What would the world be like if the Reformation never occurred, and every Protestant Church was Catholic?

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What are your reasons for making this claim? How on earth would you go about eliminating religion as a motivating factor?

Edwin
There were plenty of political reasons to consider. I can post more in depth later, but it is likely that the Pope used the Crusades to consolidate papal power in the face of increasing agitation and independence of Holy Roman Emperors.
 
Obviously you can use words any way you choose–lots of people use the word the way you do. But your usage results in a misunderstanding of what historians mean when they use the term, and more seriously it perpetuates a naive understanding of how historical inquiry works.
🤷

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_revisionism_%28negationism%29

Has someone gave a revisionist re-definition of the term “revisionist history?” :hmmm: Please tell me the “appropriate” term used by historians when people falsify history to push their own agendas. Is it “historical negation?” By the way, I am open to learning the factually awful things the Catholic Church has done…I have believed in the exaggerations of it for most of my life after all (thank you public school and History Channel).

Thanks everyone for the fruitful discussion 👍 I’m learning about events and terms I’ve never even heard of before.
 
Most likely, I’d be living in a ghetto.
It is interesting that the most observant Jews, or those who practice their religion most fervently, choose to live in situations and places that could easily be described as ghettos.

They deliberately separate themselves from the rest of the world, or culture, and live in their own closed societies where outsiders, or non-Jews are not welcome. They do not eat with non-Jews, invite them into their homes. Outside of engaging in commerce with others they live in closed societies of their own making.

No one imposes this on them. It is of their own design and of their religion which believes God set them apart and commands them to not be integrated into foreign cultures.

Even Jews who are not conservative or orthodox have to a degree this sense of themselves as they encounter the rest of the world .

Many years ago I lived near a town in northern New Hampshire where Hassidic Jews came from Brooklyn in the summer. They probably quadrupled the population. They would literally not speak to a non-Jew. They clearly lived in a self-made, self-imposed ghetto isolation.

In a sense Israel is also a ghetto. It is a country for Jews. I have an American Christian friend who lived there and worked with a Christian organization whose mission was to try to create better relations and bring peace between Jews and Arabs. The method was to get Israeli doctors to donate their services to save the lives of Arab children in danger of dying who could not otherwise get medical help. It was very successful. The Jewish physicians saved the lives of numerous children as facilitated by this organization, in one case the child of an Arab jihadist sworn to destroy Israel. His views were greatly tempered.

My friend lived in Israel for years doing this work. She has five children and is a widow. She and her children visited her family in the U.S. and when she returned to Israel to resume her humanitarian work was denied reentry. She was unwelcome. She was not allowed to go to her home and collect her family belongings, kids toys, photos and clothing.

It is ironic I suppose, but clearly Israel is a ghetto and the Jews there have built the physical ghetto walls to isolate and protect themselves from outsiders whether they are hostile or friendly. If the outiders proposed building walls to keep a separation it would be unjust.

Jews seem conflicted in a sense. They want to engage with the non-Jewish culture and participate in its political institutions, educational life, social organizations and so forth, but at the same time remain separate and isolated from those who are not Jewish.
 
🤷

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_revisionism_%28negationism%29

