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Of Lawyers & Pastors

by I.J.SINGH

 

Most readers will look askance at my clubbing the two together. We generally don't think of lawyers and pastors serving a common purpose or having a similar mindset. In our minds they reside worlds apart, even at cross purposes to each other, rarely coming close.

This becomes supremely clear when we realize that Sikhi has no ordained priestly class with its inherent ecclesiastical authority. Any respect that a Sikh serving as a minister gets derives from his or her own personal place in society and is not necessarily connected to the office.

In the common perceptions in the wider contemporary society, a lawyer is perhaps none else than the modern hit man. A generation or two ago, if we had irresolute differences with our fellow humans and there was no solution in sight, we would fight our battles personally or hire hit men.

Now the hired help is different as is the arena. In our civilized, cultured existence, we depend on a hired hand to fight our duels and get us justice in a courtroom. And the rules of battle are well defined. There is even a referee or a judge - an arbiter of our do or die struggle.

Come to think of it, the priest or pastor is not much different. He weighs our sins in this life and awards us reward or punishment in the next. When our transgressions appear outrageously beyond the pale, he may pronounce a sentence of eternal hell, fire and damnation - for ever, like life sentence without parole that our secular courts might dispense. Often his edict might be accompanied by another - that the sinner be shunned. But the rules of evidence are different.

Such idle musings with my lawyer-friends have brought me to the point where the two juridical systems appear not quite so far apart - almost like kissing cousins. Of course, in our civilized existence, neither the lawyer nor the rabbi is reduced to the status of "hit man."

A society of people - whether religious or not, related by blood and family or one of strangers who chose to share living space - find soon enough that they are interdependent and that much synchrony and symbiosis are necessary for survival; they enrich the quality of life.

An automatic next step is to construct and agree on rules of conduct that govern the individuals and a system where every participant has a voice and a stake. At the same time a code and process for enforcement of rules become vital. Living societies then bring forth people who have a vision of how that society functions coherently and predictably.

This is how families survive, societies are born, and nations come into existence.

Who then are the philosophers of a society that define its vision, parse it, interpret it, and ensure that there is a code of conduct - a set of laws - to keep the engines rolling?

Of course, that would be the lawyers if we are in a non-religious secular society. Lawyers don't often define the fundamentals of a society. For example, it was not lawyers who first cogitated on and advanced the idea of fundamental rights of people in this country when it was founded. That is a function of the people - vox populi - a democratically elected legislature that is the voice of ordinary citizens. But it is lawyers on whom we depend for applying these laws and interpreting them.

Now when we need to know if we should include women, Blacks and Asians in those who are also endowed with equal rights, or when we are not sure whether to include gays in the people that enjoy equal rights and protection of the law, where do we go? Of course, to the philosophers of our society - the lawyers.

Is a particular punishment cruel and harsh? The lawyers will parse that question. What to do with a habitual offender (an egregious sinner) like a Bernie Madoff? Again, lawyers will help us crack that nut. Shall we wage pre-emptive war? How shall we define the rights of mothers, fathers and children when a family falls apart? The lawyers will help us interpret the laws and tweak the results.

Vox populi is indeed vox dei but it needs translation, interpretation and application. And the lawyers make that possible. Their preoccupation, indeed their raison d'être, is and should be the creation of a just and secular society where every person and every religion, too, has the freedom to exist and an equal place at the table. Hence their moniker as "philosophers of modern society."

Others who find that the voice of God is channeled through the clergy know that in a congregation (sangat, in Sikh parlance), it appears as the voice of the people.

Thus are religions born and practiced until they are corrupted by the levers of political or economic power.

That is why even in the most secular societies many of the rules of conduct spring from the religious underpinnings of a society. This is necessarily so because individual values in their collectivity shape a society, while values of individual morality and ethics often spring from and are grounded in religious formulations.

This absolutely does not mean that religious people have a franchise on ethics and morality or that atheists and agnostics cannot be moral icons.

What it means is that keeping in view the increasingly multifaith character of many societies and the consequent importance of separating church and state, it becomes critical to highlight the values and rules but not a defined route or a particular model of religion. A secular society, even though with religious values at its core, has no business diminishing even the atheist.

Since most societies depend on religions to dissect and teach ethical and moral framework of a society, it follows then that the clergy should be pushing less a life in the hereafter and more a behavioural model for a progressive connected people. Then and only then can a religion define a way of life.

It seems that then pastors and lawyers would be supplementing and complementing each other's efforts and not working at cross purposes.

I wish that lawyers would not follow Abe Lincoln's mocking words to "hammer the facts if you have the facts on your side, hammer the law if you have the law on your side, and hammer the table if you have neither the facts nor the law on your side." Then it might move us beyond Shakespeare's advice asking that we "first kill all the lawyers."

It seems to me that procedurally both religions and law honour tradition in order to maintain continuity of a systematic thought process in society. Except that lawyers label it "precedent" while priests look for "God's dictum" in their traditions.

Lawyers honour precedent, yet are able to, and often delight in, tweaking and extending its interpretation. Pastors, on the other hand, often tend to hide behind tradition, dub it sacrosanct, and refuse to entertain any inquiry into it. It seems that while one enlightens, the other obscures. Perhaps this indicates the inability of clergy to explore their own limitations. Introspection that should be a pastoral trait rarely appears to be.

Exceptions are few and delightful. The Talmud presents a significant departure in religious practices in that it remains an ongoing reinterpretation and application of scriptural writing. On the other hand, there exist impressively brilliant legal minds, too, which are most reluctant to move beyond a literal interpretation of law in order to remain faithful to the original intent and language of the society's founders. (Some such minds even end up on the Supreme Court.)

