Posted on 07/27/2002 6:37:13 PM PDT by JMJ333
History and the Catholic Church by Jeffrey Rubin
Jeffrey Rubin, editor of the Conservative Book Club, interviews H.W. Crocker III, author of the LRC bestseller, Triumph: The Power and the Glory of the Catholic Church: A 2,000-Year History (Prima/Forum, 2002, $29.95)
Q. Why the title? I don't know many Catholics who are feeling triumphant right now except, perhaps, liberals who think that recent scandals will force more of the changes they've been advocating.
A: History tells us that the liberals will be disappointed; just as they have been disappointed by the failure of the Reformation, Revolution, Statism, and Secularism to eradicate the Church. For 2,000 years the gates of Hell have not prevailed and they will not. The Church militant will become the Church triumphant. And thats true with this latest round of sex scandals, too.
Q. How so?
A: Because the Vatican knows that if this scandal were reported accurately the headlines would read: Church Experience with Homosexual Priests Confirms Boy Scout Fears. Thats why the Vatican has already directed the American Church to purge itself of homosexuals. And thats why next on the chopping block will be the morally lax liberalism that allowed this happen. So the inevitable long-term result will be a rejuvenated, more conservative Church full of orthodox celibate priests exactly the reverse of what the media is predicting. But the media is too blinkered by liberal prejudice and superficiality to understand this.
Q. Near the end of the book you quote Cardinal Newman's remark that "to be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant." That's a key theme in the book, which constitutes a kind of "argument from history" for the Faith. Can you expand on that?
A: Newman goes even farther, saying that Protestantism understands this, which is why it created a religion based solely on the Bible. I think Newman is absolutely right. The argument from history is virtually irrefutable it is in fact what brought Newman into the Church. In the book, I rely heavily on secular and even liberal sources to make the case not only to Catholic readers, but to Protestants and secularists as well that objective history is Catholic history. Indeed, we now know for a fact from secular historians that the black legends of the Church, are just that: myths. Triumph does a lot of myth-busting: about the Spanish Inquisition, about the Renaissance popes .
Q. Lets stop there for a minute. Many Catholic historians have seen the Renaissance as the tipping point into secularization. Yet youre a fan of the Renaissance, and even of the Renaissance popes.
A: Yes. When it comes to the debate between Alexander VI and Savonarola or between Pope Leo X and Luther, I happily take the ultramontane position. I see the Renaissance as the culmination of the Churchs arduous rebuilding effort after the fall of Rome. Catholicism is naturally the religion of high civilization, of art, learning, and beauty, and of understanding that everythings not in the Bible and that the classical world had virtues worth preserving and building on. St. Augustine recognized that pagan Rome had great virtues. Dantes guide in the Divine Comedy is the pagan poet Virgil. Aquinas built on Aristotle. The Church incorporates everything. It truly is universal, and that is one of its great glories.
Q. You also show affection for some of the barbarians.
A. Well, yes, I do think that the Christianized-barbarian West had many redeeming qualities. I do like the Heliand, the Saxon New Testament its a sort of The Bible Meets Beowulf. I admire the vigor, the loyalty, and the rough-hewn honor of these tribes. It was the Churchs genius to marry their virtues with the virtues of high Roman civilization and incorporate both within the Church, consecrating formerly barbarian swords for Christian ends, reconciling barbarian concepts of honor and loyalty with Catholic concepts of faith and fidelity. In the book, I refer to the Dark Age newly Catholic tribes as Bikers for the Bishop of Rome. I find them much better company than the perfervid, oft-schismatic Eastern church
Q. Indeed, your book is very western, very Roman Eurocentric, the multiculturalists might say.
A. Yes, Triumph has been compared to the works of Hilaire Belloc the Belloc who said that Europe is the faith and the faith is Europe. No institution has had a great shaping influence on the Western world than has the Catholic Church. And I happen to think that the West is a great thing. In fact, the end of the book is a call for the Catholic West to rise again. Ive also come to realize that though I didnt see the movie Gladiator until after Id finished writing Triumph that Triumph really is the history of the Catholic Church as seen through the eyes of that movies hero, Maximus. Like Maximus, Triumph upholds Rome as the light. And like Maximus, the book is very martially minded. Triumph is probably the only Catholic history youll find with five or so books in the bibliography devoted to the French Foreign Legion a great Catholic institution.