Has someone gave a revisionist re-definition of the term “revisionist history?” :hmmm:
I don’t know the history of the term, but I suspect that as usual the more precise, technical use came first and the loaded, popular use came second. As C. S. Lewis said, words tend over time to take on meanings that equate to either “good” or “bad,” losing their more nuanced meanings. Naturally this is more likely to happen in popular usage, which then exerts pressure on the technical usage. For instance, the recent scholars who have challenged the “Whig” interpretation of the English Reformation (such as Duffy and Scarisbrick) are usually called “revisionists.” But obviously the more entrenched your usage becomes, the harder it will be for a professor to use that term in front of a class without prejudicing the students against the scholarship in question.
Please tell me the “appropriate” term used by historians when people falsify history to push their own agendas. Is it “historical negation?”
Wikipedia uses the term “negationism.” I haven’t heard it. Generally we just call it “bad history” or “propaganda masquerading as history” or something of the sort. I’m not sure it deserves a technical term. It’s just history done badly–and of course all history written by fallible human beings is done imperfectly to some extent. Hence the need for continual “revision.”
By the way, I am open to learning the factually awful things the Catholic Church has done…I have believed in the exaggerations of it for most of my life after all (thank you public school and History Channel).
Yes. I got the fundamentalist version because I was homeschooled–but in a way that was easier to correct because it was obviously coming from a particular, biased religious perspective. The History Channel is in my experience almost completely untrustworthy for anything before the eighteenth century (it may not be very good even for more recent stuff–the earlier stuff is what I know more about). Back when my wife and I had more cable channels, I used to joke that the History Channel should be renamed the Sci-Fi- channel and the Sci-Fi channel the Horror Channel!
Thanks everyone for the fruitful discussion 👍 I’m learning about events and terms I’ve never even heard of before.
And sorry for coming down strong. My frustration is that non-historians don’t realize how continually historians question and revise their paradigms, and making “revisionism” a bad word will just further confuse the issue. Also, as I’ve suggested, for Catholics “revisionist” history is often friendlier than “traditional” history. Much of the traditional narrative of Western history was created in the 18th and 19th centuries (such as the “myth of the flat earth”) by secular/Protestant historians who were heavily biased against Catholicism.

Edwin
 
There were plenty of political reasons to consider. I can post more in depth later, but it is likely that the Pope used the Crusades to consolidate papal power in the face of increasing agitation and independence of Holy Roman Emperors.
But the trajectory in the late 11th century was the other way round. It was the Papacy that was asserting its independence of the Empire. In the early 11th century the Papacy was corrupt and under the control of the local Roman aristocracy. The HRE helped promote the reform of the Papacy, and then found that it had created a “monster” (from the imperial perspective).

Edwin
 
It is interesting that the most observant Jews, or those who practice their religion most fervently, choose to live in situations and places that could easily be described as ghettos.

They deliberately separate themselves from the rest of the world, or culture, and live in their own closed societies where outsiders, or non-Jews are not welcome. They do not eat with non-Jews, invite them into their homes. Outside of engaging in commerce with others they live in closed societies of their own making.

No one imposes this on them. It is of their own design and of their religion which believes God set them apart and commands them to not be integrated into foreign cultures.

Even Jews who are not conservative or orthodox have to a degree this sense of themselves as they encounter the rest of the world .

Many years ago I lived near a town in northern New Hampshire where Hassidic Jews came from Brooklyn in the summer. They probably quadrupled the population. They would literally not speak to a non-Jew. They clearly lived in a self-made, self-imposed ghetto isolation.

In a sense Israel is also a ghetto. It is a country for Jews. I have an American Christian friend who lived there and worked with a Christian organization whose mission was to try to create better relations and bring peace between Jews and Arabs. The method was to get Israeli doctors to donate their services to save the lives of Arab children in danger of dying who could not otherwise get medical help. It was very successful. The Jewish physicians saved the lives of numerous children as facilitated by this organization, in one case the child of an Arab jihadist sworn to destroy Israel. His views were greatly tempered.

My friend lived in Israel for years doing this work. She has five children and is a widow. She and her children visited her family in the U.S. and when she returned to Israel to resume her humanitarian work was denied reentry. She was unwelcome. She was not allowed to go to her home and collect her family belongings, kids toys, photos and clothing.

It is ironic I suppose, but clearly Israel is a ghetto and the Jews there have built the physical ghetto walls to isolate and protect themselves from outsiders whether they are hostile or friendly. If the outiders proposed building walls to keep a separation it would be unjust.

Jews seem conflicted in a sense. They want to engage with the non-Jewish culture and participate in its political institutions, educational life, social organizations and so forth, but at the same time remain separate and isolated from those who are not Jewish.
interesting perspective. however, considering how the Jews have been persecuted throughout the centuries and the anti-semitism that seems to never go away, i can understand somewhat why they would choose to remain separate and isolated.
but you still provide an interesting perspective that in a way they create their own ghetto.
 
Much of what we can say about world history comes from English law via America - i.e. broadly “Reformation cultures”.

