CHAP. VI.
Of Paternal Power.
Sec. 52. IT may perhaps be
censured as an impertinent criticism, in a discourse of this nature, to find
fault with words and names, that have obtained in the world: and yet possibly it
may not be amiss to offer new ones, when the old are apt to lead men into
mistakes, as this of paternal power probably has done, which seems so to place
the power of parents over their children wholly in the father, as if the mother
had no share in it; whereas, if we consult reason or revelation, we shall find,
she hath an equal title. This may give one reason to ask, whether this might not
be more properly called parental power? for whatever obligation nature and the
right of generation lays on children, it must certainly bind them equal to both
the concurrent causes of it. And accordingly we see the positive law of God
every where joins them together, without distinction, when it commands the
obedience of children, Honour thy father and thy mother, Exod. xx. 12. Whosoever
curseth his father or his mother, Lev. xx. 9. Ye shall fear every man his mother
and his father, Lev. xix. 3. Children, obey your parents, &c. Eph. vi. 1. is the
stile of the Old and New Testament.
Sec. 53. Had but this one thing been well considered, without looking any
deeper into the matter, it might perhaps have kept men from running into those
gross mistakes, they have made, about this power of parents; which, however it
might, without any great harshness, bear the name of absolute dominion, and
regal authority, when under the title of paternal power it seemed appropriated
to the father, would yet have founded but oddly, and in the very name shewn the
absurdity, if this supposed absolute power over children had been called
parental; and thereby have discovered, that it belonged to the mother too: for
it will but very ill serve the turn of those men, who contend so much for the
absolute power and authority of the fatherhood, as they call it, that the mother
should have any share in it; and it would have but ill supported the monarchy
they contend for, when by the very name it appeared, that that fundamental
authority, from whence they would derive their government of a single person
only, was not placed in one, but two persons jointly. But to let this of names
pass.
Sec. 54. Though I have said above, Chap. II. That all men by nature are
equal, I cannot be supposed to understand all sorts of equality: age or virtue
may give men a just precedency: excellency of parts and merit may place others
above the common level: birth may subject some, and alliance or benefits others,
to pay an observance to those to whom nature, gratitude, or other respects, may
have made it due: and yet all this consists with the equality, which all men are
in, in respect of jurisdiction or dominion one over another; which was the
equality I there spoke of, as proper to the business in hand, being that equal
right, that every man hath, to his natural freedom, without being subjected to
the will or authority of any other man.
Sec. 55. Children, I confess, are not born in this full state of equality,
though they are born to it. Their parents have a sort of rule and jurisdiction
over them, when they come into the world, and for some time after; but it is but
a temporary one. The bonds of this subjection are like the swaddling clothes
they art wrapt up in, and supported by, in the weakness of their infancy: age
and reason as they grow up, loosen them, till at length they drop quite off, and
leave a man at his own free disposal.
Sec. 56. Adam was created a perfect man, his body and mind in full possession
of their strength and reason, and so was capable, from the first instant of his
being to provide for his own support and preservation, and govern his actions
according to the dictates of the law of reason which God had implanted in him.
From him the world is peopled with his descendants, who are all born infants,
weak and helpless, without knowledge or understanding: but to supply the defects
of this imperfect state, till the improvement of growth and age hath removed
them, Adam and Eve, and after them all parents were, by the law of nature, under
an obligation to preserve, nourish, and educate the children they had begotten;
not as their own workmanship, but the workmanship of their own maker, the
Almighty, to whom they were to be accountable for them.
