Block - Conscience
Block - Conscience
Conscience
ELIZABETH SWEENY BLOCK
Theologians and ethicists have been writing about conscience for many centuries, yet a univocal
definition remains elusive. Richard Gula once wrote, “Trying to explain conscience is like trying
to nail jello to the wall; just when you think you have it pinned down, part of it begins to slip
away.”1 This is so because conceptions of conscience have developed and evolved over many
centuries, but also because conscience holds together, or even holds in tension, opposite poles of
the moral life. For instance, scholars often describe conscience as deeply private and personal,
even as it is profoundly relational, formed and exercised in community. Conscience also
mediates the tension between subjectivity and objectivity, between the self and the world.
Additionally, conscience names a process that involves the interior life of a person and not
simply her actions, and this is much more difficult to define with precision. Furthermore,
conscience cannot be easily separated from other ambiguous concepts, including freedom, truth,
authority, and church, which means conscience is necessarily representative of many theological
debates. Statements about the nature of conscience always imply larger determinations about
what the moral life entails and requires; therefore, much is at stake when theologians take up the
topic of conscience today.
Perhaps more important than defining conscience is identifying what having a conscience or
living as persons of conscience implies. James Bretzke, SJ, uses the phrase “conscience-based
moral living,” which rightly turns conscience into more of an action than an object. Conscience
is not a thing that we possess, but a way of life.2 This chapter provides a brief history of
conscience, including traditional terminology and distinctions associated with conscience. I offer
a brief section on Protestant and Orthodox conceptions of conscience, but the primary focus of
this chapter is on conscience in Roman Catholic moral theology since the Second Vatican
Council, after which scholarship on conscience exploded as theologians worked to situate
conscience in the new personalist paradigm of morality. I focus on three features of the
contemporary conscience: the holistic nature of conscience, shorthand for the moral self; the
primacy of conscience, although its work involves integrating numerous moral sources; and the
relationality and reciprocity of conscience. I conclude, all too briefly, with attention to two
ongoing challenges to conscience: the constant tension between conscience as discernment
versus obedience, which is a particular challenge for Catholics given the role of the magisterium
in moral matters, and the more pressing, non-denominational matter of the impact of cultures of
racism, misogyny, homophobia, and xenophobia on conscience. This short chapter cannot do
justice to conscience, but my hope is that it at least provides a helpful introduction and indicates
where there remains work to be done.
This statement on conscience is only the beginning of a flurry of activity around the term.
Conscience entered a new phase post-Vatican II, wherein it became less of a mechanism for
discrete decisions and more of a representation of a person’s moral self, which includes but
certainly is not limited to actions and concrete decisions. Widespread interest in conscience in
the decades following the Council is the result of the working out of a new paradigm in morality,
one that is person-centered or “personalist” as opposed to act-centered. That is, the Second
Vatican Council marked a shift in moral theology from a focus on specific actions as right or
wrong to a focus on the character and orientation of the person, although this shift was in the
making prior to the Council and has continued to evolve since then. Conscience, understood
traditionally as the faculty of moral decision making that determines how we act, was naturally
implicated in this paradigm shift. If morality is not determined solely by actions, but is in fact
also constituted by a person’s character and relationship with God, then understandings of
conscience must account for this change. Many scholars who have written about conscience in
the past fifty years have done so in order to situate conscience in this personalist paradigm. What
has been said about conscience has been in the service of accentuating the character, narrative,
and history of a person and not only her actions. In what follows, I will highlight three
significant features of conscience today: its holistic nature, its primacy, and its relationality.
Bernard Häring describes the experience of conscience as God’s calling the whole person.23
Richard Gula notes, “Whereas in the past we tried to restrict conscience to a function of the will
or of the intellect, today we understand conscience as an expression of the whole person. Simply
put, conscience is ‘me coming to a decision.’ ”24 Since the Second Vatican Council, many
scholars have emphasized the holistic nature of conscience, but a concrete definition of
conscience remains elusive, in part because conscience is not merely a “thing” to which we can
point. Scholarship on conscience has retained the association of conscience with an inner sense
of right and wrong but has also emphasized the roles of reason, grace, emotions, and intuition in
conscience and situated conscience within the many dimensions of the person’s experience,
including cultural and religious background, education, emotions, past history, and future
plans.25 For Hogan, conscience is a term that indicates moral self-governance and highlights that
moral activity is freely chosen.26 Anne Patrick identifies conscience as an aspect of the self, a
kind of personal moral awareness.27 These contemporary examples equate conscience with the
moral self and moral agency.
