Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

21 - 27 April 2005
Issue No. 739
Opinion 

The Catholic Church and the world
On the occasion of the death of one Pope and the election of another, Immanuel 
Wallerstein reflects on the nearly 2000-year history of the Catholic Church 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The extraordinary celebration of John Paul II at his funeral, whose only 
comparable event in the last 50 years was the funeral of John F Kennedy in 
1963, has led to many reflections on the role of this Pope, and that of the 
papacy in general, in world history. The Pope was celebrated more or less 
equally by George W Bush, Fidel Castro, and Jacques Chirac, by Israeli and 
Palestinian leaders, and by clerics from all the world's religious 
institutions, which, even given the usual outpouring on such occasions, seems 
remarkable. As for the Catholic Church, it is now approaching its 2,000th year 
of existence as an institution, which no other structure of any kind can match. 
It leads one to remember the perhaps apocryphal statement of the great French 
diplomat of the beginning of the 19th century, Talleyrand, who is supposed to 
have responded to the question of what he did during the Revolution and the 
Terror with the answer, j'ai survécu (I survived). 

The Catholic Church has indeed survived the most incredible series of 
transformations of world social structures over two millennia. How has it been 
able to do it? I would say by paying close attention to two questions: how the 
church should relate to political authorities; and what the church needs to do 
to hold itself together. John Paul II was deeply concerned with both these 
questions, and his unusually long papacy (only one Pope ever served longer) 
consisted of a long series of acts that responded to these concerns.

The church, as we know, passed its first three centuries as a pariah group of 
faithful, fiercely persecuted by the Roman authorities. But in the beginning of 
the fourth century, the Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity, which 
then became the official religion of the Roman Empire. One of the early acts of 
Constantine was to convene the Council of Nicaea in 325, at which the bishops 
proclaimed Arianism (a doctrine that denied the divinity of Christ) to be 
heresy and defined the basic theological doctrine of the holy trinity that has 
guided the Catholic Church ever since. 

The church had at this point created a firm hierarchical structure and affirmed 
a clearly defined set of dogmas. On this basis, the church was able to survive 
and thrive until the beginning of the modern world system in the 16th century. 
Its evangelical activities reached successfully all of Europe, but only 
slightly beyond Europe. During all this period, the church existed primarily 
within political structures that were governed by Christian rulers. It did 
suffer the great schism with the Orthodox churches in the 11th century, one of 
the basic divisive issues being the primacy of the bishop of Rome. But 
otherwise, the church was able to contain potential heresies by developing a 
supple structure of multiple institutions with differing emphases (particularly 
the monastic structures). 

As for the political authorities, the church wrestled with various rulers, and 
particularly the Holy Roman Emperor, over the degree of control the political 
institutions could have over the church and vice versa. In a sense, the outcome 
of these struggles was a vague and unclear compromise about the division of 
authority, which allowed decisions about these issues to be made on a pragmatic 
basis, and never once and for all. 

This could be said to have worked quite well until the advent of the modern 
world, when the states in Europe began to construct themselves as strong, 
autonomous structures within the now emerging capitalist world-economy. The 
emergence of strong states was linked with the emergence of Protestant churches 
which took multiple forms, all of which however rejected the hierarchical 
authority of the Bishop of Rome. Religious struggles between the Catholic 
Church and the various Protestant churches ensued for two centuries. 

Initially, a solution was enshrined in the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 -- cuius 
regio eius religio (the religion of the ruler is the religion of the state). 
But this was not enough to settle the matter in the largest European state, 
France, where a civil war ended with the Edict of Nantes in 1598 banning 
Protestants, and then the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, 
instituting the concept of religious tolerance for significant Christian 
minorities. In a sense, it was this new concept with which the church had to 
come to terms from then on.

Religious tolerance as a concept came to be an integral part of a larger 
doctrine known as the enlightenment, and which initiated a vast process of 
secularisation, that is, of removing a whole series of moral issues from the 
dominance of religious authorities and increasing the rights of individual 
choice in many moral arenas, particularly in all those that had to do with 
sexuality and its social consequences. The Catholic Church was not the only 
religious structure to find this individualisation of moral choice 
unacceptable, but it took the lead within the European states to argue the case 
against secularism in the public arena.

