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Tomgram: James Carroll, Why the Catholic Fight Over Obama Matters


Tomgram: James Carroll, Why the Catholic Fight Over Obama Matters | Tom Dispatch.com

As TomDispatch readers are well aware, James Carroll is a man who knows something about the dangers of mixing religious fervor, war, and the crusading spirit, a subject he dealt with eloquently in his book Constantine's Sword: The Church and the Jews. A former Catholic priest turned antiwar activist in the Vietnam era, he is a weekly columnist for the Boston Globe, and was perhaps the first media figure to notice -- and warn against -- a presidential "slip of the tongue" just after 9/11, when George W. Bush referred briefly to his new Global War on Terror as a "crusade." He was also possibly the first mainstream columnist in the country to warn against the consequences of launching a war against Afghanistan in response to those attacks -- the disastrous results of which we now see daily.

Carroll's focus on fundamentalist religion and violence is long standing. In print and in other ways, he has spoken out and worked against militarism and intolerance, and has focused on the ways in which religion and violence are increasingly merging into a toxic brew capable of setting our planet aflame. Most recently, he's publicly put both his own practice of Catholicism and the perilous state of his church -- perched as it is at the edge of a fundamentalist precipice with a new Pope who threatens to push it into the void -- under a microscope.

In his latest book, Practicing Catholic, he offers a liberal's vision of that faith, and argues that twenty-first century agendas of peace and justice urgently need the rescue of the Catholic Church from its reactionaries. It's a message that certainly resonates with this a-religious Jew from New York married to an ex-Catholic from Texas, especially when Carroll puts it with his usual eloquence. Who better, then, to consider the uproar over Barrack Obama's appearance this weekend at Notre Dame? Tom

Cheer, Cheer for Old Notre Dame

A War of Words That Folds Neatly into the New Century's War of Weapons
By James Carroll

President Obama goes to Notre Dame University this Sunday to deliver the commencement address and receive an honorary degree, the ninth U.S. president to be so honored. The event has stirred up a hornet's nest of conservative Catholics, with more than 40 bishops objecting, and hundreds of thousands of Catholics signing petitions in protest. In the words of South Bend's Bishop John M. D'Arcy, the complaint boils down to President Obama's "long-stated unwillingness to hold human life as sacred." Notre Dame, the bishop charged, has chosen "prestige over truth."

Not even most Catholics agree with such criticism. A recent Pew poll, for instance, shows that 50% of Catholics support Notre Dame's decision to honor Obama; little more than one-quarter oppose. It is, after all, possible to acknowledge the subtle complexities of "life" questions -- When actually does human life begin? How is stem cell research to be ethically carried out? -- and even to suggest that they are more complex than most Catholic bishops think, without thereby "refusing to hold human life as sacred."

For many outside the ranks of conservative religious belief, this dispute may seem arcane indeed. Since it's more than likely that the anti-Obama complainers were once John McCain supporters, many observers see the Notre Dame flap as little more than mischief by Republicans who still deplore the Democratic victory in November. Given the ways in which the dispute can be reduced to the merely parochial, why should Americans care?

Medievalism in Our Future?

In fact, the crucial question that underlies the flap at Notre Dame has enormous importance for the unfolding twenty-first century: Will Roman Catholicism, with its global reach, including more than a billion people crossing every boundary of race, class, education, geography, and culture, be swept into the rising tide of religious fundamentalism?

Those Catholics who regard a moderate progressive like Barack Obama as the enemy -- despite the fact that his already unfolding social and health programs, including support for impoverished women, will do more to reduce the number of abortions in America than the glibly pro-life George W. Bush ever did -- have so purged ethical thought of any capacity to draw meaningful distinctions as to reduce religious faith to blind irrationality. They have so embraced a spirit of sectarian intolerance as to undercut the Church's traditional catholicity, adding fuel to the spreading fire of religious contempt for those who depart from rigidly defined orthodoxies. They are resurrecting the lost cause of religion's war against modernity -- a war of words that folds neatly into the new century's war of weapons.

If the Catholic reactionaries succeed in dominating their church, a heretofore unfundamentalist tradition, what would follow? The triumph of a strain of contemporary Roman Catholicism that rejects pluralism, feminism, clerical reform, religious self-criticism, historically-minded theology, and the scientific method as applied to sacred texts would only exacerbate alarming trends in world Christianity as a whole, and at the worst of times. This may especially be so in the nations of the southern hemisphere where Catholicism sees its future. It's there that proselytizing evangelical belief, Protestant and Catholic both, is spreading rapidly. Between 1985 and 2001, for example, Catholic membership increased in Africa by 87%, in Europe by 1%.

