Sunday, 1 January 2012

The Catholic Left

Michael Merrick writes:

They do not flow quite so easily as they once used to, the words ’Catholic’ and ‘Left’. These terms used to fit snugly together, accurately describing the political inclinations of swathes of the Catholic community, but have been slowly rent apart: from cliché to contradiction within less than two decades.

The separation hardly came out of the blue. Following years of implicit and explicit attack endured during New Labour’s reign, one could naturally understand the Catholic commentariat snuggling up to the Conservatives, the latest swing of the pendulum toward whichever political party would ease the relentless pressure being placed upon the faithful. The foot needed taking from the throat and if the Conservatives brought with them the promise of breathing space, then all well and good.

Yet the fallout between the Catholic community and the left has taken on air of permanence of late, just as the bonds have taken root between the Catholic community and the political Right. For what has become increasingly obvious is that, for a good number of well-informed and genuinely astute individuals, being an orthodox Catholic and being on ‘the Left’ is largely incompatible.

It is the language that shapes the intellectual landscape which lets us see most clearly the direction of travel. For many, ‘the Left’ is a phrase emblematic of those habits of thought and action that stand aggressively against the truths upheld by the Catholic Church. Respected commentators with whom many a faithful Catholic would find common ground, including certain luminaries of this parish, are perfectly happy to attribute a host of ideological idiocies to this phenomenon. Everything from liturgical vandalism to hug-a-heretic liberalism is attributed to that dark and not-so-distant force known as ‘the Left’.

Apart from being untrue (in itself a fairly fatal flaw in the analysis) the impression is given that the promulgators of such myths prefer cartoon caricature to blood and guts reality, even at the cost of flinging mud at those they ought to be standing alongside.

The notion that Left-wing thought is inimical to orthodox Catholic thinking is simply not one that is shared by a great many of those sitting in the pews throughout the country. To engage with the legacies left to us by our forefathers in faith, indeed by the very weave of social history and our unique place in it, while proclaiming that ‘the Left’ is an enemy, in whatever sense, of the faith and the Catholic community: this tale, as much as any other, presents itself as a hermeneutic of rupture.

After all, the faith that inclines an individual to stand in defence of the family, of the unborn, of the truths and values of the faithful community, is precisely the same faith that similarly compels some to stand on the Left-wing of the political spectrum, arguing that all these things are relentlessly assaulted by the political orthodoxies of the Right. This was as true historically, with sophisticated Catholic critiques of capitalism, as it remains now, as more than a few in the Labour Party continue to demonstrate. To use ‘the Left’ as shorthand for dissent is to ignore this crucial aspect: for many, their political and economic critiques are manifestations of their fidelity, not obstacles to it.

This is not to embrace what the professional, political Left has too often become. One can readily admit that social liberalism has fractured our communities every bit as much as its market-based twin, and mourn the role of the Labour Party in pursuing that creed (though one could point out that this ideological oeuvre has always been a hobby of the already empowered, existent within all three political parties). Indeed, for the Left the story is not as uniform as its cultured despisers would have it. Peter Hitchens’s distinction between the social and moral conservatism of the Left’s working class, and the ‘let-it-all-hang-out liberals’ comprised largely of the Oxbridge elite, is apposite.

Yet, in confining discussion to the moral free-marketeers of the New Left, one tells only half a story. For while the Catholic view of the family and the unborn (for example) are rightly defended from upon the rock-solid walls of Church teaching, we must be careful not to forget that other teachings have equal call on our thought and action. Church teaching interlinks and interweaves, most compellingly when offered as a coherent, holistic vision. Its impact is neutered the moment it is balkanised for political expediency. To use the encyclicals most symbolic of the impulses of which we speak, Humanae Vitae presents itself most powerfully when read with Rerum Novarum, not in isolation from it.

This gets at the nub of it. The phenomenon alluded to by those who would wash their hands of ‘the Left’ is not a political party or tradition, to be pinned to one end of an increasingly redundant political spectrum. It is much more elusive than that, forever moving because ultimately loyal to nothing but itself. As John Milbank has argued, the feigned confrontation of Left and Right is nothing but shadow play: in truth they are allies, each pursuing only the liberalism that drives them.

