As Western society becomes more and more secular, our similarities will be increasingly evident and our differences increasingly inconsequential.
I’ve read this on CAF many times. I still do not understand where this idea is coming from. Why do you think that?
Certainly there is room and reason for cooperation on many things with the Roman Catholic Church, but from what we see going on in the USA (I can’t speak for other parts of the West), it seems more accurate to say that the Roman Catholic Church itself is becoming or has become like a secular institution, at least insofar as it cooperates with the secular vision of the Church as a kind of locus of good will and social programs, rather than something that truly challenges people to get out of their comfort zone and do something to affirm traditional Christian tenets (which the secular world hates and has always hated). I suspect this is not even a modern reaction to challenges, either, as I have often seen Catholics advance the idea of Francis of Assisi (1181-1226) that when preaching the gospel, words are actually secondary or at any rate not entirely necessary (you know, “Preach the gospel at all times; when necessary, use words” or some such). I personally find this to be a very foolish idea, but it is in line with the general move to make Christianity about anything other than the literal message of Christ’s death, resurrection,. and victory and power over the bonds of sin and death that we are to participate in in a very active, engaged way, and instead to reduce it to what others have called “the social gospel” (bleh). I mean, I don’t dislike the Catholic Church for not being Orthodox (I don’t expect it to be, anyway), but it is kind of hard to miss how almost every change to Roman Catholic practice in recent centuries has been a relaxation or abolition of this or that earlier practice. Of course, other churches do this too (including my own), but partly because of the different cultural environment that the churches live in, it seems from the outside that the Roman Catholic Church has a lot of opportunities it is not taking because…well, I don’t know why. Just as an illustration, as I was heading to the Apocalypsis night service (or ‘Abu Ghalimsis’, as the Copts put it) two days ago with some friends from church, one of them mentioned how pleased he was at the (Coptic) Pope’s Easter homily because HH Pope Tawadros II was “very strong about Jesus Christ’s divinity”. I said “Well, yeah…isn’t he supposed to be? He’s the Pope!” My friend replied that, yes, he’s supposed to be, but it means a lot more to hear and see that message proclaimed directly in front of the many Muslim government officials and dignitaries who are once again attending the Easter liturgy at the Coptic Cathedral (something they did not do as recently as a few years ago under Morsi, for clearly ideological religious/Islamist reasons). When your Cathedral has been the site of violence and record numbers of churches and monasteries have been attacked in an atmosphere of political and religious Salafi terrorist-led chaos in the current day, to preach the gospel
with words to the leaders of the very people doing the violence towards you is a direct confrontation to the portion of society that truly would like to see you gone. By contrast, while I do love Pope Francis (and the world seems to, too, but I think for the wrong reasons), there is strangely a kind of barrier to really getting a substantial Christian message out there, so tailored are many of his responses as to not offend this or that group that is, in their own ways, doing no less ideological violence to Christianity. I do not think that this is Pope Francis’ or any other Roman Catholic’s fault, but it is just a fact that no established Western form of Christianity presents any kind of serious threat to the social order in the West (that is to say, increasing secularization, Islamification in certain places, etc). To paraphrase the apocalypse of St. John, many Western people, whether Christians or not, have forgotten their first love. They may get along better for it, but this only shows how easy it is to become unfocused and hence impotent when well-entrenched within a given society (something which
all of us must guard against, for sure).