In the 19th century, the church denounced this secularisation of moral values 
as the perversity of liberalism, which it condemned and against which it 
fought. It must be said in retrospect that it was, by and large, a losing 
fight. By the late 20th century, European states legitimated or at least 
tolerated many practices to which the church was opposed -- divorce, birth 
control, abortion, homosexuality. What is more, even among practicing 
Catholics, these practices gained large sway, and certainly there came to be a 
feeling that they should be tolerated if others wished to engage in them. 
Furthermore, the Catholic Church (as did other religious structures) saw a 
serious decline in vocations to the priesthood and in attendance at religious 
services.

On the other hand, the Catholic Church was ceasing to be a European 
institution. Along with the creation of a European-dominated capitalist world- 
economy went a process of evangelisation in the non-European zones of the 
world, which made considerable progress. Conversions, along with differential 
birth rates in the 20th century, transformed the church from one in 1900 still 
with predominantly European membership to one in 2000 in which Europeans had 
become a minority.

The Second Vatican Council, convened by Pope John XXIII in 1962, sought to 
respond to these changes in the social environment within which the church 
existed. John XXIII called for an aggiornamento, an updating of the church. 
What this meant were changes in the liturgy to reduce the role of Latin and the 
establishment of an Episcopal synod to help govern the church (seen as a mode 
of reducing the vertical character of church governance). There was also a new 
emphasis on ecumenicism and a removal of anti-Semitic language from church 
teachings. 

The heart of Vatican II, as seen by Catholics themselves, was that it was a 
deliberate attempt for the church to come to terms with the modern world. This 
is precisely what more conservative Catholics rejected in the aggiornamento. 
They saw it as an abandonment of the essentials of the faith. This was made all 
the worse when the church seemed to tolerate the concepts of the theology of 
liberation, put forward especially in Latin America, in which the church 
prelates and theologians advocated a deep involvement in radical political 
movements seeking earthly justice, and therefore entering into acute opposition 
with state authorities.

When John Paul II came to the papacy, he sought to rectify what he believed to 
have been a too great abandonment of traditional church doctrine. He 
re-emphasised the centrality of the Pope's authority. He condemned the theology 
of liberation. And above all, he reiterated in the strongest possible way the 
church's traditional views on sexuality -- opposing the idea of married priests 
or women in the priesthood, denouncing abortion and all other kinds of 
interference with sexuality. He became a world leader in the religious reaction 
to the triumph of secularisation and the individualisation of moral practice.

He sought to restore the church to a centrist position in terms of relations 
with the political powers -- never all-out opposition to any state authority 
and never all- out support. Of course, within those extremes lay a whole range 
of possibilities. He forbade the involvement of priests with radical movements. 
But he also criticised neo-liberalism and opposed both wars in Iraq. Much has 
been made of his role in the downfall of the Communism in Eastern Europe. No 
doubt he played a role, particularly in his native Poland, but the dismantling 
of these regimes would almost surely have occurred had he not been there to 
play the role he did play. He did emphasise a very broad ecumenicism, 
apologising publicly for the historic errors and misdeeds of the church towards 
other Christian churches, towards the Jews, towards the Muslims. But he also 
set very clear limits on what might be called structural Christian ecumenicism, 
that is, re- uniting different churches.

Where is the church today in terms of its historic worries: its relation to the 
states; maintaining the integrity of the Catholic Church? In the end, he did 
nothing that was really new in the church's relations to the state powers. He 
certainly was in no way able to reverse the declining formal role of the 
church, even within largely Catholic countries. His policy towards the states 
remained the traditional pragmatic one. 

He re-asserted firmly the hierarchical structure of the church and its views on 
sexuality. But this does not seem to have stanched in any significant way the 
slippage in the real sexual practice of Catholics, the decline of priestly 
vocations, or the decline in church attendance. Some say this will be 
compensated by an upsurge in all these fronts among the non-European sectors of 
the church. It may be so, but it is equally possible that the secularisation of 
church practice will spread to these regions as well. It is doubtful that in 
2050 John Paul II will be seen as having had as much long-lasting impact on the 
church as John XXIII. The aggiornamento seems irresistible.


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