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First Things
The Public Square
(August/September 1998)
Richard John Neuhaus
Copyright (c) 1998 First
Things 85 (August/September 1998): 75-90.
The Most New Thing in the Novus Ordo Seclorum
Since I do not assume that all our readers are also readers of the Weekly
Standard, herewith an expanded version of a review that appeared in
that esteemed publication. (No, Jody Bottum, who used to be our associate
editor and is now the books and culture editor of the Standard,
did not have the temerity to cut his former boss’ copy. It is simply that
I say some things here that seem more appropriate for this forum.)
John T. Noonan, Jr. is without doubt one of the most distinguished minds
in our federal judiciary. Before being appointed to the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals in 1986, he was professor at Boalt School of Law at the University
of California, Berkeley, and authored major studies on the maddeningly
complex connections between religion and law. Widely acclaimed books on
usury, the slave trade, and other matters demonstrate that he is, above
all, a historian, with a particular flair for the history of ideas. That
demonstration continues with his new book, The Lustre of Our Country:
The American Experience of Religious Freedom (University of California
Press, $35). The book is a personal summing up of Noonan’s reflections
on what he correctly believes to be America’s most innovative and audacious
contribution to world history—the free exercise of religion.
The book’s title is from Noonan’s hero, James Madison (or JM, as he
signed himself), for whom, says Noonan, "the whole burden of freedom
was carried by the formula of free exercise." The First Amendment’s
commitment to the free exercise of religion, Madison wrote, "promised
a lustre to our country." There are but sixteen words: "Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof." But the interpretation of those few words,
more than any other aspect of contemporary jurisprudence, has cut to the
heart of our understanding of the American experiment. Although his tone
is generally irenic, Noonan leaves no doubt that the courts, and the Supreme
Court in particular, have made a hash of the Religion Clause under the
rubric of "church-state law."
An egregious error entrenched itself beginning in the 1950s, when the
courts began speaking not of the Religion Clause but of two Religion Clauses—the
no establishment clause and the free exercise clause. Predictably, the
error has been compounded again and again as the "two clauses"
have been pitted against each other, almost always to the detriment of
free exercise. As Noonan notes, there are two prepositional phrases of
one clause. "The first phrase assumed that establishments of religion
existed as they did in fact exist in several of the states; the amendment
restrained the power of Congress to affect them. The second phrase was
absolute in its denial of federal legislative power to inhibit religious
exercise." Over time, state establishments disappeared and the First
Amendment was "incorporated" to apply also to the states, but
always it should have been evident that there is one Religion Clause devoted
to the end of the free exercise of religion. No establishment is
a stipulated means to serve that end. The jurisprudence of the last
half century, however, has tended to turn the means into the end, repeatedly
declaring that any benign connection between government and religion is
a forbidden "establishment." The result is a court-imposed governmental
indifference to religion that inevitably results in de facto governmental
hostility to religion.
As long-time readers know, I have been pressing for years the question
of the one Religion Clause, and it is most gratifying to see more constitutional
scholars picking up on it. The Religion Clause is a coherent guarantee
of free exercise, not a jerry-built compromise proposing that free exercise
needs to be "balanced" against another good called "no establishment."
From the earlier Virginia measures supported by Madison and Jefferson through
to the First Amendment, it is always clear that the reason there must be
no establishment of religion is that establishment would infringe upon
the free exercise of religion. A particular merit of Noonan’s discussion
is that it highlights how very recent is the practice in which the courts
speak of "two religion clauses." It is a practice that has led
the courts so far astray as to suggest that balancing the clauses requires
the government to be neutral as between religion and irreligion. One can
imagine the distress of Mr. Madison if he could see the way recent jurisprudence
has turned the First Amendment on its head.
Pretentious Guardians
John Noonan has written elsewhere about "the masks of the law."
One mask of the law is that of judges pretending that they are neutral
when in fact they impose (establish) their own peculiar view of religion.
In the present book, Noonan documents the powerful influence of liberal
Protestantism and especially William James in the courts’ religion jurisprudence.
In James’ Varieties of Religious Experience, religion is a radically
private experience of the isolated individual. But in the real world, religion
has corporate and social dimensions that necessarily include more than
private experience and feelings. This reality has been frequently ignored
also by the Supreme Court when, for instance in cases dealing with conscientious
objection to military service, it equates religion with any sincerely held
belief. Madison’s more vibrant understanding of free exercise, by way of
contrast, was forged in his encounters with real communities of religious
commitment called Baptist, Presbyterian, and Anglican.
Another mask of the law is the courts’ self-deluding view of themselves
as Platonic guardians of truth that float above the reality of government.
In regulating the activities of government, Noonan notes, the courts frequently
pretend that they are not themselves part of government. In fact, they
are that part of the government that assumes that "the courts themselves
are sacred." Noonan writes, "Performing these tasks that they
have determined to be allotted them by the First Amendment, the courts
unselfconsciously place themselves above any church or creed." That
is precisely what Madison intended free exercise to prevent. He declared
that citizens had a "prior obligation" and "natural right"
to acknowledge a sovereignty higher than the sovereignty of the state.
The genius of his innovation was to insist that, with respect to the exercise
of that obligation and right, the government has no legitimate "cognizance."
The Founders were keenly aware that the free exercise of religion was qualitatively
different from religious tolerance. "Tolerance," writes Noonan,
"is a policy, an acceptance of religious difference because it’s more
trouble than it’s worth to eliminate it, a prudential stance of wise statesmen.
It is something else to inscribe in fundamental law an ideal of freedom
for the human activity most potentially subversive of the existing order."
The free exercise of religion is most potentially subversive because
it proclaims a sovereignty that "stands against the sovereignty of
the state." Noonan writes, "Each individual’s religion ‘wholly
exempt’ from social control? No qualifications whatever on the right and
duty to pay homage to God as one sees fit? Surely, in the heat of battle,
Madison exaggerates! No, his theological premises compel these radical
conclusions." The last point touches on a matter central to Noonan’s
argument, namely, that the free exercise of religion is, in the main, a
religious achievement. This is explicitly proposed against the received
wisdom that religious freedom—usually construed as tolerance—is the achievement
of the secular Enlightenment against religion. In carrying this
point, Noonan the historian is on impressive display.
John Noonan, it must be admitted, evidences a peculiar mix of liberal
and conservative sensibilities. He wants to conserve the original understanding
of free exercise, at least in large part because religious freedom is an
inexpendable lever for challenging the established order. Like the civil
libertarians of the ACLU persuasion, he presents himself as being reflexively
on the side of the underdog. On the other hand, the underdog today is the
social and moral conservatism that seeks to challenge regnant liberalisms,
also in the courts. So Noonan’s conservative jurisprudence in the service
of liberal ends may be most immediately useful to contemporary forces generally
called conservative. Ironies are compounded by the fact that those conservative
forces are generally sympathetic to the use of religion to reinforce the
established order, or at least to reinforce what they think once was and
should be again the established order. Noonan has little but contempt for
such use of religion, and is most polemical in his argument against laws
prohibiting the "desecration" of the flag. In his view, the idea
of the flag as a sacred object is little short of idolatry, and laws to
protect it from "desecration" clearly violate the dangerously
subversive free exercise guaranteed by the Constitution. Many conservatives
will be cheered by Noonan’s respect for the constitutional text and his
championing of their right to challenge existing patterns of liberal judicial
usurpation, as they will also be unhappy with his hostility to the purposes
for which conservatives would employ that challenge. But that is the way
it is with a free exercise of religion that testifies to a sovereignty
that cannot be captured either by the state or by the parties that would
control the state.
A Potentially Dangerous Idea
The Lustre of Our Country is oddly put together. It begins with
an engaging autobiographical sketch of the Catholic author coming of age
under the shadow of Puritan Boston. From his early years, especially under
the influence of his father, Noonan was what in intra-Catholic discussions
is known as a liberal. His father and he never had any use for what was
taken to be the official Catholic position of the time, that the American
pattern of religious freedom was a "hypothesis" to be tolerated
until Catholics became strong enough to establish the "thesis"
of a Catholic state in a Catholic society. The auto-biographical sketch
is followed by an examination of the limits and contradictions in the Puritan
idea of religious freedom, to which he contrasts Madison’s "original
insight." A chapter is devoted to a letter "discovered"
by Noonan and supposedly written by Tocqueville’s younger sister who argues
that her brother was right to view religion as "the foremost institution"
of American democracy, but wrong in claiming that the "separation
of church and state" is, in fact, the American reality. Employing
various literary techniques, sometimes eccentric but always fascinating,
Noonan then retells key cases in which the Supreme Court has tied itself
into knots by regulating religion, with the result that it ends up in ludicrous
efforts to adjudicate the sincerity and truth of religious claims—exactly
the claims that Madison declared to be none of the government’s business.
