As we saw in the previous posting in this series, despite “Branch
Theory” — the idea that the Anglo-Catholic, Roman Catholic, and Eastern
Orthodox Churches are all part of the larger Catholic Church — there was more
dividing the Anglican Church from the Catholic Church than a matter of mere
politics. From its founding by Henry VIII Tudor, the man-centered Church of
England was necessarily in direct conflict with the God-centered Catholic
Church, and (at least in the eyes of G.K.
Chesterton, Msgr. Ronald Knox, and Msgr. Robert Hugh Benson) this orientation was leading the
Anglican Church away from Christianity altogether.
This caused great anguish to Chesterton, Knox, and Benson,
something that made all three view conversion to Catholicism as a release,
despite many pleasant associations, even love for the Anglican Church.
Admittedly,
the effect of the change was less for Chesterton; his anguish (“a great deal of
agony of mind”) was somewhat ameliorated by having become a Christian at all. (Vide
Maisie Ward, Gilbert Keith Chesterton. New York: Sheed and Ward, 1943, 159-160, 282,
455-459.)
The anguish, however, was quite real. Evelyn Waugh gave the impression that Knox simply avoided discussion of this period in his life, while Benson grew to loathe his first published work, The Light Invisible (1903) because it reminded him of a time in his life when indecision about the situation nearly paralyzed him. Chesterton, however (probably due to less “agony of mind”), wrote a book about it, The Catholic Church and Conversion (1926).
The anguish, however, was quite real. Evelyn Waugh gave the impression that Knox simply avoided discussion of this period in his life, while Benson grew to loathe his first published work, The Light Invisible (1903) because it reminded him of a time in his life when indecision about the situation nearly paralyzed him. Chesterton, however (probably due to less “agony of mind”), wrote a book about it, The Catholic Church and Conversion (1926).
What caused such revulsion of feeling was the fact that a
man-centered faith is, ultimately, irreconcilable with belief in God. This was something that Sheen stressed from
the very beginning, but which seems to have been honed to a fine point by his
association with Knox and Chesterton.
Fulton Sheen: religion must be God-centered. |
Something was missing from Anglo-Catholicism, and it seemed
to Knox to be a true sense of the sacred, a genuine sacramentalism underpinning
all the outward show and practice of religion.
Nor could service to humanity substitute for this, however much good —
or ill — it managed to do; service to man, laudable and even mandatory, in no
way replaces service to God. Perhaps this
conflict was best illustrated by Waugh’s explanation of why Knox believed he (Knox) was
not suited for the role of Anglican army chaplain in the First World War:
“He never doubted that he was
precluded from bearing arms, nor did he think it possible that he would be
accepted as a chaplain. Maurice Child’s [an Anglo-Catholic friend of Knox
— ed.] application was refused on the
grounds, it was said, that in his interview with the Chaplain-General he was
asked what he would do for a dying man, and answered: ‘Hear his confession and
give him absolution.’ The correct answer
was ‘Give him a cigarette and take any last message he may have for his
family.’” (Waugh, Ronald Knox, op. cit., 135.)
Now
for why all of this talk of religious politics and theology is important. Many converts to Catholicism from the
Anglican or other non-continental Protestant tradition, as well as those
influenced by a cursory or superficial understanding of Chesterton’s real goal
in converting to Catholicism, fail to realize the fundamental difference
between the Anglican Church and the Catholic Church. They easily fall victim to the very thing that
Chesterton, Knox, and Sheen opposed, believing it to be the essence of Catholic
social teaching and revelation. Seeing
only a political quarrel between Anglo-Catholicism and Roman Catholicism, they
fail to grasp the very real problem that exists with the fundamental assumption
of all who break the unity of the Universal Church: the focus on man instead of
God, and the consequent shift in the basis of the natural law from the
Intellect to the Will.
Pius XI: social teaching misunderstood. |
Nor is this restricted to converts. Some who have been Catholic from birth, even
clergy (including influential members of the hierarchy), are among those who have
allowed themselves to be duped by the promises of socialism and the allure of
New Age thought. As a case in point, the
U.S. bishops’ 1986 pastoral on the economy, Economic
Justice for All, makes approving references to E.F. Schumacher’s Fabian
socialist tract, Small is Beautiful
(1973), and Msgr. John A. Ryan’s 346-page sophistry, A Living Wage (1906). At the same time, the pastoral exhibits a complete
misunderstanding of Pius XI’s social doctrine as analyzed by Father William
Ferree — even as it cited Ferree's work.
This reversal of the roles of God and man — and the whole
“Anglo v. Roman” question — was also the issue with what Chesterton, Knox,
Sheen, and Mortimer Adler (and others — the list gets too long to give every
time we refer to it) saw as the Platonist revolt against Aristotle and the
reversal of our “idea of ideas.” That is,
for Aristotle and Aquinas, people use their intellect and their reason applied
to the things of the world to abstract — to form general ideas derived from
particular instances and observations.
The general (the abstraction) does not exist independent of the
particular.
The danger, of course, is that some people will reject the
general because it is dependent on the particular. They will claim that the general either has
no objective existence because each person’s perception of ideas is necessarily
subjective, or that the general does not exist at all. This is individualism, the basis of
capitalism.
Plato: ideas are independent of the intellect. |
By the way, illustrating the difficulty of translating
difficult concepts from another language, Sheen made the same argument in Religion Without God. Sheen, however, said that ideas are
conceived, but do not exist, where Adler said that ideas exist, but are not
real — yet they were both saying the same thing! (This could be a good reason to learn the
original Latin of Aquinas.)
As Adler explained,
“More than a full measure of
reality, the world of ideas had for [Plato] a superior grade of reality. The physical things that we perceive through
our senses come into being and pass away and they are continually in flux,
changing in one way or another. They
have no permanence. But though we may
change our minds about the ideas we think about, they themselves are not subject
to change. . . . The world of changing physical things is thus for Plato a mere
shadow of the much more real world of ideas.
When we pass from the realm of sense experience to the realm of thought,
we ascend to a higher reality, for we have turned from things that have no
enduring existence to enduring and unchanging (Plato would say ‘eternal’)
objects of thought — ideas.” (Mortimer
J. Adler, Six Great Ideas. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc.,
1981, 8.)
Adler: commitment to common sense. |
To understand, then, why Sheen opposed socialism so strongly
it is only necessary to apply common sense to the question — and to accept that
which Sheen, as well as Chesterton and Knox accepted as a matter of course: Aristotelian-Thomism
and the principles of reason illuminated and guided by faith, and that God, not man, is at the center. As Adler concluded his comments on Plato,
distinguishing reality from existence (or existence from conception, as Sheen
had it),
“For those of us who cannot
shuck off our commitment to common sense, Plato goes too far in attributing
reality to ideas, and much too far in exalting their reality over the reality
of sensible phenomena — the reality of the ever-changing world we experience
through our senses. We do not hesitate
to reject Plato’s theory of ideas, and declare him wrong in attributing reality
to ideas as well as to physical things, and a superior reality at that. For us commonsense fellows, it is the world
of ideas that is comparatively shadowy as compared with the tangible, visible,
audible world of things that press on us from all sides.” (Adler, Six Great Ideas, op. cit., 8-9.)
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