AP Photo/Joe Raymond Alan Keyes, former Republican presidential candidate, is arrested during an antiabortion protest Friday in South Bend, Ind. Ironically,  those opposing Obama's appearance at the university are not going to be backed  up by the  Editor's  note: This article has also appeared on TomDispatch.com. By James  Carroll May 17,  2009 | President Obama goes to the University of Notre Dame this Sunday to  deliver the commencement address and receive an honorary degree, the ninth  Not even  most Catholics agree with such criticism. A recent Pew poll, for instance,  shows that 50 percent of Catholics support Notre Dame's decision to honor  Obama; little more than one-quarter oppose. It is, after all, possible to  acknowledge the subtle complexities of "life" questions -- When  actually does human life begin? How is stem cell research to be ethically  carried out? -- and even to suggest that they are more complex than most  Catholic bishops think, without thereby "refusing to hold human life as  sacred." For many  outside the ranks of conservative religious belief, this dispute may seem  arcane indeed. Since it's more than likely that the anti-Obama complainers were  once John McCain supporters, many observers see the Notre Dame flap as little  more than mischief by Republicans who still deplore the Democratic victory in  November. Given the ways in which the dispute can be reduced to the merely  parochial, why should Americans care? Medievalism in our future? In fact,  the crucial question that underlies the flap at Notre Dame has enormous  importance for the unfolding 21st century: Will Roman Catholicism, with its  global reach, including more than a billion people crossing every boundary of  race, class, education, geography and culture, be swept into the rising tide of  religious fundamentalism? Those  Catholics who regard a moderate progressive like Barack Obama as the enemy --  despite the fact that his already unfolding social and health programs,  including support for impoverished women, will do more to reduce the number of  abortions in America than the glibly pro-life George W. Bush ever did -- have  so purged ethical thought of any capacity to draw meaningful distinctions as to  reduce religious faith to blind irrationality. They have so embraced a spirit  of sectarian intolerance as to undercut the church's traditional catholicity,  adding fuel to the spreading fire of religious contempt for those who depart  from rigidly defined orthodoxies. They are resurrecting the lost cause of  religion's war against modernity -- a war of words that folds neatly into the  new century's war of weapons. If the  Catholic reactionaries succeed in dominating their church, a heretofore  unfundamentalist tradition, what would follow? The triumph of a strain of  contemporary Roman Catholicism that rejects pluralism, feminism, clerical  reform, religious self-criticism, historically minded theology and the  scientific method as applied to sacred texts would only exacerbate alarming  trends in world Christianity as a whole, and at the worst of times. This may  especially be so in the nations of the Southern Hemisphere where Catholicism  sees its future. It's there that proselytizing evangelical belief, Protestant  and Catholic both, is spreading rapidly. Between 1985 and 2001, for example,  Catholic membership increased in Africa by 87 percent, in  In their  shared determination to restore the medieval European Catholicism into which  they were born, Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI became inadvertent avatars  of the new Catholic fundamentalism, a fact reflected in the character of the  bishops they appointed to run the church, so many of whom now find President  Obama to be a threat to virtue. The great question now is whether this  defensive, pre-Enlightenment view of the faith will maintain a permanent grip  on the Catholic imagination. John Paul II and Benedict XVI may be  self-described apostles of peace, yet if this narrow aspect of their legacy  takes hold, they will have helped to undermine global peace, not through  political intention, but deeply felt religious conviction. Something to cheer No one  can today doubt that the phenomenon of "fundamentalism" is having an  extraordinary impact on our world. But what precisely is it? Some  fundamentalists pursue openly political agendas in, for instance,  Most  notably, after the Bush administration's invasion of  Obviously,  these manifestations are so varied as to resist being defined by one word in  the singular, which is why scholars of religion prefer to speak of  "fundamentalisms." But they all do have something in common, and it  is dangerous. The impulse toward fundamentalism may begin with fine intentions:  the wish to affirm basic values and sources of meaning that seem threatened.  Rejecting any secular claims to replace the sacred as the chief source of  meaning, all fundamentalisms are skeptical of Enlightenment values, even as the  Enlightenment project has developed its own mechanisms of self-criticism. But  the discontents of modernity are only the beginning of the problem. Now  "old time religion" of whatever stripe faces a plethora of threats:  new technologies, a shaken world economy, rampant individualism, diversity,  pluralism, mobility -- all that makes for 21st-century life. The shock of the  unprecedented can involve not only difficulty, but disaster. And  fundamentalisms will especially thrive wherever there is violent conflict, and  wherever there is stark poverty. This is so simply because these religiously  absolute movements promise meaning where there is no meaning. For all these  reasons, fundamentalisms are everywhere. In  contemporary Roman Catholicism, whose deep traditions include the very  intellectual innovations that gave rise to modernity -- Copernicus, after all,  was a priest -- Catholic fundamentalists are more likely to be called  "traditionalists." They are galvanized now around the moral  complexities of "life," at a time when the very meaning of human  reproduction is being upended by technical innovation, and once-unthinkable  medical and genetic breakthroughs are transforming the meaning of death as  well. Like  other fundamentalists, they are attuned to the dark consequences of the  Enlightenment assumptions implied in such developments, from the Pandora's Box  opened by science unconnected to morality to the grotesque inequities that  follow from industrialization and, more recently, globalization. Where others  celebrate new information technologies, traditionalists, even while using those  technologies, warn of the coarsening of culture, the destruction of privacy, and,  especially, threats to the family. In nothing more than its emphasis on a  rigorous and comprehensive sexual ethic -- anti-feminist, radically pro-life,  contemptuous of homosexuality -- does this brand of Catholicism echo a broader  fundamentalism. In the  immediate aftermath of the liberalizing Second Vatican Council (1962-1965),  Catholic traditionalists, with their attachment to the Latin Mass, fiddle-back  vestments, clerical supremacy, and the entire culture of the  Counter-Reformation, were rebels. That was why the anti-Council sect, the  Lefebrites, including the notorious Holocaust denier Bishop Richard Williamson,  was excommunicated in 1988. Today,  as indicated by Pope Benedict's lifting of that excommunication, the  If the  Catholic Church is as opposed to abortion as it claims, why has it not embraced  the single most effective means of reducing abortion rates, which is birth  control? The answer, alas, is evident: The overriding issue for Catholic  fundamentalists is not sexual morality, or even "life," but papal  authority. As Protestant fundamentalists effectively make an idol of biblical  texts, Catholic fundamentalists, in obedience to the  When it  comes to Notre Dame, ironically, American Catholic fundamentalists, including  the bishops leading the charge against Obama's appearance, are not going to be  backed up by the  So, no  insults of the American president will be coming from the  Source :  http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2009/05/17/carroll/index.html?source=rss&aim=/opinion/feature
May 17, 2009
Notre Dame's Stand Against Catholic Fundamentalism
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