In their shared determination to restore the medieval European Catholicism into which they were born, Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI became inadvertent avatars of the new Catholic fundamentalism, a fact reflected in the character of the bishops they appointed to run the Church, so many of whom now find President Obama to be a threat to virtue. The great question now is whether this defensive, pre-Enlightenment view of the faith will maintain a permanent grip on the Catholic imagination. John Paul II and Benedict XVI may be self-described apostles of peace, yet if this narrow aspect of their legacy takes hold, they will have helped to undermine global peace, not through political intention, but deeply felt religious conviction.

Something to Cheer

No one can today doubt that the phenomenon of "fundamentalism" is having an extraordinary impact on our world. But what precisely is it? Some fundamentalists pursue openly political agendas in, for instance, Northern Ireland, Israel, and Iran. Some like Latin American Pentecostals are apolitical. In war zones like Sudan, Afghanistan, Palestine, and Sri Lanka, fundamentalism is energizing conflict. Most notably, after the Bush administration's invasion of Iraq in 2003, the insurgent groups there jelled around fundamentalist religion, and their co-extremists are now carrying the fight, terrifyingly, in the direction of the nuclear arsenal of Pakistan. Catholic fundamentalists in the U.S. are far from being terrorists, but an exclusionary, intolerant, militant true belief is on display this week in their rallying to denounce President Obama in Indiana.

Obviously, these manifestations are so varied as to resist being defined by one word in the singular, which is why scholars of religion prefer to speak of "fundamentalisms." But they all do have something in common, and it is dangerous. The impulse toward fundamentalism may begin with fine intentions: the wish to affirm basic values and sources of meaning which seem threatened. Rejecting any secular claims to replace the sacred as the chief source of meaning, all fundamentalisms are skeptical of Enlightenment values, even as the Enlightenment project has developed its own mechanisms of self-criticism. But the discontents of modernity are only the beginning of the problem.

Now "old time religion" of whatever stripe faces a plethora of threats: new technologies, a shaken world economy, rampant individualism, diversity, pluralism, mobility -- all that makes for twenty-first century life. The shock of the unprecedented can involve not only difficulty, but disaster. And fundamentalisms will especially thrive wherever there is violent conflict, and wherever there is stark poverty. This is so simply because these religiously absolute movements promise meaning where there is no meaning. For all these reasons, fundamentalisms are everywhere.

In contemporary Roman Catholicism, whose deep traditions include the very intellectual innovations that gave rise to modernity -- Copernicus, after all, was a priest -- Catholic fundamentalists are more likely to be called "traditionalists." They are galvanized now around the moral complexities of "life," at a time when the very meaning of human reproduction is being upended by technical innovation, and once-unthinkable medical and genetic breakthroughs are transforming the meaning of death as well.

Like other fundamentalists, they are attuned to the dark consequences of the Enlightenment assumptions implied in such developments, from the Pandora's Box opened by science unconnected to morality to the grotesque inequities that follow from industrialization and, more recently, globalization. Where others celebrate new information technologies, traditionalists, even while using those technologies, warn of the coarsening of culture, the destruction of privacy, and, especially, threats to the family. In nothing more than its emphasis on a rigorous and comprehensive sexual ethic -- anti-feminist, radically pro-life, contemptuous of homosexuality -- does this brand of Catholicism echo a broader fundamentalism.

In the immediate aftermath of the liberalizing Second Vatican Council (1962-1965), Catholic traditionalists, with their attachment to the Latin Mass, fiddle-back vestments, clerical supremacy, and the entire culture of the Counter-Reformation, were rebels. That was why the anti-Council sect, the Lefebrites, including the notorious Holocaust denier Bishop Richard Williamson, was excommunicated in 1988.

Today, as indicated by Pope Benedict's lifting of that excommunication, the Vatican is the sponsor of such anti-liberal rebels. Instead of reading the Bible uncritically, as Protestant fundamentalists do, Catholic traditionalists read Papal statements that way. To affirm the eternal validity of prior Papal statements, as in the case of the on-going Papal condemnation of "artificial birth control," traditionalists willingly sacrifice common sense and honesty.

If the Catholic Church is as opposed to abortion as it claims, why has it not embraced the single most effective means of reducing abortion rates, which is birth control? The answer, alas, is evident: the overriding issue for Catholic fundamentalists is not sexual morality, or even "life," but papal authority. As Protestant fundamentalists effectively make an idol of biblical texts, Catholic fundamentalists, in obedience to the Vatican, make an idol of the papacy.