Sec. 57. The law, that was to govern Adam, was the same that was to govern
all his posterity, the law of reason. But his offspring having another way of
entrance into the world, different from him, by a natural birth, that produced
them ignorant and without the use of reason, they were not presently under that
law; for no body can be under a law, which is not promulgated to him; and this
law being promulgated or made known by reason only, he that is not come to the
use of his reason, cannot be said to be under this law; and Adam's children,
being not presently as soon as born under this law of reason, were not presently
free: for law, in its true notion, is not so much the limitation as the
direction of a free and intelligent agent to his proper interest, and prescribes
no farther than is for the general good of those under that law: could they be
happier without it, the law, as an useless thing, would of itself vanish; and
that ill deserves the name of confinement which hedges us in only from bogs and
precipices. So that, however it may be mistaken, the end of law is not to
abolish or restrain, but to preserve and enlarge freedom: for in all the states
of created beings capable of laws, where there is no law, there is no freedom:
for liberty is, to be free from restraint and violence from others; which cannot
be, where there is no law: but freedom is not, as we are told, a liberty for
every man to do what he lists: (for who could be free, when every other man's
humour might domineer over him?) but a liberty to dispose, and order as he
lists, his person, actions, possessions, and his whole property, within the
allowance of those laws under which he is, and therein not to be subject to the
arbitrary will of another, but freely follow his own.
Sec. 58. The power, then, that parents have over their children, arises from
that duty which is incumbent on them, to take care of their off-spring, during
the imperfect state of childhood. To inform the mind, and govern the actions of
their yet ignorant nonage, till reason shall take its place, and ease them of
that trouble, is what the children want, and the parents are bound to: for God
having given man an understanding to direct his actions, has allowed him a
freedom of will, and liberty of acting, as properly belonging thereunto, within
the bounds of that law he is under. But whilst he is in an estate, wherein he
has not understanding of his own to direct his will, he is not to have any will
of his own to follow: he that understands for him, must will for him too; he
must prescribe to his will, and regulate his actions; but when he comes to the
estate that made his father a freeman, the son is a freeman too.
Sec. 59. This holds in all the laws a man is under, whether natural or civil.
Is a man under the law of nature? What made him free of that law? what gave him
a free disposing of his property, according to his own will, within the compass
of that law? I answer, a state of maturity wherein he might be supposed capable
to know that law, that so he might keep his actions within the bounds of it.
When he has acquired that state, he is presumed to know how far that law is to
be his guide, and how far he may make use of his freedom, and so comes to have
it; till then, some body else must guide him, who is presumed to know how far
the law allows a liberty. If such a state of reason, such an age of discretion
made him free, the same shall make his son free too. Is a man under the law of
England? What made him free of that law? that is, to have the liberty to dispose
of his actions and possessions according to his own will, within the permission
of that law? A capacity of knowing that law; which is supposed by that law, at
the age of one and twenty years, and in some cases sooner. If this made the
father free, it shall make the son free too. Till then we see the law allows the
son to have no will, but he is to be guided by the will of his father or
guardian, who is to understand for him. And if the father die, and fail to
substitute a deputy in his trust; if he hath not provided a tutor, to govern his
son, during his minority, during his want of understanding, the law takes care
to do it; some other must govern him, and be a will to him, till he hath
attained to a state of freedom, and his understanding be fit to take the
government of his will. But after that, the father and son are equally free as
much as tutor and pupil after nonage; equally subjects of the same law together,
without any dominion left in the father over the life, liberty, or estate of his
son, whether they be only in the state and under the law of nature, or under the
positive laws of an established government.
Sec. 60. But if, through defects that may happen out of the ordinary course
of nature, any one comes not to such a degree of reason, wherein he might be
supposed capable of knowing the law, and so living within the rules of it, he is
never capable of being a free man, he is never let loose to the disposure of his
own will (because he knows no bounds to it, has not understanding, its proper
guide) but is continued under the tuition and government of others, all the time
his own understanding is uncapable of that charge. And so lunatics and ideots
are never set free from the government of their parents; children, who are not
as yet come unto those years whereat they may have; and innocents which are
excluded by a natural defect from ever having; thirdly, madmen, which for the
present cannot possibly have the use of right reason to guide themselves, have
for their guide, the reason that guideth other men which are tutors over them,
to seek and procure their good for them, says Hooker, Eccl. Pol. lib. i. sec. 7.
All which seems no more than that duty, which God and nature has laid on man, as
well as other creatures, to preserve their offspring, till they can be able to
shift for themselves, and will scarce amount to an instance or proof of parents
regal authority.
