The Sad Story of Thomism in America
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Transcript of The Sad Story of Thomism in America
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The Sad Story of Thomism in America
Florian Michel, La pense catholique en Amrique du Nord: Rseaux intellectuels et
changes culturels entre l'Europe, le Canada et les Etats-Unis (Descle de Brouwer
Paris, 2010).
Reviewed by Joseph Filipowicz
See what an evil it is to commit ourselves rashly to our enemies, and to conspirators
against us. On this account Christ used to say, "Give not holy things to the dogs, neither
cast ye your pearls before the swine, lest they turn and rend you."
St. John Chrysostom, Resisting the Temptations of the Devil, Homily III
I have to agree with you that there are practicing Catholics who even seem devout in the
eyes of others and are perhaps sincerely convinced, yet are naively serving the enemies
of the Church. Into their very homes, under various names, invariably wrongly used ecumenism, pluralism, democracy has insinuated itself the worst adversary
ignorance.
St. Josemaria Escriv
On July 30, 1934, Wallace Filipowicz received a letter from Rev. Wilfrid Parsons, S.J.,
editor of America: The National Catholic Weekly. Parsons informed Filipowicz, a 21-
year old seminarian from St. Mary's of Orchard Lake, Michigan, that there was a
potential research project in understanding the neo-scholastics. Until the 1920s,
Thomism really only existed in the libraries of religious orders in North America. But,
now, Thomism was going public. The term neo-scholastic was simply the term that
everyone was using to revivify old-fashioned scholastic philosophy and introduce it to
the halls of public discourse in the United States. Parsons ends his letter encouraging the
young Filipowicz to study the books of Coppens, Turner, and Poland so that he will be
"put on the right path for your studies . . . because philosophy is an essential part of the
training for the priesthood."
If we were to guess about the names of the neo-scholastics that Filipowicz asked about
or would certainly soon discover, we would probably not be far off the mark if we
mentioned Etienne Gilson, Jacques Maritain, and Charles DeKonnick. Florian Michel,
author of La pense catholique en Amrique du Nord, would agree with us. And, his
book shows not only the influence of neo-scholastics in America beginning in the 1920s
and 1930s, but also the influence that these three men had on intellectual life in North
America over the next 35 years.The book shows how American Catholics, under the leadership of Maritain, Gilson,
DeKonnick, and to some degree Yves Simon, embraced Thomism. It also shows the
way in which America's leading Catholic intellectual institution rejected Thomism,
paving the way for Catholics in the United States to be absorbed by the dominant
culture.
The story begins with Etienne Gilson's arrival at Harvard in 1926 as a visiting professor.
The French Catholic philosopher's gentlemanly spirit and kindness amused professors
Whitehead and Perry. And so, they tolerated him and his ideas with high-minded
indifference. Allowing Gilson on their staff was an opportunity for them to show their
liberality and largesse, even if they viewed him and his ideas as anti-modern,
reactionary and opposed to any future development. After three years, they decided tooffer him a permanent position.
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Gilson thought deeply about the proposal. He had been almost completely rejected by
the French Intellectuals of the 1920s and 1930s, and cultured indifference was better
than hostile rejection. To be sure, coming to the United States was like coming to an
"intellectual desert," a place lacking a serious intellectual tradition and a deeply rooted
Christian culture. Still, tolerant indifference was a step up. It also offered interesting
possibilities, for example, building up a Christian culture. And so, this man, who sawhimself as being for North America what Alcuin was to Charlemagne's France, balked
at the proposal. He rejected the position because at the same time he had received an
offer to start an Institute for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto.
Despite thinking that Toronto was a "pur nil," Gilson thought that a nil was a better
place to carry out his project than a desert. Alcuin in the 8th Century instituted a
curriculum that became the foundation for the great intellectual achievements of the
12th and 13th Centuries. Toronto would be the place where Gilson would plant the
seeds of what might become a flourishing intellectual culture in the next few centuries.
From its foundation through 1968, the Medieval Institute produced many good students
who laid the foundation for Medieval and Thomistic studies especially at Catholic
Universities in America, places like Marquette University and the University of NotreDame. Toronto also became the conduit for other French Thomists to come to the
United States. One such Thomist was Jacques Maritain. In the 1920s and 1930s he had a
reputation for being a little combative and flamboyant, but also had a capacity to get
himself or his friends an audience with the Pope. And so, as Gilson was having
difficulties getting his institute started, an audience with the Pope would prove to be
helpful, and calling on his friend to help him made sense.
When Maritain came to North America, he brought a particular attitude with him. He
appreciated Gilson, but he held something between a great reserve to a hostility towards
the Thomists of Quebec, led by Charles De Konninck. The problem, according to
Maritain, is that the world was being led into an agony by the existentialists of France.
And right at that very moment, Maritain's personalism told him, liberal democracy was
the logical venue for establishing friends in this world. And yet, the intransigent
Catholics of France were not directly attacking the existentialists. They were attacking
the liberalism, individualism, and neo-pelagianism that were part of liberal democratic
cultures. Maritain was "horrified" by this "obscurantist," and "traditionalist" approach.
He carried this reserve towards anything that evoked traditionalism with him during his
two stays in North America that lasted from the 1930s to the 1960s.
As an aside, Michel observes that not all French Intellectuals were as horrified by De
Koninck as Maritain was. Antoine de Saint-Exupry, author of the The Little Prince
came to Laval at De Koninck's invitation. Saint-Exupry was so enamored with the
beauty of his son, Thomas, that Thomas became the "model" for the little prince.While Maritain could not tolerate Laval, he could tolerate Chicago, and so, in 1933,
when Robert Hutchins and Mortimer Adler extended to him the invitation to him to
come to Chicago and join them in the good fight, he jumped at the opportunity. Chicago
in the 1930s was an early battlefield in what would become the culture wars of the
1960s to our own day. Hutchins sensed it. Adler called it a battleground of a civil war,
and Maritain realized it almost as soon as he stepped onto the campus. As Michel
describes it, the battle was between those who accepted Metaphysics as a science
(Hutchins, Adler and Maritain), and those who did not (John Dewey, and his followers
in philosophy and the social sciences). Those who did not called themselves
pragmatists. Those who did called themselves Thomists.
Hutchins wanted to reform Chicago, making metaphysics the high point of thecurriculum. To be sure, he realized on some level that he was opposing the foundational
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spirit of the place, as represented by John Dewey, whose philosophy was pragmatic,
naturalist, evolutionary, relativist, and utilitarian.
