Theology at the barricades

McCarraher, Eugene

BOOK ESSAY Theology at the barricades Eugene McCarraher Catholic scholars have taken the dynamite of the church, have wrapped it up in nice phraseology, placed it in an hermetic...

...If secularism is the denial or negation of the sacred in the name of reason and science, then American culture—with its spiritual smorgasbord of religions, denominations, sects, New Age groups, and individual collages—is hardly secular...
...Niebuhr, Murray, and their acolytes effect a subtle transfer of allegiance from the church to the market and the state...
...Hauerwas and Milbank indict Niebuhr and "Christian realism" on the same charges...
...The book is a tour de force that invokes the gamut of cultural criticism from church fathers to proponents of queer theory...
...Because it understands and does not despise our bodily desires, the concept of "perversion" holds together the good and the evil of some of our most insistent and potentially blessed longings...
...Marianne Sawicki, for instance, conjuring up the "paleochurch" and its diminutive resistance to Rome, calls for "small-scale refusals" of the "pomps and glamours of middle-class life...
...Faith must mean a distinctive thought and practice...
...It mandates scriptural and theological instruction, individual and communal prayer, liturgy, and mutual encouragement...
...But while such gestures remain bold and enticing in comparison with the exhaustion of the secular left, they're not unprecedented, and their precursors at least spelled out in some detail what they wanted...
...Budde, a political scientist at De Paul...
...Budde insists that discipleship is "incompatible with voting, holding state office, and other direct state-supportive practices"—in other words, incompatible with the only large-scale and effectual means we currently have to mitigate the damage he spends an entire book detailing...
...A new movement of intellectual, ecclesial, and political regeneration calling itself "radical orthodoxy" offers some hope that the dynamite can still be ignited...
...The new radicals contend that the contemporary erosion of the church represents merely the most advanced stage of an illness called "Constantinianism"— the church's wrong-headed and suicidal offer to be a "sponsor of the world," a reliable partner in the creation and maintenance of economies, empires, and cultures defined apart from the gospel...
...This creedal fidelity provides the intellectual and ecclesial foundation from which radicals attempt to "criticize modern society, culture, politics, art, science, and philosophy with an unprecedented boldness...
...Through its theory and practice of ecclesiology, radical orthodoxy has an opportunity to solve one of the persistent dilemmas of politically engaged intellectuals: how to link the pursuits of a professional intelligensia with the daily experience and critical power of workers (blue- and white-collar), farmers, and others...
...Which is to say that radical orthodoxy ought to get out into the world...
...I suspect that some radicals would not be averse to refurbishing anarcho-syndicalist or guild socialist schemes that sought direct worker control of production and the revival of artisanal creativity...
...we live in a culture that retains traces, often strong ones, of a moral lexicon to which Christians can appeal...
...He is currently working on The Enchantments of Mammon: Corporate Capitalism and the American Moral Imagination...
...Baxter, for example, notes that Murray's work is "remarkably bereft of references to Christ, the sacraments, Scripture, the saints, and other traditionspecific terms and categories...
...Milbank contends that theology reads "all history as...anticipation, or sinful refusal of, salvation"—a salvation (recall) defined by inclusion in the body Commonweal 23 July 13,2001 of Christ, a revolutionary vanguard and the destination of history itself...
...The radically orthodox must discover and create venues outside of conferences, seminars, or e-mail lists...
...He is the author of Christian Critics: Religion and the Impasse in Modern American Social Thought (Cornell University Press, 2000...
...As a consequence, Murray ends up affirming "the myth of the modern liberal state as a religiously neutral institutional arrangement...
...Second, absent any concrete translation of ecclesiology into a politics of work, technology, race, or sexuality, "small-scale refusal"—along with "eucharistic anarchism" or "Christian socialism"—looks like a dreamy and selfrighteous form of resignation...
...These flamboyant advocates of change have already made the pages of Time and the Chronicle of Higher Education...
...If the church is indeed a new way of being, then that life must radiate its redemptive energy throughout our fallen but still beautiful world...
...It is about time to blow the lid off...
...From the Archdiocese of Chicago's corporate-designed restructuring of educational and pastoral resources, to the intellectual mediocrity of episcopal, curial, and papal pronouncements on the mass media, to the proliferation of Vatican and other product tie-ins, licensing agreements, and marketing ventures, church leaders are, Budde charges, tragically "remaking the church in the image and likeness of the global culture industries...
...and Ward, who has written or edited several incisive works on theology, philosophy, and critical theory...
...That's not surprising given some of their virtuoso intellectual performances...
...The church, Milbank writes, is the communal anticipation of the heavenly city, a caravan of brothers and sisters "on pilgrimage through this temporary world...
...and William Cunningham of Saint Thomas, whose Torture and Eucharist (1998) is a searching theological examination of modern political thought...
...That's why I'd suggest less Derrida and more Simone Weil...
...In this context, secularity emerges as the real enemy...