Sec. 61. Thus we are born free, as we are born rational; not that we have
actually the exercise of either: age, that brings one, brings with it the other
too. And thus we see how natural freedom and subjection to parents may consist
together, and are both founded on the same principle. A child is free by his
father's title, by his father's understanding, which is to govern him till he
hath it of his own. The freedom of a man at years of discretion, and the
subjection of a child to his parents, whilst yet short of that age, are so
consistent, and so distinguishable, that the most blinded contenders for
monarchy, by right of fatherhood, cannot miss this difference; the most
obstinate cannot but allow their consistency: for were their doctrine all true,
were the right heir of Adam now known, and by that title settled a monarch in
his throne, invested with all the absolute unlimited power Sir Robert Filmer
talks of; if he should die as soon as his heir were born, must not the child,
notwithstanding he were never so free, never so much sovereign, be in subjection
to his mother and nurse, to tutors and governors, till age and education brought
him reason and ability to govern himself and others? The necessities of his
life, the health of his body, and the information of his mind, would require him
to be directed by the will of others, and not his own; and yet will any one
think, that this restraint and subjection were inconsistent with, or spoiled him
of that liberty or sovereignty he had a right to, or gave away his empire to
those who had the government of his nonage? This government over him only
prepared him the better and sooner for it. If any body should ask me, when my
son is of age to be free? I shall answer, just when his monarch is of age to
govern. But at what time, says the judicious Hooker, Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 6. a
man may be said to have attained so far forth the use of reason, as sufficeth to
make him capable of those laws whereby he is then bound to guide his actions:
this is a great deal more easy for sense to discern, than for any one by skill
and learning to determine.
Sec. 62. Common-wealths themselves take notice of, and allow, that there is a
time when men are to begin to act like free men, and therefore till that time
require not oaths of fealty, or allegiance, or other public owning of, or
submission to the government of their countries.
Sec. 63. The freedom then of man, and liberty of acting according to his own
will, is grounded on his having reason, which is able to instruct him in that
law he is to govern himself by, and make him know how far he is left to the
freedom of his own will. To turn him loose to an unrestrained liberty, before he
has reason to guide him, is not the allowing him the privilege of his nature to
be free; but to thrust him out amongst brutes, and abandon him to a state as
wretched, and as much beneath that of a man, as their's. This is that which puts
the authority into the parents hands to govern the minority of their children.
God hath made it their business to employ this care on their offspring, and hath
placed in them suitable inclinations of tenderness and concern to temper this
power, to apply it, as his wisdom designed it, to the children's good, as long
as they should need to be under it.
Sec. 64. But what reason can hence advance this care of the parents due to
their off-spring into an absolute arbitrary dominion of the father, whose power
reaches no farther, than by such a discipline, as he finds most effectual, to
give such strength and health to their bodies, such vigour and rectitude to
their minds, as may best fit his children to be most useful to themselves and
others; and, if it be necessary to his condition, to make them work, when they
are able, for their own subsistence. But in this power the mother too has her
share with the father.
Sec. 65. Nay, this power so little belongs to the father by any peculiar
right of nature, but only as he is guardian of his children, that when he quits
his care of them, he loses his power over them, which goes along with their
nourishment and education, to which it is inseparably annexed; and it belongs as
much to the foster-father of an exposed child, as to the natural father of
another. So little power does the bare act of begetting give a man over his
issue; if all his care ends there, and this be all the title he hath to the name
and authority of a father. And what will become of this paternal power in that
part of the world, where one woman hath more than one husband at a time? or in
those parts of America, where, when the husband and wife part, which happens
frequently, the children are all left to the mother, follow her, and are wholly
under her care and provision? If the father die whilst the children are young,
do they not naturally every where owe the same obedience to their mother, during
their minority, as to their father were he alive? and will any one say, that the
mother hath a legislative power over her children? that she can make standing
rules, which shall be of perpetual obligation, by which they ought to regulate
all the concerns of their property, and bound their liberty all the course of
their lives? or can she inforce the observation of them with capital
punishments? for this is the proper power of the magistrate, of which the father
hath not so much as the shadow. His command over his children is but temporary,
and reaches not their life or property: it is but a help to the weakness and
imperfection of their nonage, a discipline necessary to their education: and
though a father may dispose of his own possessions as he pleases, when his
children are out of danger of perishing for want, yet his power extends not to
the lives or goods, which either their own industry, or another's bounty has
made their's; nor to their liberty neither, when they are once arrived to the
infranchisement of the years of discretion. The father's empire then ceases, and
he can from thence forwards no more dispose of the liberty of his son, than that
of any other man: and it must be far from an absolute or perpetual jurisdiction,
from which a man may withdraw himself, having license from divine authority to
leave father and mother, and cleave to his wife.