Dewey and his intellectual progeny at Chicago were not the tolerant liberals of the
Harvard that Gilson entered in the 1920s. They detested the initiatives of Hutchins and
Adler to reinstitute a classical education at the school. And so, Maritain's arrival was
like adding fuel to the fire. It is likely that if what began to emerge at Chicago in the1930s had emerged at Harvard under Gilson, it would have lit a similar fire. Hutchins,
after being appointed President of the University, began to plan for the creation of an
Aristotelian curriculum in the Humanities with Mortimer Adler as his strong man.
By 1934 Adler was in open confrontation with the likes of Sidney Hook, Professor
Shils, and Sociologist and social engineer Louis Wirth over the purpose of education,
philosophy, the shape of the University, and the role of the United States in the
upcoming war. Wirth thought that the university should do everything in its power to
prevent even one Catholic from coming to campus. Thomism was the greatest threat to
liberty. As a response to this threat, Wirth and company brought Rudolf Carnap and
other members of the Vienna Circle to Chicago in 1935. They brought in Bertrand
Russell to the philosophy department. Frank Knight joined in Chicago's anti-CatholicCrusade, eventually publishing: Natural law: Last Refuge of the Bigot. They, along with
Professor Perry, saw Maritain as nothing more than an agent of Catholic Propaganda.
MARITAIN'S RESPONSE
And what was Maritain's response to this? He and Yves Simon attempted to engage
Wirth, Carnap, Knight, Russell, or Hook in dialogue during the next 20 years but to no
avail. Leo Strauss and Eric Voegelin did engage in some dialogue with the two
neoscholastics later in the 1940s and 1950s. Strauss was by no means ultimately
sympathetic to their position, seeing himself as trying to create a modern version of
Marsilius of Padua to rival their brand of Thomism, in addition to chiding Catholics for
their adherence to the natural law consequences of birth control.
Maritain must have become convinced at Chicago that something like the Hutchins-
Adler version of democratic liberalism was destined to prevail in the United States. In
fact, it seems that he began to see the United States solely through that lens. His
personalism would lead him to see something of the spirit inspiring it. At different
points in his career, Maritain saw that pragmatism leads to despair, that it denies
intelligence, and that it leads to the disarmament of liberty, but he felt nonetheless that it
could work in America if it were freed from British empiricism. Rather than leading
him to give up on America, Maritain's experience at Chicago in the 1930s led him to
become dedicated to the American cause, which he defined as purifying the pragmatists
of their empiricism. In short, Maritain tried to reconcile what by that point had become
an un-resolvable contradiction between the principles of the liberalism, as establishedduring the time of the 18th Century and the principles of classical realism. The
principles of 18th Century liberalism result in revolution. The two alternatives are
mutually incompatible because the principles of classical realism put one on the road to
embracing Logos, and the Church that He established.
Michel's book does not flesh out completely the position of Wirth and his colleagues. It
was not the focus of the book. This material is available in the archives of the
University of Chicago in the form of letters, memos, and notebooks. It would be
interesting in a future study to determine to what extent Maritain was aware of the
"project" of Wirth and his associates, and how he dealt with it. Of course, the outlines of
Wirth's project have been examined and published, and part of their project was to
directly attack the Catholic faith, which, in their minds, was, ironically enough,represented in the United States by Polish neighborhoods in Chicago.
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The vitriol Wirth and his colleagues harbored against Maritain and what they thought
Maritain represented had its source in something other than British Empiricism. Wirth
was no longer concerned about the dead Protestant denominations or the bad philosophy
that helped rationalize them. He saw them as culturally harmless due to their
innumerable divisions and lack of cohesion. Hutchins and Adler, so long as they were
not Catholics, could also be dealt with. They were conservatives. They neededliberalism as something to react against. The real problem for Wirth was the Catholics.
They were not, simply speaking, a philosophical problem. Catholics lived close to each
other in urban centers, in Polish neighborhoods in Chicago. But, even more than that,
they were united by the same creed and the same system of morality. They refused to
use birth control, and they refused to embrace alternative lifestyles. This made Catholics
"suspect."
It does not seem that Maritain was aware of Wirth's deepest concerns, but Maritain was,
throughout his career, ambivalent to or indifferent towards the Catholicism as
represented by the Polish ethnic neighborhoods of Chicago. He does not seem to have
been aware that, as he arrived in Chicago in the 1930s and during his entire time there,
Wirth and the members of the Vienna Circle were laying the foundations for what theyunderstood to be the great culture war of the 20th Century, a war that would overwhelm
the likes of Maritain and his followers in the later 20th Century.
Maritain did not seem to know that Wirth was part of the psychological warfare
establishment in the United States, and that in Wirth's conception of the future of
America, all Catholics would be suspect. Wirth was part of the developing science that
would use propaganda in newspapers, radio, television, and film to undermine Catholic
morals before the likes of Maritain got them to read his philosophical writings. Wirth
hoped to get the Catholics to see themselves first and foremost as middle class
suburbanites. And then, through advertizing and other media, they would be more
susceptible to the dominant ideology of America than any philosophy that Maritain
could teach them.
And so, Wirth thought that dialogue with the likes of Maritain was unnecessary. Wirth
had probably learned the same lesson that Wilhelm Reich had learned in Vienna around
the same time, One could argue with a Catholic girl until one is blue in the face about
the existence of God, and she will not budge, but get her to commit an act of self abuse
and her belief in God will disintegrate without any debate at all.
Maritain probably did not know that Wirth admired the ethnic cleansing policies of
Stalin and the birth control policies of Hitler, thinking that they had used unfortunate
means for obtaining proper goals. He probably did not know that Wirth had a deep-
seated hatred for Catholics because he lost his first job in New Orleans due to Catholic
opposition to Wirth's public speeches promoting birth control. He did not know thatwhile most Protestants in the United States saw Catholics as effectively marginalized,
Wirth saw them as the major threat to the proper development of the United States and
the world, as the enemies of rational and enlightened man.
Maritain did not know that Wirth would employ assimilation and subversion to disrupt
communication between Catholics over time and that the first step in assimilation would
be the social engineering of Catholic neighborhoods in American cities, beginning with
Chicago in the 1940s. He probably did not know that all of this would be done in the
name of encouraging all Americans to adopt "democratic values." This would be the
first step in making Catholics into first class cosmopolitans, citizens committed to
spreading the American Empire.
Wirth realized that the first step in this process would be detaching Catholics from theirethnic identity and replacing it with a middle class identity. He also hoped to turn the
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ethnic issue into a racial issue.
