L
lynnvinc
Guest
I read it, and it seems to have lots of good points. Of course, now what used to be called “liberal” centuries ago (because they opposed the Church and autocratic government), is now called “conservative”; and our “liberals” of today share this Enlightenment foundation.Oops, here’s the Trower link: catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?id=7805&CFID=111141897&CFTOKEN=58764007
I don’t see Marxism coming directly out of Enlightenment thinking, as he implies, but rather out of developments that arose from both Enlightenment thinking (e.g., laissez-faire capitalism) and industrialization – which led to extremely horrible conditions for the poor and working class that even the Church condemned back in the late 19th & early 20th centuries. Communism developed as a corrective to this evil, but ended up going too far in its wrong direction, and stupidly thought Christianity was the enemy of the poor, rather than a friend of the poor (hum, wonder where it got that idea?).
Trower contrasts the French’s greater focus on equality v. British/U.S. greater focus on liberty, which seems to be correct. I do like it that my relative in France got free (paid out of their taxes) medical care and paid maternity leave during a difficult pregnancy and free, professional childcare for her other children; I do not like the French law that bans Muslim girls from wearing scarves (I’d hope that all the French women would don scarves and defy that law in solidarity with their Muslim sisters). However, it should also be known that conservatives here in America are working hard to take away freedoms of over 67% of the population (anyone within 100 miles from our borders or along the planned Keystone XL pipeline) – see next post. So we (esp conservatives) are not really into freedom as much as Trower thinks; but we are into corporate welfare that goes way beyond any welfare for the poor. This not only violates equality, but also liberty. The not-so-free market here is rigged to help the rich, esp the multinationals, squash the poor into squalor and death (thru pollution, etc). So it’s sort of like the best of Enlightenment values gone pretty much bogus. We here in America live under an illusion of freedom, if not actual or illusory equality and brotherhood.
Also he speaks of the “milder looser more pragmatic Anglo-Saxon or Anglo/North-American form…[which is not] irreconcilable with belief in God or Christianity,” as if it were better? As if it didn’t have nefarious motive in using and twisting Christianity to evil ends, as a way of keeping the masses subjugated and unenlightened.
This is where I see the main problem is, Christianity has been corrupted in especially America (which I’ve witnessed since a kid for over 5 decades) and has become the handmaiden of destruction and death…by bamboozling the (perhaps willing to be bamboozled) Christian right into thinking that corporations are human beings and deserve equal rights with humans, that corporations should be allowed to buy, control, and/or influence the government, the media, the educational system, and the military…and the churches. That corporations should be allowed to gobble up resources that rightfully belong in part to future generations; making the ultra rich richer and the poor poorer, destroying subsistence lands which provide food to the actually living people, excreting pollution and killing people and other parts of God’s creation. The very things BXVI calls on us to oppose in Caritas et Veritate.
Don’t get me wrong, I liked Trower’s address because it did bring up important issues; it just seemed to focus too shallowly and too narrowly. It missed the deeper level Enlightenment concept of person on which these values are founded and which wreaks havoc in our world today – a concept (as I mentioned above) that not only lacks foundation in modern sciences and social sciences (about our deep human-nature and human-human interconnections), but also on Church teachings throughout the millennia.
It would be whiggist to blame 18th and 19th c. Enlightenment thinking for these misconceptions that have led to such wrongs and bads (as well as goods, as Trower points out); the thinkers were just doing the best they could with the state of knowledge they had then; and they were pretty upset in Europe, if not America, about the centuries of religious wars (which I’d blame not on religion, but on people). However, 20th and 21st century people can be blamed for not having a better understanding of people and the world around them, for not paying better attention in school, or refusing to consider that we are social beings who rely on others and on God’s providence, but persist in thinking we are self-sufficient individualists with rights, rights, rights, but no duties, no family, no society, no God, except the twisted manufactured God that only favors those who help themselves to everything, including that which belongs to others.
I’m sorry this is a screed, but we have very serious problems today, and no one really wants to face them or address them, except what seems to me a bogus concern about medical abortions (bogus, bec others’ lives are at stake, but no one seems to care about them, including abortions (miscarriages) through pollution, etc). But at least that’s something.
However, taking up only one issue is not going to be very effective unless we all – conservative and liberal, anti-abortionist & environmentalist – join together to solve all these problems that threaten our lives and souls. We need all in our Catholic Church, and this attempt to exclude liberals who also have good ideas for seeking first the Kingdom of God (and I do feel it is an attempt to exclude, not a mere, “why do they stay”), will only put us all in hell.