Sec. 66. But though there be a time when a child comes to be as free from
subjection to the will and command of his father, as the father himself is free
from subjection to the will of any body else, and they are each under no other
restraint, but that which is common to them both, whether it be the law of
nature, or municipal law of their country; yet this freedom exempts not a son
from that honour which he ought, by the law of God and nature, to pay his
parents. God having made the parents instruments in his great design of
continuing the race of mankind, and the occasions of life to their children; as
he hath laid on them an obligation to nourish, preserve, and bring up their
offspring; so he has laid on the children a perpetual obligation of honouring
their parents, which containing in it an inward esteem and reverence to be shewn
by all outward expressions, ties up the child from any thing that may ever
injure or affront, disturb or endanger, the happiness or life of those from whom
he received his; and engages him in all actions of defence, relief, assistance
and comfort of those, by whose means he entered into being, and has been made
capable of any enjoyments of life: from this obligation no state, no freedom can
absolve children. But this is very far from giving parents a power of command
over their children, or an authority to make laws and dispose as they please of
their lives or liberties. It is one thing to owe honour, respect, gratitude and
assistance; another to require an absolute obedience and submission. The honour
due to parents, a monarch in his throne owes his mother; and yet this lessens
not his authority, nor subjects him to her government.
Sec. 67. The subjection of a minor places in the father a temporary
government, which terminates with the minority of the child: and the honour due
from a child, places in the parents a perpetual right to respect, reverence,
support and compliance too, more or less, as the father's care, cost, and
kindness in his education, has been more or less. This ends not with minority,
but holds in all parts and conditions of a man's life. The want of
distinguishing these two powers, viz. that which the father hath in the right of
tuition, during minority, and the right of honour all his life, may perhaps have
caused a great part of the mistakes about this matter: for to speak properly of
them, the first of these is rather the privilege of children, and duty of
parents, than any prerogative of paternal power. The nourishment and education
of their children is a charge so incumbent on parents for their children's good,
that nothing can absolve them from taking care of it: and though the power of
commanding and chastising them go along with it, yet God hath woven into the
principles of human nature such a tenderness for their off-spring, that there is
little fear that parents should use their power with too much rigour; the excess
is seldom on the severe side, the strong byass of nature drawing the other way.
And therefore God almighty when he would express his gentle dealing with the
Israelites, he tells them, that though he chastened them, he chastened them as a
man chastens his son, Deut. viii. 5. i.e. with tenderness and affection, and
kept them under no severer discipline than what was absolutely best for them,
and had been less kindness to have slackened. This is that power to which
children are commanded obedience, that the pains and care of their parents may
not be increased, or ill rewarded.
Sec. 68. On the other side, honour and support, all that which gratitude
requires to return for the benefits received by and from them, is the
indispensable duty of the child, and the proper privilege of the parents. This
is intended for the parents advantage, as the other is for the child's; though
education, the parents duty, seems to have most power, because the ignorance and
infirmities of childhood stand in need of restraint and correction; which is a
visible exercise of rule, and a kind of dominion. And that duty which is
comprehended in the word honour, requires less obedience, though the obligation
be stronger on grown, than younger children: for who can think the command,
Children obey your parents, requires in a man, that has children of his own, the
same submission to his father, as it does in his yet young children to him; and
that by this precept he were bound to obey all his father's commands, if, out of
a conceit of authority, he should have the indiscretion to treat him still as a
boy?
Sec. 69. The first part then of paternal power, or rather duty, which is
education, belongs so to the father, that it terminates at a certain season;
when the business of education is over, it ceases of itself, and is also
alienable before: for a man may put the tuition of his son in other hands; and
he that has made his son an apprentice to another, has discharged him, during
that time, of a great part of his obedience both to himself and to his mother.
