
Likewise, the universe, the community, and the individual, are in harmony when we are in divine order, in our place. As Williams puts it in the April 2005 Touchstone , Matter obeys soul, soul obeys Reason, which reflects the mind of God.
I believe in natural hierarchies. Not tyrannies. C. S. Lewis, in the Abolition of Man, writes that respect, for instance, to a parent, or to the aged, is a natural response. Patriotism is a natural repsonse. Reverence for God is a natural response. And while there are natural responses which are disordered, respect for the Crown is not one of them. When we reverence the Queen, as a Christian Prince, we show our reverence to the God who appointed her. Hannah More, in her response to Thomas Paine, put it this way: "He [Paine] does not wish to destroy Kings, but He by whom Kings reign". Having become disconnected from God, our ultimate authority, it follows that we also rebel against the Queen He has appointed for us, and the church He has given us. Republicanism is a sign of rebellion. It is un-natural, and dis-ordered. Perhaps, if we could return to the Old Testament, and have God ruling over us directly, it would be better. But God comes to us, and will come, as a King. Oops. No majority vote there. He has given us the Queen, as, in a sense, a placeholder for Himself. When He comes, He will receive the government. Until then, He has entrusted it to Elizabeth, his servant and viceregent against evil.
Reverencing hierarchy does not mean the Queen should be an absolute tyrant. Modern thinking assumes that "leadership" means superiority. But the monarchy reminds us of the older idea of Headship. The Queen is a woman, and in that sense is equal with her subjects. But by her covenant with them and with God, she becomes more than that. At her coronation, the Lords Temporal and Spiritual take her hands, and lift her up onto the Throne, to become the servant of her people. Married to England, in Elizabeth I's phrase. And the people cry out "Vivat Regina!"-The acclamation, the recognition, the acceptance. The Queen is the epitome of servant leadership, and carries that burden, promising in fact to respect and uphold the dignity of all her subjects. "Maintain the laws and liberties of all your respective peoples...stop the growth of iniquity....Cause Justice with mercy to be done in all your lands....Protect the Holy Church of God and the true profession of the gospel...." The coronation is an affirmation of human dignity, for it is a part of dignity to recognise government. The coronation thus includes three parts. The anointing, where God recognises the Queen, and the Queen recognises and covenants with God. The acclamation, where the people recognise the Queen, and she them, promising to defend their liberties. And the enthroning, where the nobility, Spiritual and Temporal, raise her up above them, to become Queen regnant. That is why American republicanism, with all its many strengths, is flawed. It has a strong conception of human dignity, but no transcendent framework with which to protect it. So, "human dignity" in the United States, is often translated to "rights" or "freedoms". Yes, liberty is important. But it protects human dignity, it is not the same. When republicans demand the abolition of monarchy because of human dignity, they are really demanding the abolition of monarchy because of freedom, or "the Rights of Man". The Queen, and social order generally, puts curb on freedom, and stops liberty becoming license. A conception of an over-arching moral and social order sets one free to do what is right, not what one wants. That is why order is a conservative virtue.
Reverence for, and submission to, order is a natural response. Burke puts it this way:
"We have real hearts of flesh and blood beating in our bosoms. We fear God; we look up with awe to kings; with affection to parliaments; with duty to magistrates; with reverence to priests; and with respect to nobility. Why? Because when such ideas are brought before our minds, it is natural to be so."
To be a loyal subject is not a loss of personhood, but a glory. To affirm the monarchy is not a loss of dignity, but an affirmation of it.
Pitt the Younger (originally posted here)
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