Since America has been the most powerful country in the world financially since 1918, it has been able to influence everything else. Asians wear American business suits, and Africans drink Coca-Cola. This influence obviously has allowed wealthy America to send mostly-Protestant missionaries across the world. For 100 years before 1918, Britain was the most powerful, and it dominated sea trade for 200 years before 1918, and that meant it dominated colonisation and missionary activity…

Economics would have developed very differently without the Reformation. Our Western stock exchange can be traced to the banks of Ludgate Hill and the tulip-gardens of Amsterdam. The Western system of usury evolved, in the last 300 years, within the legal relationship between Whitehall, the Temple Bar, and the merchants above the River Thames. At the very least, without the Reformation there would’ve been no American “Gilded Age” at the end of the 19th century, which was the result of an Anglo-Saxon Protestant ethic. Who knows what the New World would be like?

In politics, I doubt very much that our current situation would exist, even remotely. I believe the Catholic monarchies of Europe considered Britain, the Netherlands, and Lutheran princes to be dangerously radical in their relative egalitarianism. England’s republican-lite suffrage developed far beyond Magna Carta, after the Reformation. The limits on the monarch, freedom of religion, and comparatively free press were very Protestant ideas.

In law, the Inns of Court in London were definitely influenced by Protestant principles of private judgment and freedom of conscience, ideas rejected by Pius IX and others. The right to silence, the “golden thread” of presumed innocence before proven guilt, and other ideas of law which we take for granted, were created within English Protestant philosophical humanism.

In terms of the second half of the title, what churches would look like, we know the Gothic revolution was at its height and beginning to give way to Classicism by 1510. Without the Protestant drive to destroy images, crosses, and statues, and to “clean up” the churches, who knows how things would have developed? English, Swedish, and Lutheran baroque were very austere and minimalist, compared to the explosive Jesuit, French, and Italian churches of later days.

I don’t think Rome would have developed altars versus-populum without the perceived need for ecumenical outreach to Protestantism. I don’t think Rome would have allowed a vernacular Mass without Protestantism as an example. You never know, though, as the Orthodox always kept the vernacular. Who knows where dialogue might’ve gone with them?

Aesthetic predictions are always speculation. 🙂
Good point.
People often forget just how married to the monarchical system the medieval Church was.
 
The fact of the matter is, all churches need reform because all churches are filled with sinners, and it is preposterous to believe that the effects of sin will never touch the core of the faith itself. This is not to make the error of radical Protestants by suggesting that the Church of the middle ages was totally corrupted, to the point of disappearing until the Reformation restored it. Anglicans certainly believe that the true Church exists and has existed in every age, even amidst and mingled with errors, and that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it (Matthew 16:18). Nevertheless, in every era there will be heresy in the Church that will need to be corrected through reform, through returning to first principles, through returning to the Scriptures and the mind of the early Church.
 
The fact of the matter is, all churches need reform because all churches are filled with sinners, and it is preposterous to believe that the effects of sin will never touch the core of the faith itself. This is not to make the error of radical Protestants by suggesting that the Church of the middle ages was totally corrupted, to the point of disappearing until the Reformation restored it. Anglicans certainly believe that the true Church exists and has existed in every age, even amidst and mingled with errors, and that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it (Matthew 16:18). Nevertheless, in every era there will be heresy in the Church that will need to be corrected through reform, through returning to first principles, through returning to the Scriptures and the mind of the early Church.
Well-said, brother. This holds particularly true for the Arian heresy & schism in the 4th century. I think 70% or more of the Catholic bishops simply became Arians. They were mighty in Milan, and spread their errors across the Balkans at Arminium and Seleucia, very large councils with 300-400 heretical bishops.

Athanasius condemned them utterly, even though they had more men at those two councils than at Nicaea I. newadvent.org/fathers/2817.htm
Athanasius in De Synodis Part 1 Paragraph 6:
Vainly do they run about with the pretext that they have demanded Councils for the faith’s sake; for divine Scripture is sufficient above all things; but if a Council be needed on the point, there are the proceedings of the Fathers, for the Nicene Bishops did not neglect this matter, but stated the doctrine so exactly, that persons reading their words honestly, cannot but be reminded by them of the religion towards Christ announced in divine Scripture.
Here is the secret of unity. 👍
 