Maritain did not know any of this. It seems that few, if any, Catholic intellectuals of the
time knew this. Even now, few seem willing to admit it. But, knowing it now allows us
to put the rest of Maritain's political project in a new light. Maritain argued from early
on and maintained consistently throughout his career that American democracy was
worth saving. It descended, he claimed, from the philosophy of St. Thomas himself.And so, while he seemed to be on the opposite side of the metaphysical struggle against
Louis Wirth and the members of the Vienna Circle at Chicago in the 1930s, his efforts
at political theory played right into their hands.
Wirth saw the ethnic neighborhoods in Chicago as being a microcosm of the various
nationalities in Europe: rooted, ethnic, and Catholic. He also saw that just as World War
II would allow the occasion for suppressing national identity in Europe, it would also be
the occasion for suppressing Catholic ethnic identity in the United States.
At times, both Maritain and his friend Yves Simon seemed to recognize that something
was up, but they could never quite put their finger on the problem. In the 1950s, Simon
wrote to Maritain that Chicago "was composed of intellectuals without roots,
homeless." And although they tried to treat Simon as if he were one of them, he did notthink of himself that way. Instead he attributed "an imbecility to the intellectualism
here, the myth of culture, that profoundly destroys any sense of life in society. ...
Intellectual tongues wag more and more at Chicago, and the implicit intention is to
show that the American people are illiterate and that we can only learn from them."
Chicago intellectuals, Simon thought, possessed a disdainful irony that itself showed a
kind of unintelligence.
Maritain agreed with Simon. He thought Hutchins had intellectual insight and courage,
but that the deracinated Germans, Cassirer, Arendt, Carnap, Strauss, Tillich, and Von
Hayek had all taken over Chicago and that this could prove to be problematic for those
who studied under them. When Maritain had to summarize his time in the United States
for the French Government, he devoted much of his summary to explaining the debates
between pragmatists and Hutchins at the University. Dewey, he thought, would lead
Americans away from their ideal of disinterested service. He also noted that there was a
strong opposition to Dewey's pragmatism in the United States rooted in love for the
humanities, the liberal arts, and humanistic education. And so, Chicago was the best
place for Thomism to enter American culture.
In his summary to the French Government, Maritain also argued that if Chicago was the
best place for Thomism to enter the arteries of American Culture, then Notre Dame was
the best place for Thomism to mature into an excellent philosophy. By the 1940s, it had
started its own Medieval Institute on the Toronto model and had ties with Ottawa-
Montreal, Laval, and Chicago.Michel observes that the growth of Thomistic thought in the United States does not
follow the lines that most contemporary Catholic philosophers and theologians think it
does. They typically argue that an intellectual vitality first appeared among Catholics in
the United States in the 1880s and 1890s, only to be crushed by Leo XIII's and Pius X's
irrational fear of Americanism and Modernism. According to this story, John Courtney
Murray revitalized both Americanism and Modernism, rekindling the possibility of a
vital intellectual culture among American Catholics. But this story is more myth than
reality.
NO REAL THOMISM
Michel points out that there was no real Thomism in the United States until the 1920s
and 1930s, suggesting that the reality is that the Americans were slow in putting therecommendations of Leo XIII and Pius X into effect. This conforms with the evidence
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in our letter of Parsons to the eventual Msgr. Filipowicz in 1934, that he could find no
real evidence of Thomism unless he looked for it in the libraries of some religious
orders in the late 19th Century. In addition, the so-called time of intellectual sterility
was in fact the time when Americans experienced the first stirrings of an intellectual
culture. In the light of Michel's evidence, the 1930s and the 1940s was precisely the
time that a combination of a commitment to classical realism and an awareness of theattack on the Church could have led to a fruitful maturation of traditional ethnic
Catholic neighborhoods. But, in the upcoming culture wars, Catholic ethnics would be
treated by their own intellectual leaders with attitudes ranging from ambivalence to
hostility. Rather than any sort of philosophical engagement that might lead to their
protection, they were abandoned by their intellectual leaders.
But, we are getting ahead of ourselves. Notre Dame established its philosophy
department in 1921. In the 1930s it established its own Medieval Institute with the
approval of Gilson. On 4-5 November 1938, the department had its first ever
philosophical symposium, during which "the shock of Totalitarian Doctrines and the
principles of Democracy will be examined." Maritain, Simon, Carl Friedrich, Jerome
Kerwin, Waldemar Gurian, and Mortimer Adler all spoke. When the bishops of theUnited States called on all Catholics to defend democratic institutions in January 1939,
Notre Dame responded by starting the Review of Politics. Philosophy seems to have
taken an early political turn at Notre Dame.
Maritain and Simon did what they could at Notre Dame to inculcate a love for America.
Maritain called for a renewal of religious conscience, a confidence in the creative forces
of liberty, and a hope in the earthly efficacy of the Gospel and Reason.
According to Michel, it is not the case that there was no philosophy at Notre Dame until
the late 1950s. Instead, philosophy began in the 1930s and it developed and grew. By
the early 1950s it had grown into a place that expressed genuine Catholic pluralism. It
had a number of philosophers who were trained in and aware of all the modern
methods.
While there was a general agreement on following the principles of St. Thomas, there
was genuine disagreements between the followers of DeKoninck, Maritain, Gilson and
others. Simon, for example, did not think that Notre Dame should have a Medieval
Institute. Guerian started a controversy over Gilson's position that France should remain
neutral during the Cold War because Russia was not really a military threat to France
and that by adopting so strong an anti-communist position, France risked her Catholic
identity. Simon did not like Fr. Mullahy, whom he saw as being insolent and aggressive
after returning to Notre Dame from Laval, being subsequently named chairman of the
philosophy department.
Maritain also had his strong dislikes. He warned who he could against the obscurantismof the Thomists in Laval and anyone who cast a sympathetic glance at Franco's Spain.
He would not visit Laval or Fordham for these reasons. They had too many Franco
sympathizers. He pressed President O'Hara of Notre Dame to clarify his position
because O'Hara balked at inviting Alfredo Mendizabal, a suspected communist, to speak
on campus.
Both Maritain and Simon discovered "Religion and Democracy" in America, and those
two words became for them their "sole temporal refuge against despair." In America,
"life can be beautiful. The word happiness still has a meaning. They do not mock
industrial progress and democracy. ... They seek to promote the good. In America they
call this the pursuit of happiness. This is a formula that could very well be egoist or
materialist, but it is not necessarily egoist or materialist. ... We will see much later ifthere will be a reason to take the oath of Hannibal" (letter of Simon to Maritain, July
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1940).
