Enhancing Democracy: the Key
to Religious Reform
by James Carroll
Plenary address at 2002 CTA national conference in Milwaukee
Carroll develops these themes more fully in his 2002 book, "Toward a New Catholic Church: The Promise of Reform."
In the last thirteen months, we Americans have discovered with
something approaching astonishment the wild diversity of religious
and spiritual impulses that has come to mark not only the planet,
but our own nation. "Today," as the great Catholic theologian
Karl Rahner put it, "everyone is the next-door neighbor and
spiritual neighbor of everyone else in the world." And the
organizers of this conference have wisely recognized that in choosing
our theme. For as Rahner argues, even from within Catholicism,
this new circumstance means the assumptions of every religion
must now be the subject of re-examination. Here is a fuller version
of Rahner's statement: "The West is no longer shut up in
itself." he wrote. "It can no longer regard itself simply
as the center of the history of this world and as the center of
culture, with a religion which . . . could appear as the obvious
and indeed sole way of honoring God . . . Today everybody is the
next-door neighbor and spiritual neighbor of everyone else in
the world . . . which puts the absolute claim of our own Christian
faith into question."
Ideological and religious elbow-rubbing is a global phenomenon,
but it occurs in United States as nowhere else. A nation that
welcomes an unending stream of immigrants, with their plethora
of faiths and traditions, America implicitly sponsors this re-examination,
as religiously diverse peoples encounter each other in the mundane
"neighborhoods" of work, school, and living. The testing
of assumptions that inevitably follows is one of the reasons America
is suspect in the eyes of rigidly traditional societies.
To ask the question, as this gathering does, "Who is my neighbor?"
is implicitly to seek ways of honoring that neighbor by honoring
her or his self-understanding and separate integrity, which means
honoring her or his beliefs. But the gifts of diversity, as the
conference title suggests, bring challenges, too. That is especially
true for those of us of the Roman Catholic tradition in which
diversity has so often been defined as heresy, pluralism as a
denial of the oneness, holiness and even catholicity of the Church.
The Call To Action theme was chosen, I suspect, with a feel for
the fact that diversity and pluralism - the presence of neighbors
who do not believe as we do - represent a profound challenge to
contemporary Catholicism, not just to the hierarchy, but to all
of us who find a home in this community. Here is the problem,
laid bare this year in ways it may never have been before: It
is impossible to reconcile a rejection of pluralism with an authentic
commitment to democracy, and a Catholic devotion to the eradication
of pluralism remains dangerous. Internal Church policies have
relevance here because the use of anathemas, bannings, and excommunications
to enforce a rigidly controlled intellectual discipline in the
Church reveals an institution that has yet to come to terms with
basic ideas like freedom of conscience and the dialectical nature
of rational inquiry.
Democracy and pluralism
What is it that we Americans, for all of our criticism of our
country, most love about it? Obviously, the precious idea of constitutional
democracy, which, since 1989, has taken a firm hold on the worldwide
human imagination. But the very idea of constitutional democracy
begins with the insight that government exists to protect the
interior freedom of citizens to be different from one another,
and to cling, if they choose, to opposite notions of the truth.
The political implementation of this insight requires a separation
of church and state, since the state's purpose is to shield the
citizen's conscience from impositions by any religious entity.
And, of course, it tells us everything that this political insight
was spawned, in the 16th and 17th centuries, by religious conflicts.
As the forces of "secular enlightenment" targeted religion
itself as the source of conflict, the Catholic Church understandably
came vigorously to the defense of religion. Alas, the absolutism
of the ensuing argument corrupted truth on both sides. The Church,
for example, repudiated the violence of the Inquisition, but it
continued to hold to the ideas that had produced it. In the 19th
century, a panic-stricken Vatican launched a sequence of condemnations:
socialism, Communism, rationalism, pantheism, subjectivism, modernism,
even "Americanism," all adding up to a resolute denunciation
of everything we mean by democracy. From the standpoint of the
hill overlooking the Tiber, all of this was simply an effort to
defend the key idea that the worlds of science, culture, politics,
and secular learning were apparently conspiring to attack the
idea that there is one objective and absolute truth, and that
its custodian is the Catholic Church.