...Because discipleship is, "an inherently ecclesiocentric proposition," the state of the church is a recurrent occasion of analysis, anger, and hope...
...For radical orthodoxy revives Chesterton's hope to sing both the "Marseillaise" and the "Magnificat," and repeats his call to the romance of orthodoxy...
...as Hauerwas puts it, "the church is a social ethic," anticipating Milbank's assertion that "salvation is only in common...
...BOOK ESSAY Theology at the barricades Eugene McCarraher Catholic scholars have taken the dynamite of the church, have wrapped it up in nice phraseology, placed it in an hermetic container and sat on the lid...
...Their jeremiads about the dilapidated condition of Christianity, especially American Catholicism, often sound as if they belong in the pages of the reactionary magazine Crisis...
...While indebted to Marxism, they are deeply ambivalent about and even hostile toward liberation theology...
...Baxter's celebration of the Catholic Worker raises flags, for this observer, about the movement's uncritical and debilitating technophobia...
...Assaults on the secular effectively hit only a limited range of targets—namely, intellectuals, outside of whose uncharmed circles religion is as vibrant, if not as Christian, as ever...
...Thus, I'd suggest that the terms secularism and materialism are of limited value in understanding the erosion of Christian commitment or the enchantments of capitalist culture...
...Promising to "read the signs of the times through the grammar of the Christian faith," Ward studies numerous artifacts of postmodern culture—Epcot Center, Leaving Las Vegas, sex shops, cyberspace, and virtual reality, to cite a few—and concludes that modernity's effort to create "a world without transcendent values" is rapidly and desperately imploding...
...I'll be quoting these and other sources largely without attribution...
...the Catholic Workers...
...The three co-edited Radical Orthodoxy (Routledge, 1999), a collection of essays by British and American contributors devoted to a Christian reconstruction of epistemology, ethics, sexuality, politics, aesthetics, and other subjects...
...The life of the contemporary bourgeoisie is a wearying frenzy of work, work, spending, and work, with some time left over for civic duties, commodified leisure, sex, family, and—maybe—a spiritual life...
...liberation theology...
...The movement is still too socially incubated in academia, too marinated in postmodernist palaver...
...supernatural sociologists" like Paul Hanly Furfey and Luigi Sturzo...
...Yet the diagnosis of our religious ills differs sharply from the conservative critique...
...the "politics of Jesus" espoused by the Mennonite John Howard Yoder...
...Catherine Pickstock, whose After Writing (Blackwell, 1997) combines history, theology, and philosophy to argue for the unavoidable religious culmination of Western thought, what she calls "the liturgical consummation of philosophy...
...Jacques Maritain and "integral humanism...
...Capitalism embodies a "mean little heresy" that destroyed a guild system in which work was endowed with a liturgical character...
...Like him, the radical orthodox assert that genuine faith is an adventure and not a possession, an insistence on love and peace as the very architecture of creation, a state of rebellion against every false god and perverted longing...
...Michael Budde's wellreceived (Magic) Kingdom (Westview Press, 1997) is a good example...
...However abstruse this enterprise can get—one finds references to everyone from Gregory of Nyssa to the neoPlatonists to Nietzsche—radical orthodoxy's most visible concern is the church...
...Milbank demonstrates how Gutierrez, Segundo, and the brothers Boff do nothing more than swing a thurible around the totem of "progress" constructed by liberals and Marxists...
...The names and movements cited Commonweal 21 July 13, 2001 by the radical orthodox compose a motley syllabus in twentieth-century theology, philosophy, and social thought: Alasdair Maclntyre, from whom they borrow a mutable sense of tradition and a twilight sensibility...
...Such an outcome would be a sorry waste of talent and opportunity...
...If they don't—if they remain content, as I fear some of them do, to carp and posture before gatherings of the anointed—then the movement will become at best a beloved clique and at worst another academic vaudeville show...
...In short, the lid seems firmly sealed...
...Nor do they genuflect reflexively before the social encyclicals and pastoral letters...
...PETER MAURIN Few today can imagine that Catholic social thought has the pyrotechnic promise that Peter Maurin identified in his "easy essay," "Blowing the Dynamite...
...Radical orthodoxy" is to some extent a British import...
...Under Constantinianism, personhood is understood as self-mastery, possession and ownership are elevated as moral ideals, and power and manipulation are relied on to maintain an unloving and tenuous peace...
...However idiosyncratic, the Catholic Workers' coupling of doctrinal orthodoxy and radical politics epitomized a faith in the church as an exemplary form of human community, an imperfect but anticipatory effort, in the words of the Catholic sociologist Paul Hanly Furfey, "to reproduce heaven on earth...
...He is especially devastating on the co-opting of church leaders...
...I'd propose instead Augustine's notion of sin as "perversion"—the misdirection of our love and energy...
...These new proponents of "orthodoxy" emphatically reject the neoconservative baptism of capitalism and just as clearly repudiate the accommodation with capitalism enjoined by Catholic liberals...
...If "to be a Christian must mean to live in the church, to be formed by the church," then salvation is the social participation in the "body of Christ"— an old but venerable ecclesiological parlance...
...I'd also propose that secularism has become a misleading and even inaccurate term...