Gula describes conscience as a capacity, process, and judgment. This tripartite structure
illustrates the fluid nature of conscience and indicates that conscience is not merely a faculty or a
part of the body or the brain. As a capacity, conscience is “the fundamental characteristic of
being human”28 and “our general sense of value and … responsibility which makes it possible
for us to engage in moral discussions.”29 This capacity is often equated with synderesis,
sometimes referred to as “the spark of conscience.” As a process, conscience “searches for what
is right through accurate perception”30 and includes analysis and reflection. This is important
because it implies that conscience is in constant motion, always searching, on an endless journey
toward the truth. We are never finished; our story is always incomplete. Finally, Gula retains the
more common understanding of conscience as a “concrete judgment of what I must do in a
situation based on my personal perception and grasp of values.”31 This is a discrete act of
conscience, in a particular moment, introduced above as syneidesis or conscientia: the act of
applying moral knowledge to a particular situation.
Bretzke builds on this holistic picture of conscience by identifying conscience as a “modality
of being human,” that is, a way of being human in the world and which gives us insight into the
true nature of human morality.32 Bretzke focuses on what he calls “the spiral of conscience-
based moral living,” which further implies that conscience is not merely a faculty or judgment
but a way of life, our moral self always in progress.33 “A spiral suggests both a certain circularity
in the process of conscience development as well as an ongoing and upward progression as we
grow in moral wisdom and skill in putting this wisdom into practice.”34 Bretzke’s spiral begins
with and returns to the formation of conscience, which requires paying attention to a multitude of
sources of moral wisdom, especially to voices other than the ones we commonly, or want to,
hear; we must escape our comfort zone and hear the voices of those from whom we differ. In
between the forming and informing of our conscience comes reconsideration, reflection,
discernment, decision, and action, finally returning to formation. Even as scholars such as
Bretzke argue that conscience is not merely about decision making, often in our efforts to capture
the meaning of conscience we end up right back at conscience as judgment. Bretzke himself
notes the weakness of his spiral model: “It is still very intellectual and rationalistic and seems to
suggest that conscience is mostly about coming to the right answer.”35 However, Bretzke is
much more interested in identifying conscience as the process of “moral striving to seek out and
do good and avoid or minimize evil.” Here again it is evident that conscience names a process,
the ongoing work of moral selves on a journey.36
Legal scholar Robert Vischer similarly urges us to break conscience out of its “black box,”
wherein conscience is a law unto itself, accessible and accountable to no one. Conscience is “not
some self-contained black box but comprises convictions about right and wrong in the world of
actions and is as likely to serve as path of dialogue as path of isolation.”41 Although the moral
authority of conscience may be highly personal, the authority of conscience is made possible by
claims that originate outside the person. Conscience is not merely the means for justifying
whatever I believe to be right. Conscience exists and functions in relation to things outside itself,
including objective moral norms and the needs and well-being of the surrounding community.
Invoking conscience should not stop the conversation but open us to dialogue.
CHALLENGES OF CONSCIENCE
In 1874, John Henry Cardinal Newman wrote, “Conscience is the voice of God, whereas it is
fashionable on all hands now to consider it in one way or another a creation of man.”42 The same
could be said today. Because conscience is at least in part personal and private, there exists
always this danger that conscience will be purely self-referential, nothing more than a source of
self-justification for whatever we want to do, “a creation of man” with no connection to objective
moral truths. If I declare that my conscience dictates that I act this way, or if I contend that “my
conscience is clear,” does that simply make it so? The short answer is “no,” but this is tricky
territory.
Scholars generally agree that conscience is the medium between subjectivity and objectivity,
between the self and the world, including moral objectivity. As Curran puts it,
The subject pole concerns the human person and involves one’s basic orientation and the virtues or attitudes that
characterize each one. The object pole considers the world, the communities, and the relationships in which people
live and the values and principles that direct them in these areas. The church itself constitutes an important part of
the object pole, but the primary importance of the church for Christian morality requires that the church be
considered first in Catholic moral theology.43
The subject pole of the moral life encapsulates “who the person is as subject,” while the object
pole is constituted by “what the person does as agent.”44 The object pole of morality reminds us
that morality is not solely about individual humans and our feelings, desires, wishes, and hopes.
