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DL82
Guest
It occured to me recently that nearly all the saints who wanted to be obedient to Catholic teaching and had positions of political power ended up either being kicked out of power (like St Elizabeth of Hungary or St Edward the Confessor) or became quite right wing and authoritarian.
For example, there is St Louis IX of France, who once remarked that sometimes the only way to make a heretic understand is with a sword thrust up to the hilt! In more recent times, St Josemaria Escriva, whose Opus Dei organisation was initially closely related to the Spanish fascist government. Even St Thomas More, one of the more liberal and progressive saints in politics, who wrote Utopia, nonetheless found his name on the death warrant of William Tyndale, burned at the stake for translating the Bible without ecclesiastical permission.
Even King David, the original holy politician, finds himself saying “I am for peace, but when I speak, they are for war.”
Is it inevitable that a Catholic who sticks to his moral convictions in the political sphere will find himself either booted out or forced to be authoritarian?
For example, there is St Louis IX of France, who once remarked that sometimes the only way to make a heretic understand is with a sword thrust up to the hilt! In more recent times, St Josemaria Escriva, whose Opus Dei organisation was initially closely related to the Spanish fascist government. Even St Thomas More, one of the more liberal and progressive saints in politics, who wrote Utopia, nonetheless found his name on the death warrant of William Tyndale, burned at the stake for translating the Bible without ecclesiastical permission.
Even King David, the original holy politician, finds himself saying “I am for peace, but when I speak, they are for war.”
Is it inevitable that a Catholic who sticks to his moral convictions in the political sphere will find himself either booted out or forced to be authoritarian?