...Well, we don't live in Rome...
...For radical orthodoxy, there is no individual salvation to which one attaches social implications...
...Third, the rhetoric of "pomp and glamour" belongs to a tradition of imprecation against "materialism" that's critically unconvincing and theologically threadbare...
...Cunningham's "eucharistic anarchism," while it rightly roots Christian social life in liturgy, provides no guidance about production or consumption, and Milbank's Christian socialism goes nowhere beyond gestures toward John Ruskin and Eric Gill...
...And that, Budde and his compatriots argue, is a far more fundamental betrayal of the gospel than sexual immorality or ecclesiological deviance...
...Or take Graham Ward's Cities of God (Routledge, 2000...
...And, like good students of Maclntyre, they recognize that this project includes "rethinking] the tradition...
...Anglican socialists such as Maurice Reckitt, R. H. Tawney, and J. N. Figgis...
...Its foremost figures are associated with the University of Cambridge: John Milbank (now at the University of Virginia), whose Theology and Social Theory (Blackwell, 1990) could be taken as the urtext of the movement...
...they must grasp the hands of labor unions, feminists, gay and lesbian activists, and other secular or religious groups...
...In this country, Stanley Hauerwas of Duke is the best-known representative, followed by Michael Baxter of Notre Dame (a Holy Cross priest and former student of Hauerwas's...
...The only hope for the world, the radicals claim, lies in a revitalized church and a theology remade (or rather recovered) as social theory and cultural criticism...
...As a consequence, its pinch-penny "virtues" (frugality, sobriety, punctuality, sexual restraint) have become the marrow of Christian divinity, and its displacement of charity by accumulation the defining principle of social relations...
...The editors of Radical Orthodoxy assert a "commitment to creedal Christianity" that entails a "return to patristic and medieval roots," especially to Augustine...
...Tracing its origins to late medieval theologians whose work was completed by modern social scientists and philosophers, the creation of the secular insists that society, economics, politics, and so on are independent of divine power and ecclesial supervision...
...Eugene McCarraher teaches humanities and history at Villanova University...
...It offers us the chance to lift the lid off Catholicism and detonate the charge of the gospel...
...With a formidable grasp of both theology and neo-Marxist theory, Budde sketches the political economy of culture, demonstrates its corrosive impact on spiritual life (primarily but not exclusively through the sheer volume of commercial imagery), and suggests forms of resistance...
...Some of radical orthodoxy's cultural criticism is all too tiresome and predictable...
...Commonweal 24 July 13,2001...
...Commonweal 22 July 13,2001 Represented by John Courtney Murray and Reinhold Niebuhr, modern "Constantinianism" proscribes Christian language and suppresses the political character of the church and the gospel...
...Milbank contends that much of modern Catholic social teaching is a "grotesque hybrid" of liberal market economics and organicist, patriarchal social ideals, underwritten by discredited notions of essentialism and natural law...
...For Milbank, Ward, Baxter, and the rest, theology becomes a form of historical and revolutionary theory, and the church assumes a role akin to that of the proletariat and the party...
...Add Hans Urs von Balthasar, as well as French heavyweights like Emmanuel Levinas, Jacques Derrida, Gillian Rose, and Luce Irigaray, and you have the intellectual pedigree of the movement...
...Still, despite all the brave talk about "unprecedented boldness" and the "political nature of the gospel," radical orthodoxy hasn't displayed much in the way of political acumen or imagination...
...Budde and Robert Brimlow, a philosopher at Saint John Fisher College, have recently edited The Church as Counterculture (SUNY, 2000), a collection that could be read as a more accessible American counterpart to Radical Orthodoxy...
...Drawing on the disparate histories of guilds, liturgies, theology, and classical economics, Milbank and Pickstock compose rich and penetrating accounts of capitalism as it is linked to unprecedented violence...
...the nouvelle theologie that embraced Maurice Blondel and Henri de Lubac...
...It's not unwarranted to note the affinities between radical orthodoxy and Marxism...
...By "policing the sublime," in Milbank's apt phrase—by redefining Christian life in "spiritual," private terms, and by recasting the church as a spiritual entity with no claims on the secular—secular reason enables capital and the state to proceed unchecked...
...Capitalism—even the "democratic capitalism" hosannahed from the pews of neoconservatism—is identified as the principal vessel of secularism and spiritual atrophy...
...Although church membership is open to all, it must be, as Walter Brueggemann puts it with superb nuance, "inclusive, but not casual...
...Marked by the imperfect and incessant practices of charity and forgiveness, the church is "a particular historical practice" that resists and overthrows the earthly city through "the imagination in action of a peaceful, reconciled social order...
...George Lindbeck, "post-liberal" theology, and the "Yale school" of religious studies...
...Anyone acquainted with Juliet Schor's "overworked" and "overspent" Americans, or with Lendol Calder's brilliant Financing the American Dream, knows that pleasure and gratification are often the last things consumers experience...
...Can it ever be pried loose again...
...Among contemporary Catholics of all political stripes there seems little desire to recreate this radical ecclesial and political imagination...

Vol. 128 • July 2001 • No. 13


 
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