Prisoner of the Vatican by David I Kertzer

D'Agostino, Peter R

BOOKS 'Sic transit gloria mundi' Peter R. D'Aeostino Dt seems impossible to date the precise moment when European civilization became "modern," "liberal," "secular." A host of potential...

...He never mentions that the first phrase in the constitution of this ostensibly demonic and wicked kingdom read: "The Catholic Apostolic and Roman religion is the sole religion of the State...
...Next to these grand intellectual and political events, the creation of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861 and its conquest of Papal Rome in 1870 hardly merits notice...
...There were, rather, several dynamics that both Pius and Leo regularly set in motion, which they hoped would instigate the downfall of the Kingdom of Italy...
...Leo's secretary of state, Cardinal Mariano Ram-polla del Tindaro, reached out to France in the 1880s to cast its lot with the papacy and eliminate the Italian enemy...
...Still, the Vatican constantly sought to belie this claim in order to inflame Catholic populations to pressure their governments to support the papacy, and to compel European states to restore the pope's dominions...
...Remarkably," Kertzer explains, in 1881 "Vatican officials had indeed been secretly discussing the possibility of encouraging a republican revolt in Italy as a way to regain control of Rome...
...Like the kidnapping of Edgar-do Mortara, the subject of Kertzer's 1998 book, the proclamation of papal infallibility turned the Great Powers against the papacy...
...Kertzer's archival investigation into the Vatican's Congregation of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, which reveals secret debates among curial cardinals, merits applause...
...Instead, the papacy became even more attached to an absolutist notion of sovereignty adopted from the ancien regime...
...From the perspective of many Italian statesmen, Pius IX and Leo XIII (1878-1903) were dangerous extremists, who recklessly sought to destroy the Kingdom of Italy by any means, welcoming European war and violence if it might serve their reactionary purposes...
...The peninsula's meager natural resources, ethno-cultural diversity, abiding provincial loyalties, weak national identity, and failed colonial ventures were not the resources from which national greatness might emerge...
...Kertzer makes no mention of the serious and nearly successful efforts of Benedict XV (1914-22) to regain a temporal sovereignty in the aftermath of World War I. In addition, Kertzer's brief observation about the ostensible inability of contemporary Italian school children to learn the real facts about the papal resistance to the Risorgimento seems out of place...
...The kingdom, ever posturing to be, and hoping to become, a great power, was in fact a minor player in the nineteenth-century scheme of things...
...Sadly for Pius, Prussia defeated Austria and foiled his hopes...
...A host of potential candidates vie as symbols to mark the birth of "modernity...
...First, both vicars of the Prince of Peace welcomed the prospect of a European conflagration in which Italy would collapse in the face of Prussian, or French, or Austrian power, and the victor might restore the Papal States...
...For instance, in 1866 when Italy and Prussia fought Austria, culminating in Italy's annexation of Venetia, Pius IX cast Austria as the champion of the pope-king...
...After the fall of Papal Rome, Pius IX (1846-78) proclaimed himself a "prisoner" within the Italian kingdom that embodied all that was wrong with liberalism and modernity...
...A crucial diabolical manifestation in this sinful chain of events was the conquest of the Papal States and Papal Rome...
...In retrospect, it seems the nineteenth-century papacy missed two opportunities...
...Kertzer demonstrates that departure was a very real possibility, particularly after anticlericals attacked the funeral procession of Pius IX in July 1881, and after radicals erected a monument in Rome's Campo dei Fiori to honor the sixteenth-century apostate friar, Giordano Bruno...
...Throughout the 1880s, Leo repeatedly turned to the cardinals of the curia to advise him on whether the time had come for him to flee Rome...
...Sometimes, he offered this threat "as a brake on the more anticlerical actions being contemplated by the Italian government...
...Indeed, Kertzer might have indicated the extent to which some moderate and conservative Italian liberals, in contrast to republican radicals like Garibaldi and Mazzini, were, in fact, thoughtful Catholics who hoped, through the creation of a constitutional monarchy grounded in liberal values, to see the Italian church revitalized...
...The altogether earthly quest to regain Papal Rome is the subject of David I. Kertzer's lively new book...
...This is a good read...