Perhaps the high point of Maritain's political career was to be one of the two Frenchmen
invited to Senator John F. Kennedy's inaugural address on the cold snowy day of
January 21st 1946. This was the democracy that Maritain loved, the democracy that
somehow was the expression of the vitalist energies of the times. Somehow, JFK had
come across and publicly showed a deep respect for Martain's writings, as manifested inKennedy's address at Assumption College in 1955: "Too often, in our foreign policy, in
order to compete with the power doctrines of the Bolsheviks, we ourselves practice
what Jacques Maritain called 'moderate machiavellianism.' But, as Maritain pointed out
in the showdown, this pale and attenuated version 'is inevitably destined to be
vanquished by absolute and virulent machiavellianism' as practiced by the communists.
We cannot separate our lives into compartments, either as individuals or as a nation. We
cannot, on the one hand, run with the tide, and on the other, hold fast to Catholic
principles" (June 3, 1955).
Perhaps a young Theodore Hesburgh at Notre Dame, who also became a friend of JFK,
admired Maritain's general approach and hoped to see it implemented at Notre Dame?
And just what was this approach?After he returned to the United States following his time as French Ambassador to the
Vatican during the mid-1940s, Maritain gave the impression that he was on a one-man
crusade in the USA. He seemed to combine philosophical celebrity, diplomacy and an
aura of sanctity. He prided himself on the dialogues he carried out with the likes of
Cocteau, Chagall, Hugo, and Julien Green. Daniel Sargent told him that at Columbia he
was well known by both the professors and the potentially rebellious students: "Jews
desirous of knowledge, Protestants discontent with their heritage, and poets seeking to
vindicate their rights." Sargent thought that Maritain could be a modern-day St.
Stephen, bringing Christ to those lost intellectuals. Several other intellectuals expressed
their hopes that Maritain would become the key figure for preserving the intellectual
heritage of the West in the United States. He would lead the charge at Catholic
Universities, enabling them to make deep in-roads in the areas of Medieval and Patristic
studies. By doing this, they could make a lasting contribution to the development of
American Culture.
Imagine Maritain's joy in the early 1960s when he attended the inauguration of now
President Kennedy, and the University of Notre Dame established the Jacques Maritain
Center to continue and refine his project in the United States.
But strange winds were blowing at Notre Dame in 1960 and 1961, winds that Martitain
was probably also not aware of. Ironically, they were winds of a similar nature to those
emanating from the Windy City in the 1930s, perhaps even some of the first effects of
the winds emanating from the Chicago boys of the 1930s at Chicago. For example,Notre Dame in the early 1960s began holding secret conferences on campus to theorize
possible ways to change the Church's teaching on birth control.
On the philosophical front, another battle in the culture war was taking shape. A young
professor, Ernan McMullin, arrived at the University of Notre Dame in 1957, and he
brought with him an animus against Thomism. Like John Dewey and Louis Wirth at the
University of Chicago, McMullin thought that the real game was either to defend or
demolish St. Thomas. Almost immediately after arriving on campus, he started rabble
rousing for the latter of the two options. He sent off two letters, one of which was made
public, advocating a philosophy department that did away with the Thomist pluralism
that it had established.
He kept up the pressure so effectively that in 1960 President Hesburgh ordered anoutside organization to evaluate the philosophy department. Phi Betta Kappa did so and
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refused to include the department on its list of great university philosophy departments.
Not enough professors at Notre Dame knew the secret handshake. Initially, Hesburgh
defended the department. It had professors who were trained at all the major research
universities in the United States and around the world as well as places associated with
Thomism such as Laval, Louvain, and Notre Dame. There were a variety of methods
and opinions, healthy conflict, and an abundance of good research and teachingRight at this moment, John Evans tried to make the Maritain Center the heart of the
philosophy department because the Center represented everything good about America.
But in 1962 more fuel was thrown on the fire that McMullin had started. Edward
Manier instigated a debate about the Catholic heritage at Notre Dame in the light of its
status with respect to great American secular universities. On the surface, this debate,
like the one which had taken place in Chicago in the 1930s, was a debate over the place
of philosophy and theology in the curriculum. Under the surface, it was a debate about
sexual revolution. Manier questioned the close links between philosophy and theology.
He claimed that docility to the Church would ruin good pedagogy. He also critiqued
Notre Dame for failing to allow deviant subcultures a presence and influence on
campus.As this second fire was brewing, we also know now that, beneath the surface, Manier
and the administration were getting involved in birth control politics. They, in fact, were
leading the charge in what would become a capitulation that Louis Wirth or John D.
Rockefeller would never in their wildest fantasies have thought possible from their
offices in Chicago in the early 20th Century, that Catholics from a Catholic school
would be working with them in implementing the birth control regime on American
Catholics. While Wirth could only have fantasized this happening in the 1930s, it was a
sign that his method of social engineering was much more effective than even he could
imagine.
ABOUT FACE
Three years after defending a Catholic and pluralist department, Hesburgh pulled an
about-face. He did not defend the department and in 1964 installed a new chair, Harry
Nielsen, a devoted follower of Ludwig Wittgenstein. According to Nielsen, philosophy
began and ended with Wittgenstein.
In 1965, with Nielsen at the helm, the department described itself as carrying out Judeo-
Christian philosophy. It was a pluralist but no longer a Thomist department. Manier
took advantage of this concession to advance a further initiative. Now he argued that
there was a crisis in Catholic undergraduate education. He argued that just as now there
was religious freedom in civil society there should be academic freedom in Catholic
institutions. The Catholic University should allow for a diversity of sub-cultures to
exist. It should rethink the status of priests on campus who are given the authority tospeak in the name of the Church. Because when they do, they censor ideas, and they
lose scientific prestige. Of course, we know now that Manier's arguments were code for
promoting deviant sexual behavior as normal: the use of birth control, masturbation, and
sodomy to name a few that he has publicly supported since then.
Neilsen soon had difficulties with the new pluralism that he had helped inaugurate at
Notre Dame. So much so, in fact, that by 1966 he was gone. Hesburgh then appointed
Ernan McMullin as head of the department. This proved to be the beginning of the end
for Thomism at Notre Dame. McMullin wanted to change the name of the Maritain
Center to the "Center for the Study of Christian Philosophy," relegating all Catholic
philosophers in his mind to this ghetto so that serious philosophy could be done in the
department. Maritain and Evans both thought that this would be a disaster. After a heartto heart conversation with Hesburgh, Evans was able to avoid the renaming of the
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Center.