On the "subversive" dimension of free exercise, Noonan recalls
four "crusades"—the abolition of slavery, the war against Mormon
polygamy, the prohibition of alcohol, and the civil rights movement under
the leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr. Curiously, he does not include
a fifth crusade, that against the abortion license of Roe v. Wade,
on which he has written elsewhere with great persuasive effect. Opposition
to the abortion license is usually viewed as a conservative cause, and
perhaps Noonan did not want to let the rest of his argument be taken hostage
to ideological labeling. Or perhaps he does not think the pro-life movement
is a "crusade" comparable to the earlier movements he describes.
If that is the case, one wishes that he had argued it. The absence of abortion
from his discussion is deeply puzzling, since it is undoubtedly the most
fevered question joining religion and religiously grounded morality in
legal and political dispute today.
Throughout this and other books, Noonan leaves no doubt that the free
exercise of religion is a potentially dangerous idea. Madison and most
of the Founders believed that the entire constitutional order, this novus
ordo seclorum, was contingent upon taking that risk. Noonan worries
that we Americans, with the courts in the lead, may now have lost our nerve
for it. Implicit in that loss of nerve, he suggests, is an acceptance of
Durkheim’s view that religion is essentially a function of society, something
to be used and tolerated to the extent that it serves "the sacred
society." He very effectively makes the case that a functional view
of religion—the claim that religion is a creation of society and designed
to provide moral legitimacy for society—can be maintained only by determinedly
ignoring the actual intentions of people who are religious. That willful
blindness is another instance of neutrality-as-a-mask, and it is made more
objectionable by the fact that judges, operating under the guise of neutrality,
routinely smuggle in their own beliefs that are religious in nature if
not in name.
Nonetheless, Noonan is by no means ready to give up. For all the missteps
along the way, the American commitment to the free exercise of religion
is still a "success." Against what he views as the false humility
of many Americans, he urges a forthright acknowledgment that religious
freedom is this country’s foremost contribution to the world’s understanding
of just government. In advancing that claim, he devotes chapters to four
contrasting case studies: the French Revolution’s affirmation and betrayal
of the American idea of religious freedom, the American imposition of the
idea on a defeated Japan, Russia’s current and deeply flawed efforts to
incorporate the idea, and the American influence in the Second Vatican
Council’s teaching on religious liberty.
The Lustre of Our Country is erudite and instructive, frequently
whimsical and typically wise. I expect other readers will share my frustration
with aspects of the argument. At times Noonan seems to conflate freedom
of religion with freedom of conscience. There are similarities, to be sure,
and there are also big differences. Freedom of conscience is easily reduced
to radical individualism, ending up with what Noonan rightly deplores as
the courts’ common depiction of religion as a private aberration to be
tolerated insofar as it does not interfere with government purposes. The
conflation also invites the subsuming of religious freedom into constitutional
guarantees of freedom of speech and other provisions that ignore religion’s
necessarily subversive witness to a higher sovereignty. Noonan is apparently
unhappy with the Supreme Court’s recent striking down of the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act, which many view as almost tantamount to repealing
the Religion Clause, but he offers no suggestion of other legislative remedies
for judicial hostility to religion. This is a matter of some importance,
since Congress is at this moment working on another effort to produce such
remedial legislation.
Friends of religious freedom have pressed for a restoration of the principle
that religious claims should be privileged, and overriding such claims
should be dependent upon the government being able to demonstrate that
there is both a "compelling" interest and no less intrusive way
for that interest to be served. Noonan notes that, in fact, courts have
routinely ruled that almost any government interest at all is sufficient
to override the free exercise of religion. One wishes he had more directly
taken on the arguments of Justice Antonin Scalia, who appears to speak
for a majority of the Court on this question. Scalia is frequently depicted
as a champion of raw majoritarianism for whom the Religion Clause is little
more than a vestigial and inconvenient appendix. I expect his views on
religion and law are considerably more interesting than that, and since
he is such a dominant voice on these matters, it would have been helpful
if Noonan engaged him more directly. On the other hand, it may be less
than politic for a judge of a circuit court to challenge so frontally a
justice of the Supreme Court.
Development of Doctrine
The present book provokes speculation about the assumptions underlying
Noonan’s judicial philosophy. He is clearly a "textualist," as
is evident in his insistence upon the one Religion Clause and his opposition
to pitting the "two clauses" against each other. And he is an
"originalist" in his devotion to the radical intention of Madison
and those responsible for the First Amendment. Yet at other times he seems
to want the judge to be something like a philosopher king. His epilogue
proposes "Ten Commandments" for people dealing with religious
freedom, including the admonition that "you shall know that no person,
man or woman, historian or law professor or constitutional commentator
or judge, is neutral in this matter." Fair enough. He is right to
insist that, with respect to religion and much else, but especially with
respect to religion, imagination and empathy are required. "Can a
judge be a pilgrim?" Noonan asks. He answers in the affirmative, and
I agree. But as a judge he should strive to read the law, to be
objective, and, yes, neutral. Safety from judicial usurpation rests not
so much in having judges who are better philosophers as in having judges
who recognize that, as Mr. Madison would say, there are questions not within
their cognizance.
Both suggestive and problematic is Noonan’s persistent drawing of parallels
between judicial interpretation and John Henry Newman’s theory of "the
development of doctrine." In this connection he offers his extended
treatment of the development of Catholic teaching on religious freedom
at Vatican Council II. Clearly, Noonan has no use for the exponents of
a "living Constitution" who declare, in effect, that the Constitution
is dead because it means whatever the courts say it means. Just as clearly,
there are parallels between what judges do and what church councils do.
Both are involved in trying to understand a "sacred text" as
it relates to current problems and understandings. A crucial difference,
however, and a difference one wishes Judge Noonan addressed more directly,
is that church councils—at least in the Catholic understanding of things—are
promised the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Noonan misses important opportunities in his treatment of Catholic teaching.
He fully appreciates the immeasurable contribution of Father John Courtney
Murray to the Council’s declaration on religious freedom, and he is right
to claim that this was a distinctly American contribution to the teaching
of the universal Church. But there is no mention at all of the ways in
which the understanding of religious freedom—precisely as a religious achievement—has
been greatly deepened and elaborated by this pontificate, notably in encyclicals
such as Centesimus Annus, Evangelium Vitae, and Veritatis Splendor.
And this reader at least is not persuaded by Noonan’s tendency to view
the "development" of doctrine as a change, or even a reversal,
of doctrine.
It is all too easy to compare, for instance, the texts of the nineteenth
century "Syllabus of Errors" with current magisterial texts and
show the verbal and policy differences, even contradictions. More effort
is required to demonstrate the continuity and internal coherence that Newman
described as the development of doctrine. As Noonan debunks the
Durkheimian sacralization of political society, he also tends to politicize
the workings of the sacred society that is the Church. That is certainly
not his intention. He has a very effective passage on how the political
maneuverings of the Council are consonant with an "incarnational"
understanding of the way God works. But in accenting the discontinuities
produced by such maneuverings, the affirmation of God’s incarnational ways
seems to be a naked act of faith unsupported by historical evidence.
But let me not leave the wrong impression. The questions and arguments
provoked by The Lustre of Our Country testify to its great achievement.
Judge Noonan understands, as very few judges and constitutional scholars
do, the founding genius of the American experiment. He knows and persuasively
explains why those sixteen words of the First Amendment continue to be
this country’s most innovative, audacious, and promising contribution to
the world’s understanding of the right ordering of political society.
