Left to right: Cardinal Carlo Martini, Pope Benedict XVI, and Dr. Rowan Williams (CNS photos).
Jonathan Aitken, an Anglican, has
penned
a piece for The American Spectator praising the edgy, intellectual heights and depths of Rowan Williams
and the late Cardinal Carlo Martini. The latter was not known to many
non-Italian Catholics (at least on this side of the pond), I suspect, until
after he died this past August and it was revealed, with much media furor, that
he was critical of certain qualities exhibited by the Church in Europe. He
stated, rather (in)famously, in an interview late in life, "The Church is
200 years behind the times". This was top-grade catnip for the chattering
classes, who immediately made Cardinal Martini a saint, prophet, and folk hero.
(Russell Shaw ably critiqued the usual suspects in
this
September 2012 CWR article.)
Aitken is late to the party, but wants the tired band to
play on. He writes that Cardinal Martini "shook up a heady intellectual
cocktail for the Catholic Church before he passed away." That's certainly
debatable. Making a splash and making a difference are, well, different. And an
occasional fireworks display from the secular media does not equate in the
least to seriousthat is, meaningful, mature, and rationaldiscussion within
the Church. But Aitken seems to think the dusk has fallen on the Catholic
Church; yet a much stronger case can be made that the light of faddish, liberal
Christianity is fast faltering, if only because it is (to switch metaphors in
midstream) parasitical and the host, secular humanism, will only abide it while
it is helpful.
But, before getting too far afield, here is Aitken outlining
the impressive achievements of his two heroes:
The lives of Cardinal Martini and
Archbishop Williams share common themes. Both have held the highest academic
positions and been recognized as great scholars, having produced over 50 works
of theology between them. Both are remarkable linguistsMartini spoke 11
languages and Williams speaks six. Their prelatical concoctions pack a punch,
and both will certainly enliven the debates about the future of the world’s two
largest churches
And, he adds, "Cardinal Carlo Martini, who died on
August 31, was the best modern pope we never had." It's interesting, of
course, to hear what an Anglican hopes for in a pope, keeping in mind that
Anglicanism was the product of a king rejecting the papacy. (If I ever make the
mistake of trumpeting my choice for king or queen of England, please chastise
me promptly.) It appears that Aitken, not surprisingly, would prefer a pope who
is, well, not really Catholic or papal; in short, someone like Williams.
Cardinal Martini, he notes approvingly, "was the
counterweight to papal conservatism. On a crucial range of
issuescontraception, homosexuality, family values, and the right to end
lifehe took popular positions that made him almost a leader of the opposition
within the hierarchy of the church." Or, in other words, he apparently
took positions contrary to historical, traditional Catholic teaching.
Agreedthose positions are certainly popular, most notably among those who have
either renounced the Catholic Faith or large chunks of it. Shocking, that.
Anyhow, this means Martini is deemed worthy of one of the greatest titles that
can be granted a capitulating Christian: modernizer. The assumption is that being
"modern"which seems to ultimately fixate on loosening moral and
marital bonds while lamenting the demands of traditional beliefsis not just
inevitable but enviable.
Williams is wonderfully brilliant and incredibly open
minded, Aitken notes, yet has somehow managed to repeatedly mess things up,
having openly "spoken with engaging self-deprecation about his sense of
failure and frustration." The departing Archbishop of Canterbury has not
been able to bring unity to his "disparate flock" and has been "troubled
by the impossibility of maintaining doctrinal unity." Granted, Williams
was dealt a difficult hand. As Monsignor Ronald Knox, who left Anglicanism in
1917 (and whose father was a Church of England bishop), once noted, “The
Anglicanism of today, except where it is expounded by people definitely under
the influence of the Oxford movement, simply does not possess enough of fixed
background to allow for it being intelligently yet authoritatively taught.”