From this point on, McMullin only sought to hire analytical philosophers and disciples
of De Koninck. McMullin was deeply anti-Thomist and anti-Maritain. By 1969
McMullin could pontificate that Neo-Thomism was in rapid decline. In fact, it had
practically disappeared. It could no longer keep the optimism it once had. The Neo-
Thomists had poorly adapted themselves to a philosophical quest for the truth that wascontrary to the methods of Aristotle and Saint Thomas.
McMullin summed up the new spirit when he lectured to the American Catholic
Philosophical Association that their goal in the 1970s would be to expose the oxymoron
implied by the phrase Catholic University. He also hoped the association would show
that terms like "intellectual apostolate" were slogans only used by fanatics. The spirit of
the times sent Thomism into the intellectual catacombs. All Catholic philosophers had
been rounded up into one hated camp and cast out of the halls of respectable academic
professionals.
By 1971, Kritzeck could write to Maritain that "the university no longer has any regard
for philosophy, Thomism, or truth. It has become the worst kind of secular university."
He urged Maritain to withdraw his name from the Center. But, Maritain did not do this.Perhaps he did not do this because he was a personalist. Personalists have tended to
hold to the position that somehow the Holy Spirit speaks to groups and institutions
outside of the Church to move the Church this way or that in a given time. In the 1920s,
many personalists chose to see these vital energies manifesting themselves in fascism.
In the 1940s, they saw them either in Marxism or in Liberal Democracies. And so,
perhaps now, Maritain saw them operating at Notre Dame.
In his last book, The Peasant of the Garonne, Maritain remained convinced that the
sexual degeneracy of the left was for the most part insignificant. It would pass, or, at the
very least, it should not be given much account. It came from a few rabble-rousers on
the left. He also remained convinced that the Church's new position on the Jews would
give the Church a great capacity to show its liberality in the upcoming years. In short, it
seems that he was never capable of seeing what has been identified as the modern
Jewish Revolutionary, someone like Louis Wirth, who still holds vestiges of the
morality of the Talmud, even as he has thrown off the official practices of Judaism. That
is, he advocated sexual politics to corrupt the morals of Catholics, while harboring a
deep-seated hatred of Christ. By failing to be suspicious of men like Wirth or Catholics
like Manier who were deceived by the psychological warfare campaigns of the 1940s-
60s, Maritain and those who followed him fostered in many the false hope that
somehow American Democracy and Catholicism were compatible.
Maritain, like Wirth and Hesburgh, helped American Catholics see themselves as
Middle Class American Democrats first and Catholics second. And it seems as if theMaritain Center, according to Michel, has continued its activity leaving this aspect of
Maritain's legacy unresolved. In 1979, Ralph McInerny took over the Center. In 1980
Ronald Reagan, with the help of the neoconservatives took over the Republican party in
the United States. Again, from a personalist perspective, one could potentially see in the
neoconservatives a vitalist energy outside of the Church manifesting itself.
From a more practical and political perspective, one could see the electoral strategies of
Richard Nixon at work. Nixon realized that with the radicalization of the Democratic
Party in 1968, that Catholics would increasingly find themselves looking for a party that
at least spoke the language of the family and took a strong stand against abortion. Nixon
encouraged Republican operatives to at least speak the prolife talk in their electoral
campaigns in order to win a big chunk of the Catholic vote. Reagan did this, and itbrought him the 1980 election.
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Early on in McInerny's career as head of the Center, he was approached by a recent
convert to Neoconservatism, Michael Novak. Novak had raised some money for starting
a cultural magazine and gave this money to McInerny, who started what came to be
known as Catholicism in Crisis, or later just Crisis. Neoconservative foundations
instigated a similar initiative, though certainly under more dramatic circumstances, to
found First Things. Later on in his career, Novak could say that, "our association withthe Jacques Maritain Center is another symbol of our intention to occupy the large
center of Catholic Thought." Maritain, according to Novak, was a symbol of Catholic
Reaganites, the first Catholic Neoconservative. Bernard Doering has argued that these
are misappropriations of Martiain's thought and achievement.
Thus, the question can be raised, did the Center misappropriate the agenda of Maritain?
On the immediate political level, the answer is yes, Maritain, like the Notre Dame that
harbored his center, seemed committed to bringing about a grand Democratic-Catholic
Alliance in the United States. Maritain, unlike Hesburgh at Notre Dame, left the United
States as the Democrats openly adopted the agenda of sexual revolution. Hesburgh still
tried to work out a deal, and, to this day, the University seems committed to this deal.
But it is a raw deal.Seen from another perspective, the answer to Doering's dilemma is, no, the Center did
not misappropriate Maritian's personalist agenda. It has correctly read the
theological/political spirit of the times. On the level of implementing a certain kind of
personalism, the Center is simply following the vitalist signs of the day. Just as some
personalists attached themselves to the fascists in the 1920s, and then the Marxists or
Americanists of the late 1940s and 1950s, now the Center attached itself to the next
vitalist movement, the neoconservative movement.
But, Maritain, like Notre Dame under Hesburgh, was doing an intellectual dance with
the devil. He, like Notre Dame, saw himself as someone who wanted to deal with the
likes of Louis Wirth and Paul Blanshard. It is not clear in the case of Maritain that he
knew Wirth's or Blanshard's real interest in destroying the Catholic Church.
Louis Wirth and his fellow conspirators at Chicago had no interest in keeping Thomism
at the University, no interest in compromising with the Catholic Church in Chicago, and
no interest in seeing the Catholic Church continue its mission in the United States or the
world, at least not if it failed to accept Louis Wirth's agenda to promote birth control
and sexual liberation among the population.
When McMullin dismantled the philosophy department at Notre Dame, he could draw
on Maritain's brand of Thomism as the rationale for dismantling the department.
Someone like Maritain could only emerge in an environment like France, an
environment in which Thomists were reduced to an insignificant and hard-headed
minority, one that could at best be tolerated with curious indifference. If this were thecase, McMullin could justify creating an environment at Notre Dame in which Thomists
found themselves a chastened and insignificant minority in a pluralist department that
reflected the current philosophical fashions among academic philo-sophists.
McInerny never accepted McMullin's view of things. He saw the pre-1965 department
at Notre Dame as a manifestation of healthy Catholic pluralism. It dealt with all
contemporary trends in philosophy from a Catholic perspective, and Jacques Maritain
was the symbol of how this could be done.
