By George Neumayr on 6.6.08 @ 12:08AM
In order to win, Obama needs the problem priest's brand of left-wing Catholic clericalism.
The very left-wing Catholic clericalism from which Obama hopes
to derive votes in the fall served as the pretext for his leaving
the Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Just as Jeremiah
Wright's over-the-top sermons could not have come as a surprise to
Obama, so Father Michael Pfleger's hyper-partisanship would have
been known to him as well.
But Father Pfleger's timing and choice of a target were poor:
his antics hit the Internet just as the Wright furor had begun to
dissipate and instead of attacking a Republican for racism he
selected Hillary Clinton. Maybe at another moment in the campaign
this wouldn't have mattered -- Geraldine Ferraro's comments saying
Obama had an unfair advantage due to race might have even lent the
sermon some plausibility -- but as Obama began his courting of
Hillary's support he found it all very annoying.
Yet normally the Democrats encourage priests and religious to
misuse their office, to treat the binding teachings of their church
as debatable while treating the platform and causes of the
Democratic Party as doctrine; to put on their religious garb at
political meetings, then take it off for catechesis.
The Drinans and Pflegers can't muster up much enthusiasm for the
magisterium of the Church but left-wing politics brings out their
zeal. Disagree with Church teaching? That's okay, they think.
But disagree with the Democratic Party's specific proposals for
this or that tricky, prudential issue on which reasonable people
could disagree? That's not. Dissenters inside the Church brook
little dissent when it comes to left-wing politics.
SO WHILE OBAMA severs his association with Trinity Church on the
pretext of offense at left-wing Catholic clericalism, he plans in
the coming months to recruit practitioners of it.
Obama has formed a "Catholic advisory committee." Among the
national co-chairs of his committee are Sister Jamie Phelps, O.P.,
Professor of Theology at Xavier University, and Sister Catherine
Pinkerton with the Congregation of St. Joseph, standard issue
leftists both.
As long as priests and religious in the mold of Pfleger aim
their partisan arrows at the right targets, Obama won't mind. He
needs them to choose fidelity to the Democratic Party over fidelity
to the teachings of the Church -- to treat the former as absolute
and the latter as relative.
And if John McCain, as is likely, blurs the moral differences
between the parties, Obama's task will become all that much easier.
Look how little it takes to get a Douglas Kmiec to come over to his
side. That McCain finds religious talk off-putting while Obama
gravitates to quasi-religious rhetoric won't help matters
either.
WHAT COMPLICATES Obama's project is that Pope Benedict XVI has
asked the bishops to knock off the clericalism and restrict their
political participation to "non-negotiable" principles that
represent not personal opinions but moral truths.
Some bishops are following his lead, if only incrementally. They
are taking steps to end open scandals, starting with the immediate
one of Catholic politicians who support abortion.
A more spiritually serious Catholic Church is bad for the
Democratic Party but critical to the common good. The clericalism
of the last four decades marginalized the moral authority of the
Church at the very moment American society needed it most. It made
the American Church seem like just one more irrational special
interest group clamoring for attention over the din of
democracy.
This model of political participation was justified on the
spirit-of-Vatican-II grounds that without it the Church couldn't
speak to the "whole world." But as Pope Benedict understands, that
model ensures it never will.
In the end the world isn't interested in the erratic opinions of
men but the voice of God. It is only when the Church restricts its
political participation to the articulation of universal moral
principles rooted in the reality God made that it can speak to all
men authoritatively.
topics:
John McCain, Hillary Clinton, Abortion