The Church's rigidity during that period of conflict was central
to what Pope John Paul II apologized for in his momentous declaration
of March 2000. That apology was the beginning of a process, not
the completion of one, because, while John Paul II confessed the
sin of "the use of violence that some have resorted to in
the service of truth," the apology did not confront the implications
of that still-maintained idea of truth. Universalist claims for
Jesus as the embodiment of the one objective and absolute truth,
launched from the battlement-like pulpits of basilicas, have landed
explosively in the streets for centuries. Nothing demonstrates
the links joining philosophical assumptions, esoteric theology,
and political conflict better than the claims we Catholics have
made for Jesus, claims that have often led to terrible violence
against, yes, our neighbors. The violence of the heresy hunts
of the fourth and fifth centuries is tied to that story, and so,
at its other end, is the violence of Europe's imperialist colonizers
who, even into the 20th century, felt free to decimate native
populations -"poor devils" - because they were heathens.
Hanging from the line joining those two posts, in addition to
the Inquisition, are the religious wars waged in the name of Jesus,
not only against heathens and Jews, but against other Christians
who believed, but wrongly.
'What is truth?'
Underlying all this is a question that the Catholic reform movement
must confront, a question the answer to which shapes attitudes
toward democracy, a question the answer to which has profound
relevance to the Church's past and future relations with Jews,
Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, Jains, animists and atheists - the
Church's relationship not only to "neighbors" but to
its own members: people like us. It is a question the answer to
which shapes the meaning of the Church's self-understanding as,
in Rahner's phrase, the "absolute religion." It is
the question that was put most famously by Pontius Pilate, in
the Pilate-exonerating Gospel of John. This was an instant before
Pilate told the Jews that Jesus was innocent, preparing the ground
for Judaism's permanent blood guilt. "Everyone who is of
the truth hears my voice," Jesus had just told Pilate. To
which the Roman replied, "What is truth?"
Latin philosophy had long answered that question by appealing
to an objective and external order. As you know, the various traditions
claiming Plato and Aristotle as patrons had given shape to Christian
theologies. The dualism of Christian Platonism posited a divide
between nature and grace, with grace the realm of truth approachable
only through faith. The more rationalistic tradition of Thomas
Aquinas affirmed the compatibility of nature and grace, the knowability
of God through reason. But in asserting the absolute character
of truth, Thomas took note of the problem that occurs when a contingent,
nature-bound creature attempts to perceive it. Truth, he said,
is perceived in the mode of the perceiver. Human perception can
take in the absolute truth, but not absolutely. Thus Thomas makes
a modest claim for human knowing, with room for ambiguity - which
means room for diverse claims made in the name of truth. Alas,
this aspect of Aquinas's subtlety would be lost in the rigidities
of the Catholic response to the Reformation.
Indulge me for a moment here with a little history of philosophy.
The question can seem esoteric, but it is crucial to what we are
doing here, and we must take each other seriously at this level
of intellectual inquiry if we want to carry the argument in the
Church. You recall that René Descartes's Discourse on Method
(1637) asserted that truth can be arrived at only on the basis
of what is immediately self-evident, which eliminates knowledge
gained through the unreliable senses. Therefore it is impossible
to really know the truth - an impossibility that condemns the
human mind to skepticism. It is this skepticism that the Catholic
scholastics of the 18th and 19th centuries went to war against,
and though they wrapped themselves in the mantle of Thomas Aquinas,
calling themselves Thomists, they narrowly defined truth as the
unambiguous conformity of the mind to the objective truth, without
any sense that ambiguity might be a property of that mind. Enlightenment
science had adopted a mechanical view of the universe that eliminated
God (Nietzsche's Thus Spake Zarathustra announced the death of
God in 1883). Ironically, to defend God the Thomists assumed an
equally mechanical view of the universe, with a gear-like correspondence
between nature and grace, subject and object, mind and truth.
Imprecision, ambiguity, paradox, doubt, and mystery had as little
place in the mind of a Catholic scholastic as in the mind of a
catalogue-obsessed 19th-century naturalist.
Claiming absolute truth
This Catholic view of truth meshed perfectly with, indeed required,
the 19th-century view of Catholic authority, whose role was to
guard against ambiguity - which it could do, after 1870, infallibly.