Papal Popularity
I came across it again the other day, the flat assertion that Pope John
XXIII was the most widely loved and admired Pope of the modern era, and
perhaps of the Church’s entire history. I do not wish to detract from his
undeniable stature by entering a modest demurrer. One cannot help but note
that such assertions are usually made by Catholics who identify with the
"progressive" interpretation of the Second Vatican Council, and
usually in the context of an invidious comparison with Paul VI and, especially,
John Paul II. Among Catholics of a liberal disposition, who are a relatively
small minority, and among folk in the media who follow their lead, it seems
to be the case that John XXIII is the most loved and admired of modern
Popes. That I think is the more accurate statement. And, it should be added,
among such he is typically depicted as a proponent of the radical changes
they typically espouse, a depiction that has slight basis in fact.
John was Pope for a relatively short time (1958-1963), while John Paul
II will be in the chair of Peter for twenty years come this October. John’s
inestimable contribution was to convoke the Council on which subsequent
pontificates have built. The idea of a papal popularity contest is unseemly
and should not be encouraged, but, just for the sake of accuracy, can there
be any reasonable doubt that John Paul II is known, loved, and admired
by more people than any other Pope in history? It is not terribly important
to say that, and I would not say it at all, were it not that some people
think it so important to deny it.
The immediate occasion for this reflection is a fine new book by David
Aikman, an evangelical Protestant and former Time magazine correspondent,
Great Souls: Six Who Changed the Century (Word, $22.95). He offers
winsome profiles of six "great souls": Billy Graham, Mother Teresa,
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Elie Wiesel, Nelson Mandela, and John Paul II.
Of the last he writes: "Billy Graham has said of Pope John Paul II,
certainly with accuracy, that he will ‘go down in history as the greatest
of our modern Popes. He’s the strong conscience of the whole Christian
world.’ I respect that judgment, but for me it doesn’t go far enough. I
am not a Roman Catholic, and I certainly share many of the Protestant reservations
about some aspects of Catholic doctrine and some forms of Catholic devotionalism.
Yet it is my view that Pope John Paul II, in his profound spiritual depth,
his prayer life, his enormous intellectual universe, his compassion and
sympathy for the oppressed, and above all in his vision of how Christians
collectively are supposed to live, is the greatest single Christian leader
of the twentieth century. When he is gone, he may well be viewed, quite
simply, as one of the most exemplary figures in all of Christian history."
Of course, one can disagree with Aikman’s judgment. Or one can agree,
as I do. But agree or disagree, one should do so, I believe, without making
invidious comparisons between John XXIII and John Paul II, two who are
undoubtedly great souls as well as great Popes.
Swiss Gold, and Chinese
Over the last couple of years there has been a great to- do over the
ways in which the Swiss turned their World War II neutrality into a very
good thing. The formidable A. M. Rosenthal of the New York Times
recently wondered out loud whether fifty years from now the same questions
might not be raised about U.S. dealings with China. President Clinton,
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and the National Council of Churches appear
to take the position that what’s good for corporate America is good for
the world. Human rights, and religious persecution in particular, must
not be permitted to interfere with that new world order. Those who disagree
will be interested, and others should be interested, in the following report
from the March 28, 1998 issue of the London Tablet, an international
Catholic weekly. The author is Cecilia Bromley-Martin, press officer for
Aid to the Church in Need. (Reprinted with permission.)
Going Underground in China
In the bitterest conditions I have ever known, my three colleagues and
I waited for our secret contact. Tourists thronged around us, so our Western
faces were unlikely to bring any suspicion as we climbed into a jeep and
drove away.
After many miles—seven of us crushed into the ancient four-man vehicle—we
finally arrived at a poor and remote house. As we were ushered speedily
inside, the husband welcomed us. His wife was cooking and their daughter
played with a friend in her room—but beyond, behind closed doors, we found
a dozen young men, preparing for China’s clandestine priesthood.
These students are just one small group of an "underground"
seminary, forced to abandon its own diocese when the persecution there
became too severe. They have been dispersed and the groups are anything
up to three hundred miles apart. They have one spiritual director, a priest.
He is thirty.
After celebrating Mass together in a small, concrete shed with a makeshift
altar, decorated with ferns in an old drink can, we crowded into their
cold bedroom. Through clouds of breath, drinking boiling water from jam
jars to keep us warm, we heard about the life of China’s illegal Catholics.
One young priest, in charge of this group of seminarians, told us that
there seems to be a three-year cycle—three years of relative calm, then
three years of persecution. All the seminarians we met are wanted by the
authorities.
But it is not just priests and nuns who suffer for their faith. Every
Catholic who gave us food, a bed, or transport took a great risk. In one
diocese, about eight hundred people used to meet in a Christian’s courtyard
for Mass, but the police found out and put the owner in prison, where he
has become semi-paralyzed. Four houses with crosses on top were confiscated,
without compensation; three are now being used as schools, and one is being
used by the local government. A recent operation known as "Strike
Hard" was specifically devised to reduce and control underground Catholics.
It is estimated that China has twelve million Catholics—roughly 1 per
cent of the population. For forty-five years, the Communist regime attempted
unsuccessfully to crush the Church—Mass was forbidden, loyalty to the Pope
outlawed, and priests imprisoned or executed. Eventually, the authorities
compromised and set up the Patriotic Association to monitor a state Catholic
Church answerable to China rather than Rome. Many Catholics, exhausted
by years of punishment, felt the only way they could practice their faith
was to join this official Church; but for countless others, to be Catholic
and not remain loyal to the Pope was inconceivable. These went "underground."
Yet no foreigner will ever fully comprehend the complexities of China’s
divided Church. Two-thirds of the country’s official bishops have been
legitimized by the Pope, and whilst in some dioceses the "patriotic"
and clandestine bishops do not communicate in any way, we met one underground
bishop who shares the home of his official counterpart. It is well known
that many future secret priests train in the official seminaries. One bishop
told us that the majority of the bishops are good, but "the rest are
weak Communist puppets."
Even the official Church is by no means left in peace. The "archangels"—as
they facetiously call the officials who watch their every move—stamp their
mark on every aspect of church life. Christian cemeteries are illegal,
no rank higher than bishop is permitted, male orders are forbidden, and
only "useful" female orders are allowed: contemplatives are considered
a waste of time.
We met a group of underground novices. So great is the danger of discovery
that—enclosed in small, dank farm buildings lent to the thirty-nine-year-old
bishop by a brave peasant farmer—the young men are unable to leave the
compound during the whole two years they are there. Traveling only under
the cover of night, we were able to visit this seminary.
Their day starts in the chapel at 4 a.m. They pray for nine hours a
day and can talk to each other for only fifty minutes. Breakfast, a sort
of porridge, is at 8:20 a.m., with dinner (vegetables) at 4:10 p.m. On
Fridays they miss breakfast, and twice a week they live on just bread and
water. They never have meat or eggs. "We think that our standard of
life should be lower than that of the average Christian," one told
us. "We don’t usually notice the lack of food because the prayer makes
us feel closer to God."
Wherever we went, underground priests, nuns, and seminarians smilingly
accepted that they would probably serve at least one prison sentence for
their vocation. None was frightened. We met another young priest who had
been sent alone to one of the poorest areas of China, with scarcely any
Christians—now, five years on, there are one thousand. In winter, the temperature
plummets, and he has forty-six outstations to visit in an area of 2,500
square miles. He gets around on an old motorbike, but when it’s icy he
walks. "Are you happy?" I asked him. His smile was radiant, huge:
"I am very happy as a priest. I meet people who have no goal in life,
and when they convert and they are blessed, I see how happy and fulfilled
they are, and that makes me happy."
At Ease in Zion
Woe to those who are at ease in Zion (Amos 6).
I was speaking at Princeton a while back and had dinner with a group
that included a number of Lutherans and one Methodist who had recently
become Roman Catholic. They declared themselves utterly convinced of everything
the Catholic Church teaches, but where, they wanted to know, does one find
the Catholic Church at worship? They had a long list of horror stories
from Masses at suburban parishes with wannabe Jay Leno priests, guitar-twanged
Andrew Lloyd Webber show tunes, and song-leader soloists strutting their
stuff. On the train back from Princeton I read Edward Farley of Vanderbilt
Divinity School writing in Christian Century on the current state
of Protestant worship. It was a continuation of the dinner conversation.
"Though prayers, music, and sermon may treat solemn and sacred
themes of grief, suffering, evil, redemption, and hope, these themes arise
from and then resubmerge into a stream of comfortable and casual pleasantness.