I don’t see how you can know that. It all depends on how the reform energies were directed. Suppose for instance a reformist, “Erasmian” papacy committed to being a moral voice against the amoral brutality of the nation-state, and moving away from the power politics of the late medieval papacy. This is idealistic but not anachronistic–it’s imaginable if unlikely. Suppose further that this papacy supported the city-state culture of Italy and Germany as an alternative to the nation-state. Imagine an ideology of European unity under the papacy, committed to cooperation, as an alternative to the national ambitions of the great monarchs. Again, this is idealistic, but not impossible–these forces were there, at work–they were just swamped by other forces, and the schism of the Reformation was one of the things that submerged them.
I think it all rather depends on whether one supposes that the Papacy would have a level of independence from circumstances. With the Spanish in control of Italy (holding Southern Italy, with client States elsewhere) nobody they didn’t approve of was going to be Pope and, even should that unlikely event occur, they’d ignore what they didn’t like - Philip II was as in as much control of his ‘National Church’ as any Protestant Monarch could hope to be. These would be highly unlikely circumstances for the Papacy to develop a theory of international and local niceness. The only counter-balance was France (and the Ottoman Turks to annoy the Austrian Habsburgs, of course).
But then, this is my fantasy, to which I’m writing the rules–my only limitation is that I can’t simply project into the sixteenth century an idea or social/economic/cultural current that wasn’t actually there. (That’s why I can’t just say “well, of course they would have thrown open the ghettos and given full toleration to Jews.”) I can instead imagine the ones I like best triumphing. . . . Edwin
My ‘Italian’ cynicism tends to the idea that dealing with anything Italian-based has great opportunities for intellectual brilliance and considerable artistic style on the one hand, balanced by our huge talents in the fields of governmental incompetence and corruption on a grand scale - at its worst in areas that were controlled/dominated by the Spanish. 😉
 
I am guessing no Enlightenment, or Industrial Revolution, since the competition between the Protestant and Catholic nations of Europe was a big factor in those periods of history (at the very least the Enlightenment and Industrial Revolution would have occurred very differently).
The way societies develop depends on a number of factors - science and technology, obviously, and that could happen (as it did) in a world of educated men sitting in their libraries/‘laboratories’ and corresponding with other educated men sitting in their libraries/‘laboratories’ - these men could be more, or less, religious. That this could happen was crucial but equally crucial was the existence/development of the kind of society where surplus money was available, where there was enough of a potential market to develop, and where there was enough social mobility to make effort and ambition worthwhile and so on.

So, I suppose, one would have to consider how far the Reformation helped or hindered that.
 
Good point.
People often forget just how married to the monarchical system the medieval Church was.
I have rarely met anyone who forgets this. I know a lot of people who mistakenly think that absolute monarchy was something traditionally promoted by the Church, and forget that the Church was the major factor *limiting *royal power in the later Middle Ages. Or if this is mentioned, it’s simply mentioned as evidence of how power-hungry the Popes were.

Medieval society had a certain “separation and balance of powers,” even if this was less a deliberate mechanism and more the result of conflicts that no one group could win decisively.

Edwin
 
I think one mistake people make in answering this question is assuming that if the Reformation hadn’t happened the Catholic Church as it emerged from the Reformation would simply have been the only game in town. The post-Reformation Catholic Church was itself a product of the events of the Reformation era. One can understand why pious, traditional Catholics might forget this–it’s easy, and understandable, to skate over the complexities of historical development in one’s conviction that the essence remains unchanged. But what’s odd is that Protestants and secularists also seem to assume that if it hadn’t been for the Reformation we’d all be living under Tridentine Catholicism.Edwin
It’s fair to point out, though, that Luther and other Reformers didn’t have a problem with Tridentine Catholicism (which didn’t exist yet). They had a problem, precisely, with the Church that corresponded with pre-Tridentine Catholicism. That is the Church (the pre-Tridentine church) that most Catholics, today, acknowledge was corrupt as well.
I tend to agree with Erasmus–the conservative backlash that became Tridentine Catholicism should be blamed (for those of us who have problems with it) on the Reformation.
I personally am much fonder of Erasmus–in terms of his temperament and his doctrines–than I am of Luther. To “blame” the Reformation in a literal sense, however, for the reaction that was the Counter-Reformation, ironically brings up one of the very things Luther and Erasmus wrangled about – the freedom of the will (I am not sure whether you were assigning blame in the strict sense of moral responsibility and of strict causality, but I’m taking the word “blame” at face value). The Counter-Reformation was how the church at that time chose to respond to the Reformation, or what they perceived as a necessary response. They were responsible for their reactions, not Luther. Similarly, the Reformation was how Luther chose to respond to what he saw as corruption in the church. But if – objectively speaking – it is fair to blame the Reformation for the Counter-Reformation, then it is fair to blame the acknowledged corruption in the Church at that time for the Reformation.