Once the Church, in its hierarchy, and in particular in the pope,
had defined the objective truth, the duty of the Catholic was
univocally to conform his or her mind to that truth.
But history has a way of challenging such ideas. The implications
of Darwin's theory of evolution outran its first adherents and
soon frustrated the most compulsive cataloguer. Human knowing
is as dynamic as the development of species is. The "absolute
truth" can in no way evolve or change (God as the Unmoved
Mover), but what if everything else does? Then, in 1918, Albert
Einstein published Relativity: The Special and General Theory,
suggesting that neither the ground on which one stands while thinking
nor the time in which one pursues a thought to its conclusion
is free of ambiguity, paradox, contradiction, movement, relativity.
Suddenly thinkers had a new language, based in physical observation,
with which to describe the fact that every perception occurs from
a particular point of view and that not even the point of view
is constant. Every person is a perceiving center, and every perception
is different. There is no absolute conformity of the knowing subject
to the known object. Therefore truth can be known only obliquely,
and, yes, subjectively.
Catholic theology spent much of the 20th century recovering from
the defensive rigidities of Counter-Reformation scholasticism,
but the recovery is not complete. The Catholic Reform movement
must retrieve for the Church the deep-seated human intuition that
mystery is at the core of existence, that truth is elusive, that,
as Abraham Joshua Heschel put it, God is greater than religion.
If mystery is at the core of religion, then ambiguity, paradox,
and even doubt are not enemies of faith, but aspects of it.
But how? Are we condemned to a mindless pluralism that is ready
to equate the shallow with the profound, the stupid with the wise,
the cruel with the kind? Does subjectivity condemn the person
to the tyranny of the self? Does subjectivity condemn the community
to, in the great contemporary Catholic theologian David Tracy's
phrase, "the void of sheer fascination at our pluralistic
possibilities"? Fearing the answer to those questions had
to be yes, the Church set itself against democracy, and still
openly regards pluralism with suspicion. But Tracy, and others
suggest that the antidote to the equivocation of modern skepticism
is not the univocal mindset so firmly defended by Catholic authority
today, but the "analogical imagination." Instead of
a dualistic universe, with nature and grace impossibly alienated,
or conformed into the mold of one or the other, the analogical
imagination posits a world in which every affirmation contains
its own principle of self-criticism, if you will. Affirmation,
therefore, does not close off further thought, as the Vatican
would have it, but inevitably opens to the next thought. What
does this mean? That even in our own thinking there is diversity
and difference. Diversity and Difference, therefore, are to be
respected, not condemned. That is the gift and challenge of diversity.
Tracy explains the vivid connection between such a frame of mind
and the respect we must have for a neighbor, even for a formerly
hated other: "We understand one another, if at all, only
through analogies. Each recognizes that any attempt to reduce
the authentic otherness of another's focus to one's own with our
common habits of domination only seems to destroy us all, only
increases the leveling power of the all-too-common denominators
making no one at home. Conflict is our actuality. Conversation
is our hope."
Conversation is our hope. In that simple statement lies the kernel
of democracy, which is based not on diktat but on the interchange
of mutuality. The clearest example of conversation as the sine
qua non of democracy is the electoral process, in which candidates
literally engage in conversation with the citizenry, opening themselves
so that voters can judge them, but also changing their minds in
response to interaction with the public. The proliferation of
town meetings and debates in recent American political campaigns
exemplifies this social equality and supports it.
Jewish roots of dialogue
There is a special tragedy in the fact that, for contingent historical
reasons, the Catholic Church set itself so ferociously against
the coming of democracy - tragic because Christianity began its
life as a small gathering of Jews who were devoted to conversation.
This was, of course, characteristically Jewish, since Judaism
was a religion of the Book. Indeed, that was what made Judaism
unique. That the Book was at the center of this group's identity
meant that the group was never more itself than when reading and
responding to texts, and while the rabbinical schools may have
presided over such a process, all Jews participated in it, especially
after the liturgical cult of sacrifice was lost when the Temple
was destroyed. Gatherings around the Book became everything. Conversation
became everything. The assumption among the followers of Jesus
was that they were all endowed with the wisdom, insight, maturity,
and holiness necessary to contribute to the pursuit of the truth
of who Jesus had been to them.