When it comes to Notre Dame, ironically, American Catholic fundamentalists, including the bishops leading the charge against Obama's appearance, are not going to be backed up by the Vatican. In Rome, a tradition of realpolitik tempers the fundamentalist urge of the current establishment. The highest Church authorities have long been accustomed to putting issues of theological purity second to the exigencies of state power.

So, no insults of the American president will be coming from the Vatican this weekend, and its silence on the Notre Dame controversy will speak more clearly than any official statement on the subject might. Indeed, the long history of Roman Catholicism, where Puritanism has steadily lost out to robust earthiness, and doctrinal rigidity has regularly bent before the pressures of lived experience, is itself reason to think that Notre Dame University has found the truest Catholic response to the world's present moment: its brave decision to honor President Barack Obama.

###

James Carroll is a scholar-in-residence at Suffolk University, columnist for the Boston Globe, and author of the bestselling Constantine's Sword. His most recent book is Practicing Catholic, from which this essay draws.

Copyright 2009 James Carroll

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>If the Catholic Church is as opposed to abortion as it claims, why has it not embraced the single most effective means of reducing abortion rates, which is birth control? The answer, alas, is evident: the overriding issue for Catholic fundamentalists is not sexual morality, or even "life," but papal authority. As Protestant fundamentalists effectively make an idol of biblical texts, Catholic fundamentalists, in obedience to the Vatican, make an idol of the papacy.

They say that birth control contradicts God's authority to gift humans with children. Of course, that begs the question of why so many children come into the world to live in suffering, poverty and war - when the church's hierarchy has access to copious worldly riches that could be used to alleviate that. Maybe if their priests weren't so busy diddling kids, while the church protects them by shuffling them around to elude discovery and prosecution.

Sexual exploitation is a criminal offense. Why is it so infrequently prosecuted? Why isn't the church charged with conspiracy for reassigning predators to hide their crimes?

The Catholic Church and The Peace Movement have something in common here, conspiracies against children. But neither sin should be whitewashed, or exploited & excused by the respective hierarchies.

As far as "copious worldly riches" are concerned , the Catholic Church is an organization that is no different from any other as well, the leaders at the top have the power. As far as the convent & rectory that I grew up with from K through 8 in my local parish Catholic school, you would find the most loving, morally upright, kind and dedicated nuns and priests, who took their vows of poverty quite seriously.

ARREST BUSHCO & RICO PNAC/FARA AIPAC...PNAC is Bush/Cheney's "Helter Skelter" !

My point about "copious worldly riches" is that the church hierarchy conserves the vast majority of the church's wealth, while global poverty prevails.

That is not a reflection on the caliber of your childhood school teachers; it is a reflection of how the Vatican uses its resources.

The central seat of any religious organization has its hierarchy and centralized headquarters, as with any major political headquarters such as the White House. The same accusation could be given to President Obama and his "copious worldly riches", so I will play devil's advocate here, and say that we should eBay the White House and all its contents and give the money to the poor and let President Obama shack up in a more economical apartment, and rent a car after selling off Airforce One and the presidential limousines. The point I am making , of course, is that the Vatican belongs to all Catholics worldwide, just as the White House belongs to all Americans. All Catholic dioceses and parishes throughout the world are missionary extensions of the central Church in Rome, so without the Vatican, the Catholic churches, schools and missions throughout the world would not exist. You may not be aware of the very long tradition of charity and all the good throughout the world that the Catholic Church does for poor people, but I do firsthand. Only the warts make the news.

ARREST BUSHCO & RICO PNAC/FARA AIPAC...PNAC is Bush/Cheney's "Helter Skelter" !

Yank, you wrote:

>The central seat of any religious organization has its hierarchy and centralized headquarters

Well, no, not true. There are communities of faith ascribing to defined principles that are decentralized and/or loosely centralized.

>The same accusation could be given to President Obama and his "copious worldly riches", so I will play devil's advocate here, and say that we should eBay the White House and all its contents and give the money to the poor

I'm not sure why the phrase "copious worldly riches" tripped your trigger, but my point is that the Catholic Church has "copious worldly riches" acquired over world wide generations of adherents...and yet, even while global poverty prevails.

>say that we should eBay the White House and all its contents and give the money to the poor

Really? Is the function of religion and government the same?

>let President Obama shack up in a more economical apartment

"Shack up"? A curious choice of words, you've used...Michelle and Barack agree that they are married to each other, so how is he shacking up?...

>The point I am making, of course, is that the Vatican belongs to all Catholics worldwide, just as the White House belongs to all Americans.

You're drawing an abstraction, which, as an absolute parallelism, doesn't exist.

Yes, there is a parallelism between hierarchies (bureaucracies) of religion and state.