This pleasant mood disengages these things from adoration and neutralizes
and tames the Mystery. Most of the things done on Sunday morning do not
seem to be directed toward adoration. Judged by the mood and ethos, the
primary concern and referent of this hour is something other than the sacred.
"Without wanting to idealize earlier periods of Protestant ritual,
I do wonder what has caused worship to become like this. Is it the outcome
of a long historical process in which the Protestant movement failed to
discover how to relate proclamation to sacramentality, how to retain both
iconography and iconoclasm? Is the essence of Protestantism the replacement
of adoration with proclamation, where grace comes by listening, not adoring?
Is Sunday morning the result of the Protestant opposition between faith
and works, an opposition that assigns ritual activities and even the act
of adoration to ‘works’? Has the Protestant fascination with the forensic
problem of release from guilt edged out acts of adoration? Is Sunday morning
the result of the displacement of older pieties by civil religion, the
therapeutic, the culture of narcissism, or social protest? Have contemporary
churches been infected by the entertainment orientations of the electronic
church and the new megachurches created by nondenominational entrepreneurs?
"I cannot say. I have no villains in mind. Ministers, music directors,
worship and congregational leaders have not deliberately conspired to bring
about this state of affairs. Protestant congregations have become devoid
of worship as various features of contemporary culture have formed congregational
life. The casual, happy, amused, and chatty Sunday morning has crept up
on us unawares. If it is here to stay, at least for a while, perhaps congregations
face the difficult task of creating another time or event in their ritual
life when people gather to adore."
That about sums it up: "Casual, happy, amused, and chatty."
I told my Princeton friends that I have witnessed some of what they deplore,
but my general experience, beginning with my own parish in Manhattan, Immaculate
Conception, is that of the Mass done with great dignity and reverence for
the eucharistic mystery. And I do get around to parishes in other parts
of the country. They countered that the parishes that would invite me are
probably pretty good to start with, or clean up their liturgical act when
I’m around, and there may be something to that. A former Lutheran in Virginia
who became a Catholic a couple of years ago says, "I thought I was
joining the Catholic Church, and then discovered I had joined the Diocese
of Richmond."
In truth, he and the Princeton folk all say they have found places where
the Mass is done as one might expect Catholics to do it, but, they insist,
it isn’t easy. One found an ethnic inner-city parish, another goes to a
nearby monastery, and yet another attends an Eastern rite parish. One says
she has even found a large suburban parish where the people actually kneel
during the canon, the priest refrains from ad-libbing the prayers, and
there is regular exposition of the Blessed Sacrament. But that, all declare,
is the great exception. These people, be it noted, are not "traditionalists"
or fans of the Tridentine Rite. They are simply looking for the Mass to
be celebrated in a way consonant with what the Church teaches and not disdainful
of the liturgical and musical treasures of the Catholic tradition. That
doesn’t seem like too much to expect, and, for all the banality of the
English texts, it can be done eminently well with the Order of Mass in
common use.
There was a time, not all that long ago, when people were attracted
to the Catholic Church by the mystery, splendor, and fervent devotion of
its worship. I count myself among the many who were formed by the liturgical
renewal pioneered by leaders such as Monsignor Martin Hellriegel and embraced
by the Second Vatican Council. What happened to that renewal is by now
a familiar story, involving liturgists who confused the discovery of the
human in worship with the worship of the human, ecumenists who felt obliged
to love all traditions but their own, and episcopal bureaucracies that
became establishment enforcers of perpetual change.
These developments were and are very profitably exploited by publishing
empires in places such as Chicago and Portland that peddle to parishes
an uninterrupted flow of musical tackiness premised upon the equation of
progress with vulgarity, and all designed to put God’s people at ease in
Zion. It is called pandering, but it is by no means evident that the pandering
is appreciated by those being pandered to. The Mass as entertainment is,
well, mildly entertaining. One may wonder if there is anything so sure
to induce passivity in most of the people as the exhortations to hyper-activity
in Father Bob’s performance liturgy. Not, mind you, that the Mass was done
so well thirty years ago. That’s why the Council called for renewal. More
than thirty years later, the call would seem to be more pertinent than
ever. (The best and hilariously devastating sendup of the current state
of Catholic worship is Thomas Day’s Why Catholics Can’t Sing. It
ought to be mandatory reading for all priests, seminarians, and music directors.)
In the last several years there has been a dramatic but little-remarked
increase in the number of converts coming into the Church, and I am in
regular conversation with Lutherans, Anglicans, Presbyterians, and others
who are contemplating that momentous step. As one might expect, many have
reasons for hesitation. I have never encountered anyone who has problems
with the Church’s moral teachings or with issues such as women’s ordination.
The Church’s position on such questions is generally a definite attraction.
There are two common obstacles. One is papal infallibility. That is a good
problem to have, for thinking it through leads to a deeper understanding
of ecclesial authority, the development of doctrine, and Christ’s promise
that the Holy Spirit will lead his Church into all truth (John 16). But
an obstacle as common, if not more common, is the state of Catholic worship.
That ought not to be.
The Catholic Church gladly acknowledges the grace of God to be found
outside its boundaries. With equal clarity, it teaches: "Whosoever,
therefore, knowing that the Catholic Church was made necessary by God through
Jesus Christ would refuse to enter her or to remain in her could not be
saved." (Lumen Gentium, 14) That poses the crucial point of
decision. I regularly remind inquirers of Flannery O’Connor’s remark that
one is called to suffer ever so much more from the Church than for the
Church. That will likely continue to be the case. And a reminder is always
in order that some of the tales of liturgical horribles are probably exaggerated
for effect. Nonetheless, as the prophet Amos might say: Woe to those who
create an obstacle to the fullness of Catholic communion by the liturgical
kitsch of Masses that are "casual, happy, amused, and chatty."
I have heard the objection that this is merely a matter of aesthetics,
to which one answer is that aesthetics is not mere. Another answer is that
a cultivated indifference to bad taste should not be a price exacted for
becoming a Catholic. The most important answer, however, goes beyond taste
to belief. A former Lutheran pastor tells me, "I had read the Catechism
and Balthasar and the great doctors of the Church and was completely convinced
by what they said about the Mass." Then she visited the neighboring
Catholic parish. "From the way the Mass was celebrated, I just couldn’t
believe that they believed what they said they believed. That was the biggest
stumbling block in the way of my becoming a Catholic." She overcame
it. But why did she have to?
Ernst Käsemann, RIP
One of the most influential Protestant biblical scholars of the century,
Ernst Käsemann, died this past February at age ninety-one. There was
no notice in the press here, which is not right. I asked Paul F. M. Zahl,
Dean of the Cathedral Church of the Advent (Episcopal) in Birmingham, Alabama,
to pen a brief tribute. He was both a student and personal friend of Professor
Käsemann.
Ernst Käsemann was born July 12, 1906 in Dahlhausen near Bochum.
He said that his childhood was "alone and joyless." Having studied
theology at Bonn, where he was influenced by Erik Peterson (whose conversion
to Roman Catholicism in 1930 jarred him deeply), Käsemann met Rudolf
Bultmann at Marburg in 1925. Bultmann was his teacher and colleague until
1965, when Käsemann broke with Bultmann over the "anthropological,"
i.e., subjective, tilt of Bultmann’s thought. From 1959 to 1971 Käsemann
was Professor of New Testament at Tübingen.
He served in parish ministry from 1933 to 1946. In 1937 his preaching
against the Nazi ideology drew the wrath of the Gestapo and he was imprisoned.
He was the last of his generation of German Church resisters to Hitler,
a generation of whom, with the exception of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, almost
nothing is ever said in the United States.
Käsemann considered himself a revolutionary "partisan,"
campaigning against idolatry on every front. His confrontation with the
Gestapo in 1937; his conflict in the 1970s with the "Pietists,"
who believed that he denied the bodily resurrection of Jesus; his public
sympathy with student radicals in 1968; the fact that his daughter Elizabeth
became a political revolutionary in Argentina and was killed by the junta
there in 1977: these and other important moments in a life that can be
properly described as almost "world-historical" were all shaped
by the metaphor of struggle against the principalities and powers.
On the scholarly side, Käsemann was a founder of the "second
quest" for the historical Jesus and was a leading theologian of St.