But all the duty of honour, the other part, remains never the less entire to
them; nothing can cancel that: it is so inseparable from them both, that the
father's authority cannot dispossess the mother of this right, nor can any man
discharge his son from honouring her that bore him. But both these are very far
from a power to make laws, and enforcing them with penalties, that may reach
estate, liberty, limbs and life. The power of commanding ends with nonage; and
though, after that, honour and respect, support and defence, and whatsoever
gratitude can oblige a man to, for the highest benefits he is naturally capable
of, be always due from a son to his parents; yet all this puts no scepter into
the father's hand, no sovereign power of commanding. He has no dominion over his
son's property, or actions; nor any right, that his will should prescribe to his
son's in all things; however it may become his son in many things, not very
inconvenient to him and his family, to pay a deference to it.
Sec. 70. A man may owe honour and respect to an ancient, or wise man; defence
to his child or friend; relief and support to the distressed; and gratitude to a
benefactor, to such a degree, that all he has, all he can do, cannot
sufficiently pay it: but all these give no authority, no right to any one, of
making laws over him from whom they are owing. And it is plain, all this is due
not only to the bare title of father; not only because, as has been said, it is
owing to the mother too; but because these obligations to parents, and the
degrees of what is required of children, may be varied by the different care and
kindness, trouble and expence, which is often employed upon one child more than
another.
Sec. 71. This shews the reason how it comes to pass, that parents in
societies, where they themselves are subjects, retain a power over their
children, and have as much right to their subjection, as those who are in the
state of nature. Which could not possibly be, if all political power were only
paternal, and that in truth they were one and the same thing: for then, all
paternal power being in the prince, the subject could naturally have none of it.
But these two powers, political and paternal, are so perfectly distinct and
separate; are built upon so different foundations, and given to so different
ends, that every subject that is a father, has as much a paternal power over his
children, as the prince has over his: and every prince, that has parents, owes
them as much filial duty and obedience, as the meanest of his subjects do to
their's; and can therefore contain not any part or degree of that kind of
dominion, which a prince or magistrate has over his subject.
Sec. 72. Though the obligation on the parents to bring up their children, and
the obligation on children to honour their parents, contain all the power on the
one hand, and submission on the other, which are proper to this relation, yet
there is another power ordinarily in the father, whereby he has a tie on the
obedience of his children; which tho' it be common to him with other men, yet
the occasions of shewing it, almost consich tho' it be common to him with other
men, yet the occasions of shewing it, almost constantly happening to fathers in
their private families, and the instances of it elsewhere being rare, and less
taken notice of, it passes in the world for a part of paternal jurisdiction. And
this is the power men generally have to bestow their estates on those who please
them best; the possession of the father being the expectation and inheritance of
the children, ordinarily in certain proportions, according to the law and custom
of each country; yet it is commonly in the father's power to bestow it with a
more sparing or liberal hand, according as the behaviour of this or that child
hath comported with his will and humour.
Sec. 73. This is no small tie on the obedience of children: and there being
always annexed to the enjoyment of land, a submission to the government of the
country, of which that land is a part; it has been commonly supposed, that a
father could oblige his posterity to that government, of which he himself was a
subject, and that his compact held them; whereas, it being only a necessary
condition annexed to the land, and the inheritance of an estate which is under
that government, reaches only those who will take it on that condition, and so
is no natural tie or engagement, but a voluntary submission: for every man's
children being by nature as free as himself, or any of his ancestors ever were,
may, whilst they are in that freedom, choose what society they will join
themselves to, what common-wealth they will put themselves under. But if they
will enjoy the inheritance of their ancestors, they must take it on the same
terms their ancestors had it, and submit to all the conditions annexed to such a
possession. By this power indeed fathers oblige their children to obedience to
themselves, even when they are past minority, and most commonly too subject them
to this or that political power: but neither of these by any peculiar right of
fatherhood, but by the reward they have in their hands to inforce and recompence
such a compliance; and is no more power than what a French man has over an
English man, who by the hopes of an estate he will leave him, will certainly
have a strong tie on his obedience: and if, when it is left him, he will enjoy
it, he must certainly take it upon the conditions annexed to the possession of
land in that country where it lies, whether it be France or England.
