Patrick J. Deneen writes:
For most casual observers, whether Catholic or
not, the main battle lines within American Catholicism today seem self-evident.
The cleavage overlaps perfectly the divide between the political parties,
leading to the frequently-used labels “liberal” and “conservative” Catholics.
We have Nancy Pelosi and Andrew Cuomo representing the Left, and Rick Santorum
and Sam Brownback aligned with the Right.
Mainstream opinion has classified
Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI as honorary Republicans, and Pope Francis
as a Democrat (hence, why he is appearing on the covers of Time and Rolling
Stone magazines).
This division does indeed capture real battle
lines, but more than anything, the divide is merely an extension of our
politics, and—while manned by real actors—does not capture where the real
action is to be found today in American Catholic circles.
The real action does not involve liberal “Catholics”
at all. Liberal Catholicism, while well-represented in elite circles of the
Democratic Party, qua Catholicism is finished.
Liberal Catholicism
has no future—like liberal Protestantism, it is fated to become
liberalism simpliciter within a generation.
The children of
liberal Catholics will either want their liberalism unvarnished by incense and
holy water, or they will rebel and ask if there’s something more challenging,
disobeying their parents by “reverting” to Catholicism.
While “liberal” Catholicism
will appear to be a force because it will continue to have political
representation, as a “project” and a theology, like liberal Protestantism it is
doomed to oblivion.
The real battle is taking place beyond the
purview of the pages of Time Magazine and the New York Times.
The battle pits two camps of “conservative” Catholicism (let’s dispense with
that label immediately and permanently—as my argument suggests, and
others have
said better, our political labels are inadequate to the task).
On the one side one finds an older American
tradition of orthodox Catholicism as it has developed in the nation since the
mid-twentieth century.
It is closely aligned to the work of the Jesuit theologian John
Courtney Murray, and its most visible proponent today is George
Weigel, who has inherited the mantle from Richard
John Neuhaus and Michael
Novak.
Its intellectual home remains the journal founded by Neuhaus, First Things.
Among its number can be counted thinkers like Robert
George, Hadley
Arkes, Robert Royal,
and—if somewhat quirkier than these others—Peter
Lawler.
Its basic positions align closely to the
arguments developed by John Courtney Murray and others. Essentially, there is
no fundamental contradiction between liberal democracy and Catholicism.
Liberal
democracy is, or at its best can be, a tolerant home for Catholics, one that
acknowledges contributions of the Catholic tradition and is leavened by its
moral commitments.
While liberalism alone can be brittle and thin—its stated
neutrality can leave it awash in relativism and indifferentism—it is deepened
and rendered more sustainable by the Catholic presence.
Murray went so far as
to argue that America is in fact more Catholic than even its Protestant
founders realized—that they availed themselves unknowingly of a longer and
deeper tradition of natural law that undergirded the thinner liberal
commitments of the American founding.
The Founders “built better than they
knew,” and so it is Catholics like Orestes Brownson and Murray, and not liberal
lions like John Locke or Thomas Jefferson, who have better articulated and
today defends the American project.
Proponents of this position argue that America
was well-founded and took a wrong turn in the late-19th century with the
embrace of Progressivism (this intellectual position, closely associated with
intellectuals at Claremont McKenna College and Hillsdale College, was briefly
popularized by Glenn Beck. It has been developed not especially by Catholics,
but by students of Leo Strauss, but has been widely embraced by Catholics of
this school).
The task, then, is restore the basic principles of the American
founding—limited government in which the social and moral mores largely arising
from the familial and social sphere orient people toward well-ordered and moral
lives.
This position especially stresses a commitment to the pro-life position
and a defense of marriage, and is generally accepting of a more laissez-faire
economic position.
It supports a vigorous foreign policy and embraces a close
alignment between Catholicism and Americanism. It has become closely aligned
with the neoconservative wing of the Republican Party.
On the other side is arrayed what might be
characterized as a more radical Catholicism.
Its main intellectual heroes are
the philosopher Alasdair
MacIntyre and the theologian David
L. Shindler (brilliantly
profiled in the pages of TAC by Jeremy Beer). These two figures write
in arcane and sometimes impenetrable prose, and their position lacks comparably
visible popularizers such as Neuhaus, Novak, and Weigel.
Its intellectual
home—not surprisingly—is the less-accessible journal Communio. An occasional popularizer
(though not always in strictly theological terms) has been TAC author
Rod Dreher.
A number of its sympathizers—less well-known—are theologians, some
of whom have published in more popular outlets or accessible books, such as
Michael Baxter, William
T. Cavanaugh, and John
Medaille. Among its rising stars include the theologian C.C.
Pecknold of Catholic University and Andrew Haines, who founded its
online home, Ethika Politika.
From time to time I have been counted among its number.
The “radical” school rejects the view that
Catholicism and liberal democracy are fundamentally compatible. Rather,
liberalism cannot be understood to be merely neutral and ultimately tolerant
toward (and even potentially benefitting from) Catholicism.
Rather, liberalism
is premised on a contrary view of human nature (and even a competing theology)
to Catholicism. Liberalism holds that human beings are essentially separate,
sovereign selves who will cooperate based upon grounds of utility. According to
this view, liberalism is not a “shell” philosophy that allows a thousand
flowers to bloom.
Rather, liberalism is constituted by a substantive set of
philosophical commitments that are deeply contrary to the basic beliefs of
Catholicism, among which are the belief that we are by nature relational,
social and political creatures; that social units like the family, community
and Church are “natural,” not merely the result of individuals contracting
temporary arrangements; that liberty is not a condition in which we
experience the absence of constraint, but the exercise of self-limitation; and
that both the “social” realm and the economic realm must be governed by a thick
set of moral norms, above all, self-limitation and virtue.
Because of these positions, the “radical”
position—while similarly committed to the pro-life, pro-marriage teachings of
the Church—is deeply critical of contemporary arrangements of market
capitalism, is deeply suspicious of America’s imperial ambitions, and wary of
the basic premises of liberal government.
It is comfortable with neither party,
and holds that the basic political division in America merely represents two
iterations of liberalism—the pursuit of individual autonomy in either the social/personal
sphere (liberalism) or the economic realm (“conservatism”—better designated as
market liberalism).
Because America was founded as a liberal nation, “radical”
Catholicism tends to view America as a deeply flawed project, and fears that
the anthropological falsehood at the heart of the American founding is leading
inexorably to civilizational catastrophe.
It wavers between a defensive
posture, encouraging the creation of small moral communities that exist apart
from society—what Rod Dreher, following Alasdair MacIntyre, has dubbed “the
Benedict Option”—and, occasionally, a more proactive posture that hopes for the
conversion of the nation to a fundamentally different and truer philosophy and
theology.
While the New York Times (and Fox News)
focuses on the theater pitting “liberal” vs. “conservative” Catholics, it has
been altogether ignorant of the significant and, arguably, increasingly
vociferous dust-ups that have been taking place between these two schools of
thought.
Recently, for example, Michael Baxter wrote a seering
critique of John Courtney Murray, which provoked a vigorous
response from George Weigel. Not too long ago, I was asked to write an
essay about liberalism for the “other team’s” journal, First Things—entitled
“Unsustainable
Liberalism“—which provoked not just the two critical responses in
the same issue, but a
critique by Villanova Law professor Robert Miller and another more
recently by Andrew Latham.
The article was also criticized by my
colleague Phillip
Munoz and by Nathan Schleuter,
with responses by me, going several more rounds, in the
online journal “Public Discourse,” a publication closely associated with Robert
George and the Witherspoon Institute.
More recently still, a shrill salvo was
launched by John Zmirak entitled “Illiberal
Catholicism,” accusing the “rad trads” of pining for the reestablishment of
Inquisition and hoping for an auto-da-fe of a few Protestants at the stake.
His
broadside provoked numerous responses,
and signalled a considerable ratcheting-up of the battles over the fate of
Catholicism in America. Just yesterday, Ethika Politika posted a
critique of George Weigel by Thomas Storck, arguing that Weigel has
been just as likely to act as a “cafeteria Catholic” as those he criticizes on
the Left.
One can expect the debate will only intensify as the stakes increase.
If one paid attention only to canned accounts of
things Catholic in the mainstream media, you would think that there’s something
called “conservative” Catholicism that spends all of its time fretting about
liberal “Catholicism.”
That debate, such as it is, is merely our well-rutted
political division with a Latin accent; the real intellectual action that will
likely influence the future of Catholicism in America is being fought in
trenches largely out of sight of much of the American public, even those who
are well-informed.
As this debate develops—and, I believe, bursts into public
view, and begins to engage the Catholic remnant—major implications for the
relationship of Catholics to America, and America to Catholics, hang in the
balance.
It is already evident for anyone with eyes to see
that elites in America are returning to their customary hostility toward
Catholicism, albeit now eschewing crude prejudice in favor of Mandates and
legal filings (though there’s plenty of crude
prejudice, too).
For those in the Murray/Neuhaus/Weigel school, it’s simply
a matter of returning us to the better days, and reviving the sound basis on
which the nation was founded. For those in the MacIntyre/Schindler school,
America was never well-founded, so either needs to be differently re-founded or
at least endured, even survived.
The relationship of Catholicism to America,
and America to Catholicism, began with rancor and hostility, but became a
comfortable partnership forged in the cauldron of World War II and the Cold
War. Was that period one of “ordinary time,” or an aberration which is now
passing, returning us to the inescapably hostile relationship?
A growing body
of evidence suggests that the latter possibility can’t simply be dismissed out
of hand: liberalism appears to be daily more hostile to Catholicism, not merely
disagreeing with its stances, but demanding that they be
changed in conformity to liberal views on self-sovereignty (especially
relating to human sexuality and marriage) or, failing that, that the Church be
defined out of the bounds of decent liberal society, an institution no more
respectable than the Ku Klux Klan.
Whether the marriage between the (Catholic)
Church and the (American) State can be rescued, or whether a divorce is in the
offing, depends in large part on the outcome of this burgeoning debate about
which most Americans are wholly unaware, but to which those with interests in
the fate of the imperial Republic should to be paying attention.
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