Maritain thought that he was able to achieve some degree of success with the
pragmatists, as he understood them, at Chicago in the 1930s. He at least was able to
establish helpful disagreement. This was the beginning of creating a fruitful cultural
synthesis between pragmatism and Catholicism in the United States.His second career in the United States, after the Second World War, was a chance to
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further develop that synthesis. It was during that time that he turned his house at
Princeton into an environment open to painters, musicians, poets, religious, &
mathematicians, in short, a wide reaching cultural environment within which he could
introduce them to the philosophy of St. Thomas. From his home in Princeton, he could
establish himself as a leader, especially in Catholic intellectual circles. From that stance,
he could welcome non-Catholics in dialogue.Maritain's dealings with Wirth at Chicago in the 1930s and then with radical
intellectuals in the 1950s had a certain panache, but not all were impressed. Daniel
Sargent feared that the position that Maritain took (in 1949) denigrated Our Lord and
Our Lady. He wrote to Maritain explaining: "it seems you favor infidels, heretics, and
Jews over Catholics. When you are among these people, you constantly denounce the
errors of Catholics. Twenty years ago I could not get them to invite you to Harvard
because you were 'too Catholic.' Now, the leftists at Harvard think that you are one of
them and that you are an accidental Catholic. Philosophers who are not Catholic or anti-
Catholic are able to think in unison with you. Catholics of little faith are in unison with
you and they do not feel challenged. Maritainism is blinding a generation of Catholics.
In my opinion, it is an insidious form of thought. I cannot imagine a mode of thinkingmore dangerous to our generation of Catholics. It has given thinkers of the left a new
life by granting their positions intellectual dignity."
Maritain was not impressed. He responded to Sargent: "I prefer 10 pagans to one
Catholic like you. You are not even a Pharisee. You are an idiot!" Maritain thought that
Catholics in the US risked being hated by their non-Catholic fellow citizens if they were
to affirm any form of theocracy. He also feared that they would become total liberals in
the American sense. He pointed to Paul Blanshard as the kind of person Catholics
should reach out to and appeal to. If not, they would risk being hated forever in this
country and they would always be seen as opponents of liberty.
Maritain could not accept Sargent's correction. In retrospect, it seems that he should
have accepted it, or he should not have rejected his fellow Catholic with such vitriol
while running into the arms of the likes of Paul Blanshard. The likes of Paul Blanshard
already hated Maritain and his fellow Catholics, and there was little Maritain could do
to assuage their hatred, short of joining them in subverting the faith, or opening the door
to them so that they could work directly with Catholics in subverting their faith.
Blanshard, like Wirth, was fearful of any Catholic because that Catholic would not use
birth control, would not promote the homosexual culture, would not accept divorce,
would not accept eugenics, and would not accept abortion. In short, there was no
compromise with Blanshard's ultimate goals as we now know them through his
memoirs. But, in the 1940s and 1950s Catholic intellectuals were bending over
backwards to welcome Blanshard into their circles, taking his positions seriously, andattempting to befriend him while remaining indifferent to or condemning their ethnic
co-religionists.
TREATED WITH WARMTH
Maritain saw himself as always treated with warmth in the United States. After the
Second World War, he came to see that it was the only way left open to him after his
time in Rome. France and the rest of Europe, in his mind and that of Gilson's, was a
closed shop. In the West, their only hope was in the United States.
Despite what Maritain thought, the College of France offered him a chair in 1951, a
position he refused. So, it seems that the truth is that he would not go back to France,
and he was sad that he would not go back at the same time. He cultivated the image that
he was in exile, suffering outside of France.Michel also points out that Maritain was working for the French Government while he
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was here. He was an ambassador of religious and cultural affairs. This "bitter exile," as
Journet called it, was financed by the French Government. The French, whom Maritian
thought rejected him, were paying for his sojourn in the United States! Another project
that Michel's book points to is research into the influence that the French government
had on the thought of Maritain. Maritain was, after all, on the payroll of the same
French Government that oversaw the dismantling of the Catholic Church in that countryafter World War II.
At Princeton, Maritain was never quite able to insert himself into the heart of the
intellectual and cultural life on campus. He thought that there were fewer secularist
prejudices at Princeton and that Thomism could find a place on campus, but not in the
philosophy department. It was no man's land. The department there, he thought, had no
leader or unity. It was supposedly "open" to all philosophical currents. The people there
were friendly, but they gave rise to little light.
Once at Princeton, Maritain's approach was not to change modern American
philosophy, but to enter into its currents. From his perch at Princeton, he defended John
Courtney Murray when Murray was silenced in the 1950s. Now that the priest had been
silenced by the Vatican, Maritain thought that the layman could take up his cause ofpromoting religious liberty, American-style. Also from Princeton, Maritain wrote what
he called his "love letter to America." In this book Reflections on America, he takes up
what he sees to be good in American pragmatism and the cause for freedom.
During his time at Princeton, Maritain not only got help from the secularist French
Government, he also got money from the same Rockefeller Foundation which would
use Notre Dame to attempt to change the Church's teaching on birth control. In the late
1950s and early 1960s, representatives from the Rockefeller Foundation approached
Maritain. They helped to arrange for the lectures that he eventually gave at the
Smithsonian in Washington D.C. They even offered to pay his salary at Princeton.
Based on the evidence that Michel presents in his book, the question could be asked,
was Maritain an agent of the French Government? Was part of his purpose in the United
States to create the conditions for a cultural influence of France on the United States?
Was he an agent of the Rockefeller Foundation? Did their money influence his
writings? Why did they befriend him? Were they just interested in art? Probably not. It
was precisely at that time that they were approaching the likes of the University of
Notre Dame, dangling them the carrot of financing from their foundation in exchange
for more openness on the question of birth control.
By 1968, Maritain was back in France writing The Peasant of the Garonne. From the
banks of the Garonne, he thought that America was in a fine position. She was the
society that best embodied the spirit of the Second Vatican Council. She was open and
tolerant of the Jews, and she had the right political-religious alliance as represented bythe likes of the Kennedy family. There were, of course, a small fringe element obsessed
with sex, but they were insignificant and the nation would soon get over that.
MARITAIN'S DISCIPLES
The problem, of course, is that neither Martain's disciples, nor Catholics in America, nor
the country as a whole soon got over that. As an example, two of Maritain's disciples,
Eleanor Walker and Janet Kalven, entered the Lady of the Grails, and became super-
committed to the vitalist movement for corrupting women in the 1970s, feminism. They
found themselves attending the first Women's Ordination Conference in Detroit.
