RESISTANCE IN ARMS THE TRUE MEANING OF LAW
I
When we stand up to question false
authority we should first make our footing firm by
showing we understand true authority and uphold it.
Let us be clear then as to the meaning of the word
law. It may be defined; an ordinance of reason,
the aim of which is the public good and promulgated
by the ruling power. Let us cite a few authorities.
“A human law bears the character of law so far
as it is in conformity with right reason; and in that
point of view it is manifestly derived from the Eternal
Law.” (Aquinas Ethicus, Vo, .)
Writing of laws that are unjust either in respect
to end, author or form, St. Thomas says: “Such
proceedings are rather acts of violence than laws;
because St. Augustine says: ‘A law that
is not just goes for no law at all.’”
(Aquinas Ethicus, Vo, .) “The
fundamental idea of all law,” writes Balmez,
“is that it be in accordance with reason, that
it be an emanation from reason, an application of
reason to society” (European Civilisation,
Cha. In the same chapter Balmez quotes St.
Thomas with approval: “The kingdom is not
made for the king, but the king for the kingdom”;
and he goes on to the natural inference: “That
all governments have been established for the good
of society, and that this alone should be the compass
to guide those who are in command, whatever be the
form of government.” It is likewise the
view of Mill, in Representative Government,
that the well-being of the governed is the sole object
of government. It was the view of Plato before
the Christian era: his ideal city should be established,
“that the whole City might be in the happiest
condition.” (The Republic, Book 4.) Calderwood
writes: “Political Government can be legitimately
constructed only on condition of the acknowledgment
of natural obligations and rights as inviolable.”
(Handbook of Modern Philosophy, Applied Ethics,
Se.) Here all schools and all times are in agreement.
Till these conditions are fulfilled for us we are
at war. When an independent and genuine Irish
Government is established we shall yield it a full
and hearty allegiance: the law shall then be
in repute. We do not stand now to deny the idea
of authority, but to say that the wrong people are
in authority, the wrong flag is over us.
II
“We must overthrow the arguments
that might be employed against us by the advocates
of blind submission to any power that happens to be
established,” writes Balmez, on resistance to
De Facto Governments. (European Civilisation,
Cha.) We could not be more explicit than the
famous Spanish theologian. To such arguments let
the following stand out from his long and emphatic
reply: “Illegitimate authority is
no authority at all; the idea of power involves the
idea of right, without which it is mere physical power,
that is force.” He writes further:
“The conqueror, who, by mere force of arms,
has subdued a nation, does not thereby acquire a right
to its possession; the government, which by gross
iniquities has despoiled entire classes of citizens,
exacted undue contributions, abolished legitimate
rights, cannot justify its acts by the simple fact
of its having sufficient strength to execute these
iniquities.” There is much that is equally
clear and definite. What extravagant things can
be said on the other side by people in high places
we know too well. Balmez in the same book and
chapter gives an excellent example and an excellent
reply: “Don Felix Amat, Archbishop of Palmyra,
in the posthumous work entitled Idea of the Church
Militant, makes use of these words: ’Jesus
Christ, by His plain and expressive answer, Render
to Cæsar the things that are Caesar’s, has
sufficiently established that the mere fact of a government’s
existence is sufficient for enforcing the obedience
of subjects to it....’ His work was forbidden
at Rome,” is Balmez’ expressive comment,
and he continues, “and whatever may have been
the motives for such a prohibition, we may rest assured
that, in the case of a book advocating such doctrines,
every man who is jealous of his rights might acquiesce
in the decree of the Sacred Congregation.”
So much for De Facto Government. It is
usurpation; by being consummated it does not become
legitimate. When its decrees are not resisted,
it does not mean we accept them in principle nor
can we even pretend to accept them but that
the hour to resist has not yet come. It is the
strategy of war.
III
We stand on the ground that the English
Government in Ireland is founded in usurpation and
as such deny its authority. But if it be argued,
assuming it as Ireland’s case, that a usurped
authority, gradually acquiesced in by the people,
ultimately becomes the same as legitimate, the reply
is still clear. For ourselves we meet the assumption
with a simple denial, appealing to Irish History for
evidence that we never acquiesced in the English Usurpation.
But to those who are not satisfied with this simple
denial, we can point out that even an authority, originally
founded legitimately, may be resisted when abusing
its power to the ruin of the Commonwealth. We
still stand on the ground that the English government
is founded in usurpation, but we can dispose of all
objections by proving the extremer case. This
is the case Dr. Murray, already quoted, discusses.
