of guilt and shame about money and sex, fearful that somebody somewhere might be enjoying themselves.
I look forward to reading Rabbi Sack’s book.