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Cardinals Virtues
Chicago Archbishop’s New Book Focuses on Faith and Culture
BY EDWARD PENTIN REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
October 25-31, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/16/09 at 3:14 PM
In his first book, The
Difference God Makes — A
Catholic Vision of Faith, Communion and Culture, Cardinal Francis George aims to bring together
some of the most influential writings on the Catholic vision — “not just of the
Church herself, but also of all the peoples of the world,” according to the
book’s synopsis.
The
publication, which went on sale in American bookstores on Oct. 11, contains the
author’s observations of Catholicism in cultures around the globe, as well as
the perspectives of many other theologians and intellectuals, with a special
emphasis on the United States and the teachings of Pope John Paul II.
Cardinal
George discussed the book, gave his assessment of the conscience clause and
health-care debates, and spoke about recent discussions concerning the approach
of the pro-life movement.
How would you sum up the book’s
contents? It struck me as a kind of handbook for the evangelization of America.
I’m glad you see it that way. I was
afraid that it wouldn’t be useful, but that’s what I have in mind, and,
consequently, it’s something of a polemic against individualism in the culture
and against a specialization that prevents us from seeing things whole.
We tend to identify ourselves by
individual choices, but the argument is: No, they are secondary to
relationships that are given. Secondly, we tend to see things in parts, or at
most from a national perspective, and so are at a loss to see things globally.
Therefore, universally, in Catholic communion, those two cultural proclivities
are hampering us from living as Catholics.
You talk a lot in the book about
evangelizing culture and also the point about divorcing freedom from truth.
Would you unpack those issues for people who may be unaware of them?
Both of those are from the papal
magisterium of John Paul II. Freedom from truth comes out very clearly in John
Paul II’s and Benedict XVI’s writings, and he [Benedict XVI] spoke in the Czech
Republic about that very point. The cultural point is that we do divorce
freedom from truth in our culture because we see objective truth as a threat to
subjective freedom.
And subjective freedom is seen as a
primary value that must be safeguarded at all costs — even if we have to
sacrifice objective truth and the search for it.
The danger and difficulty of that is
that you cannot live free unless you know the truth, if you’re enslaved to
falsehoods of one sort or another. So, if you want to be truly free, you have
to keep searching for the truth, or else you’ll end up in traps of your own
making.
You seem to suggest in the book
that tackling secularism isn’t so much the challenge as overcoming a
Calvinist/Hobbesian individualist mindset in American society.
I think our culture is highly
influenced by a conversation with Christianity and its Calvinist expression. So
when it secularizes itself, it’s not so much a rejection of God or religion,
although that’s part of it to some extent, although it’s a very minor part.
It’s rather secularization of Calvinist Protestantism.
So you keep all the attitudes and
the proclivities and even the virtues of that kind of faith while you divorce
them from God. So there’s this sense of responsibility to oneself, not before a
God who judges us, but before ourselves. So you keep all the virtues of
Calvinism — and they are virtues — but divorce them from the life with God, and
you have secularized virtues.
That explains the hierarchy of
values in American culture.
What would you say is the best
way of going about correcting that?
Be Catholic, that’s all. Since
Protestantism split into liberal and conservative, you have had a danger of
isolation on the part of fundamentalism and conservatism, and you have had a
danger of assimilation on the part of liberals.
Assimilation means the culture is
the last word, not the faith. Isolation means that the faith has no influence
at all. Either way, you have secularization of the culture. Whereas in
Catholicism, we say we know who we are: It’s a religion that’s deeply
religious, but it’s also open to the culture.
And, so, if we are who we are,
living our life together, in parishes, in families, etc., we will be a leaven
that will transform the culture into ways that are friendlier to the Gospel
than what you’ve got right now.
There’s no formula for that. It’s a
question of living the life thoroughly, authentically, not as an individual
choice but as a gift to a community, and doing that long enough so society
eventually makes changes and is transformed.
And since we are very sensitive to
popular opinion in the United States, that’s very effective if it’s done well.
And you see the liturgy as being
central to that?
Sure. The liturgy is the great gift
that tells us who we are. We are called to worship God in this life and in the
next, and so the worship of God is something that characterizes us as
Catholics. It opens us up to the world.
You move to the Creator of the world
and the Savior of the human race in order to go back and dialogue with the
world and everybody else, the human race.
So, yes, the liturgy is the source
and summit of our life as the [Second Vatican] Council calls it in Sacrosanctum
Concilium (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy). That doesn’t just
mean our personal life: It means our social, political, business life and
everything else.
For various
reasons, some people have spoken recently about a lack of charity, and a
hostility, among some in the pro-life movement. What is your view of that
opinion?
Well,
it isn’t only some pro-lifers who are occasionally disagreeable. There are
people who are even more disagreeable. I would be very loath to criticize
people in the pro-life movement because a lot of them have given 30 to 40 years
of their life to trying to protect unborn children.
So
if they become overly focused perhaps on that to the exclusion of everything
else — if even the Church becomes an instrument to foster this cause — it’s
because they’ve given so much of themselves to it with such a good heart. And
it’s the singly most important issue in front of us.
As
Mother Teresa used to always say: If you’re killing an unborn child, what else
can you do? There are no limits to human depravity. So, it is of key
importance, and these people have carried the burden. So I would be loath to
criticize them.
It’s
also true, however, that we’re called to love our enemies, and called to be
charitable in all circumstances, and there can be, in any movement, a sector
that is less concerned about forming allies — however imperfect they might be —
than about maintaining the purity of the cause, and that can turn upon people,
even the bishops.
That
is not productive, and it is more from the goal that is being hampered that I
would enter a cautious word of criticism than from any consideration about
being charitable to everybody. It’s counterproductive.
Edward
Pentin
writes from Rome.
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