Paul. The inner core of all his written work was a highly individual reception
of justification by faith. If Käsemann was a partisan of the partisans,
he was also a Reformation theologian par excellence. He did not mind being
called a Gnesio-Lutheraner (a "purist of the Lutherans"),
although he really wasn’t. He was too combative to be held to any single
school of thought.
Käsemann’s last letter to this writer was dated Reformation Day
1996. The next-to-penultimate paragraph stands as a moving testament to
his understanding of what it means to be an authentic warrior for Christ:
Whoever took part in the German Church struggle [i.e., of 1933-1939]
was a very individual partisan. I was one, too. I stood in the pulpit and
right in front of me, in the gallery and below in the chancel, sat the
Gestapo and the Nazis. You won’t believe how much of an individual I felt
then! To preach Heaven and to have Hell right before your eyes in the person
of its legates. . . . A thousand listeners were asked, at the highest pitch
of individuality, to what end they were listening. . . . We represented
our Lord and we risked His cross. We were called revolutionaries and were
dealt with accordingly. But the Kingdom of God is revolutionary!
While We’re At It
- Many years ago Woody Allen’s Sleeper had this fellow waking
up two hundred years later in a newly health-conscious world where it had
been discovered that the very best things to do were to smoke a lot and
eat plenty of ice cream. Maybe we don’t have to wait two hundred years.
A few weeks ago there was that huge longitudinal study, the biggest thing
ever done to study people’s health over decades, which determined that
the one variable that made a significant difference for the better was
having a drink or two every day. And now the Journal of the American
Medical Association reports that long-term studies in the U.S. and
Japan indicate that men who eat more fat, including more saturated fat,
are less likely to suffer a stroke. Science and a health-obsessed culture
appear to be at cross purposes, sometimes posing hard choices. Like last
week’s announcement of a pill that can reduce balding, but at the risk
of causing impotence. Why be attractively hirsute if you can’t handle the
consequences? It is no secret that I enjoy a good cigar, and will make
do with a bad one if circumstances demand. Some months ago I opined in
this space that nobody knows if the world would really be a better place
if nobody smoked. That sent the Adventist magazine Liberty into
a tizzy. Their editorial blast against my heresy was accompanied by a cartoon
depicting me on chummy terms with Joe Camel. All I meant to say is what
I believe, namely, that a world without cigars and pipes may be a world
with a great deal less personal happiness. As for cigarettes, I hold no
brief for the habit but am appalled by the way a culture once noted for
its rugged individualism has pusillanimously surrendered to the extremists
of the new prohibitionism. I confess that my disposition is powerfully
shaped by the spectacle of a society that has declared open season on unborn
children and celebrates a subculture based on sticking sexual plumbing
into inappropriate orifices rigorously imposing its last moral absolute:
no smoking. And I have been influenced by the experience of nearly dying
(some thought I had died) of cancer five years ago, which has put me on
much friendlier terms with mortality. In any event, and lest the folks
over at Liberty get themselves excited all over again, this space
does not purport to offer medical advice. I do think moral and intellectual
health is greatly improved by cultivating a robust skepticism toward medical
agitations in service to the delusion that, if we are careful enough, some
of us might get through life without dying.
- Reviewing Don Cupitt’s After God: The Future of Religion, professor
of theology Dennis Nineham begins with a question: "How is that Don
Cupitt, one of the most learned, acute, lucid, and intellectually stimulating
theologians of his generation, has received virtually no public recognition,
either in his own place (Cambridge) or any other?" In his book, Cupitt
contends that the word "God" has no objective referent, being
a vestige of the monotheism human beings constructed after they left the
hunter-gatherer phase of evolution. In our enlightened time, we see "that
everything, including all linguistic meanings, truths, values, and indeed
reality itself, is a slowly evolving consensus product with no objective
basis." Any other questions, Professor Nineham?
- A Canadian paper reports that an Anglican church in downtown Toronto
is trying "a novel approach to attract new members." St. Stephen-in-the-Fields
advertises that it offers a "warranty" that it welcomes everyone,
regardless of class, sexual orientation, or marital status, and "will
not tell you how to dress, feel, or act." Now why hasn’t someone thought
of that before?
- The Charitable Choice provision in the latest welfare-reform law allows
the government to contract also with religious organizations to provide
social services, which of course sends Barry Lynn of Americans United for
the Separation of Church and State into his usual snit. The law, he says,
will force people "to be good or religious." Being good or being
religious, or even being both, might strike some as a not bad idea. James
Skillen of the Washington-based Center for Public Justice says Lynn has
got the law all wrong: "Lynn’s fears are so strong that he can’t even
read the law correctly. The Charitable Choice provision specifically stipulates
that eligible recipients do not have to go to a religious provider for
services. And if they do go and find that they don’t like what they hear,
they are free to go elsewhere or to stay and refrain from participating
in the full program of the agency. No one is forced to do anything. The
truth is that it’s the old and dying system defended by Lynn that exerts
illegitimate force on people. Think of it this way. What about all those
citizens for whom faith is a full-life matter? When they are eligible for
welfare services, the only option Lynn thinks they should have is one separated
from their religious faith. In the name of equal treatment and religious
freedom, Lynn would exclude many citizens and service organizations from
full participation in public life. The Charitable Choice provision does
just the opposite of forcing people to become religious. It opens real
choice to all Americans by stopping the discrimination against religious
groups. If government allows a full diversity of groups to participate
in providing services, and if it makes sure people are free to choose their
service provider, then no one is forced to be religious. Government simply
complies with the Constitution’s true demands, which are to protect religious
freedom and to refrain from establishing any religion. . . . The time has
come for Barry Lynn to put the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries behind
him and to become a genuine, twentieth-century public pluralist—someone
ready to advocate real religious freedom for all Americans under a government
that does not discriminate against either believers or non-believers. It
is time for Americans United to join the fight for justice."
- There are all kinds of loose hymnals floating around in Catholic circles,
and Don Schenk of Allentown, Pennsylvania, who is responding to Father
Avery Dulles’ article on "The Ways We Worship" (FT,
March), is not amused by one called Gather. In his parish
the Sunday before he had to endure number 719, which asked him to sing
a complaint about "dogmas that obscure your plan." The galling
thing is that it was set to the tune of "Tantum Ergo," the hymn
composed by Thomas Aquinas for the feast of Corpus Christi. As in the dogma
of the Real Presence.
- Johannes Baptist Metz is a serious theologian, and his little devotional
reflection, Poverty of Spirit, has been cherished by many. Here
is an announcement that it has now been reissued in an "inclusive-language
version." Poor in spirit and rich in correctness. The publisher’s
blurb says, "The only image we have of God is the face of our neighbor;
thus it is in our relationship with others that we find our salvation."
Paulist Press would be well advised to check that out with St. Paul. In
fact, they might check it out with Father Metz.
- Riches upon riches from Paulist Press. A Buddhist Life in America
by Joan Halifax, with an introduction by Ronald Thiemann of Harvard Divinity
School. The publisher says that Miss Halifax is "the spiritual successor
to Joseph Campbell." I think that is meant as a recommendation.
- Popular writer Paul Wilkes has a new book, The Seven Secrets of
Successful Catholics (Paulist). It comes with the following guarantee
from Father Robert Drinan, S.J.: "The fortunate people who read this
precious book will not only be successful but will have joy and tranquillity
in their lives." Lawyers of disappointed buyers can contact Father
Drinan at the Georgetown University Law Center.
- Stephen A. Wise, grandson of the famous Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, asks
why Dietrich Bonhoeffer is not honored as a "righteous gentile"
at Yad Vashem. There is no doubt that Bonhoeffer, a Lutheran pastor and
theologian, courageously spoke out for the Jews as early as 1933, was actively
involved in the rescue of Jews, and paid with his life when he was executed
by the Nazis in April 1945, only a month before war’s end. Officials at
Yad Vashem tell Mr. Wise that recognition can be granted only for assistance
to Jews "still adhering to the Jewish faith." The claim is that
the Jews rescued by Bonhoeffer were either nonpracticing or had converted
to Christianity. Wise points out that the Nazis did not make such nice
distinctions; a person with even one Jewish grandparent or great-grandparent
was slated for destruction. He adds, "What then does ‘adhering’ mean?