What also isn’t Luther’s fault is the fact that, though there were voices within the church that wanted worship in the vernacular long before he was born, it took another 400 years (until Vatican II) for the church to swing around to it. If the attitude was, “anything Luther supported must be wrong” or “if we change now, we will give the appearance that Luther has won” or, “now that we have the Tridentine mass, God has spoken for all time” then that tells us more about the church’s own response to the phenomenon of the Reformation–or perhaps, its relationship to change–than it does about Luther himself.
If no Reformation, what would have happened? There’s no way to tell. The Reformation resulted from a very complex set of cultural, religious, economic, and social factors. One can imagine it turning out differently–but something was going to happen. What the world would look like now would depend on what happened instead of the particular set of events we call the “Reformation.”

From my perspective, it would have been nice if something like Vatican II had happened in the sixteenth century. That’s anachronistic, but not entirely so–some of the reforms were things that people had been pushing for ever since the Reformation era, and that ranges from specifics like more vernacular in the liturgy to general principles like a great emphasis on the Bible and the Fathers over against scholasticism.
The proposed reforms of Czech Catholic Jan Hus (14th century) would have brought many of the reforms of Vatican II into the pre-Reformation church, as some Catholics have pointed out! Hus was burned at the stake for his heretical ideas, not so much for his theology–which was acceptably orthodox by Catholic standards, even as regards the sacraments–but for having questioned the authority of the pope too vigorously. The dilemma was, how to propose those reforms without questioning the authority of the pope to vigorously? (even Erasmus, who took sides with the Catholic church against Luther, was later placed on the Index of Forbidden books). What Hus advocated was greater participation of the laity in all aspects of church life – including use of the Czech vernacular during church services. He also emphasized more immediate access to the Bible, I believe. As we all know, greater laity participation was a huge part of Vatican II.

My question is, “what was it about the church at that time that seems to have impeded an internal mechanism for change?” Various individuals–Peter Waldo, Wycliff, Hus–made presumably good faith efforts to change the church from the inside, and were not successful. St. Dominic and St. Francis also sought to reform the church from the inside–and were largely successful–but focused on improving its morals as opposed to its policies, per se. Neither saint was preoccupied with the question of worship in the vernacular or the Bible in the vernacular, but this was an issue that Reformers and proto-Reformers felt passionately enough about to risk their lives over it (Hus lost his life over it, as did William Tyndale).

That, for me, is the problem – I don’t see that the church at that time had a sufficient internal mechanism for change and reform; for example, nothing comparable to the system of checks and balances that we have in our own representative democracies. Change ultimately had to come from the outside, not from within (or from both the inside and the outside, as opposed to just from the inside). Those who tested the boundaries of reform from within, as did Jan Hus, risked the loss of life or limb in the process (as for Wycliff, his bones were dug up and burned post-mortem).

The other problem is, once violence takes place, charity is broken and antagonism is solidified. Luther no doubt knew the fate of Hus and Tyndale when he began to voice his opinions so loudly (and, admittedly, obnoxiously); he knew his life was at risk.
 
I have rarely met anyone who forgets this. I know a lot of people who mistakenly think that absolute monarchy was something traditionally promoted by the Church, and forget that the Church was the major factor *limiting *royal power in the later Middle Ages. Or if this is mentioned, it’s simply mentioned as evidence of how power-hungry the Popes were.

Medieval society had a certain “separation and balance of powers,” even if this was less a deliberate mechanism and more the result of conflicts that no one group could win decisively.

Edwin
True. Henry was a prime example.

GKC
 
The way societies develop depends on a number of factors - science and technology, obviously, and that could happen (as it did) in a world of educated men sitting in their libraries/‘laboratories’ and corresponding with other educated men sitting in their libraries/‘laboratories’ - these men could be more, or less, religious. That this could happen was crucial but equally crucial was the existence/development of the kind of society where surplus money was available, where there was enough of a potential market to develop, and where there was enough social mobility to make effort and ambition worthwhile and so on.