That there is an object pole of morality indicates not only that there is something true,
irrespective of whether you or I recognize or concur with this truth, but also that we as subjects
interact with objects, people, communities, and a world that are outside of us. The push and pull,
give and take, between these poles is conscience at work. This is again why the formation of
conscience with attention to a multitude of sources is critical; without this, conscience is in
danger of being purely self-referential.
This is a perennial problem surrounding conscience: how to navigate the personal and sacred
nature of conscience while also hearing, respecting, and living the truths of one’s faith. Ideally,
these components of the moral life are in harmony, but this is not always the case. In these
situations, is the work of conscience obedience or discernment? Bretzke has called this the next
great quaestio disputata in the Catholic Church.45 There are still those who identify a rightly
formed conscience as one that is fully aligned with Church teaching, while others argue for
respecting decisions made in conscience, even if those decisions appear to be “in objective non-
compliance” with Church teaching. Unlike Pope John Paul II, who worried about the separation
of freedom from truth and subsequently equated conscience with obedience in his 1993
encyclical Veritatis splendor, Pope Francis errs on the side of discernment. In Amoris laetitia,
Francis writes of the difficulty that Church leaders have in “mak[ing] room for the consciences
of the faithful, who very often respond as best they can to the Gospel amid their limitations, and
are capable of carrying out their own discernment in complex situations. We have been called to
form consciences, not to replace them.”46 This is a bold statement about the primacy of
conscience in relation to the magisterium.
Perhaps the greatest challenge to conscience today is not how to balance discernment and
obedience but how to form and inform our consciences in a world mired by structural sin, or
what Bryan Massingale calls “culturally legitimated social evil.”47 Racism, sexism, homophobia,
and xenophobia are daily realities, not only in explicit acts but also built into our systems,
structures, and cultures, such that we are implicated in injustice simply by virtue of our
participation in everyday life. Attending to conscience is a reminder to be deliberately self-
reflective, aware of who we are, what we are doing, and how what we do impacts who we are.
But we must also strive for a deep and honest awareness of our own context and culture, which
define us and form our ways of life. We must remove the blinders that conceal our own
involvement in sinful injustice. This problem reveals the inadequacy of invincible ignorance,
which too easily renders people blameless and fails to account for implicit cultural evils.
At a gathering of Catholic theologians, Massingale spoke these words: “Our moral theology
[is] becom[ing] conceptually complicit in structural injustice.”48 If we fail to understand
conscience as the moral self, relational, navigating the tension between discernment and
authority, accountable to the consciences of others, and wounded by unconscious biases and
cultural evils, then conscience becomes an inadequate term at best, an instrument of injustice at
worst. Conscience ought to unify, not divide.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bretzke, James, SJ. “Conscience and the Synod: An Evolving Quaestio Disputata.” Journal of
Moral Theology 5, no. 2 (2016): 167–72.
Cox, Kathryn Lilla. Water Shaping Stone: Faith, Relationships, and Conscience Formation.
Collegeville: Liturgical, 2015.
DeCosse, David E., and Kristin E. Heyer, eds. Conscience and Catholicism: Rights,
Responsibilities, and Institutional Responses. Maryknoll: Orbis, 2015.
DeCosse, David E., and Thomas A. Nairn, OFM, eds. Conscience and Catholic Health Care:
From Clinical Contexts to Governmental Mandates. Maryknoll: Orbis, 2017.
Hogan, Linda. Confronting the Truth: Conscience in the Catholic Tradition. Mahwah: Paulist,
2000.
Keenan, James, SJ. “Redeeming Conscience.” Theological Studies 76, no. 1 (2015): 129–47.
1 Richard Gula, SS, Reason Informed by Faith: Foundations of Catholic Morality (Mahwah: Paulist, 1989), 123.
2 James T. Bretzke, SJ, A Morally Complex World: Engaging Contemporary Moral Theology (Collegeville: Liturgical,
2004), 138.
3 Linda Hogan, Confronting the Truth: Conscience in the Catholic Tradition (Mahwah: Paulist, 2000), 37–8.
4 Charles Curran, The Catholic Moral Tradition Today: A Synthesis (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press,
1999), 175.
5 Hogan, Confronting the Truth, 67.
6 This is a distinction and synthesis that moral theologians still grapple with today. What is the relationship between the
person and her actions? In the twentieth century, the fundamental option theory placed greater emphasis on a person’s
orientation and less weight on actions, although a person’s orientation is expressed in and through her actions. See
Darlene Weaver, The Acting Person and Christian Moral Life (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 2011).