The religious language for this assumption had it that all believers
were endowed with the Holy Spirit, which was seen to reside in
the Church, not through an ordained hierarchy but through all.
That is why the apostolic writings are nothing if not manifestations
of pluralism. Indeed, there are four Gospels, not one. Each has
its slant, and each slant, in this community, has its place. "That
there is real diversity in the New Testament should be clear to
any reader of the text," David Tracy comments, and he goes
on to note that the first Christians could admit the validity
of positions not their own from the charismatics to the apocalyptics
to the zealots to the prophets. There is even a diversity of images
that disclose the meaning of Jesus' life, with some giving emphasis
to the ministry, some to the death, some to the symbolic assault
on the Temple, some to the expected return. There are those who
emphasize bringing the Gospel to the Gentiles and those who insist
on the Gospel's place within the hope of Israel. And because the
texts gather all of this, honor it, and declare it all sacred,
nothing could be further from the mind of the early Church than
making its subjects conform to a narrowly defined "objective
truth." The Spirit was seen to be living in all, and the
truth, for all, remained shrouded in mystery.
It would be anachronistic, of course, to read this as evidence
of an early Church polity that was what we would call democracy.
That does not mean, however, that democracy, by taking each member
of the community as of ultimate worth, equal to every other, is
not a fulfillment of the biblical vision that attributes just
such valuing of each person to God. Isaac Hecker, the American
who founded the Paulist Fathers, the religious order to which
I was privileged to belong, argued that America and Catholicism
were inherently compatible because of this. Roger Haight gave
a magnificent expression of this insight in the first session
here this morning. To Hecker, the equal rights of citizenship
was a secular expression of the religious "indwelling of
the Spirit" in each person. When this idea was brought to
Europe at the end of the 19th century, Leo XIII condemned it as
the heresy "Americanism." In particular, the pope denounced
the idea "that certain liberties ought to be introduced into
the church so that, limiting the exercise and vigilance of its
powers, each one of the faithful may act more freely in pursuance
of his own natural bent and capacity." The anathemas were
nearly pronounced over Hecker himself. My own life as a 20th-century
Catholic, in dissent from a 19th-century Catholicism, began with
my falling under Hecker's spell. The Catholic Church should rescind
the condemnation of "Americanism," acknowledging that
the "pursuit of happiness" assumes the pursuance of
one's natural bent, and that nothing better defines the purpose
for which our Creator made us.
In a mirror, dimly
So the answer to Pilate's question - What is truth? - matters.
If truth is the exclusive province of authority, then the duty
of the people is to conform to it. That answer to the question
fits with the politics of a command society, whether a monarchy,
a dictatorship, or the present Catholic Church. But if truth is,
by definition, available to human beings only in partial ways;
if we know more by analogies than syllogisms; if, that is, we
"see in a mirror dimly," then the responsibility of
the people is to bring one's own experience and one's own thought
to the place where the community has its conversations, to offer
and accept criticism, to honor the positions of others, and to
respect oneself, not in isolation but in this creative mutuality.
The mutuality, in this community, has a name: the Holy Spirit.
The implication here is that truth is not the highest value for
us, because, in Saint Paul's phrase, "our knowledge is imperfect
and our prophecy is imperfect." Which is why the final revelation
of Jesus is not about knowing but about loving. This, too, places
him firmly in the tradition of Israel, which has always given
primacy to right action. "Beloved," the author of the
First Epistle of John wrote, "let us love one another; for
love is of God, and he who loves is born of God and knows God.
He who does not love does not know God; for God is love."
This statement of a biblical faith in the ultimate meaning of
existence as love is a classic affirmation of what one might call
the pluralistic principle: Respect for the radically other begins
with God's respect for the world, which is radically other from
God. In other words, God is the first pluralist. "In this
the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent God's
only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. In
this is love, not that we loved God but that God loved us and
sent God's Son to be the expiation for our sins. Beloved, if God
so loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has ever
seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and God's love
is perfected in us." ( I John 4, 9-12.)
Religious pluralism begins with this acknowledgment of the universal
impossibility of direct knowledge of God. The immediate consequence
of this universal ignorance is that we should regard each other
respectfully and lovingly. But our clear statement of Christian
openness to the other is its own revelation. The epistle just
cited is attributed to John, the author of the fourth Gospel.