And what is the measure of adherence: Orthodox Judaism? Conservative? Reform?"
Good questions all, and deserving of a more credible response from the
people in charge of Yad Vashem.
- Tantalized by the death watch. The editors of National Catholic
Reporter view this pontificate as an instrument of unspeakable oppression,
but they have not given up hope. "The lure of hope is eternal. The
current silent acquiescence of theologians and church leaders may be hiding
a multitude of new ideas and aspirations. Every day, opinions and attitudes
are being formed that will find expression and life only when this Pope
has passed to his reward. This is not to say Catholicism is relative, a
menu that changes, or that each Pope founds a new religion. But history
shows how tantalizingly the Church has evolved from one papacy to the next."
Aw c’mon, admit it, a new religion would be really neat.
- Poor Andrew Carnegie. He gave away zillions in an undoubtedly sincere
passion for world peace. After establishing a couple of foundations that
he thought were not going about it the right way, he gave what was then
a megafortune to establish the Church Peace Union. When I worked with it
in the 1970s, it was called the Council on Religion and International Affairs,
and there Jim Finn and I edited what I continue to think of as a worthy
but short-lived magazine called Worldview. The organization has
again been renamed as the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International
Affairs and continues to operate out of its elegant houses on East 64th
Street as a lunch and chatter center for people in the international affairs
"community." The uncertainty of its mission is reflected in the
instability of its name. But then, uncertainty and instability are the
fate of institutions in the world peace business. When he established the
Church Peace Union, Carnegie wrote a letter to the distinguished trustees
pointing out that, through the bonds of sacred commerce with our imperial
cousins in Great Britain and Germany, the abolition of war would be achieved
sooner than most people thought, and therefore, when their goal was reached,
the trustees should give the remaining funds to the deserving poor. Needless
to say, the deserving poor are still waiting. Carnegie’s letter was written
in the summer of 1914. Now I see that another of his foundations, the Carnegie
Corporation, has come out with a book, Preventing Deadly Conflict,
which is the product of ten years’ labor and the expenditure of 9.5 million
dollars. The project was overseen by a most distinguished commission composed
of former Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, the former prime minister of
Norway, and many other noted formers. The commission was advised by thirty-six
scholars and "eminent practitioners," and had a huge bash of
a coming-out party at the Willard Hotel in Washington, which was duplicated
in other capital cities around the world. This monumental study has concluded
that "the need to prevent deadly conflict is increasingly urgent,"
and "preventing deadly conflict is possible." It also discovered
that "peace and equitable development will require not only effective
institutions, but also greater understanding and respect for differences
within and across national boundaries." Religious leaders are urged
to "undertake a worldwide effort to foster respect for diversity,"
to avoid conflicts, and to "censure co-religionists who promote violence."
Were he still around, Andrew Carnegie might consider establishing yet another
foundation, perhaps reviving that fine old name, the Church Peace Union.
- The German government has been giving the Church of Scientology a hard
time, refusing to recognize it as a legitimate religion. The Scientologists,
in response, have been running full-page ads in this country around the
theme once-a-Nazi-always-a-Nazi, portraying themselves as martyrs to religious
freedom. Governments are very bad at defining what is and what is not legitimate
religion, and I don’t know what Germany should do, but my impression is
that Scientology is, among other things, a money-making scam built on a
set of psychic placebos that the late L. Ron Hubbard peddled as "Dianetics."
The Scientologists run "celebrity centers" which have had a notable
appeal for Hollywood types in search of who they are apart from being celebrities.
Dianetics offers high-priced treatments that allegedly help people discover
their true selves and take control of their lives. The Wall Street Journal
recently ran an item critical of Scientology and what the paper thought
to be its dubious tax-exemption granted by the IRS. David Miscavige, chairman
of the outfit, wrote a long letter of protest offering what he apparently
thinks are cogent arguments, including this: "If you are so right
about everything, why don’t you try and run for President, and put yourself
in the public arena and see if the American public votes for you?"
One suspects that Mr. Miscavige is overdue for his next treatment.
- A recently retired Navy officer responds to the comment (March) on
the editorial in Strategic Review urging resistance to new rules
about women in combat. He sends along the official "instruction"
on the matter issued by the Department of the Navy and has this to say:
"This instruction is hard policy, and the equal opportunity phrase
gives it large teeth. Those who disagree cannot be viewed as supporting
and being proactive in attaining the Navy’s equal opportunity goals. Officer
fitness reports and enlisted performance evaluations both require comment
on equal opportunity performance; a less than stellar grade was a career
killer before I retired from the Navy [recently] and is more so now. If
I were still on active duty, I would feel duty bound to grade adversely
a subordinate who expressed disagreement, for any reason, with this policy.
I am very thankful that I have been spared that experience! I reckon that
those who share my professional and, perhaps, my moral reservations about
women in combat are leaving the Navy at the first opportunity. It is clearly
imprudent to stay in the service if one has any reservations about the
role of women. It is also dishonest to oneself, to one’s shipmates, and
to the Navy to pretend to wholeheartedly support the Navy’s policy while
inwardly opposing it; an honorable man should complete his obligated service
and then resign."
- Call it quixotic, but it brightens the day. The Phillip Morris company
gave $40,000 to Belmont Abbey College, a small Catholic school in Belmont,
North Carolina. The money was to fund an adult literacy program run by
the college. Then college president Robert A. Preston came across an ad
for Virginia Slims in Time magazine that in his judgment and that
of others was clearly promoting premarital sex. He discussed the matter
with the students in his ethics class. "Some of them argued that it
would do more good for us to keep the money and use it for the literacy
project, or that it was such a small amount that it wouldn’t matter to
a big company like Phillip Morris." But most of the students thought
the money should be returned, as did the trustees, and so it was. Said
Phillip Morris: "We regret their decision because our grant would
have helped improve literacy in Gaston County." Dr. Preston’s letter
returning the money made it clear "that this action is in no way connected
with the fact that Phillip Morris is in the tobacco business." Draw
a line between those who would approve returning the money as a protest
against the promotion of tobacco and those who approve it as a protest
against the promotion of premarital sex and you get one way of understanding
alignments in what some call the culture wars.
- There is manifestly a Christian revival in the culture, says David
R. Carlin, even if it takes the form of reaction against decades of secular
onslaught. But it is very much a Protestant revival/reaction. Catholics
are not likely to really get with it unless they are led by their clergy,
and Catholic clergy are way behind their Protestant counterparts on this
score. Why should that be? Well, says Carlin, Catholic clergy tend to be
older and badly overworked. Then too, in the aftermath of Vatican II many
clergy took a liberal turn, and most are still very nervous about being
perceived as anti-liberal, which means that they often end up on the secular
side of the culture wars. But there is also another reason worth pondering:
"The Catholic clergy are less ‘American’ than the conservative Protestant
clergy, and therefore less disturbed by the de-Christianization of the
United States. By this I do not mean that Catholic clergy are less patriotic
than Protestants—not at all. Members of the Catholic clergy, however, have
a strong sense of belonging to an international church, the United States
being only one of many branch offices; if Christianity goes under in the
United States, that’s too bad, but it’s not the end of the world. By contrast,
conservative Protestant clergy—take, for instance, the Southern Baptists,
the single largest conservative Protestant denomination—have a strong sense
of belonging to a church whose home country is the United States; if Christianity
goes under here, its true home, it is in grave trouble everywhere. They
are therefore more sensitive to anti-Christian developments in American
culture and more prompt in responding to them."
- What I have written about the naked public square, says Louis R. Tarsitano,
is "too optimistic." My problem, he says, is that I assume people
are still capable of moral argument about the right ordering of our life
together. Alas, says Tarsitano, writing in Touchstone, that was
true of modernism, but our present era of postmodernism knows nothing about
rational argument; contests are determined by what he calls "the plausible
person." "The plausible person is the analog of the two-dimensional
image on a television screen, a moving picture of a role that stirs the
emotions of the viewers. He is a spectacle and an entertainment: not a
communicator of ideas, but of sentiments." The supreme example of
the plausible person is, of course, Bill Clinton, the "Sentimentalist-in-Chief."