...Second, had Pius and Leo tried to cultivate the moderate and conservative Italian liberals (known as the Flistoric Right) who established the Italian kingdom in 1861, the papacy might better have protected the church from anticlerical statesmen who came to power in 1876 when the Historic Right, weakened by Pius's machinations, fell...
...Papal threats to leave Rome, though, were the most popular strategy to destabilize the church's nemesis...
...Finally, his offhand remark suggesting the nineteenth-century Vatican is responsible for contemporary "Italians' lack of national spirit and the weakness of their allegiance to the Italian state" seems unwarranted...
...Governments feared the implications of infallibility for their resident bishops and Catholic subjects or citizens...
...After excommunicating, repeatedly, all those involved in the Italian "revolution," and forbidding Catholics to run for office and vote in national elections in the wicked new state, Pius awaited God's hidden hand to overthrow the kingdom...
...Inevitably, Italian statesmen suspected that foreign powers plotted with the pope during these machinations in order to create a pretext for military intervention or to gain the loyalty of their Catholic populations...
...It took institutional form in the Protestant Reformation from which other modern revolutions followed as the Evil One expanded his earthly dominions...
...The Law of Guarantees, passed unilaterally by the Italian government in 1871, was meant to provide that assurance...
...Luther's protest, Renaissance naturalism, the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, Marx's materialism, Darwin's Origin of Species-all claim thoughtful advocates who suggest each had a primacy in ushering in a new order...
...Scenarios and alignments in this scheme constantly shifted over the decades from 1860 to 1890...
...The papal offensive failed once again...
...It is one explanation of why statesmen within Europe declined to help restore Pius to his temporal throne...
...This issue would require an analysis of the Fascist debacle, the role of communism in postwar Italy, and the revelation of links between the Mafia and the discredited political classes that brought down the First Republic in the 1990s...
...Liberal modernity and its consequent secularization, the papacy and Catholic apologists before Vatican II taught, had one single demonic ancestry: Satan's revolt against God...
...Another scenario envisioned a republican revolution that would bring down the fragile Italian monarchy and compel conservative European states to intervene and reestablish the temporal power of the pope to preserve order...
...In 1870, for instance, Pius considered fleeing Rome while Italian statesmen offered him concessions to keep him in Rome...
...But, in the dominant Catholic philosophy of history, the Risorgimento (the unification of Italy) and its "sacrilegious usurpation" of the pope-king's dominions ranked high as a marker of the treacherous, apostate modern world...
...Notwithstanding the subtitle of this intriguing study, there was not one "secret plot" to regain Papal Rome...
...The epilogue then races to explain how the tension that drives the plot found resolution in 1929 with the creation of Vatican City...
...First, confronted with the loss of temporal power, it might have developed new conceptions of "sovereignty...
...The center of civilization itself, Rome, fell to the Enemy, and the ability of the papacy to work for the restoration of Christ the King to his rightful place required first the restoration of his vicar to his divinely ordained kingdom centered in Rome...
...Sadly, American theologians and historians, like Pius himself, have conflated these Catholic liberals with "sectarian" anticlerical liberals, and often mistakenly identify Italy before World War II as . a "republic" when in fact it was a rather conservative Catholic monarchy...
...Unfortunately, the story ends abruptly in the 1890s for no clear reason...
...Pius, with dramatic flair, declined the Italian offer and performed his role as a prisoner on an international stage...
...Leo also deployed the threat of departure...
...He called on the reluctant European Catholic powers to "liberate" him from the "sectarian" enemies of God, and to restore his patrimony...
...The Kingdom of Italy expended tremendous energy trying to convince the Great Powers that the pope was free, secure, and independent in Rome...
...Kertzer, like Owen Chadwick before him, demonstrates how damaging the proclamation of papal infallibility at Vatican Council I was for the papacy and the church...
...His detailed descriptions of diplomatic intrigue, surrounding episodes both known and unknown to English-language readers curious about the nineteenth-century papacy, deserve admiration for their clarity and drama...

Vol. 131 • December 2004 • No. 22


 
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