And that’s exactly when God was brought to the fore.
At the very end of an arduous day marked by questions, answers, tears, recriminations, declarations, and pontifications, the final moments in determining the fate of Judge Kavanaugh rested in the hands of John Kennedy, the NRA-backed Republican senator from Louisiana. He was the last senator to hold the floor and the last member of the committee to ask any questions of Judge Kavanaugh. And for the senator, it would be the judge’s faith in God that would ultimately settle the matter.
Here are the key excerpts from their brief but potent exchange:
“Do you believe in God?” Senator Kennedy asked.
“I do,” Judge Kavanagh replied.
“I’m gonna give you a last opportunity, right here, right in front of God and country. I want you to look me in the eye. Are Dr. Ford’s allegations true?”
“They are not accurate as to me. I have not questioned that she might have been sexually assaulted at some point in her life by someone, someplace. But as to me, I’ve never done this. Never. Done this to her, or to anyone else . . .”
And then:
“None of these allegations are true?” the senator asked.
“Correct.”
“No doubt in your mind?”
“Zero. One hundred percent certain.”
“Not even a scintilla?”
“Not a scintilla. One hundred percent certain, Senator.”
“Do you swear to God?”
“I swear to God.”
“That’s all I have, Judge,” concluded the senator.
And that’s all he needed.
If Judge Kavanaugh believed in God, then that was that. If he could solemnly swear to a supernatural being, then he simply must be telling the truth.
For Senator Kennedy—and for many millions of Americans—a proclaimed faith in God is eminently significant when it comes to discerning the nature of truth or lies, good or evil, wrong or right. After all, God-believers are more apt to be more truthful, good, and moral than secular nonbelievers, right? As President Trump’s first attorney general, Jeff Sessions, has publicly proclaimed, secular people are actually incapable of knowing truth, for “without God, there is no truth.”2 Jeff Sessions’s replacement, Attorney General William Barr, has gone even further, declaring that social problems such as crime, drugs, and sexually transmitted diseases are the direct result of a “moral crisis” perpetuated by the “secularists of today.”3 For Senator Kennedy, Attorneys General Sessions and Barr, and so many other powerful people occupying key positions within Trump’s administration, God is the underlying bedrock of truth, goodness, and decency. Without God, according to their perspective, moral life simply isn’t possible.
It’s an oddly ironic perspective to be trumpeted by people supporting a president who is among the most morally bankrupt leaders we’ve ever had. But, nonetheless, it’s a perspective that rests on centuries of certitude.
Theistic Morality
The insistence that morality depends upon God remains one of the most widespread, popularly held notions. As Ivan, one of the main characters in Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov declares, if there is no God, then everything—including sexual assault—would be permitted.4 Or in the words of leading contemporary Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga, “God himself is the origin of moral constraints. It is his will, his commands or approvals, that determine what is right and wrong, morally acceptable or morally objectionable.”5 Or in the even more definitive words of Donald Trump supporter and top Evangelical apologist William Lane Craig, “the concept of morality loses all meaning in a universe without God. There can be no right and wrong . . . without God, good and evil do not exist.”6
Despite the fact that such an unequivocal, age-old, God-based view of morality continues to be shared by millions of people, its global popularity provides no cover for its intrinsic erroneousness. The deeply entrenched beliefs that there must be a God in order for morality to exist—and that we must believe in this God in order to be moral—are both problematic and, in many instances, pernicious. And while such a theistic approach to ethical behavior may have served humans well in bygone centuries, today—given our advanced understanding of human evolution, moral psychology, neurology, sociology, etc.—this God-based morality is at best unhelpful, and at worst maladaptive.7
Thus, while I can’t speak to the veracity of Judge Kavanagh’s denials of Dr. Ford’s accusations, I can confidently assert that his publicly purported belief in God during a United States Senate Judiciary Committee hearing should not, in any way, be accepted as some sort of ultimate guarantee of his truthfulness, his character, or his moral compass. And the pervasive premise that personal faith in the supernatural rests at the heart of moral living—a premise shared by our most powerful leaders—should not be accepted uncritically.
The brute fact is that morality based on belief in God—theistic morality—rests on untrue premises, limits our capacity for empathy and compassion, stymies our ability to take responsibility for our choices and actions, obfuscates the naturally evolved sources of ethical conduct, and ultimately thwarts moral progress, holding individuals and societies back from confronting the dire problems of the day and attending to the very real suffering they produce.
That said, my critique of theistic morality is not meant to impugn all people of faith. I happily recognize that many worshippers of God are moral and ethical and do a tremendous amount of good in the world. And not all religious people base their morality solely upon God, to be sure. Nor are all religious people irrationally fervent or dangerously dogmatic in their faith; many are humble in their religiosity, don’t think that their religion is the only true one, and don’t seek to force their religion on others. Such moderately religious people abound. But, unfortunately, other types of religious people—stronger, more fundamentalist—are also aplenty. For them, faith, ritual, and spiritual involvement are central, foundational aspects of their lives and identities. They are strident and vigorous in their religiosity. They are sure that they possess the One True Faith. They want everyone else to adopt their beliefs. They are dubious of other religious traditions, intolerant of other worldviews, and—above all—they are absolutely certain that without God, there can be no morality.
When confronting religion in the modern world, it is these more dogmatic fundamentalists that we must consistently contend with: Evangelical Christians, zealous Muslims, orthodox Jews, nationalistic Hindus, and so on. And it is these religious groups, and their traditional theistic beliefs, that comprise a loud and boisterous presence, an aggressive and antagonistic societal force, and—most importantly—a politically and culturally influential minority. As Chris Hedges explains in his book American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, while conservative religious fundamentalists may not constitute a majority of religious people out there, their societal impact is pervasive, demonstrably outweighing their numbers.8 As such, they continue to have an outsized role in shaping our world for the worse.9
After all, it was the resourcefulness and fortitude of people like Senator John Kennedy, Judge Brett Kavanaugh, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions—individuals supremely confident in a Bible-based morality—that brought us President Trump and his decidedly immoral political agenda.10
The Regressive Politics of Theistic Morality