Tarsitano’s point is that Christians must be prepared to communicate the
gospel in this postmodernist mode. There are many parts to his argument,
and I am not as convinced as he appears to be that the flight from public
reason is a permanent fact of life, but along the way he has many suggestive
things to say. And his analysis of last year’s curious cultural juxtaposition
of Princess Diana and Mother Teresa is, I think, one of the best reflections
on the subject I’ve seen: "The power of the plausible person to appeal
both to the post-modern and to the incompletely so did not go unnoticed.
In the English parliamentary elections, Tony Blair and the Laborites adopted
the language of plausible persons. Telegenic, well dressed, and well groomed,
they said and emoted the right things; and they won, easily defeating a
Tory Party that relied on modernism’s facts and figures to make its case
to the people. Mr. Blair further demonstrated his supreme plausibility
at the funeral of Princess Diana. In a sea of plausible persons, here was
a man who could read St. Paul’s hymn to charity with style, and then downplay
its potentially offensive Christian presuppositions by sentimentalizing
to the pop eulogy of Elton John. He put St. Paul’s words into their proper
postmodern context, where one song is as good as another, as long as it
makes the audience feel something good about itself. Diana’s funeral was
the model of postmodern events, as celebrities, the ultimate in plausible
persons, mourned for one of their own. Sung during the procession, the
words of the ancient Burial Office were reduced to part of the show. Then,
speaking the words of the postmodern Alternative Service Book, the participating
clergy demonstrated their bland, vaguely spiritual ability not to give
offense, or to draw unseemly attention to such questions as the possible
existence of an absolute truth in Jesus Christ. In contrast, the funeral
of Mother Teresa the following week was anything but a postmodern ‘concert
with a corpse.’ A simple chorus of novice nuns served as the choir, singing
with a religious seriousness missing in the technically exquisite music
that framed Elton John’s performance at Diana’s ‘event.’ The bishops and
priests who conducted the service made little effort to appear plausible
or to reassure the postmoderns that they were only kidding about the resurrection
and the life in Christ. They delivered the same funeral that they would
have given anyone else according to the Roman rite. While the cameras followed
Diana’s funeral in riveted silence, so as not to disrupt the music or speeches,
during Mother Teresa’s funeral, the networks repeatedly cut away, with
apologies for the ‘boring’ canon of the Roman Mass. The speakers were often
silenced, so that the commentators could raise questions about the morality
of the deceased’s Christian opposition to abortion. The same commentators
also attempted to rehabilitate Mother Teresa in postmodern terms, stressing
her ability to work with people of other faiths, as if this proved that
she did not take her Christianity or Roman Catholicism too seriously. The
person they praised was not the intensely faithful woman whose body lay
in the box before them, but a plausible person who thought that all religions
were good and more or less equally true."
- Chaplain at Cambridge for some thirty years, Monsignor Alfred Gilbey
recently died at age ninety-six. The obituary in the London Times
said "he was the last Roman Catholic priest of his kind and had been
for a considerable time." In latter years he lived at the Travellers’
Club and, until a few months ago, walked each day to say 7:30 Mass in St.
Wilfred’s chapel of the Brompton Oratory. We had lunch in New York in 1995
on his first visit to this country, and he declared himself very pleased
with America. "I will not wait another ninety-four years before coming
again," he said. He was most elegant in manner, but the Times
notes there was "a certain asceticism" about him. "He might
counsel a dinner companion against ordering a certain dish and then choose
it for himself, as a gentle exercise in self-mortification." He was
altogether a remarkable and gentle man. Requiescat in pace.
- I take nothing back from what has been said in these pages about the
judicial usurpation of politics in the U.S. But then one looks northward
and is grateful that here we still have a fighting chance. King’s University
College in Edmonton, Alberta, a Christian school, had dismissed an instructor
for his public homosexual practices which, said the administration, violated
the foundational beliefs of the college. Canada’s Supreme Court has now
issued a unanimous decision that the school violated the instructor’s human
rights. The court noted that the province of Alberta’s human rights law
did not include sexual orientation, declaring that it was now remedying
the omission by "reading in" that provision, effective immediately.
It is almost unimaginable that an American court would on this question
so arrogantly ride roughshod over the political process and the free exercise
rights of a religious institution. Almost. At present. Of course there
is still a fighting chance in Canada, too. If anyone had the nerve for
it.
- A few months ago, the Wall Street Journal carried a story, "Striking
Behavior: The Ezzos Sell Parents Some Tough Advice: Don’t Spare the Rod."
Gary Ezzo has written a slew of books that are a big thing in the evangelical
Christian market and are now being picked up in some Catholic circles.
Dr. Thomas Mezzetti and Jacintha Mezzetti have written a hard-hitting critique
of the Ezzo approach, called "Neo-Evangelizing the Catholic Family
with an Alien Gospel." Readers may write the Mezzettis (5117 White
Flint Dr., Kensington, MD 20895) or get a copy of the essay on the website
(http://members.aol.com/ncp2000/index.html). This is not my area of expertise,
but it strikes me as an important debate about what it means to rear children
in the fear and love of the Lord.
- Somewhere along the way Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr said he sometimes
sings hymns while jogging in the morning. Or maybe somebody caught him
in the act. In any event, it has become a prime exhibit in the media prosecution
of Mr. Starr as a very weird person. So weird, and dangerous, that he is
even looking into books that "that woman" gave Mr. Clinton as
presents, including what is apparently a semi-pornographic novel called
Vox. Some of the chief elements in what the New York Times
insists is not a culture war are blatantly on display in a column by Maureen
Dowd: "I must admit that it is amusing to think of the prissy Independent
Counsel, who attended Bible College and who still reads the Bible and sings
hymns when he jogs, poring over the raunchy, heavy-breathing phone exchanges
in Vox." That’s a nice touch: He still reads the Bible.
How weird can you get?
- The news is the first draft of history, Ben Bradlee of the Washington
Post is supposed to have said. More often, the news is what fills up
the space on page three. For instance, a very busy cardinal in the Curia
had agreed to give a lecture on "the Church" in connection with
a Roman anniversary. Having not read anything on the subject for years,
he sent his secretary to the library to get "some books on ecclesiology."
The secretary brought back a wide selection, including one by a German
theologian who is a famous dissident. The lecture was a cut-and-paste job,
including an item from column A, another from column B, and so forth. Sure
enough, the famous dissident was uncritically quoted, and this was reported
by someone at La Repubblica who didn’t have anything better to write
about that day. Then it was picked up by the Times of London; and
pretty soon Father Thomas Reese, S.J., author of a guidebook called Inside
the Vatican, was joining others in public ponderings about Rome’s new
opening to the left. The story is not the first draft of history, just
a minor gaffe of a type familiar to those who know about life inside the
Vatican.
- Almost nobody engaged in the city’s public life could not know Bella
Abzug, she of the loud mouth and broad-brimmed hats. She was a determinedly
vulgar woman with a nonstop ego, a caricature that might have been invented
by the opponents of a certain style of feminism. But others claim to have
been inspired by her. Hillary Clinton, for instance, gathered with about
a hundred women in Washington, all wearing big hats, to honor Bella’s memory.
Among the speakers was Representative Maxine Waters, who boldly declared,
"We owe it to Bella to really kind of recommit ourselves." Really.
Kind of.
- I have to say it from time to time: While this space is a "continuing
survey" it is by no means an exhaustive survey. Many things of enormous
moment go unmentioned here, which does not suggest that they are not of
enormous moment. One such item was the refusal of the Republican National
Committee to adopt a policy of declining to support any candidate who does
not oppose partial-birth abortion. Does the fact that it went unmentioned
here mean that I think the decision is not objectionable? Not at all. It
is morally contemptible. I say that even though I have great respect for
some of those who opposed a "litmus test," and understand their
political reasoning. Partial-birth abortion is infanticide. While many
refuse to use that term, nobody even attempts to offer an argument that
it does not typically involve the killing of a healthy and fully formed
baby who is within three inches of being definitively born. It is objected
that this reasoning would lead to a "litmus test" against any
support for abortion, which is the killing of an innocent child. There
is much to be said for that, but a case can be made (not an entirely convincing
case) that the widespread confusion about abortion in general is a politically
pertinent fact to be taken into prudential account. No sane person, however,
is confused about what is done in partial-birth abortion. The RNC decision
has done severe damage to the claim that Republicans are "the pro-life
party." At the same time, it may continue to be a necessary instrument
in working toward the goal of "every unborn child protected in law
and welcomed in life." The cynics in the RNC count on the indispensability
of the party to the pro-life movement. On that score they may be in for
some rude surprises from the likes of James Dobson of Focus on the Family
and Gary Bauer of the Family Research Council. In any event, the RNC decision
is yet another reminder that, whether with this party or any party, the
psalmist had it right when he counseled, "Put not your trust in princes."