7 Rom. 7:19.
8 This summary of different positions on error is the work of Curran, Catholic Moral Tradition Today, 88.
9 Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et spes (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1965), § 16.
10 Dave Leal, “Against Conscience: A Protestant View,” in Conscience in World Religions, ed. Jayne Hoose (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1999), 21.
11 Ibid., 56.
12 Paul Tillich, Morality and Beyond, Library of Theological Ethics, foreword by William Schweiker (Louisville:
Westminster John Knox, [1963] 1995), 65.
13 Ibid., 77.
14 H. Richard Niebuhr, The Responsible Self: An Essay in Christian Moral Philosophy (New York: Harper & Row, 1963),
74.
15 Jeffrey Morgan, “Self-Knowledge and the Approximation of Divine Judgment: Conscience in the Practical Philosophy
and Moral Theology of Immanuel Kant,” Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 36, no. 1 (2016): 111.
16 Ibid., 119.
17 William Schweiker, “The Ethical Limits of Power: On the Perichoresis of Power,” Studies in Christian Ethics 29, no. 1
(2015): 12.
18 William Schweiker, “Responsibility and the Attunement of Conscience,” Journal of Religion 93, no. 4 (2013): 471.
19 Stephen Thomas, “Conscience in Orthodox Thought,” in Conscience in World Religions, ed. Jayne Hoose (Notre
Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1999), 104.
20 Ibid., 105.
21 Ibid., 106.
22 Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et spes, § 16.
23 Bernard Häring, Free and Faithful in Christ: Moral Theology for Clergy and Laity, Vol. 1 (New York: Crossroad,
1978), 227.
24 Gula, Reason Informed by Faith, 131.
25 For these descriptions of conscience, I am indebted to Charles Curran and Linda Hogan. See Curran, Catholic Moral
Tradition Today, 172, 186; and Hogan, Confronting the Truth, 9, 13.
26 Hogan, Confronting the Truth.
27 Anne E. Patrick, Liberating Conscience: Feminist Explorations in Catholic Moral Theology (New York: Continuum,
1996).
28 Gula, Reason Informed by Faith, 10, 244.
29 Ibid., 132.
30 Ibid.
31 Ibid.
32 Bretzke, A Morally Complex World, 130–1.
33 Ibid., 138–44.
34 Ibid., 138.
35 Ibid., 142.
36 It has been argued that conscience has become a means of being consistent with oneself rather than the means of
judging ourselves as God judges us. The worry is that conscience loses touch with the transcendent and universally
binding moral law against which we should judge ourselves. See Jeffrey Morgan, “A Loss of Judgment: The Dismissal
of Judicial Conscience in Recent Christian Ethics,” Journal of Religious Ethics 45, no. 3 (2017): 539–61.
37 Hogan, Confronting the Truth, 15.
38 Ibid., 14.
39 Häring, Free and Faithful in Christ, 224.
40 Linda Hogan, “Marriage Equality, Conscience, and the Catholic Tradition,” in Conscience and Catholicism: Rights,
Responsibilities, and Institutional Responses, ed. David E. DeCosse and Kristin E. Heyer (Maryknoll: Orbis, 2015), 91.
41 Robert Vischer, Conscience and the Common Good: Reclaiming the Space between Person and State (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2010), 22.
42 John Henry Cardinal Newman, Letter to the Duke of Norfolk, 247.
http://www.newmanreader.org/works/anglicans/volume2/gladstone/index.html#titlepage.
43 Curran, Catholic Moral Tradition Today, 83.
44 Ibid., 95.
45 James Bretzke, SJ, “Conscience and the Synod: An Evolving Quaestio Disputata,” Journal of Moral Theology 5, no. 2
(2016): 167–72.
46 Pope Francis, Amoris laetitia (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2016), § 37.
47 Bryan Massingale, “Social Sin versus Cultural Evil: Insights from African American Socio-Political Analysis,” paper
delivered at the 73rd Annual Convention of the Catholic Theological Society of America, Indianapolis, June 8, 2018.
See also, Bryan Massingale, “Conscience Formation and the Challenge of Unconscious Racial Bias,” in Conscience
and Catholicism: Rights, Responsibilities, and Institutional Responses, ed. David E. DeCosse and Kristin E. Heyer
(Maryknoll: Orbis, 2015), 53–68.
48 Ibid.