Sec. 74. To conclude then, tho' the father's power of commanding extends no
farther than the minority of his children, and to a degree only fit for the
discipline and government of that age; and tho' that honour and respect, and all
that which the Latins called piety, which they indispensably owe to their
parents all their life-time, and in all estates, with all that support and
defence is due to them, gives the father no power of governing, i.e. making laws
and enacting penalties on his children; though by all this he has no dominion
over the property or actions of his son: yet it is obvious to conceive how easy
it was, in the first ages of the world, and in places still, where the thinness
of people gives families leave to separate into unpossessed quarters, and they
have room to remove or plant themselves in yet vacant habitations, for the
father of the family to become the prince of* it; he had been a ruler from the
beginning of the infancy of his children: and since without some government it
would be hard for them to live together, it was likeliest it should, by the
express or tacit consent of the children when they were grown up, be in the
father, where it seemed without any change barely to continue; when indeed
nothing more was required to it, than the permitting the father to exercise
alone, in his family, that executive power of the law of nature, which every
free man naturally hath, and by that permission resigning up to him a
monarchical power, whilst they remained in it. But that this was not by any
paternal right, but only by the consent of his children, is evident from hence,
that no body doubts, but if a stranger, whom chance or business had brought to
his family, had there killed any of his children, or committed any other fact,
he might condemn and put him to death, or other-wise have punished him, as well
as any of his children; which it was impossible he should do by virtue of any
paternal authority over one who was not his child, but by virtue of that
executive power of the law of nature, which, as a man, he had a right to: and he
alone could punish him in his family, where the respect of his children had laid
by the exercise of such a power, to give way to the dignity and authority they
were willing should remain in him, above the rest of his family.
(*It is no improbable opinion therefore, which the archphilosopher was of,
that the chief person in every houshold was always, as it were, a king: so when
numbers of housholds joined themselves in civil societies together, kings were
the first kind of governors amongst them, which is also, as it seemeth, the
reason why the name of fathers continued still in them, who, of fathers, were
made rulers; as also the ancient custom of governors to do as Melchizedec, and
being kings, to exercise the office of priests, which fathers did at the first,
grew perhaps by the same occasion. Howbeit, this is not the only kind of
regiment that has been received in the world. The inconveniences of one kind
have caused sundry others to be devised; so that in a word, all public regiment,
of what kind soever, seemeth evidently to have risen from the deliberate advice,
consultation and composition between men, judging it convenient and behoveful;
there being no impossibility in nature considered by itself, but that man might
have lived without any public regiment, Hooker's Eccl. Pol. lib. i. sect. 10.)
Sec. 75. Thus it was easy, and almost natural for children, by a tacit, and
scarce avoidable consent, to make way for the father's authority and government.
They had been accustomed in their childhood to follow his direction, and to
refer their little differences to him, and when they were men, who fitter to
rule them? Their little properties, and less covetousness, seldom afforded
greater controversies; and when any should arise, where could they have a fitter
umpire than he, by whose care they had every one been sustained and brought up,
and who had a tenderness for them aII? It is no wonder that they made no
distinction betwixt minority and full age; nor looked after one and twenty, or
any other age that might make them the free disposers of themselves and
fortunes, when they could have no desire to be out of their pupilage: the
government they had been under, during it, continued still to be more their
protection than restraint; and they could no where find a greater security to
their peace, liberties, and fortunes, than in the rule of a father.
Sec. 76. Thus the natural fathers of families, by an insensible change,
became the politic monarchs of them too: and as they chanced to live long, and
leave able and worthy heirs, for several successions, or otherwise; so they laid
the foundations of hereditary, or elective kingdoms, under several constitutions
and mannors, according as chance, contrivance, or occasions happened to mould
them. But if princes have their titles in their fathers right, and it be a
sufficient proof of the natural right of fathers to political authority, because
they commonly were those in whose hands we find, de facto, the exercise of
government: I say, if this argument be good, it will as strongly prove, that all
princes, nay princes only, ought to be priests, since it is as certain, that in
the beginning, the father of the family was priest, as that he was ruler in his
own houshold.
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