This demands that we employ a little more nuance in interpreting the socio-political landscape. The truth is that that which the Church holds to be good and true can exist on the Left, has existed on the Left, and continues to exist among significant portions of the Left, as becomes obvious once one zooms out from the unrepresentative outpourings of media-savvy progressive activists and cosmopolitan liberals ill at ease with their own tradition. Indeed, there are few expressions of Church social and moral teaching not readily identifiable within the traditions of the Left, both historically and philosophically, a truth inexplicably forgotten though increasingly rediscovered.

As such, painting ‘the Left’ as the bogeyman that assaults a Catholic vision of the good life is not just simplistic but genuinely dangerous, since it feeds into that culture war narrative that is so pernicious to the wholeness of Church teaching precisely because its tidy-minded simplicity, while so very alluring, is also so very wrong.

Not that I try to claim Catholicism for the Left, or indeed the Left for Catholicism. To do so would be to contradict my whole purpose in writing this article.

But it is to offer a warning that those who would slip so cosily into the arms of the Conservatives as a reaction against ‘the Left’ ought to be careful: that which you run toward is much the same as that which you run from. The intellectual and political tides that swept away any influence among the professional Left (although not the cultural Left) are the same tides currently weaving their way through the professional Right.

In other words, the revolution of the New Left is the revolution of the New Right. And both need Truth spoken to them.

12 comments:

  1. I agree with the last parts--the Left is no necessary enemy of the Church and what she means, but the New Left and New Right definitely are.

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  2. Thank you for addressing my concerns about the Latin Mass & homosexual affliation among the young modern orthodox. I think I upset Miner's boy. I wonder if most if not all the young faithful who are not called to religious life will produce the type of large, faithful families the church desperately needs.

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  3. The Church has always included single laypeople and childless couples.

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  4. It has indeed David, it has indeed. But surely now more than ever, the Church needs blossoming & faithful Catholic families. What do you think?

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  5. Well, of course.

    Why do you have this bee in your bonnet?

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  6. Well I'm rather interested to see what will happen to organised Christianity in this country. I have a belief that this is the decade when the church institutions will begin to sag under the weight of the loss of churchgoers. I think that up until now there have been enough survivors from generations for whom churchgoing was a common activity to prop up the churches as institutions. I believe the next 10 years will see an acceleration in church closures & a slowdown in church based charitable activity in the traditional churches.

    I think perhaps the last of those generations is now beginning to die off in the mainstream churches & that this will have a lot of political implications. I think that a man like yourself who has an interest in both religion & politics might have a view on the subject worth hearing. I'm especially interested to hear whether you believe that the young orthodox RC generation can rejuvenate that church. Are they breeding in suffiecient numbers?

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  7. I see that Anonymous has intruded on another topic to peddle his 'concerns' about 'the Latin Mass & homosexual affliation among the young modern orthodox'.
    I would not describe him as having a 'bee in his bonnet', as you have, but more of an unhealthy fixation on something that is patently not true. He did not 'upset me' as he claimed, I just queried his strange point of view that was not borne out by the facts. And, as he did not respond, I presumed that he could not produce any facts to back up his comments.
    One more point of clarification. The 'Latin Mass' is the norm of the Roman rite - whether in the ordinary or extraordinary form. The new form of Mass was promulgated in Latin and is celebrated by many priests. It is from this Latin 'original' that all vernacular translations are made. In this country there is the Association for Latin Liturgy which has had bishops celebrating Mass for them. Does Anonymous tar these Latin Mass types with his broad brush of 'homosexual affiliation', or is it restricted to those who prefer the traditional form?
    I really do wonder why he is so obsessed with homosexuality and breeding.

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  8. I didn't respond to Miner's boy on the previous thread because David Lindsay asked us to remain on topic. Miner's boy himself noted that we had strayed.

    I began this thread by thanking David Lindsay for addressing my concerns about the young modern orthodox & homosexuality because David has addressed these concerns.

    Now I'm interested in David's opinion about whether the current generation of young faithful will be able to replenish the churchgoing population. David asked me to explain myself, & I have done so in my last post. I do try to remain on topic where possible, but sometimes I get interseted in a subject & I feel that this is the only way I can raise it with our host. David is very generous in responding & I do appreciate that.

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  9. And there, I feel, let the matter rest.

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  10. Thank you for allowing me to respond to Miner's Boy David.

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