If law posits an adversarial confrontational model for ferreting out the truth, it seems that religions and the clergy that advocate an exclusionary vision are not much better when they fail to promote the universal connectivity that binds us all, irrespective of the religious label .

In religions, the system of ecclesiastical justice is often such that the clergy seems to retain the power of prosecutor, judge, jury and hangman. Not so in law.

Earlier I had drawn a distinction between the law that punishes us as soon as it can catch us for our transgressions in life, and religions that punish our sins in this life with consequences in the next. But it was not always thus.

Until the middle ages, religions demanded their pound of flesh here and now - and they could do so because of the unholy alliance of "church and state."

Witness, for instance, the crusades, jihads and the Inquisition. Even though rare, shades of this continue to exist. Look at one manifestation of Islamic law (sharia) in which an adulterer is stoned to death even today in some societies.

Most religions, however, having lost political and military power are content to condemn the sinner to shunning in this world or punishment in the hereafter.

Religions progressively lost their earthly muscle when political power and religious authority remained no longer joined at the hip. Clearly, a model of vigorous debate in an adversarial system with an unbiased judge in the middle to weigh precedent and law cannot occur in religious societies when clergy assumes powers of prosecutor, jury, judge and hangman. This destroys the presumption of innocence that is the hall mark of functioning secular societies.

It is in discussion and debate that we define our goals, sharpen our focus and hone our skills. Law lives and dies by this adversarial model. Religions, on the other hand, run away from discussion and dialogue, even though it was Guru Nanak's preferred method of teaching.

Sikhs were willed by their Gurus a system of justice that was open, just and compassionate. But we seem to have lost it. It is one that we need to discuss, debate and rediscover.

One fundamental of this is the miri-piri doctrine. It is often erroneously interpreted to mean that politics and religion are inseparable. Others suggest that piri qualifies miri in the sense that we need to conduct our worldly affairs (settle our differences, allocate resources, frame and execute policy, for example) within an ethical framework. In this context, then, lawyers arguably have become "hit-men" because they have lost sight of the moral underpinnings (the piri, so to speak) of their profession, and this explains the need for some soul-searching.

A fine example of discourse on this is The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession by Anthony Kronman, the Dean of Yale Law School.

Sikhi once had a somewhat embryonic model system of internal justice, one that was centuries ahead for that culture and time, but one that we failed to treasure or nurture. It promised a body of precedent (tradition), a five member panel of Sikhs in good standing (a jury of peers?), with the Akal Takht as the highest seat where matters could be argued and justice rendered.

To drive the lesson home, Guru Gobind Singh himself appeared at such a panel, as did Maharaja Ranjit Singh (the much admired 19th century ruler of Punjab) , and in the late 20th century, a ho-hum Chief Minister of Punjab, Surjeet Singh Barnala. The lesson: No one is above the law - not even a Founder-Master of the faith.

But we seem to have mutated Akal Takht into an all-in-one prosecutor, judge, jury and hangman. This, in spite of the fact that its head (Akal Takht Jathedar) remains a bureaucrat not necessarily steeped in Sikhism - its traditions, history or laws; these are fundamentals from which should flow interpretations and applications.

Have we then stopped the evolutionary process of Sikh society and its laws? Have we become frozen in time?

I have argued elsewhere how we should look at the five Takhts, how judges (Jathedars) should be nominated, appointed or removed; what qualifications should they come with. An ecclesiastical system of justice requires a whole new system of lower courts and procedural safeguards that we haven't even thought about. What we absolutely do not need is a pope but that's what we seem to be relentlessly pushing towards.

I see that during the past decade many young Sikhs have chosen law as their life's work. I salute their spirit and skill at dissecting ideas. I specially acknowledge a few young Sikh attorneys - especially those associated with SALDEF, Sikh Coalition and United Sikhs. They are moving us into the 21st century as equal citizens in a progressive society.

I particularly want to note here their disputations and conversations that have benefited me immensely in exploring this topic today. I am indebted to them. I have never seen a lawyer hankering after anonymity, but these young people chose to remain unnamed today.

For much of the world, morals have a religious underpinning, but elaborate theories of morality and justice have been articulated in ways that leave religions largely, if not entirely, out of the mix. Yes, lawyers have a lot to learn about morality, but priests/pastors have a lot to learn from law and lawyers in a just society.

Consider this: If a judge or jury abandoned the rules of evidence and relied instead on "faith" to send a man to prison, a popular outcry would ensue, and appropriately so, against what would be deemed a "miscarriage of justice"; both pastors and lawyers would be marching alongside the rest of us.

On the other hand, when preachers make claims about the nature of God and morality with certitude, they aren't as faithful to the rules of evidence as they should want to be. This then becomes intellectually dishonest or hypocritical, especially when preachers try to turn their edicts into public policy.

Pastors and lawyers need each other. History tells us that the early training for a lawyer until as recently as the mid-19th century was only apprenticeship and the education for a gentleman; for a pastor it was faith, dogma and little else. Hence this tribute to law, lawyers and pastors, even though many of them shake their heads in disbelief when I push what I have argued here.

There was a time when I dismissed both pastors and lawyers peremptorily. They were little more than their shenanigans, I thought. A friend saw this essay while it was still under construction and quickly blurted out, "Lawyers have the integrity of used car salesmen and the style of ambulance chasers."

Said I: "And pastors are now widely associated with pedophilia, while surgeons and anatomists historically shared their professional identity with barbers and grave robbers respectively." (I am an anatomist.)

Now, if I had my druthers, I think I'd both a lawyer and a pastor be - exactly half of each.

October 13, 2009

ijsingh99@gmail.com

Conversation about this article

1: Amardeep (U.S.A.), October 18, 2009, 11:06 AM.

It is kind of a funny article and makes many interesting points (as always).

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