'Something not to be grasped': notes on equality on the occasion of the Twentieth Anniversary of Mulieris Dignitatem.

AuthorMcCarthy, Margaret

INTRODUCTION

As a world riving in the wake of that well-known French call to arms, it is almost unthinkable to question the equality of everyone. Everything has been so efficiently equalized, not the less so with postmodernity, which has only distributed equality around more broadly, more evenly, between cultures, and species no less, through its unmasking and breaking up of all the old universals and their hierarchical "binarisms." The American "all men are created equal" effectively drove the creation of a new nation, so captivating was its content. And if the first century of that nation's existence was marked by a reveling in the lack of class distinction so characteristic of the ancienne regime and then in the long struggle to overcome the racial divide, the second century would add the struggle of including women among those already equal to men.

What is it that is so desirable about equality? It hardly needs saying that no human being likes to be treated as inferior to others. Given the widespread experience of "power struggles," it should come as no surprise that when one catches a glimpse of the fundamental and equally distributed dignity of being human, and when, moreover, one feels something new in the air that recognizes that dignity, the desire to move toward it and away from everything that calls it into question is irrepressible.

When the equality in question is between men and women, certain things come to mind almost universally. On the positive side, equality affirms that "women are fully human and are to be valued as such," (1) and that each person is to be allowed "to come into his or her own" (2) in a movement toward their destiny of "human flourishing." (3) On the negative side, "whatever diminishes or denies the full humanity of women" is opposed, and theologically speaking, any such diminution is judged "not to reflect the divine or an authentic relation to the divine or the authentic nature of things." (4) In short, and in the words of one feminist, equality between man and woman means "a concomitant valuing of each other, a common regard marked by trust, respect, and affection in contrast to competition, domination, or assertions of superiority." (5) Commonplace and uncontestable meanings of "equality" such as these are put forth today without much ado, even if in the past much ado has had to be made, and not over nothing.

  1. INTRODUCTION TO THE PROBLEM OF EQUALITY

    One cannot, however, talk about "equality" without setting off certain alarms. By ancient definition, equality is the contrary of "the greater and the lesser" and is achieved by a kind of standing in between them--as an intermediary, as it were--equalizing them, taking something from the greater and giving it to the lesser. (6) It can be seen at work, for example, at the level of quantity (more or less/fewer) or at the level of a certain quality (hot or cold), where "equal" would mean that two children have the same number of jelly beans or that two glasses of water are of the same temperature. Equality is no happy bedfellow with differences. Now, as if proof was needed, the unhappy marriage of the two is plain for all to see in today's culture, which in its race toward equality must always play down, on pain of excommunication, obvious differences of the truly "greater and lesser" sort--real inequalities, which undeniably exist between human beings at the level of mental, physical, and moral capacity and achievement. If the denial of obvious differences (of the unequal kind) was not painful enough, what is worse is that when it comes to the kinds of differences that mark and define interpersonal relations between a son or daughter and his or her mother and father, and that between a man and a woman, "equality talk" invariably has a way of short-circuiting important differences, the uniqueness of one with respect to the other, the distinct needs, and the respective responsibilities that are called forth on account of these distinct needs. Mothers and fathers become generic "parents"; husbands and wives become "partners," or even "party A" and "party B"; boys, girls, and friends become just plain "people." With this kind of equality comes rights that more often than not serve to sever natural bonds, as, for example, with abortion rights, sexual rights, and children's rights.

