How Freedom Is Lost One Compromise at a Time
Rarely does a society abandon truth in a single moment. More often, it drifts, one compromise at a time. What begins as an exception becomes accepted practice. What is accepted becomes protected. What is protected becomes promoted. And what is promoted eventually becomes expected. The result is a gradual erosion of conscience, religious liberty, and objective moral truth. Christians must recognize this pattern because evil seldom announces itself as evil. More often, it arrives wrapped in the language of compassion, fairness, progress, or inclusion, slowly redefining what is true until the culture no longer recognizes the difference between good and evil.
Policies promoted “for the good of others” often start with noble goals, such as expanding access, promoting fairness, reducing suffering, and protecting vulnerable people. Yet when government redefines moral realities such as marriage, gender, or human identity, these changes extend far beyond legal adjustments. They reshape cultural expectations and place growing pressure on religious individuals and institutions.
Christians are called by Christ to love, serve, and seek the good of others. This is central to the Gospel. Yet one of the most effective ways truth is distorted in public life is by cloaking harmful ideas in morally appealing language, such as “fairness,” “equity,” “inclusion,” and even the “common good.” These terms can be used to justify policies that weaken personal responsibility, diminish conscience rights, and erode religious liberty. The danger is not compassion itself. The danger is compassion detached from truth. Modern Christians must exercise prudence and discernment because legal recognition can gradually become a moral expectation.
The Pattern of Gradualism
History and experience show that gradualism follows a remarkably consistent pattern. Once recognized, it becomes easier to see how societies slowly redefine truth without noticing the change as it occurs.
Tolerance → Acceptance → Celebration → Expectation → Enforcement
• What is first tolerated is eventually accepted.
• What is accepted is eventually celebrated.
• What is celebrated becomes expected.
• What is expected is ultimately enforced.
By the time coercion appears, the cultural battle has often already been won. Religious liberty is rarely removed all at once. It is redefined, narrowed, and conditioned, one decision at a time.
Modern Examples of Gradualism
- Little Sisters of the Poor – The Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate eventually required the Little Sisters of the Poor, a Catholic religious order, to seek exemptions from regulations they believed violated their religious beliefs. After years of litigation, the Supreme Court upheld their religious liberty.
- Catholic Adoption Agencies – Several Catholic adoption agencies, including those in Boston and Illinois, closed rather than comply with government requirements to place children with same-sex couples because doing so would violate Catholic teaching.
- Masterpiece Cakeshop – A Colorado baker declined to create a custom wedding cake for a same-sex wedding because of his religious beliefs. The dispute reached the United States Supreme Court, highlighting the growing tension between anti-discrimination laws and religious freedom.
- Washington State Seal of Confession – Washington enacted a law requiring clergy to report suspected child abuse, even when the abuse is learned during sacramental confession. Catholic bishops have stated they will uphold the Seal of Confession, even at personal legal risk.
- Gender Identity Policies – In several states, expanding gender identity policies have created conflicts for religious schools, ministries, and employers over pronouns, facilities, athletics, and employment practices. Many of these disputes remain before the courts.
- Medical Conscience Rights – Some physicians, nurses, and healthcare providers have challenged requirements related to abortion, sterilization, or gender-transition procedures, arguing that they should not be compelled to participate in practices that violate their religious convictions.
- Faith Based Colleges and Universities – Religious colleges have faced increasing pressure regarding accreditation, funding, and regulatory requirements related to sexual conduct and gender identity policies. Many argue that preserving their religious mission requires the freedom to maintain faith-based standards.
The Philosophical Principle
The expression “slippery slope” predates modern politics. It describes how a seemingly small change can alter the moral, legal, or cultural landscape, making further changes progressively easier until the final outcome differs dramatically from the original intention. The slippery slope is not merely a rhetorical device. It captures a recurring pattern throughout history.
St. Ignatius of Loyola recognized the same principle in the spiritual life. He taught that Satan rarely begins with grave sin. Instead, he invites small compromises that gradually weaken virtue, making larger compromises increasingly easy.
Closing Thought
History shows that religious liberty is rarely lost in a single dramatic act. More often, it is narrowed, one regulation, one court decision, one administrative rule, and one cultural expectation at a time. What begins as a limited exception becomes standard practice. What was once voluntary becomes expected. What is expected eventually becomes mandatory. By the time coercion becomes obvious, the gradual erosion of conscience has often been underway for years.
The Christian’s responsibility is not merely to recognize the final step. It is to discern the pattern before freedom is lost.