Things have only gotten worse in the meantime. Aitken writes:
Williams feels his church has been
“wrong” in its treatment of homosexuals but remains opposed to same-sex
marriages. He supports women bishops but has been unable to make progress on
this even within the comparatively open-minded Church of England. Nor has he been
able to make any meaningful contribution to the dialogue between Islam and
Christianity. In fact he made things worse, at least among his own
faithful, by suggesting that Islamic Sharia law should be recognized by the
courts.
So, other than being a failure, he's been great! And that is
exactly what the Catholic Church needs, if one follows Aitken's puff its
logical conclusion: an establishment pope who goes with the democratier,
elitistflow, regardless of tradition and truth.
In a recent First Things essay, "The
High Price of Establishment", Wesley J. Smith (an Evangelical, if I'm
not mistaken), admits being "astonished" that Williams, after the
failed attempt to usher in female bishops in the Anglican Communion, not
"only bemoaned the failure in his farewell speech to the General Synod,
but also insisted that the Church had betrayed its responsibility to reflect
the sensibilities and values of the general culture." The
take-it-home-and-let-it-make-you-ill-quote goes like this:
“Whatever the motivation for voting
yesterday,” Williams sternly lectured his flock, “whatever the theological
principle on which people acted or spoke,” dissenters had to understand that
their objection to woman bishops “is not intelligible to wider society. Worse
than that, it seems as if we are willfully blind to some of the trends and
priorities of wider society.”
Much could be said about what the brilliant but often
failing Williams misses here. For instance, is the rejection of female bishops
really an act of willful blindness to "the trends and priorities of wider
society" or in fact the recognition that occasionallyyes, sometimes!the
tradition and teaching of what we might generally call orthodox Christianity is
preferable to current fads? The serious danger with being a “modernizer”, it turns
out, is that modernity not only seeks to direct and distort the faith, it can become the faith. Smith writes:
Here’s a further irony: Statues
honoring Christian martyrsincluding Martin Luther Kinghave been installed
above the main entrance to Westminster Abbey. But what Christian was ever
martyred for adhering to mainstream cultural values?
It is amazing that Rowan Williams,
a widely respected scholar of Church history, would urge the church toward such
a blatantly conformist course. Under his theory of fitting in, for example,
should early Christians have attended the wildly popular gladiator games in
order to prove they were not “blind” to the values of their culture? Rather
than seeming aloof and intolerant, should they have participated in pagan
feasts and consumed meat dedicated to idols? Heck, maybe they should have gone
through the motions of emperor worshipsuch as famously required by Pliny the
Younger and approved by Trajanto avoid martyrdom.
I mean, dying rather than lighting
incense to a statue? How “not intelligible to wider society.”
Smith is right, but is it really so "amazing" that
Williams gets it wrong? After all, even his fans, such as Aitken, acknowledge
that he gets much wrong. Begin with faulty premises and you’ll never be
surprised when you arrive at faulty conclusions. Unless, that is, you never really test and evaluate your assumptions.
Meanwhile, it's more than a little revealing that Aitken, in
all of his talk of intellectual giants and popes"we need spiritual
leaders who are intellectuals of the highest stature", he saysnever
mentions a pope who has published close to a
hundred bookson a dizzying array of topicsand is widely acknowledged as
the greatest pope-theologian of modern times. If you really want a
"religious stirrer", you cannot go wrong with Joseph Ratzinger/Pope
Benedict XVI. The current pontiff is well aware of what he calls the “dogma of
relativism”, which presents active, orthodox Christian belief as narrow-minded,
reactionary, and outdated. He knows, as he wrote in Truth and Tolerance (Ignatius, 2004) that “the belief that there is
indeed truth, valid, and binding truth, within history itself, in the figure of
Jesus Christ and in the faith of the Church is referred to as fundamentalism …”
Much more has followed over the course of his pontificate.
So, it is Benedict who continues to address modernity with
both directness and nuance. He is neither reactionary or capitulating, and he
does not make the self-destructive mistake of preferring the "trends and
priorities of wider society" over the teachings of Christ, the Tradition
of the Church, and the intimate guides of faith and reason. His pontificate, to
indulge Aitken’s metaphor, has been a bracing and exceptional drink, not
shaken, but truly stirring.