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Dear friends,
One of the things that has long attracted me to Catholicism as an adult
has been the social teaching of the Church. For the first third of my
adult life I would have put as much energy into party politics as what
I've put into initiatives like Catholica
and the other voluntary endeavours I've put energy into in the last fifteen
years or so. In the end I grew tired of party politics and looking back
on that I honestly think a significant contributing factor was that I
began to better understand the core thrust of Catholic social teaching
which seems to operate "beyond politics". It is seeking to analyse
and understand the challenges we face as a community and as individuals
on a bigger canvas than the one that is used to analyse and understand
life at the party political level.
Here in Australia one of the places where we tend to see Catholic social
teaching explained and discussed is through the work of the Australian
Catholic Social Justice Council. The annual Social Justice Statements
produced by the Australian Catholic Bishops seem to be always informative
and genuinely "worth the read".
The document they have produced this year under the chairmanship of Bishop
Christopher Saunders, "Who is my neighbour?
Australia's role as a global citizen", is comprehensive,
well-argued and right-up-to-the-minute in relevance in the way it discusses
current challenges that are at the centre of the political debates going
on in this nation today as we move to what looks to be one of the most
significant turning point elections in our nation for the past half century.
For a long period during my years of political activism I was a died-in-the-wool
conservative. I really did believe that the election of a Labor Government
would be some form of political poison to the health and well-being of
the social and economic fabric in our nation. It has been a long and slow
conversion, or I'd prefer to think of it as a maturation, as I've slowly
come to appreciate politics in an entirely different light today. A large
part of my own political conversion I do attribute to my growing appreciation
of Catholic social teaching. My conversion though has not been from The
Liberal Party to the Labor Party, from free enterprise to socialism, or
from an individualist to a collectivist mindset.
At heart I still do recognise that I am still a big "L" Liberal
and one who believes that the encouragement of individual initiative and
enterprise achieves more for society than the collectivist outlook which
seeks to govern society by committees.
The importance of the creative "tension" between
the two outlooks
Through my political conversion which, as I said, was largely
influenced by Catholic social teaching I came to see that the strength
in democracy came from having a number of strong political parties. For
most of recent history and I suspect this goes back to the dawning
of the industrial revolution the "tension"
in society has been between the collectivist and the individualist interest.
In societies like our own, the United States, Canada, New Zealand and
Britain we have been well-served by a small number of political parties
that broadly represent the individualist and collectivist interests in
society. What makes democracy or even
Western civilisation work so well is not the particular political
philosophies of either the conservatives or the socialists but
it comes from the "tension" that is created in society between
two outlooks that broadly represent the collectivist and the individualist
perspectives and is able to marshall the
"tension" through the parliamentary process to a consensus that
both develops intelligent and creative policy outcomes that do move society
forward but which also "maintains the tension"
between the two broad outlooks. The stength of the democratic
system comes not from ideology. It comes from the "tension"
between competing ideologies. Our strength as an Australian nation, or
the strength of the British or American nations comes not from having
strong Labor or Republican Parties, or strong Liberal, Conservative or
Republican Parties. It comes from all those parties being strong and effective
voices for the competing interests in society.
A new "underlying tension"
The challenge I think we face in society today is that I suspect the
core underlying tension in society is no longer the individualist/collectivist
divide or, should I say, it is not as dominant or the principal
divide in society today. Society at large has "grown up". I'm
not sure what the emerging new "underlying divide" in society
is. What I do suspect we need is a new alignment in the political structure.
The old Liberal/Labor; Conservative/Labor; or Democrat/Republican dualism
no longer accurately reflects the underlying "tension" which
is what needs to be managed if society is to grow, to prosper and to manage
the human and material resources at our disposal in ways that are sustainable
and to the benefit of not only present-day society but to the generations
that will follow.
Certainly part of the new emerging divide seems to be a base difference
in psychological outlook reflecting the different ways in which different
sectors of society manage insecurity and fear. In the Australian context
I certainly believe the old Liberal/National Party alliance, which has
been the natural party of government, is now dead. It is not "dead"
though because of any lessened desire on the part of those who still subscribe
to those parties for power if anything, they are more hungry for
power today than they have ever been. Their dominance is now dead basically
because the Labor Party has now basically stolen their agenda and articulates
it far more coherently and intelligently than the old masters ever could.