Q. You have no qualms about being a Crusader.
A. No. Pat Buchanan has talked about the milquetoast Christianity we have on offer today. Well Triumph is the pure, unadulterated fighting faith. In hoc signo vinces is the spirit of the book. Constantine, the Crusades, the Monastic Military Orders, the Conquistadors when Christendom was Christendom it rightly turned swords on the faiths behalf, just as Peter had leapt for his scabbard to defend his Lord. It was the Church that gave us chivalry, turning barbarian high spirits to useful ends. It was one of the great historic tragedies of Reformation Protestantism that it broke this Church check and guide on the martial spirit by saying that the power of the state was scriptural and that the power of the Church was not.
That was a terrible regression. It sanctified the idea that might makes right, and the idea that the Church was of marginal importance to society, civilization, and politics. It undid the work of centuries. Where once the Roman emperor, commander of all Romes legions, could be forced to do penance by the Bishop of Milan, as the Emperor Theodosius was compelled to do by St. Ambrose, after the Reformation the Churchs check on state power was abolished. If any institution was not surprised by the twentieth century being a century of genocide and two world wars, it was the Church. The Church predicted that this was the path that was being laid by the Reformation, Revolution, Liberalism, Secularism, and Statism, all of which inevitably followed one after the other, as the Church saw they would.
Q. Theres not a lot of apologizing in your book for the sins of the Church.
A. I think theres plenty of criticism where criticism is called for. I think the popes have not always been as politically astute as would have been good for the faith. Indeed, I charge the papacy with wrongly fearing the power of the Holy Roman Empire more than the Protestants whom the empire was at the brink of bringing to heel. But the fact is that this flood of books with titles like Papal Sin, Hitlers Pope, and worse to come, all alleging institutional anti-Semitism and a variety of other crimes against the Church are just more black legend mythologizing that needs to be called to task.
The Church rarely responds to its critics. Triumph is meant to be that response because the truth is on our side. And these myths take pernicious root. How many people have any idea that the Spanish Inquisition was responsible for executing fewer people per year, on an average year, than the state of Texas and that it was among the most lenient and fair-minded courts of its time? Thats established secular history now. But Im sure to most everyone, the words Spanish Inquisition still dredge up images of horror beyond compare. Just as now the word priest is immediately linked to pedophile when we know, as far as we have factual data, that Catholic priests are no more likely in fact, they are probably less likely to be pedophiles than anyone else.
And then theres the smear campaign against Pope Pius XII, which would be absurd if it werent so evil trying to erase the testimony of the Jews who survived the Holocaust and praised Pope Pius XII. And its all done for partisan political ends. The Communists did that of course; they began this big lie about Pius XII. Now its liberals who have picked up Voltaires battle standard of ecrasez linfame and made Pius one of their targets. But as I point out in the book, no institution save the Allied Armies rescued more Jews during the Second World War than did the Catholic Church. Pope Pius XII had a long history of battling the Nazis, going back at least to 1921. But by the twentieth century of course, the Church didnt have armies of its own to command any more, unless one counts the Swiss Guards who were rather weak on heavy weapons, tanks, and air support.
The really extraordinary thing is that if you talk to most people about Catholic history, this is what you get a lot of unexamined, scandal buzzwords: Hitlers Pope, deal-cutters with Mussolini; sexual depravity in monasteries and nunneries; decadent Renaissance popes; the Spanish Inquisition; the sacking of Constantinople; and so on. The Church, to its credit, has never tried to deny bloody history it doesnt opt out of history the way Protestantism does; and it doesnt nurture historical grudges like the Eastern Orthodox. The Church accepts that it operates in a sinful world with fallible human beings. But what is always missing among the buzzword droppers is any sense of historical context or understanding that would lead a fair-minded observer to see that in many cases the charges leveled against various aspects of Church history are sheer propaganda or even the very reverse of the truth.
