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Saturday, November 3, 2018

Deracinated Conservatives

Conservatism has many meanings, the most arrant being the definition derived from the word itself, that certain things, ideas, and institutions are worth conserving in the vicissitudes of change that flow through life. The difficulty conservatives often face, regardless of their stripes, is that more often than not they are trying to keep scattered items of the past without believing in anything specific that bears down on contemporary issues. In short, conservatives are often too practical about what they want to keep and not innately idealistic enough about a vision for society as it exists now.

There are rare exceptions to this lamentable conservatism. American conservatism was successful in the late 20th century on the heels of an idealistic base built by William Buckley, Russell Kirk, Whitaker Chambers etc. They slowly built an alliance over the course of a generation that capture the presidency and the Congress for the following generation, an opportunity which the custodians of those institutions occasionally made good use of, but not always.

Another type of conservative exists, too. This type is perhaps the rarest and also the most curious kind of a conservative, the kind that wishes to preserve things which they themselves do not believe or make use of, yet they heartfeltly appreciate these ideas and institutions much more than even their own devotees do. An earlier example of this may have been George Santayana, a Spaniard raised on the values of old world Catholicism who, in the age of Darwin and progressive eugencists, embraced Greek materialism with a modern twist. To the end he lived in a monastery and called himself an "aethetic Catholic", defending the concept of natural aristocracy and choice against determinism and a coldly evolving society, ideas which reflected his own life choices more than his beliefs.

A more modern example would be Jordan Peterson, whose surging popularity in the last year descends from his twin talents for calm responses to angry questions and his non-dogmatic, personal way of addressing actual problems people face in life. Peterson routinely expresses positive views about masculinity in the age of #MeToo, religion in a post-religious time, and stable households with a mother and father when the "nuclear family" is more or less the exception. For all his contributions and good points, Peterson is one of these deracinated conservatives, a proponent of "Western Civilization", what was once called Christendom, but still falls into the occasional trap of expounding traditional values because they are valuable, not because they are right. Like Santayana and the Adams brothers decades ago, Peterson's secularism allows him to see the Church, the Christian mindset, the Christian family, suffering, and the Genesis origin story as things of importance and things to be preferred to this day's alternative, but he himself does not hold them.

In the age of Bergoglio I see in my own parish, on this blog, and across the internet various people falling into this sort of exceptional conservatism, trying so very hard to retain things they can while their own relation to those things is denuded. Nature abhors a vacuum, and what is often left in the gap of the person is a lingering bitterness that tends towards a vacillating belief. This is not the age to be a conservative, much less this sort of deracinated conservative that clings to things which no longer "work" for them.

Supposedly there was a synod of some sort in Rome recently about young people. I have no idea what they discussed and I absolutely do not care. At all. Far from burying our heads in the sand, Catholics today must do whatever keeps their heads clear and close to the Church, the continuing presence of Christ on earth. That doesn't mean saying prayers; it means prayer, which is something much harder. For this individual, staying close to the Church means calmly and prudently saying the Office, making time to read the New Testament or a Church Father daily, and keeping an equilibrated approach to the turbulence of life. It also means steering clear of political views of the Church or the temptation of ideology, which thwarted any great love of the Liturgy until I came upon the Eastern Churches (and I am a better Roman for it).

This is the challenge for Catholics today, as my co-writer alluded to last month, to find a way to come out of our distractions intact. We must build upon the corner-stones of the faith rather than grasp with white knuckles at what we hope we will be permitted to keep.

8 comments:

  1. The nonsense can be bracing though. One realises that the institutional church (apart from in its barest Apostolic bones, the threefold order and the sacraments) in its concrete expression is mostly silly nonsense that one can ignore; and seeing ultramontanism played out ad absurdam helps to strip away residual respect for the modern institution of the papacy and the Vatican, and to reduce one's estimation of its real purpose to the simple transmission of Apostolic faith (feed my lambs). In this situation, what teaching role do the hierarchy have when you & I know that their teaching isn't rooted in the Bible, the Fathers and any theology worth the name?

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    1. Timothy,

      I empathize with your point, but the nonsense does not help us. An Oratorian once remarked to me that liberalism is sterile, both in that its ideas are distasteful to the point no one knowingly wants them and that they are willing to thwart the generation of additional people like them as far as birth. The best we can do in such a case, like the great Church reformers before us, is to plant stronger roots that prove the test of time and will outlast them.

      An Orthodox friend of mine once remarked that the hierarchy (speaking of his Church and mine) seems to practice a de facto atheism. While it's true it also doesn't help us in our desire to live with Christ. The Eastern and Western hierarchies won't be fixed by passive belief, but there is also nothing we can realistically do about them right now other than ignore them when they refuse to teach the truth.

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    2. When trads say things like this (Tim), it really betrays how they're basically liberal/Protestant in mindset/approach to matters, just with a personal taste for different stuff.