“The question,” he writes, “is about
resistance to an established and legitimate government
which abuses its power.” (Essays, Chiefly
Theological, Vo.) He continues: “The
common opinion of a large number of our theologians,
then, is that it is lawful to resist by force, and
if necessary to depose, the sovereign ruler or rulers,
in the extreme the very extreme case
wherein the following conditions are found united:
“1. The tyranny must be excessive intolerable.
“2. The tyranny must be manifest,
manifest to men of good sense and
right feeling.
“3. The evils inflicted by
the tyrant must be greater than those which
would ensue from resisting and deposing
him.
“4. There must be no other
available way of getting rid of the tyranny
except by recurring to the extreme course.
“5. There must be a moral certainty
of success.
“6. The revolution must be
one conducted or approved by the community at large
... the refusal of a small party in the State to join
with the overwhelming mass of their countrymen would
not render the resistance of the latter unlawful.”
(Essays, Chiefly Theological; see also Rickaby,
Moral Philosophy, Cha, Se.)
Some of these conditions are drawn
out at much length by Dr. Murray. I give what
is outstanding. How easily they could fit Irish
conditions must strike anyone. I think it might
fairly be said that our leaders generally would, if
asked to lay down conditions for a rising, have framed
some more stringent than these. It might be said,
in truth, of some of them that they seem to wait for
more than a moral certainty of success, an absolute
certainty, that can never be looked for in war.
IV
When a government through its own
iniquity ceases to exist, we must, to establish a
new government on a true and just basis, go back to
the origin of Civil Authority. No one argues
now for the Divine Right of Kings, but in studying
the old controversy we get light on the subject of
government that is of all time. To the conception
that kings held their power immediately from God,
“Suarez boldly opposed the thesis of the initial
sovereignty of the people; from whose consent, therefore,
all civil authority immediately sprang. So also,
in opposition to Melanchthon’s theory of governmental
omnipotence, Suarez a fortiori admitted the
right of the people to depose those princes who would
have shown themselves unworthy of the trust reposed
in them.” (De Wulf, History of Medieval Philosophy,
Third Edition, .) Suarez’ refutation of
the Anglican theory, described by Hallam as clear,
brief, and dispassionate, has won general admiration.
Hallam quotes him to the discredit of the English
divines: “For this power, by its very nature,
belongs to no one man but to a multitude of men.
This is a certain conclusion, being common to all
our authorities, as we find by St. Thomas, by the
Civil laws, and by the great canonists and casuists;
all of whom agree that the prince has that power of
law-giving which the people have given him. And
the reason is evident, since all men are born equal,
and consequently no one has a political jurisdiction
over another, nor any dominion; nor can we give any
reason from the nature of the thing why one man should
govern another rather than the contrary.”
(Hallam Literature of Europe, Vo, Cha.) Dr. Murray, in the essay already quoted,
speaks of Sir James Mackintosh as the ablest Protestant
writer who refuted the Anglican theory, which Mackintosh
speaks of as “The extravagance of thus representing
obedience as the only duty without an exception.”
Dr. Murray concludes his own essay on Resistance
to the Supreme Civil Power by a long passage from
Mackintosh, the weight and wisdom of which he praises.
The greater part of the passage is devoted to the
difficulties even of success and emphasising the terrible
evils of failure. In what has already been written
here I have been at pains rather to lay bare all possible
evils than to hide them. But when revolt has
become necessary and inevitable, then the conclusion
of the passage Dr. Murray quotes should be endorsed
by all: “An insurrection rendered necessary
by oppression, and warranted by a reasonable probability
of a happy termination, is an act of public virtue,
always environed with so much peril as to merit admiration.”
Yes, and given the happy termination, the right and
responsibility of establishing a new government rest
with the body of the people.
V
We come, then, to this conclusion,
that government is just only when rightfully established
and for the public good; that usurpation not only
may but ought to be resisted; that an authority originally
legitimate once it becomes habitually tyrannical may
be resisted and deposed; and that when from abuse
or tyranny a particular government ceases to exist,
we have to re-establish a true one. It is sometimes
carelessly said, “Liberty comes from anarchy,”
but this is a very dangerous doctrine. It would
be nearer truth to say from anarchy inevitably comes
tyranny. Men receive a despot to quell a mob.
But when a people, determined and disciplined, resolve
to have neither despotism nor anarchy but freedom,
then they act in the light of the Natural Law.
It is well put in the doctrine of St. Thomas, as given
by Turner in his History of Philosophy (Cha: “The redress to which the subjects
of a tyrant have a just right must be sought, not
by an individual, but by an authority temporarily
constituted by the people and acting according to
law.” Yes, and when wild and foolish people
talk hysterically of our defiance of all authority,
let us calmly show we best understand the basis of
Authority which is Truth, and most highly
reverence its presiding spirit which is
Liberty.