It might be too much to hope for, given the closing of the American mind, but I do hope that Triumph will remind Catholics just how great the Churchs gifts to the world have been. And I do sincerely hope that it will bring fallen away Catholics back to the fold and bring many others now outside into full communion with the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church of the Creed. A tall order, I know. But if I have succeeded as I hope I have in giving Catholics the first affirmative, accessible, one volume history of their Church in at least fifty years . Well, I like to think that a drought has been ended, and that Triumph might bring refreshing water to those thirsting after righteousness. Or at least give them an entertaining read, with a bit of humor between the battles. Ill settle for either.
(Excerpted from an interview that appeared in the April 18, 2002, issue of The Wanderer.)
Yes!!!! Thank the Lord too! And fie on Puritans who are afraid of culture, philosophy, art (including STATUES) and anything remotely "pagan." What did Chesterton say? The Catholic Church is like a jug of wine, a good steak a fine cigar. Something like that. I could never be a Protestant. Not to offend, really. It is NOT the main reason I could not be one, but I just could never be a Protestant because it's too plain!! Not that Protestants cannot become very holy people. But is so plain!!! I like complexity and variety. I like it that the RCC has not been scubbed clean of culture and color and mystery. Maybe it is because I am part Italian that I could never feel at home in a bible belt Protestant Church. As I said, no offense to anyone. I guess it is what you are used to.
And the Protestants burned witches too! That was the way it was back then.
Intellect and the Mass
A thinking man can think himself deeper and deeper into Catholicism . . . conversion is the beginning of an active, fruitful, progressive and even adventurous life of the intellect . . . To exalt the Mass is to enter into a magnificent world of metaphysical ideas, illuminating all the relations of matter and mind, of flesh and spirit, of the most impersonal abstractions as well as the most personal affections. To set out to belittle and minimise the Mass, by talking ephemeral back-chat about what it had in common with Mithras or the Mysteries, is to be in altogether a more petty and pedantic mood; not only lower than Catholicism but lower even than Mithraism . . . It is precisely the dogmas that are living, that are inspiring, that are intellectually interesting. {The Thing, NY: Sheed & Ward, 1929, 212-213}
I've been reading it in bits and pieces.
Its a great, unapologetic romp through Catholic history, reminiscent in its bellicose Catholicity to the historical tales of Hillaire Belloc.
I can't recommend it highly enough.
Ain't it the truth? I can't get over how many NC's think that a "rite" as in a "ritural" as in something as innocent as making the sign of the cross over yourself with holy water is sooooo terrible. What is THAT all about? What in the heck is wrong with making the sign of the cross? As long as live, I will never understand this kind of thinking. I suppose it is because they think of it as superstitous. But to me what IS superstitious is to believe that making the sign of the cross is superstitious. And candles. What in the world is wrong with having candles in a church? What is wrong with lighting a candle and saying a prayer? When you go into a Catholic church and you see the lit candles, it shows that people have been there praying. I think that is wonderful! Why? Why? Do NC's see that as something undesirable? I'll never understand it and it bugs me. I wish it did not but it does. Some of the most innocent things are seen as something bad. It's a sad thing really. I guess it is what you are used to. That's the only answer I can come up with. I suppose if I was not used to it, I would feel as they do. I don't know.
Oh, to see this line in print...
Church Experience with Homosexual Priests Confirms Boy Scout Fears.
I fear that would take an act of God for that to happen. heh.
And the tract that gave the go ahead was entitled, Against the Murderous and Rapacious Hordes of the Peasants. Herr Luther, what do you really think about the peasants? LOL.
;-)
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