So, I suppose, one would have to consider how far the Reformation helped or hindered that.
I think part of the issue in this particular scenario we’ve all concocted is how to “dethrone” a certain Greek philosopher from his pedestal.

Part of the Reformation’s effects on European society at large was to deliver a sort of questioning spirit to a comprehensive worldview. By daring to question the keystone to the whole system, it opened a pathway for other branches of knowledge to be examined and questioned.

Duly acknowledged, as Edwin pointed out, there was already some rectification of the Philosopher’s ideas as early as the 13th century. But to jump on Portofino’s analysis, would the Church as the primary source of higher education have mustered an internal mechanism to throw out Aristotle from Physics?

In a certain sense, the monastic orders tending to the natural philosophy and theology valuable to your Church’s intellectual edifice may have had a very strong institutional reason to perpetuate the continued amelioration of the Philosopher’s views as opposed to showing Aristotle the door so to speak.

We contrast this against the historic fathers of the natural sciences, who were mostly Protestants and whose individual theological ideas played a role in the attitude by which they approached the examination of nature.

I am not saying that getting to Enlightenment science would be impossible. It may have very well taken a much longer road to achieve. An institutional shift would have to occur, one that would require a bit of a revolution in thinking.

We should also bear in mind that European history does not occur in isolation. 3 other Civilizations are out there making discoveries about the natural world and applying that knowledge to manufacturing, medicine, and warfare.

Our most immediate and belligerent geographic neighbor, who continued to excel us in technology, has thankfully stalled by this era. I’ve often inquired as to why this was the case, but the general consensus i’ve heard is that something happened within Middle Eastern society that halted the questioning spirit brought to Islamic philosophy and science by the likes of Avicenna and Averroes.

The latest pet theory i’ve heard is that the Mullahs, Jurists, and other theologically inclined intellectuals adopted a form of Occasionalism ~ which completely stalled investigation into the causes of phenomena.
 
I’d like to toss out another possible consequence for evaluation in this Europe without a Reformation.

Namely - What happens to Religious Tolerance.?

Minus the Orthodox and Jewish people for historical reasons, in this scenario you have a unified Catholic Europe moving in one the same direction facing a very unCatholic world.

How does the Reformation effect the existence of Religious Tolerance? Simply put, the Wars of Religion.

Many of my atheist “fellows” generally point to this as a negative, saying its some sort of indicator for the evils of religious thought.

As macabre as this may sound, i’d spin this as a positive.

For a concrete example, take a look at the actions of the New Model Army and the Scots during the English Civil War. The Scots essentially forced the hand of Charles II into accepting the Presbyterian kirk as a body which would impose itself on the religious life of Scotland, Wales, and England. The New Model Army saw this simply as a return to Laudianism - without the incense and ritual so to speak.

When Charles II was restored to his throne, many of the more “mainstream” Protestant sects admitted they had made a mistake in attempting to enforce their particular religious viewpoint on their fellows.

War, famine, and lots of death taught them all the value of tolerance - at least Inter-Christian tolerance.

In this non-Reformed unified Catholic Europe, would its denizens ever come around to the idea that the man living outside Christendom could still be a good man and not merely an infidel? Or that the man could even be his friend?

Would it even matter to you all?
 
I’d like to toss out another possible consequence for evaluation in this Europe without a Reformation.

Namely - What happens to Religious Tolerance.?

Minus the Orthodox and Jewish people for historical reasons, in this scenario you have a unified Catholic Europe moving in one the same direction facing a very unCatholic world.

How does the Reformation effect the existence of Religious Tolerance? Simply put, the Wars of Religion.

Many of my atheist “fellows” generally point to this as a negative, saying its some sort of indicator for the evils of religious thought.

As macabre as this may sound, i’d spin this as a positive.
Hard to say! What I do know, or what I had a distinct impression of, is that the Wars of Religion damaged the credibility of religious belief in the eyes of many Europeans and Americans (just as Soviet communism, no doubt, damaged the credibility of atheism in the minds of many!)

Voltaire was a passionate advocate against religious strife–and was a Deist, as you probably know–but also subscribed to the view that religion was “dangerous” (just as most believers maintain that atheism is dangerous).