I'd argue though we can't allow this nation to become a "one party
state". Even though the old "natural party of government"
is now dead, or almost dead, we do need a new "natural (and strong)
party of opposition". Rather than "party of opposition"
though I'd prefer the term "party of ideas". The truth is that
the former dominant conservative parties in this nation were never much
good at generating ideas. They were just good thieves at stealing all
the ideas generated within the opposition. Today we need a new party that
"generates ideas" and serves in opposition to the Labor Party
as it once did in opposition to the Liberal and National Parties.
I could be wrong but what I've just written I suspect could only come
from within a Catholic framework of thinking.
But social teaching seems not to be enough
Sadly Catholic social teaching even presented as well and as consistently
as it has been over a long period of time by the Australian Catholic Bishops
has not been enough to stem the descent of the Catholic Church ltself
to a position of increasingly irrelevance in the minds of most people.
I often ask myself why is this? In recent days I've felt indebted to PeterR
on our discussion board for introducing me to a short passage from Yves
Congar which he reproduced
on our forum. I have long argued that our bishops have increasingly become
afraid to speak on the real issues that have been causing tension in the
hearts of their flock. The same goes for priests. Homilies these days
are, in large part, masterful exercises in trying to use as many words
as possible to in fact say as little as possible for fear of upsetting
the 5% in the sheepfold. Effectively the Church is inreasingly saying
nothing to nobody and that's why so many have drifted out the door. Every
now and again though the priests and bishops put on a pretence of "being
brave" by speaking on some subject where it is very safe for a Catholic
to be controversial. In a sense Catholic social teaching fits this category
of "safe controversy". Everybody (ie everybody in the wider
world) basically knows Catholics are "controversial" on these
issues so a bishop who makes some statement rearranging the words slightly
is not likely to get into trouble from Rome or from the 5% who
are constantly trying to report everyone to Rome.
I never realised until PeterR put the Yves Congar quotation on
our forum that someone else had said this a long, long time ago. "There
is one pope who thinks everything, who says everything, and the whole
quality of being Catholic consists in obeying him. They want to be absolutely
the only ones to think or say anything, except
on a small area of inconsequential topics. It is absolutely
required to repeat and orchestrate their oracles, declaiming, 'Ah, isnt
this wonderful!' [Rome] has attributed to me an audience and an influence
that I know very well I have never had. But they will listen to nothing
about that." [emphasis added] Congar
wrote that back in the 1950s but it has only become available publicly
a few years ago. [See the references PeterR provided
in his
post]
We live in a blessed time. Bishop Geoffrey Robinson has dared to put
his mouth outside the realms of "safe controversy" and is speaking
from the heart about a much broader canvas of issues that are far closer
to the questions that the millions have been asking for decades in the
privacy of their own dining rooms. This present petition will hopefully
contribute to giving the vast majority of our bishops a renewed confidence
to simply follow the lead given by Bishop Robinson and speak from the
heart to speak boldly and confidently about the real issues that
they do also know are the topics of conversation in the hearts of those
millions of Catholics in this country who have become disenchanted with
the game of "safe controversy" our bishops have been playing
for so long.
Our Church is not some "alternative political
party". That is how some bishops seem to present it in their public
utterances. The collective of our bishops though in these Social Justice
statements present a much truer picture of where our Church ought to sit
politically. The Church is "above" politics but it does not
attempt to be condescending towards the importance of politics in the
commonwealth of our affairs. It places high value on the importance of
politics in our social affairs but it seeks to leave the working out of
the policy options and the resolving of the "creative tension"
in society to the society at large. It does not attempt to set up political
parties that represent the "religious interest" in society as
though "the religious interest" is "just another political
point of view". I do think our Bishops have really understood this
well when they apply themselves collectively to these Social Justice statements.
They need though to reclaim the confidence to
speak confidently, courageously and "from the heart", regarding
the terrible internal political tensions that have largely wrecked our
Church and sent the vast majority of the baptised population running out
the door for spiritual fresh air and meaning.
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Brian
Coyne is the editor and publisher of Catholica Australia.
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We welcome your thoughts in response to this commentary in our forum.
Brian Coyne can be contacted at: Brian
Coyne <editor@catholica.com.au>
©2007
Brian Coyne
[Brian's Take Archive]
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