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    3. jem,

      I think you will find that remarks like Mr Graham's are motivated by an unsettled reaction to the current state of affairs and a desire to have a better Church for people, not anger that things do conform to one's personal taste. You may also find that the difference between a [genuinely] rad trad and a liberal protestant is not so much taste as much as that they don't hold any beliefs in common.

      If you wish to react to other readers' remarks you may do so prudently and respectfully, but Mr Graham has been a civil reader and deserves according respect.

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  2. I can take it & am not offended...

    What I mean to say (when I say the nonsense is bracing) is that there were things that disturbed me in JP II's teaching and actions, for example, and certain sins haven't been called by their name for a long time. But one previously filtered out one's disquiet reassuring oneself that because the encyclicals weren't that bad, things weren't that bad in the hierarchy generally. Now that the Bergoglian cat is out of the bag, people generally are rightly taking a much more critical attitude to what they hear from bishops etc. & are sifting what they read and nourishing themselves from Apostolic truth directly.

    Au contraire, Jem, one must discern the truth and submit oneself to it, especially when the hierarchy aren't teaching it. It won't do to blanket label criticism "a liberal mindset" and "personal taste" when the hierarchy are advocating liberal values and personal taste in line with the world's attack on the Christian laity / family at present. I could give examples but this is a comment section on someone else's blog.

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  3. Timothy touches on an important point.
    We/traditionalists (of whatever sort) are really and honestly not listening to the present magisterium. We will say that that isn't even magisterium in the first place because they don't teach the right doctrine. They're right when we decide they are, and same goes when they're wrong. We have learnt our stuff from the internet, and we test what they say against what we know and believe. We will proclaim them good teachers when they conform to what we believe, but that means that they still aren't our teachers.

    Modern hierarchy will say: "This and this is binding, and this and that is magisterium.", and we will say: "No, it's not.".

    We secretly pray: "Lord, send us good pastors, but by "good" we mean those who are good according to our measure.".
    I'm not condemning those notions, but i'm just being frank about them.

    The hierarchy is generally fallible, yes. So what do we do then? Whom do we follow? The Tradition? The hierarchy will say: "We're the interpreter of what Tradition is or isn't.".

    What is even the purpose of the magisterium in the information age? Not just the information age, but in any age when you can learn from the sources themselves?

    Can we even ever be sure about what is the truth of the Divine Revelation? Patrick Sheridan will surely say that his research has, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, led him to the Orthodox Church.
    Some converts from the Orthodoxy and Anglicanism or whatever to Catholicism will say the same. They will attribute the conclusions of their own research to the Holy Spirit.

    We can't test that. Maybe we'll sit at the table and see which Church has all its claims in line with the Apostolic Faith (since all claim that), and then again, that will be our research. Two people will look at the same biblical or patristic text and say that it confirms their respective claims which are mutually contradictory and they will not be able to convince one another (and they will possibly accuse one another that their conclusions are diabolically inspired).

    And what do we do then?

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    1. Marko, this an epistemological question, don't you think? In short, an individual may react or repel (knowingly or unknowingly) from God's grace and will have to answer for that. Anything beyond such a pithy answer would require we move to a philosophy seminar rather than a comment section on a blog with modest readership.

      To answer the larger question about the laxity of the hierarchy of the Apostolic Churches, one need not forget that during the Arian, iconoclastic, and Protestant crises we had a fair number of outright heretical bishops, a great majority interested in keeping whatever peace was available, and maybe the odd cleric or two interested in the truth. What kept the faith all that time was the fierce prejudice of the faithful, not the clergy, whose duty (which is not the same as automated act) is to preserve the faith for *us*. I rather like Fr Hunwicke's characterization of Magisterial teaching as something largely suspended by modern clergy, not necessarily something that has disappeared. The power to transmit the Sacraments may not reside with us, but the power to maintain our own faith and that of others persists.

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  4. From one perspective the first or primary priest in the Church Militant is the Pope, followed by the ordained bishops and priests under him. But from another perspective the first or primary priest is the father (together with the mother) of the Christian household. The decadence of the ordained priesthood coincides with the decadence of the patriarchal family, causing mutual distrust and a whole bunch of tricks to cover up this same distrust. From the perspective of the laity the corruption of the priesthood only forces us to train ourselves and our children in doctrine and piety, which is actually how it is supposed to be, seeing as the parish priest is meant to minister to the families and support the fathers in their religious work, not the families ministering to a self-serving priest. Meanwhile, the decadence of the family forces the priest of good-will to concentrate more on his responsibilities to God, which are his primary responsibilities. So what we really have is an opportunity, so that when the laity can see the priest is dedicated foremost to God, and the priest can see the people are dedicated foremost to the religious upbringing of their children, their mutual respect will be restored. The alternative is that the priests abuse their authority to cover up their lack of godliness, and the people use the ministration of the priest to cover up their own neglect of religion, both conspiring to swindle God and pull the wool over His eyes.

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