    That such a tendency toward the "evening out of things" should happen in the name of equality should come as no surprise, since, as mentioned, equality understands the distinction between the things alleged to be equal as a distinction of the greater and lesser sort. In fact, equality always operates on the assumption that the two things which are "equal" must be able to be by nature greater or less! (7) On this assumption, when it comes to the equality of women and men, the unique differences that can be found at the most basic level of the "division of labor" between them, such as the fact that only men can "beget" and only women can ovulate, carry, give birth to, and nurse a child, must be played down. (8) For to possess "more of something" (unequally in the case of commonly held traits, such as physical strength or empathy, for example, or exclusively in the case of certain anatomical features and processes) necessarily suggests diminishment of the other or that something has been "taken away from" the other, thus putting into question his or her equal dignity and worth and unleashing the various envies and fears. Freud's envious female comes to mind, but also the more recently discovered male, driven as he is by "womb envy" and fear. (9) It was not for nothing that the Grand Dame of postmodern "difference feminism," Luce Irigaray, dumped the language of equality altogether when she asked insubordinately, "Equal to whom?" (10)

    With the assumed, albeit unacknowledged, "hierarchy" of superiors and inferiors in the background, equality does not only mean "evening things out" or "giving everybody a chance" to do what only some did before. If equality means "equal access," it does so only as it looks toward the total interchangeability of the equal parties and their consequent independence one from the other. (11) This is no mere by-product of "equality," as can be seen in the speeches of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the pioneer of the American suffragette movement, who exhorted women to resist their natural tendency to "lean on men," and instead, in the more masculine spirit, "make the voyage of life alone." (12) Egalitarian equality is the big erasure of dependence. It belongs to that movement of equal brothers--now siblings--who need no longer make reference to their dependence on a common Father. (13)

    None of this conflicts substantially with those who, in opposition to the "over-against-ness" and "either-or-ness" of the patriarchal past, propose a feminism of "relationality" and other such synonyms like "mutuality," "reciprocity," and "connectedness." (14) For even as bad male (egocentric and detached) autonomy is eschewed, (15) what is put forth in its stead is a "relationality" that is quite carefully and consistently put at arm's length from any implied constitutive (intrinsic) dependence, which the element of unique non-interchangeable differences puts into evidence. (16) This is particularly clear in that very unique feminist brand of exuberance over the Trinity (which Christians generally agree to be the fount of human relations). Feminists such as Elizabeth Johnson speak rather tamely about reconceiving Trinitarian relations, (17) while others speak more honestly about a "total revision ... in light of contemporary thought patterns." (18) Such a "revision" would purge the Trinity of its alleged "subordinationist elements," (19) by which is meant the entire apparatus that, prior to revision, had upheld the much-desired relationality, namely its "order," "hierarchy," "relations of origin," "processions," and the unique "hypostases," which those relations are understood to posit. (20) And what is left? "[A] relational pattern of mutual giving and receiving according to each one's capacity and style," (21) where each, no doubt, gets to do everything. (22) A more "updated" Trinity allows "relational feminists" to make a move that would let all members of all other (non-divine) relations have their cake and eat it too, so to speak, granting them "friendship" (23) while at the same time preventing the relationship from making any claims on or limitations of the parties in question. This it seems is what Johnson means by "relational independence" and the "reciprocity/independence dialectic." (24)

    All of this effort simply illustrates the problem equality has with difference. It would take something really out of this world to at least hold them together in a paradox. Indeed, only in the wake of that Christian novelty of creation could it be said that all men (inclusively speaking) were equal on account of their common dependence on the Creator, in whose image they were all created. (25) Moreover, it was in view of the disclosure of the inner life of the Creator--in whom equality, if it did not exist on account of the distinction of Persons (the East), coincided with it (the West)--that certain fundamental distinctions between human persons--distinctions that sexual difference sets up between men and women and between them and their children--could be understood in terms other than greater-and-lesser or superior-and-inferior. Even if the Christian tradition has, with everyone else, had difficulty affirming the equality of men and women as such and in their relation to each other, (26) the elements are there (and perhaps only there)--as has been shown by several recent nineteenth- and twentieth-century figures such as M.J. Scheeben, E. Pzywara, and H. Urs von Balthasar, (27) all of whom, reaching into the deposit of the Faith, have brought such distinctions to bear on precisely those relations. More recently, Pope John Paul II has enshrined...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT