MOSAIC Fall 2014 | Page 14

What does it mean to be The Natural Law: “Written Upon Our Hearts” God’s universal standard of right and wrong is rooted in our human nature and knowable through reason and a well-formed conscience. Dr. Mark Latkovic L et’s face it. On the subject of morality, Unfortunately, the terms “nature” and “law” our world is really confused. Virtue is vice aren’t looked at favorably these days. When our and vice is virtue—although we don’t use secular culture hears law, they primarily hear the language of virtue and vice much anymore. “no.” When they hear nature, they hear only But we do talk a lot about rights. (Oh do we talk “environment.” about rights!) That’s not always a bad thing—by But the Church uses these terms in a much no means—particularly when we link rights with duties. But the Catholic Church also has had that teaching may involve a firm no—even an guardianship of an older language: the language absolute no—to a particular evil such as abortion of natural law. or euthanasia. What is Natural Law? Moral Right from Moral Wrong When she speaks of “natural law,” the Church indicates to us that it is a moral law whose principles pertain to free human nature. This is the same law that St. Paul said God has “written in our hearts” (cf., Rom 2:15). So natural law is both a “supernatural” reality and a “natural” one. St. Thomas Aquinas indicates this twofold character when he defines natural law as “nothing else than the rational creature’s participation of the eternal law” (Summa Theologiae, I-II, Q. 91, a. 2). By eternal law, St. Thomas means God’s wise and loving plan for all of his creation. Thomas also calls it “Divine Providence.” Natural law, then, is our way of sharing in God’s own governance of the world by means of human reason. Put another way: God has made all men and women with a particular nature—one that can both reason and will—and, when reasoning about practical matters, we can look at our actions and ask, “Is this act in accord with the highest moral standard of all: that of God’s eternal law?” 12 different sense in her moral teaching, even if Here’s where man’s moral conscience comes in. It is intimately related to natural law in that it mediates God’s law to our minds. Without conscience, we wouldn’t even be able to know what God’s law is. This is why conscience is best understood as our basic awareness of moral truth and not as a gut feeling or a mysterious inner voice. It of course includes our feelings (we are bodily beings after all), but ultimately it’s a rational judgment about what is (or was) right or wrong to do. The reason we must always follow the dictates of our conscience is due to its “proximate” character: it is our final and best assessment of what is morally good and bad. But conscience can err! It doesn’t always tell us correctly what the demands of God’s law are. So we must form it with proper care. MOSAIC Applies to All and Everywhere There is an objectivity and universality to natural law because of its grounding in human nature. Thus it applies to