However, that is the precise reason that we Americans have a wall of separation of church and state, to separate the philosophies of religion from the mechanics of political state.

>All Catholic dioceses and parishes throughout the world are missionary extensions of the central Church in Rome

Yes.

>...so without the Vatican, the Catholic churches, schools and missions throughout the world would not exist.

No. One thought does not follow the other. Religious communities who identify as "catholic" based on their belief system could exist without the central direction of the Church of Rome, the Vatican.

The point I was making in parallel of the headquarters of USA and of the Catholic Church (or any church, synogogue or mosque) is that , why is it that you only want the Catholic Church headquarters to sell off its assets and give to the poor? Shacking-up may have been a poor choice of phrasing, but what I was playing devil's advocate at is that President Obama can live in a shack and save the taxpayers money AND give all the White House money to the poor as well. Why not Mecca, the central location of Islam, sell it off, why not all the donations to ADS and sales from peace books, donate those to the poor as well? Why not sell off the headquarters, assets or whatever of every museum on Earth, such as the Louvre in Paris? Imagine how many people the Mona Lisa would feed. Why is it that you only want the Catholic Church, of all the entities in the world , to sell off its headquarters and give it to the poor?

The Roman Catholic Church has as its primary mission the spreading of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and it has many, many Roman Catholic Church missions of faith, hope and charity throughout the world that you are apparently completely unaware of, so to suggest that the Roman Catholic Church does not give to the poor is a false statement. The Roman Catholic Church does have a centralized system, according to tradition, because of St Peter. If other religions decide to be decentralized , that is certainly their prerogative to run their organizational system as they see fit.

ARREST BUSHCO & RICO PNAC/FARA AIPAC...PNAC is Bush/Cheney's "Helter Skelter" !

Yank, you wrote:

>...is that why is it that you only want the Catholic Church headquarters to sell off its assets and give to the poor?

Did I say only? No. Now you expand your statement to include "...or any church, synogogue or mosque" ?

Aside from not being what I said, rather a broad brush, wouldn't you say? Actually, the initial point I raised was:

  • "Sexual exploitation is a criminal offense. Why is it so infrequently prosecuted when committed by those affiliated with the Catholic faith?
  • Why isn't the church charged with conspiracy for reassigning predators to hide their crimes?"

>Why is it that you only want the Catholic Church, of all the entities in the world, to sell off its headquarters and give it to the poor?

Exactly where did I suggest that that only (as you state) the Catholic Church do that? Aside from that, why not?

>The Roman Catholic Church has as its primary mission the spreading of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and it has many, many Roman Catholic Church missions of faith, hope and charity throughout the world that you are apparently completely unaware of...

I am not unaware, nor completely unaware. Do the good works by minions obliterate the responsibility of the powerful, wealthy, unaccountable authorities?

>...so to suggest that the Roman Catholic Church does not give to the poor is a false statement.

I haven't suggested that the Catholic Church doesn't give something to the poor. The point I raised is to note that the "church hierarchy conserves the vast majority of the church's wealth, while global poverty prevails."

I asked that question, while noting:

Sexual exploitation is a criminal offense.

  • Why is sexual exploitation by clerical pedophiles associated with religious institutions so infrequently prosecuted?
  • Why isn't the Catholic Church charged with conspiracy for reassigning predators to hide their crimes?"

I am just as much against sexual predators of children and conspiracy within the Catholic Church as I am against the overt abortion indoctrination within the Peace Movement. Both are extremely appalling to me, yet I am powerless to fight these internal injustices within both organizations.

The Peace Movement and Roman Catholic Church, however, are both mutually against the Iraq War.

As far as sexual predators against children and conspiracy in Roman Catholic Church, and overt abortion indoctrination by Peace Movement are concerned , both appall me deeply, however I feel powerless to change internal injustices within both organizations.

Concerning Roman Catholic Church and charity, one of the primary mission Christian callings of the Roman Catholic Church is for the poor:

"...The Church defines its mission as spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ, administering the sacraments and exercising charity.[13] It operates social programs and institutions throughout the world, including schools, universities, hospitals, missions and shelters, as well as organizations such as Catholic Relief Services, Caritas Internationalis and Catholic Charities that help the poor, families, the elderly and the sick.[14]..."

I find it interesting that the return to religious "fundamentalism", particularly among Christian denominations comes at a time when we're dealing with various conditions, situations and circumstances which not even those who lived during Biblical times ever thought about, let alone imagined.

