Sunday, November 25, 2012

Neil Steinberg has been at it again.

Resisting aggressive secularism promoted in the world

Father Robert Barron

It was with barely concealed delight that Chicago Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg conveyed the findings of the recent Pew Forum survey that the “nones,” those who claim no particular religious affiliation, are sharply on the rise in America. Moreover, he crowed, the survey revealed that a disproportionate number of young people placed themselves firmly in the “none” camp, thus indicating that religion’s decline would only accelerate in the years to come. Taking these findings as a starting point, Steinberg then delivered himself of an anti-religion screed that was, even for him, remarkable in its vitriol and lack of nuance.
Central to Steinberg’s argument is that the “virus” of freedom, which the founding fathers planted in the body politic long ago, has spread to the point that it now threatens religion itself. Finally, he says, people have the courage to throw off the shackles of “arbitrary rules and arcane liturgies” and join the society of free-thinking moderns.
There are two fundamental problems here. First, like so many of his secularist colleagues, Steinberg conveniently forgets that the political liberty he rightly praises is predicated inescapably upon religious assumptions. The keen sense that each human being is the subject of rights and dignity is grounded in the antecedent conviction that that dignity and those rights come from God and hence have an absolute sanction. As Thomas Jefferson put it rather memorably, “All men are created equal … and are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”
If you want to see what happens to freedom and human rights when God is removed from the picture, consult both ancient aristocratic societies and modern totalitarian regimes. Steinberg exults that the “freedom virus” conduced toward the liberation of blacks in America, but he seems utterly to have forgotten that both the abolitionist movement in the 19th century and the civil rights movement in the 20th were led by passionately believing Christians, who advocated for liberty precisely because of their religious beliefs, not despite them.
The second problem is that Steinberg assumes that his position — modern, secularist liberalism — is not itself sectarian, peculiar and indeed marked by its own “arbitrary rules and arcane liturgies.” This is a difficulty that any cultural analyst tends to have, but modern liberals seem especially susceptible to it, namely, the assumption that their own culture isn’t really a culture at all but just “the way things are supposed to be.”
The form of life that came up out of the European Enlightenment of the 18th century — empirical, scientific, subjectivist, rationalist, anti-traditionalist — strikes modern secularists as just identical to sweet reason and hence they feel that anyone who fails to conform to it is operating “irrationally” or is in thrall to some strange “superstition.”
Jurgen Habermas, one of the leading philosophers in the world, advocates (admittedly at a higher level of sophistication) the position staked out by Steinberg. He argues, accordingly, that the only people who should be allowed around the table of political discussion in contemporary societies are those who accept the presumptions of the Enlightenment. Thus religious people, representing some of the most ancient intellectual traditions in the West and relying on the work of such geniuses as St. Paul, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, John Henry Newman, John Wesley, and G.K. Chesterton would not be allowed at Habermas’s table. Nor for that matter would William Lloyd Garrison, Martin Luther King, Desmond Tutu or Mohandas Gandhi. One wonders how neither Habermas nor Steinberg can see that the Enlightenment view, though obviously valuable, is hardly identical to Reason tout court.
Utterly congruent with this idolatry of the Enlightenment is Steinberg’s sneering relegation of religion to the arena of hobbies and harmless avocations: “Life is a long time … and you have to fill it somehow, and adhering to the various tenets of Lutheranism or Baptism or Seventh Day Adventism … is not inherently a worse use of your time than, oh, knitting colorful afghans or playing John Madden Football or anything else.”
Though the Christian tradition essentially created the culture of the West, though it invented the university system, and though it gave rise to Dante’s Divine Comedy, Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae, Chartres Cathedral, the Sistine Chapel ceiling, Bach’s cantatas, and the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and T.S. Eliot, it is, according to Mr. Steinberg, the intellectual equivalent of knitting an afghan! Trust me when I tell you that whatever matrix of thought produced that conclusion ain’t identical to “sweet reason.” It is in fact something peculiar and sectarian indeed.
The relegation of religion to the private realm is, of course, an aggressive move, for it is designed to exclude religious people from the political and cultural conversation. Basically, Habermas and Steinberg and their fellows are saying to religious believers, “While you play at your little hobbies, we rationalists will take care of serious matters.”
In the face of this act of violence, believers should engage in non-violent resistance, entering the public arena with the language of the Bible and the great tradition on their lips, as did our forebears Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King. Pace the secular ideologues, it is altogether possible for religious people — especially those who believe in the divine Logos — to have a logical conversation.
Barron is the rector and president of the University of St. Mary of the Lake/ Mundelein Seminary. For more of his writings visit www.wordonfire.org.