It was written, apparently, about the same time as the Gospel,
around the turn of the first century. It was addressed to Christian
communities that were riven with the disputes that had come after
the destruction of the Temple and with the first serious conflict
between what was becoming known as the Church and the Synagogue.
This plea, whatever else it referred to, concerned the tragedy
then beginning to unfold: it is John whose Gospel demonizes "the
Jews" above all. And the tragedy is underscored by the fact
that in this same letter John, as if understanding already what
is at stake in the conflict, begs his readers to "not be
like Cain who was of the evil one and murdered his brother. And
why did he murder him? Because his own deeds were evil and his
brother's righteous." The tragedy, and the sin, and what
must forever warn us off cheap talk of love, is that all too soon,
and all too easily, the followers of Jesus were content to read
these words and identify Cain with Jews.
That sin, embedded in the Gospel itself, is proof of why the Church
needs democracy, for the assumption of democratic politics, in
addition to the assumption that all citizens can contribute to
the truth-seeking conversation, is that all citizens are constitutionally
incapable of consistent truth-seeking and steadfast loving. God
may be love, but the polis isn't, and neither is the Church.
So we come full circle and recall that the language of love is
often used by those in power, while the language of justice is
used by those who suffer from the abuse of power. The language
of love is not enough. Because the language of love does not protect
us from our failures to love; only the language of justice does
that.
Democracy assumes that a clear-headed assessment of the flaws
of members extends to everyone. But even the leaders of democracies,
especially in the United States, salt their speeches with Christian
chauvinism or an excluding religiosity, assuming that a democratic
polity could be called univocal: no voices, that is, for religious
minorities or those of no religion. And that, finally, is why
a democracy assumes that everyone must be protected from the unchecked,
uncriticized, and unregulated power of every other, including
the well-meaning leader. The universal experience of imperfection,
finitude, and self-centeredness is the pessimistic ground of democratic
hope. The Church's own experience - its grievous sin in relation
to the Jews, for example, its long tradition of denigrating women,
and, lately, the inability of clerical leaders to dismantle an
autocratic structure that enabled priestly child abuse - proves
how desperately in need of democratic reform the Catholic Church
is.
Call To Action's role
The Catholic reform movement, represented at its best by Call
To Action, must therefore turn the Church away from autocracy
and toward democracy, as the Catholic people have in fact already
begun to do. The explosion of grassroots participation by lay
people in the project of changing the Church is the first step
on the new road. CTA, simply by already being here, has been
a crucial model for Voice of the Faithful. That VOTF is self-consciously
"moderate" in comparison to CTA is good, for a main
function of a more liberal movement for change is precisely to
empower the moderate effort. Together we bring about change, and
together we keep the faith. The Catholic reform movement, however
identified, must solidify this impulse and restore the broken
authority of the Church by locating authority in the place where
it belongs, which is with the people through whom the Spirit breathes.
In this way, the Roman Catholic Church must affirm that democracy
itself is the latest gift from a God who operates in history,
and the only way for the Church to affirm democracy is by embracing
it. The old dispute between popes and kings over who appoints
bishops was resolved in favor of the pope, but bishops now should
be chosen by the people they serve. The clerical caste, a vestige
of the medieval court, should be eliminated. The Catholic reform
movement must establish equal rights for women in every sphere.
A system of checks and balances, true due process, legislative
norms designed to assure equality for all instead of superiority
for some, freedom of expression, and above all freedom of conscience
must be established within the Church - not because the time of
liberalism has arrived, but because the long and sorry story of
Church hatred of Jews, Church triumphalism in relation to other
religions, Church rigidity in relation to dissent from within,
and the fresh outrage of child rape all lay bare the structures
of oppression that must be dismantled once and for all.
If Russia can do it; if East Germany can do it; if Poland can
do it; if Czechoslovakia can do it; if South Africa can do it
- so can the Roman Catholic Church. Democracy is the key to religious
reform. You are the Lech Walesas of Catholicism; the Vaclav Havels,
the Nelson Mandelas, the Corazon Aquinos. You are the prophets
of democracy. You are the Salt of the Earth, the yeast of the
Bread, the hope of the Church. Which is why I salute you, and
why I thank you.