The Reformation is a paradox: a
religious revolution that led to the secularization of society.
Rebel
in the Ranks: Martin Luther, the Reformation, and the Conflicts That Continue
to Shape Our World, by Brad S. Gregory
What does Gregory mean by “secularization”?
…[secularization] refers
specifically to the declining influence of religion in public life…politics,
law, economics, education, social relationships, family life, morality, and the
culture at large.
This secularization is described by Gregory as the broadest
and most far-reaching outcome of the Reformation. A major impact of this secularization is the
loss of any ability for the Church (or some form of unified Christianity) to
stand as a decentralizing force in governance.
Gregory points to two other unintended consequences: first,
the proliferation of versions of “Protestants.”
I would say that they multiplied like rabbits, but then one of you would
make a Catholic joke and all hell would break lose in the comments section. So I take that back.
Second is the relationship of Magisterial Protestantism
(Lutherans and Calvinists) and Catholicism; they agreed that non-Lutheran and
non-Calvinist Protestants had to be done away with. Neither Catholic nor Protestant leaders
intended to divide Christendom or bring on recurrent violence. It seems to me that this could be true of
much of the clergy given the number of councils and other attempts at
reconciliation over many years.
The Reformation cemented heresies as far as the Catholics
were concerned; it also gave new life to the Antichrist (as far as Protestants
were concerned) in Rome. It resulted in
religion being controlled by politics, as opposed to informing politics and
providing a check on power. Religion
became an individual matter, which meant it would play no institutional role in
society.
Intellectually, theology had to be separated from philosophy
and the investigation of the natural world.
I don’t even know how the former is possible; as to the latter, it only
means artificially limiting the definition of the term “natural world” by
introducing the concept of the supernatural (as if all of the “natural” in the
universe can be comprehended by man).
It is no accident that modern
philosophy and the Enlightenment emerged in the seventeenth century as
intellectual reactions to the problems of the Reformation era.
Two of the major thinkers of this Enlightenment, René
Descartes and Thomas Hobbes, were directly and adversely affected by the
so-called wars of religion: the former as a soldier during the Thirty Years’
War and the latter who took refuge in Paris during the English Revolution. They would attempt to base morality on reason
alone – reason devoid of religion and tradition. As Gregory describes this effort: “Or at least
that was the plan.”
The plan has seen its fruits in the twentieth century, and
is now being replace by a new plan – a post-modern plan, where there is never such
a thing as a knowable objective truth. New
atheists are attempting to combat this with the same tools used by Descartes
and Hobbes: reason devoid of religion and tradition. Edward Feser has examined the claims of these
new atheists and found
them lacking.
In the Dutch republic, religion was restricted and in its
place commerce was unleashed.
According to the Union of Utrecht
(1579), the Dutch republic’s most important founding document, each province is
allowed to address religion as it sees fit, without interference from other
provinces, “so long as each person shall be permitted to remain free in his
religion and that no one shall be permitted to be investigated or persecuted
for reason of religion.”
Shortly thereafter and as a result of the continuing wars
with Spain, Catholic worship is outlawed altogether. Meanwhile, the southern provinces establish
the Union of Arras, which mandates Catholicism as the established religion. Protestant refugees flee to the north.
With numerous religions and sects present, the one thing
that binds the Dutch community is trade.
Trade is open to all: Calvinists, Arminians, Lutherans, Mennonites,
Catholics, and Jews are all represented in the wealthier class. Yet magistrates continue to monitor religion,
out of a concern that some might decide to get overly political.
It turns out that regardless of
their religion, almost everyone likes more and better material things.
This mix still works as at the time, because for the most
part, Christians are Christian. They share much more in common than they are
divided by their differences. Marriage,
family relationships, responsibilities to others, civic duties, and a common
sense of morality remain; differences regarding interpretation of scripture,
grace and salvation, the sacraments, etc., are pushed to the rear – at least as
far as political life is concerned.
Within about a century, the Dutch are replaced by the
English as a global trading empire. The
English have learned something about religious toleration and commerce from the
Dutch, with London replacing Amsterdam as Europe’s leading commercial city.