13 comments:

  1. Anonymous11/25/2012

    These past four years of destruction of American traditionalism by Obama has made me realize that right now at least, we are losing the war for people's minds. The media, the popular culture, (hollywood, Tv, magazines, music) HATE our guts - period ! They are out to malign traditionalists, Republicans, religious people, business people, all who they consider to be evil)
    What we must do :
    TEACH: - our children and those around us WHY we believe what we believe. And if you do not know how to articulate it - LEARN !
    Also, teach - literally. We need to infiltrate the institutions held hostage by America hating leftists. Encourage our kids to become teachers - or become one yourself as a second career. Yeah it will be hard - too bad.
    Media: We need to buy into or create new media that will compete with the old media. Encourage neighbors to try a web site like Breitbart or Drudge Report. Also, become members of the media. We must beat back their lies but it will not happen overnight! It is time to FIGHT, not retreat !!
    JOIN Church groups - yeah actually take the time to do these things. If you are not willing to put your money and or your time to fix the downward path our country is on - then stop complaining! You are the solution

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  2. Anonymous11/25/2012

    Heard Mr. Steinberg sing about us....
    Heard old Neil put us down....

    Well I hope Neil Steinberg will remember....
    A religious man don't need him around..anyhow

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  3. Anonymous11/25/2012

    Nobody cares what Steinberg thinks. Nobody and no one.

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  4. Anonymous11/25/2012

    Wifebeater.

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  5. Anonymous11/25/2012

    Fr. Barron was recommended by Cardinal George to write and produce the CATHOLICISM series that in my view deserves recognition. He clearly demonstrates the powerful influence of the church down thru the ages that will assure the faithful the church's continued prominence in the world in spite of powerful negative influences. Evil forces led by exiled German Jewish academics going back 70 years have worked to de Christianize American culture. Providence will prevail and the Frankfurt School will perish.

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  6. Anonymous11/25/2012

    I must admit, Steinberg's anti Christian viewpoints are something. Outright mean spirited.

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  7. Anonymous11/25/2012

    He sure hates Catholics ! But that is okay for Chicago Tribune to have an anti-Catholic bigot on their writing staff - in one of the largest Catholic Archdiocese in America..

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  8. Anonymous11/26/2012

    He writes for the Suntimes. Anyway, maybe we should talk about a boycott of the paper until he cleans up his act.

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    1. Anonymous11/26/2012

      Oh yeah right...i forgot....I dropped all subscriptions after they endorsed ODumbo....rarely read the wife beater column anyhow.

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  9. I'm sure some Enlightment folk in the 18th century thought religion would be a thing of the past in the 20th century.

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  10. Anonymous11/26/2012

    This is the society we live in today. What we lack in morals can be made up for with prescriptions. Central planning and planned parenthood. 95% of the 19th ward voted for it.

    Teens Need Contraception Prescriptions in Hand, U.S. Doctors Say
    http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-11-26/teens-need-contraception-prescriptions-in-hand-u-dot-s-dot-doctors-say

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  11. Anonymous11/26/2012

    Thou shalt not beat thy wife.....oh wait that is just religious mumbo jumbo...never mind

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  12. Anonymous11/26/2012

    Neil must have taken the same journalism ethics course that Bob Greene took.

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