Unfortunately, there's always a knee-jerk reaction by Christians to new technologies, a shaken world economy, rampant individualism, diversity, pluralism and increased mobility, and that "knee-jerk" reaction is to embrace fundamentalism with an emotionally-fueled fervor, through various and sundry relligious "authorities" who regale "believers" with tales about how new information technologies are the sole culprits in the coarsening of culture and the destruction of privacy, as well as describing the "intrusiveness" of government in religious affairs (anyone remember how the Fundamentalists's made such ahuge hue and cry about the government's alleged "war" against Christmas?), and threats to the family, with particular emphasis on feminism and homosexuality which transforms sincere, genuine belief into the type of extreme religious belief which makes adherents of religious fundamentalism prone to manipulation and exploitation by those oligarchical forces who use religion to play the ancient game of "divide and conquer".

So many people who embrace religious fundamentalism, particularly "Christian" fundamentalism, are anti-science and technology, when it was Christian institutions, such as the Brotherhood of the Common Life, headed by Bishop Nicholas of Cusa, who provided a scientific education to poor boys who lived in Italy during the time of the "Dark Ages", and gave these young boys the knowledge necessary for them to discover and replicate various scientific discoveries, which would prove to be pivotal in ending the "Dark Ages" and giving birth to the Renaissance.

If it hadn't been for the Brotherhood of the Common Life, and other Catholic Christian religious groups, we wouldn't have had the college/university system of education which so many take for granted, nor would we have the various types of scientific and technological progress which so many among our poppppulation seem determined to reverse.

Another thing to consider is this ... the resurgence of "Christian" fundamentalism inadvertantly contributes to the destruction of the nation ans its population in two ways -- Firstly, "fundamentalism", with its heavy emphasis on "personal salvation", serves to distract and divert the population's attention away from taking direct political action concerning new technologies, a shaken world economy and the overall political, economic and social/spiritual/cultural impoverishment of the nation's and the world's population.

Secondly, the pursuit of "personal salvation", coupled with the world-view that man is a disgusting, "sinful", animalistic being who possesses absolutely no inherent goodness within himself, and that "goodness" can only be imparted to man through "personal salvation", along with the "virtuous victim" mentality (that is, man is a "victim" of the world, the flesh, the Devil and a coldly indifferent universe) serves as "justification" for the wholesale rejection of pluralism, feminism, clerical reform, religious self-criticism, historically-minded theology, and scientific method.

And as these dangerous times we live in become even more dangerous, many will retreat to the seeming "safety" of religious fundamentalism as they recognize that civilization is collapsing, and instead of working hard to save civilization from destruction, they want civilization to collapse so they can build a "civilization" which they believe is the kind of civvilization which man was meant to live under -- namely, a theocracy.

I certainly hope if this is a new surge of fundamentalism it will be a truer form of fundamentalist Christianity than when Reagan was doing his crusade.

They got folks all worked up over this stuff and The Lord, but were busy doing one Nazi agenda after the other, and building an SDI 'Star Wars' dictatorship with the Treasury and other monies.

The trouble with what that form of fundamentalism was is that it stuffed the Pentagon and government with NeoCons, Mossad types, and it never stopped building until right up to 9/11 and 'Operation Cast Lead' which decimated Gaza and Palestinians.

Didn't Christ himself say something like, "they shall come killing you in my name"? But he didn't say those Nazi types were actually Christians, and no where in The Holy Bible does it say we should love the wicked.
We now have an effeminate group of congresspersons who are attempting to pass the Pedophile Protection Act, in an effort to save themselves from attack, but remember what that scripture said about that? Something like, "When they cry peace and safety, sudden destruction shall come upon them".

Inform America

"The Roman Catholic Church, led by Pope John Paul II, opposed the U.S.-led war in Iraq. Now the Vatican is turning its attention to Iraq's post-war needs by making offers of humanitarian assistance and calling for all nations to be involved in Iraq's rebuilding."

I am not sure where you are coming from with "copious wordly riches" . The pope also takes a vow of poverty, and does not have a salary. His needs are handled by the Vatican, and stays with the Vatican when he dies. If you are referring to the priceless works of art by Michelangelo , Leonardo da Vinci and others, those remain with the Vatican also , and do not go to anyone when the pope dies. If you have ever been to the Vatican, you would see magnificent works of art that are beyond description that are dedicated to the Gospel of Jesus Christ by centuries of magnificently talented artists.
They are priceless and not for sale.

The Roman Catholic Church operates social programs and institutions throughout the world. There are schools , universities , hospitals , missions and shelters in both the industrialized and Third World nations. The Catholic Church also has organizations all over the world such as Catholic Relief Services, Caritas Internationalis and Catholic Charites that help the poor, families, the sick and the elderly.

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