- Said the Rev. Dr. Albert M. Pennybacker, "It’s classic Washington
collaborative convergence." It’s also the kind of thing that gives
collaboration a bad name. He was speaking for the National Council of Churches,
which was employed by a lobbying firm called the Fratelli Group, which
was, in turn, hired by a business lobby called USA*Engage, which was, in
further turn, created by several hundred corporations—and all this to fight
human rights and religious groups that supported the Freedom from Religious
Persecution Act. The act, sponsored by Frank Wolf and Alan Specter, is
an historic measure that aims to entrench religious persecution among the
concerns to be taken into account in U.S. foreign policy, and it provides
moderate sanctions against egregious offenders such as China and Sudan.
It is supported, I believe rightly, by a wide range of religious groups,
from the Union of American Hebrew Congregations to the U.S. Catholic Conference
to the National Association of Evangelicals, and by major human rights
organizations. A USA*Engage memo that has been made public says, "Business
would not be the best group to be out front on this issue. . . . Religious
leaders and religious organizations should take the lead for best results."
With handsome funding available, the National Council of Churches volunteered
to be recruited and led an international group of religious leaders to
lobby on Capitol Hill against the Religious Persecution Act and in favor
of the proposition that the U.S. should continue to do business as usual
with regimes that persecute Christians and other believers. The phrase
is worth remembering: "collaborative convergence."
- Here’s a new twist. Some politicians met with angry constituents and
tried to appease them. The Rev. Barry Lynn of Americans United for Separation
of Church and State is outraged. The politicians were Speaker Newt Gingrich
and Senator Trent Lott, and the constituents were Christian conservatives
such as James Dobson and Gary Bauer. What this means, says Lynn, is that
"Leaders in Congress made a deal with the devil and now they’re having
to give the devil his due." Religious conservatives have been called
many things, but it is worth noting for the record the Rev. Lynn’s ratcheting
of the rhetoric.
- Surreal is the word for it. In late April, President Clinton met with
members of the National Association of Evangelicals and asked them to withdraw
their support for the Freedom from Religious Persecution Act, which would
provide mild sanctions against countries engaged in egregious persecution
of Christians and other believers. The act would, said the President, put
"enormous pressure" on his Administration to "fudge"
the facts about persecution by nations such as China with which he wants
to do business. The man elected to see that laws are faithfully executed
tells religious leaders they should not put him in a position of not enforcing
the law. Was it only a year ago that Mr. Clinton was publicly musing about
what might be his legacy?
- The opening passage of Roger Ebert’s review of City of Angels
is worth a ponder: "Angels are big right now in pop entertainment,
no doubt because everybody gets one. New Age spirituality is me-oriented,
and gives its followers top billing in the soap operas of their own lives.
People like to believe they’ve had lots of previous incarnations, get messages
in their dreams, and are psychic. But according to the theory of karma,
if you were Joan of Arc in a past life and are currently reduced to studying
Marianne Williamson paperbacks, you must have made a wrong turn. When there’s
a trend toward humility and selflessness, then we’ll know we’re getting
somewhere on the spiritual front. That time is not yet. City of Angels
hits the crest of the boom in angel movies—and like most of them it’s a
love story. Hollywood is interested in priests and nuns only when they
break the vow of chastity, and with angels only when they get the hots
for humans. Can you imagine a movie in which a human renounces sexuality
and hopes to become an angel?"
- A thirty-three-page attack on "The Gift of Salvation" by
John Robbins, Ph.D., in the April issue of Trinity Review (Unicoi,
Tennessee) begins with this: "To put it bluntly, Colson and Neuhaus
are the front men (the Romanists, as well as the Communists, are adept
at using fronts) in an imperialist papal plan to regain control, first
of the churches, and ultimately of the world." So little time and
so much to do.
- "Moral equivalency" was a phrase much used during the Cold
War to describe a mindset determined to fudge the difference between the
evil empire and other empires that are far from perfect. Thus: "Yes,
it is true the Soviets put political dissidents into lunatic asylums and
persecute Christians and other believers, but there is still racism in
America and look what we’re doing to the ozone layer." Moral equivalence
is the right term for a recent speech by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
opposing the Wolf-Specter bill, which would provide mild penalties for
countries engaged in religious persecution. "Even the most patriotic
among us," she said, "must admit that neither morality nor religious
freedom nor respect for human rights were invented here—nor are they perfectly
practiced here. . . . If we are to be effective in defending the values
we cherish, we must also take into account the perspectives and values
of others." The "perspectives and values" of the Chinese
regime mandate the arrest, torture, and forced labor of Christians who
belong to churches that refuse to submit to government control, the Saudis
permit no open Christian worship at all, the Sudan enslaves Christian children,
and in Pakistan Muslims who convert to Christianity are punished by death.
That countries have such odious "perspectives and values" must
indeed be taken into account, but Ms. Albright’s point seems to be that
they should be sympathetically taken into account, as in don’t criticize
them. The idea of human rights, with religious freedom as the first among
them, was not "invented" by the U.S., nor can it be the sole
concern of foreign policy. But from the Declaration’s "We hold these
truths to be self-evident" through most of American history, this
country has played a singular role in pressing for an elementary recognition
of human dignity. It is a great sadness that the current Administration
has, in relation to China and other gross violators of human rights, regressed
to the reprehensible doctrine that what is good for U.S. business is good
for the world. Had the Clinton-Albright doctrine of moral equivalence been
operative in the 1980s, we would still be resigned to "peaceful coexistence"
with the evil empire of the Soviet Union. We do well, I think, to support
the boycott of all things marked "Made in China," including U.S.
foreign policy.
- Reason to stand up and cheer is the appearance of "A Call to Civil
Society: Why Democracy Needs Moral Truths." Issued in New York at
the end of May, this important statement comes from the Council on Civil
Society, a project involving nationally prominent thinkers and jointly
backed by the Institute for American Values and the University of Chicago
Divinity School. Among the signers are Don S. Browning, David Blankenhorn,
Senator Dan Coats, John DiIulio, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Francis Fukuyama,
William A. Galston, Robert P. George, Mary Ann Glendon, Senator Joseph
Lieberman, Glenn C. Loury, Cornel West, James Q. Wilson, and Daniel Yankelovich.
"A Call to Civil Society" is a thirty-page, very handsomely printed
manifesto that addresses in a comprehensive way the rejuvenation of the
chief institutions of democratic society, with very specific reference
to religion and communities of faith. We will no doubt be coming back to
this important initiative in these pages. For a copy of the statement,
write the Institute for American Values (1841 Broadway, Suite 211, New
York, NY 10023).
- Anyone who feels guilty about sleeping soundly might pick up Lee M.
Silver’s Remaking Eden: Cloning and Beyond in a Brave New World (Avon).
Headless tadpoles have been done, next is headless human beings, bodies
created and grown for purposes of organ transplants. This is but a small
part of the world that Silver envisions in the future, one which includes
the possibility that the wealthy with access to all the refinements of
genetic engineering may one day breed themselves into being a different
species from the poor. "Many paths can be followed to reach the goal
of having a child," he writes, and the validity of paths chosen should
be judged "not by their intrinsic nature but by the love that a parent
gives to the child after she or he is born." This proposal that love
can displace nature is evident also in Ted Peters’ For the Love of Children:
Genetic Technology and the Future of the Family, which is incisively
criticized in Nancy Pearcey’s review in the February issue. Reviewing the
Silver book in the New York Times, Paul Raeburn concludes, "Whether
or not we can produce humans without heads, Silver seems to be saying,
we ought to be sure they have hearts." The hearts of human beings
without heads, one might observe, will be good only for heart transplants.
- We will be pleased to send a sample issue of this journal to people
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Things, 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 400, New York, NY 10010 (or e-mail to
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© 1995-2012
Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 13 July 2002
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