John Locke publishes his Tolerations,
arguing for a sharp separation between church and state; Isaac Newton’s
discoveries inspire a new variety of Protestantism – Deism: God created the
universe and set its laws in motion, then took a long nap from which He is yet
to wake. Scripture might be useful for
moral teaching, but nothing more – even here, it is good for moral teaching
that conforms to reason derived absent scripture! Which eventually pretty much renders
scripture useless.
America’s founding documents make clear that religion is
completely separable from the rest of life.
There is no publicly supported church – at least at the federal level;
many states, for a time, offer such support.
Madison and Jefferson continue in the Dutch tradition:
Religion has to be construed as
something that will not disrupt public life or divide citizens. That means its scope has to be restricted,
and what it applies to has to be limited.
Jefferson famously offered: “It does me no injury for my
neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my
leg.” Easy enough to say when virtually
all Americans were Christian of some sort, although it took the horrors of almost
two centuries of European conflict to get to even this point.
The modern Western understanding of
religion succeeds in the early decades of the United States, but not because
Americans are rugged religious individualists, each eager to go her or his own
way. It succeeds because most of them
are Christians, especially English-speaking white Protestants, who continue to
share so much in common despite the disagreements that divide their churches.
It is best that I have no comment to any of this….
Conclusion
We look at the founding documents as establishing some form
of common culture: “America is an idea,” we are often told. This is not correct. The founding documents presupposed a common culture; it was this common culture that was
the foundation for the ideas in the documents.
What happens to the ideas in the documents when even the
remnants of this common culture are lost?
Are the documents any longer of functional use, or are they merely
museum pieces? And then what?
You should listen to Fr Thomas Hopko’s magnificent lecture, The Abolition of Man in which, this topic is covered in amazing detail. Gripping.
ReplyDeleteIf you are not a jesuit, you are an acolyte and really doing a great job of carrying water for them.
ReplyDelete"What happens to the ideas in the documents when even the remnants of this common culture are lost? Are the documents any longer of functional use, or are they merely museum pieces? And then what?"
ReplyDeleteThe label on the bottle of Champagne says it is Champagne, but slowly it has been filled with piss. I hear all the time, "it is unconstitutional" or that the "SCOTUS ruled it is constitutional."
Then what? We continue drinking what is the bottle and call it Champagne.
Bionic, I’ve read your blog posts on religion with alacrity. As mentioned before, I’m not a believer, and as far as I can recall even as a youngster I was skeptical about such a thing as a supreme being.
ReplyDeleteHowever, reading your discussions on the ideas presented in various writings by religious scholars, I’m beginning to think that even if one is not a believer, it is likely a good idea to assume there is indeed a supreme being and proceed with life accordingly.
I was reared in the Christian tradition, which as you’ve suggested, most Americans were before mid-20th century. It’s a tradition I can enthusiastically support because if people behave as they are instructed by this tradition, the result will predictably promote peace and benevolence toward our fellows more than the inexorable slide into chaos we are witnessing in the present day.
The above isn’t to say I don’t appreciate the impact of political squabbling on the body politic, which is not only substantial, but may be directly related to such “slide into chaos.” Nor do I overlook that humans, in spite of their better impulses, will often enough degenerate into barbaric behavior. Peg
Isaac Newton may or may not have been a deists, though deists may have been of less impersonal that we think today. Ben Franklin suggested an on-your-knees prayer meeting in that secret convention for intervention by God in their impasse. Smithsonian now hides (or lost) a once-famous painting depicting it.
ReplyDeleteAnd the first act of the new Congress was to thank God for his divine intervention.
As for Isaac Newton, and in the same sentence about deists and neglecting scripture?! Wow. Isaac Newton wrote more about the Bible than he did science and math! He wrote about prophecy a lot. And predicted from it that man would invent >70 mph transportation before the Second Coming.
Freedom from the secular co-Regency of Church and state, Pope and King, of course unleashed ugly stuff with the good.
The Puritans came to America to practice their religion without interference. There was strong prejudice against Catholics from the get go. However, as Timothy Gordon states repeatedly in his recent book Catholic Republic; Why America Will Perish Without Rome, "America is the republic wired Catholic, labeled Protestant, and currently functioning secular." The European religious wars terrorized many into silence- hence the Crypto-Catholicism that enabled liberty to flourish in the light of natural law in America. Without it we are doomed.
ReplyDelete