If you think that the story at Notre Dame is bad, you should also be aware that in the
1960s and 1970s most Catholic Universities in the United States went to further
extremes than Notre Dame to eliminate the influence of Thomism in particular and theChurch in general on campus. To this day, when Notre Dame recruits Catholic
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intellectuals and students to come to its programs and the issue of Catholic identity
arises, the representative at Notre Dame invariably responds, "well, at least we are not
as bad as X (insert almost any other Catholic University here)."
As one Notre Dame professor put it in December 2011, "that generation has failed to
realize the [effect of] sexual chaos that was being created and that is now an everyday
part of the culture. While this should not be an obsession, Catholic intellectuals andChurch leaders have not really responded in a serious way to the problem. There are
bishops who still counsel students and grown men that masturbation is not a problem
for them. Many intellectual leaders on campus act as if the students will soon get over
these little problems that they have, not realizing that many of the students have been
hyper sexualized from the time they were in Catholic grade school!"
And what is the response at Notre Dame? Of course, one response is to leave the entire
onus on the students to avoid pornography on the internet. The University has
consistently opposed putting filters on its internet system that would block much of the
worst material from the dorm rooms and libraries of the campus. At the same time, the
President has been promoted as a moderator on next year's commission for Presidential
Debates. And what is President Jenkins' big concern? He wants to moderate the vitriolicrhetoric coming out of the prolife camp in political discourse. It seems as if Maritain's
approach still prevails in the mind of the President of the University.
TWO TRADITIONS
And what is the response of the other Catholic leaders? It is to continue the project of
Maritain, with the Hispanics of the 2010s playing the role that the Polish played in the
1930s-1970s. We are told that there are two traditions present in the United States, that
of the Protestant Puritans and that of the Catholic Hispanics. Both of the traditions are
good leading to the highest development of democratic freedom, and, in the end, the
tradition of democratic freedom stems from the same font, the wisdom of Aquinas.
Once both of them figure this out, American will become good and whole again.
This position, which descends from the thought of Maritain, should now be seen for
what it truly is, namely, preposterous. The Protestant Puritans were radicals who were
rebelling against a group of rebels that were rebelling against the Catholic Faith. The
American Founding Fathers were a new set of rebels who had descended from the
Puritan rebels. The American Protestants and Jewish elites that came together to form
higher Judeo-Protestant American Culture at the end of the 20th Century were together
forming a new form of subversive and revolutionary culture. The likes of Dewey,
Wirth, Blanshard, and their leftist and neoconservative progeny do not see any
possibility of compromise with Catholic culture unless the Catholics are willing to
change their system of morals so that they would embrace birth control, war,
individualism, capitalism or any other of the modern materialist ideologies stemmingfrom the 18th Century.
People like Louis Wirth saw Catholic Culture (as first represented in the Polish and now
by Mexicans) as their deadly enemy. They are willing to use any means, including
psychological warfare, social engineering, and subversion of morals to prevent this
culture from having any significant influence in the United States. We have seen, for
example, that Samuel Huntington sees the Mexican Catholics as providing an even
greater threat to the American Judeo-Protestant ruling elite than the Catholic Polish of
the 1930s (See "The Hispanic Challenge and the Logic of Empire," Culture Wars, May
2004).
At this point, to put forth the position that somehow these cultures will form a new
synthesis is at the very least naive. It is certainly blind to the realities of history. It willbear the same fruit that Maritain's position bore from the 1930s-1970s. It will result in
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the deracination of the Hispanic ethnics, unless a spiritual vaccine is proposed that will
prevent them from catching the revolutionary virus. So far, none seems forthcoming.
In the end, what can we say about Maritain? There are three relationships that perhaps
best reveal his place in American history to us: his aspirations in and his dealings with
Louis Wirth, Paul Blanshard, and the Rockefeller Foundation. In all three cases, he
thought that he was dealing with up-standing Protestants, who were a little overlyimmersed in pragmatism, but were capable of becoming his friends. He felt he could
influence them in a positive way, but he failed to realize, and only God knows if it was
willingly or unwillingly, the nature of their hatred and vitriol for the Church and for
what the Church represents, especially when it came to the virtue of love and charity.
Judging from their private letters, memos, and diaries, their intent was to engage in a
combat to undermine and subvert the Church, first and foremost in matters of sexual
morality. They were not interested in intellectual debates, unless those debates became
opportunities for them to disrupt Catholicism. And, if they could get Catholics to enter
into their currents, they sensed that the Catholics would be swept away. They were like
the riptides in Lake Michigan. The lake looks so peaceful and the waves never seem too
big, when compared to those, for example, on the Atlantic, but swim in them and getcaught by a riptide, you will find yourself just as dead as drowning in the Atlantic.
Freedom for the likes of Wirth, Blanshard, and Rockefeller, was opposed to equality.
Freedom would give them more opportunities to corrupt the morals of Catholics, just as
Freedom would give their neo-conservative progeny the opportunities to grind the
worker and the poor. And so, Maritain, in his dealings with them, rather than converting
them, contributed to the environment that gave them and their co-subversives
respectability in Catholic circles so that they could further engage in psychological
warfare, social engineering, and the corruption of Catholic morals.
Catholic Intellectuals, including Maritain, often helped advance the cause of the
revolutionaries when the worked for an internationalism that suppressed cultural and
ethnic identity. Wirth thought that at least part of his plan would require eliminating
ethnic identity in Europe in the interest of promoting cosmopolitanism. It would also
require suppressing ethnic identity in the United States, especially of the Catholic
groups. He succeeded in doing this by replacing the category of ethnos with the
category of race. Catholic intellectuals of the 1950s and 1960s bought into this category
shift and began seeing the Wallace Filipowicz's of the world as racist rather than
preserving ethnic and spiritual identity.
In committing Catholics in the United States to the universalist aspects of the Civil
Rights movement or to cosmopolitanism, Catholic Intellectuals failed in what is perhaps
one of their most important tasks, to defend the genuine cultural and spiritual identity of
the various ethnic groups. As the CDF reminded us in 1986, "one cannot abstract fromthe historical situation of the nation or attack the cultural identity of the people.
Consequently, one cannot passively accept, still less actively support, groups which by
force or by the manipulation of public opinion take over the State apparatus and
unjustly impose on the collectivity an imported ideology contrary to the culture of the
people. In this respect, mention should be made of the serious moral and political
responsibility of intellectuals" (Instruction on Christian Freedom and Liberation, 75,
emphasis mine).
