The Catholic Thing
COLUMNS
Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Congregationalists All?
Something there is in America that works to convert all Protestant churches
into Congregational Churches. Federal judge Michael McConnell began his
career a scholar on religion and the Constitution, and he anticipated that this
trend would eventually begin to affect the Catholic Church as well. The irony
was that the understanding at work in transforming the churches had virtually
nothing to do with the Constitution’s religion clauses. The forces that were
separating Church and State, and putting ecclesial authority into the hands of
local congregations, were being powered by something, rather, in the
American regime itself. At the root of everything was a people confident in
their authority to cast votes on all species of things.
In his notable book, The Garden and the Wilderness, Mark DeWolfe
Howe showed that the forces reshaping the churches were at work in states
as religiously different as Massachusetts, New York, and South
Carolina. Running back to the seventeenth century, virtually all polities in
America provided for the public funding of churches, along with measures,
more or less severe, to make attendance compulsory and settle, with
authority, the churches that were favored. The 1778 Constitution of South
Carolina was quite unequivocal in declaring “the Christian Protestant religion”
as “the established religion,” laying down the articles of faith, and making the
point that the Christian religion is the one true religion.
We may forget that it required no religious fanaticism to bring forth the public
funding of churches. We find nothing strange these days in the notion of the
community taxing itself to sustain schools. It was no more strange in the
seventeenth century to presume a clear public interest in supporting
churches, for they were even more important in shaping the moral sensibility
that sustained a civic order. The ministers within the churches were regarded
as public employees, every bit as much as teachers in public schools
today. Complications arose when the inhabitants of any town were drawn to
religious doctrines that put them at odds with some of the churches sustained through their taxes. Howe offered the example of Dedham,
Massachusetts: It was a state of high awkwardness, to put it mildly, that
many there were being drawn to Unitarianism, and found themselves paying
for churches that were quite unyielding in Trinitarianism. The outlines of the
political solution became clear: political authority over the churches would be
severed as the public funding was ended. Churches would be free to sustain
their own doctrines, insulated under the law, as private entities, privately
funded.
But then the next phase: churches in America would be incorporated
with private donors, private land, and private trusts to maintain their
character. And yet, with time the members of the congregation could be
drawn to views less orthodox, even less distinctly religious: Unitarians could
find their confidence waning even in that one God, and in some notable cases
they shifted out of religion altogether to Ethical Culture. Judges had to school
themselves in the doctrines of a church in order to reach a faintly plausible
judgment on just how pronounced a change had to be before it broke the
terms of trust and oaths taken by the trustees in any church. This task has
ever made judges deeply uncomfortable. For as they themselves quickly point
out, training in theology has not been part of their training as lawyers. Once
again the legal quagmire pointed to a political solution: The judges would
recede, and the law would simply accept the decision made by the duly
elected officers of the church on the doctrines they found suitable to their
congregation.
But now, as we say, we fast-forward: Holy Trinity, a notable Catholic
church in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. in the 1990’s. During Mass, some
members of the church stand, while others sit or kneel. They stand in protest
over the settled doctrine of their church not to ordain women. They sense
they might have the sympathy of their priest as they seek to unsettle and
overturn that ancient doctrine. But in making their gesture, they are also
signaling their desire to have the doctrines of the church altered by protests
and by the staging of sentiments within the congregation. And yet, these
good people could simply have walked several blocks and settled themselves
in a church that gratified them on both counts: they would have readily
found, in the neighborhood, a church that offers women as ministers, and
permits doctrine to be established by the congregation itself. What apparently
exceeded their imagination was that the people around them in the Mass at
Trinity were also the bearers of rights, and the so-called dissenters were threatening now to remove those rights. Chief among them was the right to
be part of a Church whose doctrines could not be manipulated or altered by
the vote of a local majority. That sense of surety may be, even now, as
critical and consoling for the parishioners as the confidence that they are at
Church in America, where people are free to vote. But in the Church itself
the majority has no sovereignty to assert. As Chesterton put it, the Church is
“the only thing in which the superior cannot be superior.” For as John Paul II
sought to explain, there were things that even he and the College of Cardinals
were not free to change.