I sometimes wonder if not only the secularism of the Enlightenment, but also the almost total secularism of modern Europe, is not due to the “shell shock” of the Wars of Religion. The country in which these wars were played out most brutally, to my knowledge–that is, France, the country of the Saint Bartholomew Day Massacre, the country in which the conflict between Huguenots and Catholics almost tore the fabric of the society apart–is also, perhaps not coincidentally, the most secular of modern European nations (which is saying a lot!)

But I think you have a point – the “problem” of religious pluralism would have needed to come a cataclysmic head, sooner or later (or so it seems to me).

I have observed that, in my humble opinion, Catholics have learned lessons through their own history that Fundamentalist Christians and many Evangelicals–being a younger movement that is comparatively ahistorical in its orientation–have not had the opportunity to learned.

For example, we don’t hear Catholics jumping into the fray in this “Evolution versus Creationism” debate. They don’t get upset by a non-literal interpretation of Genesis. Catholics may never have been Biblical Fundamentalists, but they did have a comparatively more literal interpretation of the Bible at the time they persecuted Galileo. Their Scripture said that God made the the sun stand still so that the Israelites could win a battle (the book of Joshua, I believe); therefore, the sun must move across the sky, from east to west.

The lessons of the conflict between Science and Religion that Galileo’s heliocentrism represented were inculcated into the culture of the church. There was no “Tennessee Monkey Trial” involving Catholics, to my knowledge. And though I hear that Teilhard de Chardin caused some discomfort in Vatican ranks regarding his focus on paleontology, the 20th and 21st century church does not have a “science problem” in the way that many of these Evangelical and Fundamentalists do.

But the wars of religion… That’s a tough one. I remember reading somewhere that Benedict stated something to the effect that, “the church has been divested of its temporal power and has been returned to its purely spiritual mission. In the main, that is a good thing, and we shall not be seeking it back.” That church-state alliance–the theocracy that was Christendom, at least in principle–was a hard lesson for the church, I think, but one whose lessons it has absorbed. It does not want to rule, and it certainly does not want to wage war.

But, again, the damage is done in the eyes of many people – fairly or unfairly. Europeans–and many Americans–persist in believing that religion is “dangerous,” just as many point to Stalinism and Nazism and say that atheism or materialism is dangerous.

Voltaire was thinking of the Wars of Religion when he wrote, "What can you say to a man who tells you he prefers obeying God rather than men, and that as a result he’s certain he’ll go to heaven if he cuts your throat?” Starting on September 11th, 2001, that quote suddenly became of contemporary relevance once again – not as regards Christianity, but Islam. And so the “New Atheists”–such as Richard Dawkins, Chrisopher Hitchen, or Sam Harris–sought to give new currency to this idea that religion is inherently dangerous in a way that non-religious humanism is not.

One final thought – in a way, the most deadly social conflicts are bred–or tend to be bred–when there are primarily two opposing mainstream viewpoints (Catholics versus Protestant, for example). If Europe suddenly found itself with ten religions, and no one religion having the majority, citizens would have been forced to get along. I mention this in the same connection that people have mentioned that neighborhoods with many different ethnic groups–European, African, Filipino, Hispanic, Indian–tend to live more harmoniously than those in which the majority belong to one of only two ethnicities.
 
One final thought – in a way, the most deadly social conflicts are bred–or tend to be bred–when there are primarily two opposing mainstream viewpoints (Catholics versus Protestant, for example). If Europe suddenly found itself with ten religions, and no one religion having the majority, citizens would have been forced to get along. I mention this in the same connection that people have mentioned that neighborhoods with many different ethnic groups–European, African, Filipino, Hispanic, Indian–tend to live more harmoniously than those in which the majority belong to one of only two ethnicities.
Hmm… It looks as if Voltaire (Jesuit-educated, by the way) was of a mind regarding the desirability of religious pluralism from the perspective of peaceful co-existence. He writes:

“If there were only one religion in England there would be danger of despotism, if there were two, they would cut each other’s throats, but there are thirty, and they live in peace and happiness.”

That must have been in his “Lettres Philosophiques”, where he compared 18th century England favorably–admittedly, somewhat rosily–to his native France.
 
I do not think the world would be very good at all. The reformation and other events along those lines, brought about changes within the Catholic church too, that were for the better.
 
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