On October 20, 1967, Msgr. Wallace Filipowicz died of a massive heart attack. During
his life, it seems from the few details available to this author, that he chose to evangelize
through emphasizing ethnic and religious identity. Throughout his life, he kept a small
philosophical library, but he emphasized preserving ethnic identity. In 1941, heobtained a Master's Degree in Slavonic Studies from Columbia University. His Master's
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Thesis was a translation of Pius II's history of Poland, Lithuania, Livonia, and Russia.
He worked for 30 years at the Polish Seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan. Two
generations of priests learned Polish from him, including, as I discovered in 2002,
Cardinal Maida of Detroit. Letters sent to him that are now in his files dating back to the
1950s show an awareness of the enemy lurking in the shadows as well as an apparent
helplessness in how to deal with the coming onslaught. He served as rector of theSeminary throughout most of the 1960s, overseeing the construction of a new chapel.
He considered his greatest contribution to the chapel the creation and installation of a
sculpture of the Last Supper behind its main altar.
An article from 1966 in the Detroit News claims St. Mary's is a place with "deep roots
in Polish history" tracing its lineage back 1,000 years to the conversion of Poland.
According to its rector at the time, it could "supply any community that wants it a
display devoted to the Polish millennium or with a lecture." It was preparing for a visit
from Stefan Cardinal Wyszynnski primate of Poland as well as all bishops and
archbishops from Poland at the time. Msgr. Valerius Jasinski claimed that St. Mary's
could educate boys "so they can create in their souls what is best in American, Polish,
and Catholic Culture." It could do this because America was not a melting pot, but asymphony. The melting pot "never existed, but harmonizing, blending as in a symphony
can be accomplished only if each element retains its own characteristics, but makes its
own contribution to a symmetrical whole." Every student there had to learn Polish,
because they would go on to serve Polish communities throughout the United States and
the world, either as laymen, priests, or religious.
While Filipowicz kept a philosophical library, St. Mary's never developed a significant
philosophy program. By the 1990s it had given up on higher education completely. It
now only has a high school and a seminary, while it still maintains a center for the
Polish Mission. While much of the rest of Catholic higher education has chosen
capitulation and assimilation into the dominant culture, St. Mary's has attempted to
preserve what little bit of ethnic identity is left to it. In short, neither side has attempted
a philosophical or Thomistic approach that could fruitfully preserve and transform
ethnic identity.
Msgr. Filipowicz did not live through the chaos of the outbreak of the revolutionary
virus that began in 1968. M.N.S. Guillon thought that at the beginning of revolutions,
God removed from the scene certain souls as an act of mercy so that they would not
have to suffer through its worst effects. Perhaps that is so in this case.
It is for those of us that remain to understand what happened next and heal the wounds
caused by the plague that struck the Church in the second half of the 20th Century. On
this note, we can continue our story.
FOUR THOMIST ADJUNCTSWhile this is not in the book, if we turn to Notre Dame, in 2005, Edward Manier, much
in the same way that Louis Wirth did at Chicago in the 1930s, led an effort to address
what to his mind was cause for great concern: "there are four Thomist adjuncts teaching
introduction to philosophy in the department." The department initiated a year-long
review of the syllabi of those Thomists, to make sure they were teaching philosophy in
a way that was consistent with the standards of contemporary academic philo-sophism.
In essence, Manier and his colleagues wanted to be sure that classical realism keep its
place in the intellectual catacombs of the 21st Century.
And what are we to do? To borrow from another water analogy, what could a fish do
born into the Detroit River of the 1970s? The River, it seems, mirrored, to some degree,
the moral environment of the city and the country. Due to the pollution found in theriver, it would, from time to time catch on fire. The fish caught in that river could not
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jump out of the river and expose themselves to the air, that would mean a certain death,
but they really couldn't flourish in the river either. They had to start thinking through
how to clean up the river from within.
As our observer at Notre Dame commented, "It is one thing to allow pornography to
inundate the campus, which is seriously imprudent. But there is a second question that
nobody around here seems to have thought through, going back to the Hesburgh era:how do you form students so that they can keep their faith and live it in a hostile
environment? That is what we need to think through. How can students in this
environment be prepared to not only survive in it, but to convert it. If the faith is
something that we are ashamed of or think we have to hide or condemn in order to enter
into respectable company, how can we ever employ the medicine that the faith offers to
heals the wounds caused by the effects of sin?"
Two examples come to mind. Maritain and his intellectual progeny, Catholic
intellectuals in general, could be more charitable with the remaining Catholic ethnics.
At this point, rather than preferring ten pagans to one intransigent Catholic, they should
instead treat them as Christ treated Cleophas after the Resurrection. They should walk
with them rather than preferring the Paul Blanshard's of this world to them.And, as I finish this essay on the feast of St. Stephen, the example of St. Stephen also
comes to mind. We all know that St. Stephen prayed for his killers as they stoned him to
death. But, perhaps we should also remember that St. Stephen was also intransigent
when it came to articulating the truth as his death approached. To begin, members of the
synagogues of the Libertines, the Cyrenians, the Alexandrians, and the Cilicians were
all disputing with him. But, they were not able to get the better of him, as we would say,
because of his wisdom. In fact, they were so frustrated with him that they bribed some
officials to bring forth false charges of blasphemy against him.
When Stephen is brought to the Council, his face shines like an angel as he gives a long
speech on the history of Israel. I am not a Scripture scholar, but, as I read the text, I
assume that his face still had the aspect of an angel when he ended his speech with the
following ecumenical exhortation: "You stiff-necked and uncircumcised of heart and
ears, you always resist the Holy Spirit, as your fathers did, do you as well. Which
prophets have not your fathers persecuted? And they have slain them who foretold of
the coming of the Just One; of whom you have been now the betrayers and murderers:
who have received the law from angels, and have not kept it."
Somehow, I think, we need to say something like this to the likes of Blanshard, Wirth,
Foucault, Wilhem Reich, the members of the Vienna Circle, the Rockefeller
Foundation, their intellectual progeny, and anyone who would like to defend their
agendas, which include the birth control agenda. Then, we need a philosophical defense
not only of the teaching of the natural law, but also of those ethnic communities thatwere essentially abandoned by philosophers from the 1940s to the present. We cannot
defend them on American principles, as some would suggest, hoping that a fruitful
Hegelian synthesis will magically occur. American principles are part of the problem
not the solution, something that Michel's book makes clear.
This review was published in the April 2012 issue of Culture Wars.