“Pope Attacks Pathologies of Faith and Reason!” – ANALYSIS

On the site of the American Spectator my friend the great Samuel Gregg, of Acton Institute, has a piece about Pope Benedict which I bring to your attention with my emphases and comments.

Benedict XVI: In No One’s Shadow

By Samuel Gregg on 5.6.11 @ 6:08AM

It was inevitable. In the lead-up to John Paul II’s beatification, a number of publications decided it was time to opine about the direction of Benedict XVI’s pontificate. The Economist, for example, portrayed a pontificate adrift, “accident-prone,” and with a “less than stellar record” compared to Benedict’s dynamic predecessor (who, incidentally, didn’t meet with the Economist’s approval either).

It need hardly been said that, like most British publications, the Economist’s own record when it comes to informed commentary on Catholicism and religion more generally is itself less than stellar. And the problems remain the same as they have always been: [NB:] an unwillingness to do the hard work of trying to understand a religion on its own terms, and a stubborn insistence upon shoving theological positions into secular political categories. [Rem acu, Samuele, tetigisti.  He put this very well.  Though we often will borrow terms such as “right v. left” in our own churchy talk, we do so with a difference.  MSM does not.]

Have mistakes occurred under Benedict’s watch? Yes. Some sub-optimal appointments? [Finally someone else who uses sub-optimal!  I hope he got it from WDTPPS.] Of course. That would be true of any leader of such a massive organization.

But the real difficulty with so much commentary on this papacy is the sheer narrowness of the perspective brought to the subject. If observers were willing to broaden their horizons, they might notice just how big are the stakes being pursued by Benedict. This pope’s program, they may discover, goes beyond mere institutional politics. He’s pursuing a civilizational agenda[I have said that Benedict’s program revolves around the restoration of Catholic identity.  There are ad intra and ad extra dimensions.  Within, we have to shore up our understanding and acceptance of doctrine.  To do that the first step is liturgical worship.  When it comes to works of mercy, they must be done for true charity, etc.  As far as the world is concerned, if we don’t know who we are, then we have little to say in the public square and no one will bother to listen to us if we are unsure.  At stake is the lost of the identity of the West, especially in Europe, whose heart and soul must be Christian if Europe is to remain Europe and not, as the last Oriana Fallaci quipped, Eurabia, or something else.  My thoughts turn back constantly to the Pope 2006 Message for the World Day for Peace as an important signal about what he is doing… or trying to do.  Let’s see if Gregg and I are on the same track.  Perpend…]

And that program begins with the Catholic Church itself. [That’s the ad intra dimension I mentioned above.] Even its harshest critics find it difficult to deny Catholicism’s decisive influence on Western civilization’s development. It follows that a faltering in the Church’s confidence about its purpose has implications for the wider culture[So far so good!]

That’s one reason Benedict has been so proactive in rescuing Catholic liturgy [Say da magic woid, win a hunned dahlahs.] from the banality into which it collapsed throughout much of the world (especially the English-speaking world) after Vatican II. Benedict’s objective here is not a reactionary “return to the past.” Rather, it’s about underscoring the need for liturgy to accurately reflect what the Church has always believed — lex orandi, lex credendi — rather than the predilections of an aging progressivist generation that reduced prayer to endless self-affirmation.

This attention to liturgy is, I suspect, one reason why another aspect of Benedict’s pontificate — his outreach to the Orthodox Christian churches — has been remarkably successful. [Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.] As anyone who’s attended Orthodox services knows, the Orthodox truly understand liturgy. Certainly Benedict’s path here was paved by Vatican II, Paul VI, and John Paul II. Yet few doubt that Catholic-Orthodox relations have taken off since 2005.

That doesn’t mean the relationship is uncomplicated by unhappy historical memories, secular political influences, and important theological differences. Yet it’s striking how positively Orthodox churches have responded to the German pope’s overtures. They’ve also become increasingly vocal in echoing Benedict’s concerns about Western culture’s present trajectory.  [Not only. The Orthodox also are pressed on many sides.  They have far few resources and reach in most of the world and, in their diaspora, they struggle to maintain their identity, which is tied in part to ethnic concerns in the context of highly-heated melting pots.  This sounds more negative than it is intended to sound, but the principle is the same: the enemy of my enemy is my friend.  To whom will the Orthodox turn in their own struggle against the incursion of Islams in Orthdox regions and the prevailing dictatorship of relativism in the West?]

