Talking About . . . justice
Author: Tony Watkins
Keywords: Justice, fairness, morality, freedom, society
Film title: Good
Director: Vicente Amorim
Screenplay: John Wrathall
Starring: Viggo Mortensen, Jason Isaacs, Jodie Whittaker, Steven Mackintosh, Gemma Jones, Anastasia Hille, Mark Strong
Distributor: Lionsgate (UK); THINKfilm (USA)
Cinema Release Date: 31 December 2008 (USA); 17 April 2009 (UK)
Certificate: R (USA); 15 (UK)
Film title: State of Play
Director: Kevin Macdonald
Screenplay: Matthew Michael Carnahan, Tony Gilroy and Billy Ray, based on the BBC series by Paul Abbott
Starring: Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck, Rachel McAdams, Helen Mirren, Robin Wright Penn, Jason Bateman, Jeff Daniels
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Cinema Release Date: 17 April 2009 (USA); 24 April 2009 (UK)
Certificate: PG-13 (USA); 12A (UK) Contains strong language and violence
Film title: X-Men Origins: Wolverine
Director: Gavin Hood
Screenplay: David Benioff, Skip Woods
Starring: Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber, Danny Huston, Will.I.Am
Distributor: Twentieth Century Fox
Cinema Release Date: 29 April 2009 (UK); 1 May 2009 (USA)
Certificate: PG-13 (USA); 12A (UK) Contains moderate fantasy violence
Scientists have recently discovered that people’s reaction to injustice is disgust. When people are treated unfairly in a game, their faces react in exactly the same way as when they taste something foul or see images of filthy toilets. According to the researchers, this suggests that, ‘not only do complex thoughts guide our moral compass, but also more primitive instincts related to avoiding potential toxins.’
Is a sense of justice something innate in us, or is it something we learn? Every parent knows that children have a strong instinct for fairness. A child will be up in arms if someone else gets more than fair shares. Yet they never complain when they’re the ones who benefit. They’re quick to ensure that wrongdoers are dealt with, as long as the wrongdoer is somebody else.
So is it selfishness which prompts young children to declare, ‘It’s not fair!’, rather than an inborn sense of justice? Surely it’s both. The biblical view of human beings is that we are created in God’s image, and that we are also anti-God rebels. These two sides of our nature are in constant conflict. What comes out, then, is often a sense of injustice. We feel it deeply.
As children mature, they begin to develop empathy and learn to feel for the injustice which others experience. But adults are still often driven by the perception of being treated unjustly.

This is a key theme in countless films. Good tells the story of John Halder (Viggo Mortensen), a mild-mannered academic in pre-war Germany who objects to the Nazi party’s encroaching power dictating what he can teach. For selfish reasons he nevertheless allows himself to be sucked in, whilst his closest friend Maurice (Jeremy Isaacs), a Jewish psychoanalyst, increasingly faces appalling injustice. This injustice is not just at the hands of the state, but is also a result of Halder’s self-interest.
This idea can also be expressed as a conviction that someone must be brought to justice for the bad things they have done. This is what motivates the attack on senior Roman Catholic figures in Angels and Demons, which Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) heroically attempts to unearth.
The issue of liberty
There’s plenty of talk about justice within our society, but there are competing views on what it is. It’s closely bound up with issues of liberty and rights.
For Austrian philosopher Friedrich von Hayek, who was a colossal influence on Margaret Thatcher, justice was all about liberty. The ultimate good is the freedom to do whatever you like on your own property, providing you don’t interfere with the rights of others. So laws should be about preserving individual liberty, not bringing about social justice.
One problem with promoting individual freedom at the expense of social justice is that it easily results in marked inequalities. While our economy was doing well, we didn’t give this too much thought. But now there’s a widespread sense of the injustice of huge bonuses for bankers who presided over the disaster.
Another influential philosopher, John Rawls, argued that Hayek was wrong: justice comes before liberty, and must include the notion of equality. He believed that a just society guarantees more liberty for more people. Justice, which he saw in terms of fairness, is ‘the first virtue of social institutions, as truth is of systems of thought.’
Rawls insisted that there is such a thing as social justice. Some people in society are disadvantaged and therefore lack freedom and self-respect. One of society’s highest concerns should be to deal with this injustice. His thinking at this point reflects the Bible’s deep concern for dispossessed, downtrodden and marginalised people.
Despite the rise of moral relativism over the last half-century, justice is still a central value in our society. We frequently talk about it in terms of human rights, seeing injustice as something which infringes those basic rights.

This is a central idea in the X-Men stories, including the latest film, X Men Origins: Wolverine. The mutants like Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) are constantly on the receiving end of prejudice, bigotry and hatred, raising the question of what their rights are, and how they should respond when they are treated badly.
Commitment to justice
These issues have always been important in Star Trek too, especially in the early series when creator Gene Roddenberry saw each episode as a morality tale. The commitment to justice is still there in the new film, which goes back to the origins of the USS Enterprise crew, and their first conflict with the Romulans who threaten the peaceful Federation.
Such stories resonate strongly with us because the issue of justice matters so much to us. We instinctively cry out for justice when we hear of some terrible crime being committed. We are rightly appalled at corruption because justice and truth are always the first casualties.

The political thriller State of Play has human casualties too, leading journalist Cal McCaffrey (Russell Crowe) into a web of intrigue, deception and danger. The tension of films like this comes not just from the hazards facing the hero, but from the question of whether there will finally be justice.
This is a big question in real life too. We do feel the need for justice so deeply because it is innate. It is a vital aspect of being made in God’s image. And we need to know that when human justice fails, God’s perfect justice will not.
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Author: Tony Watkins
© Copyright: Tony Watkins 2009, first published in Idea magazine
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Unless stated otherwise, Bible quotations are from the New Living Translation (NLT) copyright © 1996, 2004 by Tyndale Charitable Trust. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers.