The Comparison |
I read the cover article by James Carroll in the most
recent (June 2019) edition of The Atlantic just now with great interest. It is entitled “To save the Church, Dismantle the Priesthood.”
Not an original idea, anymore, but one I’d like to think
might be gathering some momentum.
The context is the larger context the modern world finds
itself in these days between conservative and progressive forces, the same one
we find in the political sector, where forward thinkers go to work every day
pushing for ever greater social equity and the old fogies, the well-heeled and
the feint of heart worry about their balance sheet and fear some radical young’un
is going to come along and tear everything down. The conservatives yearn for
the good old days when men were men and women knew their place; the
progressives worry about the Amazon, climate change and transgender rights. A
progressive feels an itch and scratches; a conservative knows that too much
scratching can lead to infection.
Carroll’s itch is a spin-off of a medieval hierarchy of
authority, where the church came under the control of a special class of men known
as clerics who came to have special powers that distinguished them from ordinary men
and women. They received this authority through a process known as ordination, a
ceremony in which they are granted by God an ontological right to turn bread
and wine into the body and blood of Christ for human consumption, the power to
forgive sins and the right to define right and wrong for others.
“Clericalism,” Carroll argues, “with its cult of secrecy,
its theological misogyny, its sexual repressiveness, and its hierarchical power
based on threats of a doom-laden afterlife, is at the root of Roman Catholic
dysfunction.” That’s about as good a summation as I’ve ever heard.
He cites two examples of clericalism which are of the sort
that is bringing the church to its knees. Cardinal Bernard Francis Law was head
of the Catholic Church in Boston when the Boston Globe first published
the story of kids being sexually abused by clerics, and he is known for
having insisted that priests who had information on predator priests must be
bound to the power of the confessional, making sure the information never got
out on his watch. In so doing, he made it certain that the victims of abuse
would never see justice, because it switched the focus from possible harm done
to victims to an appeal to show mercy to the clergyman who had committed the
sin of abuse. For this act of loyalty to the church, you may remember, Law was
rewarded with a new life in the Vatican, which doesn’t have an extradition
treaty with the United States. Law was hardly the only cleric to prioritize protecting his fellow clerics and the reputation of the church by paying hush
money to the families of the victims, but he serves as an early and primary
example of an enabler of abusers par excellence.
Carroll also links the name of Joseph Ratzinger, Pope
Benedict XVI, to clericalism because of Ratzinger’s rigid insistence on maintaining
celibacy just because through the centuries it has taken on the feel of eternal
truth, even though it dates back only to the twelfth century when the church needed
a mechanism for capturing the fortunes of priests when they died. Too much was
being lost to inheritances. This practice became a tool for fostering misogyny
and homophobia, as it depends on defining chastity as a virtue, limiting all
sexual activity to reproduction and centering morality on sexual behavior. Patriarchal
supremacy, already well established in both Roman and Jewish traditions, was
carried forward into modern times. Women acquired virtue through obedience,
lost it whenever they took the role of Eve, the seductress.
But there is nothing especially Christian, Carroll insists, about
maintaining the practice of subordinating women to men. It is simply a practice
inherited from the feudal age, and not from anything in the Christian message. Carroll
addresses himself to conservatives who want to understand any changes in church
practice such as eliminating the chastity requirement as a hole in the dike
that would lead to the ultimate collapse of tradition and moral values.
Instead, he asks them to understand the natural evolution of the church’s role
in society as reflecting the reality of its historical times.
The church, for all its claims to be the work of God on
earth, is a man-made, man-run organization, subject to the common values found
at any point in history. The church’s teaching in the early centuries was in
tune with the rules of imperial Rome. Later, it reflected the values of feudal Europe.
Why, then, Carroll asks, should it not “absorb the ethos and form of modern liberal
democracy?” Keep your eye on the message
of Christ, he believes, and the rest will fall into its proper place.
I naturally filter this analysis of the Catholic Church by
one of its own through my own eyes as an ex-Lutheran. I have trouble
understanding why one religious mythology should prevail over another religious
mythology, but I have not lost a sense of respect for what I think was probably
the most profound notion in Luther’s Reformation: the doctrine of the “priesthood
of all believers.” For all of Luther’s faults, which were considerable, he advocated
a departure from the corruption of the Catholic church, which at the time was
selling forgiveness for future sins as a means of raising money to build St.
Peter’s, and a return to the values of the message of Christ, as laid out in the
Scriptures. He put his efforts into making the Scriptures available to all, creating
a common German language in the process. What people made of what they read he
left to them. Although he sided with princely authority over who would run the secular
world this side of heaven, at least he took an egalitarian view of one’s
intellectual powers, leaving it up to every man and woman to work it out with
God whether to understand Jesus’s emphasis on love, charity and compassion as
essential, and whether they needed to follow ancient Hebrew rules against
mixing types of fabric.
What Carroll is advocating is something similar. Switch the
focus from power and glory back to the message of Christ, he’s saying, a move
which, besides being good for the soul in its own right, would put Catholics in
sync with other Christians. Given the number leaving church membership these
days, it surely wouldn’t hurt to link forces with others who share this focus
on forgiveness and compassion. He believes Catholics and Lutherans and all
other Christians can free themselves from clerical authority without having to
reject their cultural homes.
Catholic conservatives can sometimes be heard to worry aloud
that giving up all that makes Catholicism distinctly Catholic, including blind
adherence to conservative clerical authority, will lead inexorably to
Protestantism, which they see as just another step on the road to secularism
and rejection of religion altogether. As a “none” myself, I’d be quite happy if
this were the case. I’m persuaded that for all the good organized religion
does, it does so much harm to the psyche and the societies in which it
functions, that we’d be better off without it. But I think that fear is
unfounded.
A “return to Jesus”, in other words, is not a move toward
Protestantism except in its desire to cleanse the church of corruption. And
while Protestants like to think they reached the obvious modernist conclusion ahead
of Catholics that an embrace of secularist values in the public sphere does not
have to involve an abandonment of religious values in private, Protestants don’t
own the idea of universal justice and equity. The widespread acceptance of humanistic
democratic values throughout the modern industrialized world, countries with
catholic and protestant traditions alike, makes that plain to see.
Religion in America, where I experience it most directly,
has become a sinister force. Not all religious organizations, of course, but
the authoritarian versions currently in the driver’s seat making the headlines.
These Christian organizations, Pentecostalist, Mormon, Baptist and other
evangelical organizations, have largely shed their erstwhile religious nature
and remodeled themselves as political action lobbies, with goals such as
opposing gay rights and abortion. In this they have thrown in their lot with
the traditional clericalist Roman Catholics, tossing hitherto inconvenient
theological differences out the window.
Their authoritarianism is fundamentally patriarchal.
They act out their desire to keep women subservient to men, and display an
instinctive aversion to diverse ways of seeking happiness and meaning in life. Conservative means a not always tacit
preference for white over black, straight over gay, Christian over
non-Christian, male over female and religious over secular – not merely as “default”
conditions, but as “standard” conditions. And, to an authoritarian, “standard” is
another word for “normal”, and “normal” a stand-in for “determinant.”
As the current attack on the rights of women reveals, there
is no guarantee the world will always move forward. You may resonate with that wonderful
phrase Martin Luther King made famous (it is properly attributed to the abolitionist
Theodore Parker, if I am not mistaken): “the arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends toward justice.” I’m not so sure. I’m aware of how often we take
one step forward and two steps backward, as we can see happening these days
with the attack on poor women facing unwanted pregnancies in Alabama, Georgia and Missouri, and I
believe five other states so far, who will bear the brunt of the attempt to
roll back Roe v. Wade. What I find particularly offensive (and un-Christian, by the
way) about these attempts is the ease with which one uses religion unabashedly in our secular society to tell others outside that religion how life is to be defined.
Republicans may try to maintain the fiction that they are not the party of the rich, but the fact remains that rich women are not affected by these laws to the degree poor women are. They will always be able to hop a plane to visit Aunt Helen in Los Angeles and have an abortion which nobody needs to know about while they’re there, an option not open to women living in poverty.
Republicans may try to maintain the fiction that they are not the party of the rich, but the fact remains that rich women are not affected by these laws to the degree poor women are. They will always be able to hop a plane to visit Aunt Helen in Los Angeles and have an abortion which nobody needs to know about while they’re there, an option not open to women living in poverty.
Anti-abortion laws are inevitably the work of the
authoritarian religions, and not of religious groups who leave it to individual
women to make their own moral decisions. And they illustrate why progressive
people, religious and non-religious alike, have a common cause in the embrace
of modern secular values in the public sphere.
I have done more than my share of church-bashing in the
past, before I learned to make the important distinction between those who lean
toward theocracy and those who know the difference between trying to persuade
others to follow their religion and using the law to make their religion the
law of the land. Carroll criticizes clericalism as anti-democratic and simultaneously expresses his longing to be able to return to his church. By shedding clericalism, he argues, it could once again become a home for many who have abandoned it because it no longer represents an evolved notion of morality, based in equality and justice.
To anyone whose toes I stepped on in the past in my anger and resentment at the damage done by the Catholic Church, I apologize
for the rhetorical excess. I mistakenly allowed the ideology of clericalism to represent the entire Catholic Church. Carroll has helped me understand it does not.
I take Carroll at his word that he would start attending mass again if the priesthood were to be dismantled, if the church ever becomes less of a scold, less of an organization of old men in silk and lace with wagging fingers, more of a warm all-embracing home for the body of true believers.
Who would have believed it? Me, the mocker of religion, hoping a religious man's dreams come true.
I take Carroll at his word that he would start attending mass again if the priesthood were to be dismantled, if the church ever becomes less of a scold, less of an organization of old men in silk and lace with wagging fingers, more of a warm all-embracing home for the body of true believers.
Who would have believed it? Me, the mocker of religion, hoping a religious man's dreams come true.
Photo credit
The painting is the work of French painter Jehan Georges Vibert (1840-1902). It is entitled: The Comparison
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