But above all, Benedict has — from his pontificate’s very beginning — gone to the heart of the rot within the West, a disease which may be described as pathologies of faith and reason. [Well said.]

In this regard, Benedict’s famous 2006 Regensburg address may go down as one of the 21st century’s most important speeches, comparable to Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s 1978 Harvard Address in terms of its accuracy in identifying some of the West’s inner demons.

Most people think about the Regensburg lecture in terms of some Muslims’ reaction to Benedict’s citation of a 14th century Byzantine emperor. That, however, is to miss Regensburg’s essence. It was really about the West. [Excellent.]

Christianity, Benedict argued at Regensburg, integrated Biblical faith, Greek philosophy, and Roman law, thereby creating the “foundation of what can rightly be called Europe.[Keep in mind that years before his election Ratzinger had a book called, in Italian at least, Una svolta per l’Europa… a Turning point for Europe.] This suggests that any weakening of this integration of faith and reason would mean the West would start losing its distinctive identity. In short, a West without a Christianity that integrates faith and reason is no longer the West. [Bingo.]

Today, Benedict added, we see what happens when faith and reason are torn asunder. Reason is reduced to scientism and ideologies of progress, thereby rending reasoned discussion of anything beyond the empirical impossible. Faith dissolves into sentimental humanitarianism, an equally inadequate basis for rational reflection. [Remember my comment about “true charity”?  Cf. Caritas in veritate.  This is also why the Holy See is starting to crack down on the organization Caritas.] Neither of these emaciated facsimiles of their originals can provide any coherent response to the great questions pondered by every human being: “Who am I?” “Where did I come from?” “Where am I going?”

So what’s the way back? To Benedict’s mind, it involves affirming that what he recently called creative reason lies at the origin of everything. [I think it starts with liturgical renewal.]

As Benedict explained one week before he beatified his predecessor: “We are faced with the ultimate alternative that is at stake in the dispute between faith and unbelief: are irrationality, lack of freedom and pure chance the origin of everything, or are reason, freedom and love at the origin of being? Does the primacy belong to unreason or to reason? This is what everything hinges upon in the final analysis.”  [This is why when I write about liturgical worship I hammer away at the concept of mystery.]

It’s almost impossible to count the positions Benedict is politely assailing here. On the one hand, he’s taking on philosophical materialists and emotivists (i.e., most contemporary scholars). But it’s also a critique of those who diminish God to either a Divine Watchmaker or a being of Pure Will. [Modernism?]

Of course none of this fits into sound-bites. “Pope Attacks Pathologies of Faith and Reason!” is unlikely to be a newspaper headline anytime soon. [But it has in the blogosphere.  Thanks, Mr. Gregg.] That, however, doesn’t nullify the accuracy of Benedict’s analysis. It just makes communicating it difficult in a world of diminished attention-spans and inclined to believe it has nothing to learn from history.  [Again, as part of my own liturgical reflection, I note that we are dominated by distraction,and at the root of that distraction is timor mortis, which Augustine calls our hiems cotidiana.  The focus on the Cross is what cracks that distraction and brings us into touch with the mystery which both terrifies and attracts.  If liturgical worship doesn’t accomplish this over time, it has failed.]

So while the Economist and others might gossip about the competence of various Vatican officials, [A distraction.] they are, to their own detriment, largely missing the main game. Quietly but firmly Benedict is making his own distinct contribution to the battle of ideas upon which the fate of civilizations hang. His critics’ inability to engage his thought doesn’t just illustrate their ignorance. It also betrays a profound lack of imagination.

Well done, Mr. Gregg.

About Fr. John Zuhlsdorf

Fr. Z is the guy who runs this blog. o{]:¬)
This entry was posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, The Drill, The future and our choices and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.