Opinion | joe biden’s catholic moment (published 2021)

Opinion | joe biden’s catholic moment (published 2021)


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The new president elevates a liberal Catholicism that once seemed destined to fade away. The inauguration of our second Catholic president was, in its way, a very American-Catholic


spectacle. A Jesuit delivered the invocation, the president quoted St. Augustine and paused for a moment of silent prayer just long enough for a quick Hail Mary, and the justices and


celebrities represented various ethnic-Catholic inheritances — Irish for John Roberts, Italian for Lady Gaga and Nancy Pelosi, Latina for Jennifer Lopez and Sonia Sotomayor. (It was left to


Garth Brooks, singing “Amazing Grace,” to represent Protestant culture.) As America Magazine’s James Keane noted, even Biden’s proposed cabinet is stuffed with Catholic Democrats, with few


white male Protestants in sight. It’s normal for American presidents to hew close to the country’s religious center. For a long time this meant almost every president belonged to one of the


Protestant denominations called Mainline: Between 1881 and 1961, for instance, there were 13 Mainline-affiliated presidents (plus one Quaker and one Unitarian). The last of the 13, Dwight


Eisenhower, proved the Mainline’s influence by being baptized into Presbyterianism early in his presidency, like a 16th-century prince accepting the state religion to claim a vacant throne.


The subsequent decline of the Protestant establishment, the most important fact in American religious life since the 1960s, has altered this dynamic. Instead of being connected to a clear


religious center, the presidency has been passed among different religious tendencies that aspire, so far mostly unsuccessfully, to the status of the old Mainline. Thus George W. Bush


represented the cultural alliance between his own evangelicalism and conservative Catholicism, which envisioned itself as a new religious establishment — and then faded amid the Catholic


sex-abuse crisis and a new wave of secularization. Next, Barack Obama embodied an uneasy fusion between an attenuated liberal Protestantism and the African-American church — before the


emergence of a more zealous, ‘woke’ progressivism, in his second term and after, left Obama’s more detached religious style behind. Then Donald Trump, a Norman Vincent Peale “power of


positive thinking” Christian without the actual belief, became an avatar for prosperity theology and Christian nationalism — a style of religiosity too fundamentally right-wing to lay claim


to the religious center. Now we have Biden. Many emergent forces are changing liberalism’s relationship to religion — wokeness, secularization, even paganism. But the new president


personally embodies none of them. Instead he has elevated his own liberal Catholicism to the center of our national life. Calling a form of religion “liberal” can mean two different things:


On the one hand, a theological liberalism, which seeks an evolution in doctrine to adapt to modern needs; on the other, support for policies and parties of the center-left. In practice,


though, the two tend to be conjoined: The American Catholic Church as an institution is caught between the two political coalitions, but most prominent Catholic Democrats are liberals in


theology and politics alike. But more than a set of ideas, liberal Catholicism is a culture, recognizable in its institutions and tropes, its iconography and allusions — to Pope John XXIII


and Jesuit universities, to the “seamless garment” of Catholic teaching and the “spirit” of the Second Vatican Council, to the works of Thomas Merton and hymns like “On Eagle’s Wings” (which


Biden quoted in his victory speech). And, of course, invocations of Pope Francis. A decade ago it was a commonplace to regard liberal Catholicism as a tradition in decline. Its period of


maximal influence, the late 1960s and 1970s, had been an era of institutional crisis for the church, which gave way to the conservative pontificates of John Paul II and Benedict XVI.


Conservative Catholics felt that liberal ideas had been tried and failed, liberal Catholics felt that they had been suppressed. But then Francis gave the liberal tendency new life, reopening


controversies that conservatives assumed were closed and tilting the Vatican toward cooperation with the liberal establishment and away from associations with conservatism. The papacy does


not issue political endorsements, but there seems little doubt that many figures in Francis’ inner circle welcome a Biden presidency. When the American bishops’ statement on his inauguration


included a stern critique of his position on abortion, there was apparent pushback from the Vatican and explicit pushback from the most Francis-aligned of the American cardinals. So the


conservative Catholics who spent the election year arguing that Biden isn’t a Catholic in good standing find themselves (not for the first time) in tacit conflict with their pope. That


conflict belongs to the internal drama of Catholicism. In the internal drama of _America_, though, liberal Catholicism is an interesting candidate to claim the religious center, to fill the


Mainline’s vanished role. If you wanted to make a case for its prospects and potential influence, you would emphasize three distinctive liberal-Catholic qualities: an abiding


institutionalism, in contrast to the pure dissolving individualism of so much American religion; an increasingly multiethnic character, which matches our increasingly diverse republic; and a


fervent inclusivity, an anxiety that nobody should feel discriminated against or turned away. This inclusivity means that liberal Catholicism sometimes seems to capture the universalist


aspirations of the church better than its conservative and traditionalist subcultures. The latter are supposed to be for everybody, but at the moment they tend to appeal to distinctive


personality types (he said, looking in the mirror) while remaining somewhat alien to the normal run of Americans — with “normal” lately meaning not just anyone who doubts certain of the


church’s harder teachings but anyone who doubts the wisdom of a vote for Donald Trump. On the other hand, liberal Catholicism sometimes achieves its feeling of universality by simply


claiming for itself the whole Catholic-influenced world — _sure, he’s __no longer a practicing Catholic__, but_ _did you know that Dr. Anthony Fauci was educated by Jesuits?_ — without


regard to whether that influence actually amounts to much more than a vague spirituality, a generic humanitarianism. Which means that the liberal Catholic worldview is constantly in danger


of simply being subsumed into political liberalism, with all religious distinctives shorn away — as Joe Biden’s past pro-life positions have now been entirely subsumed, for instance, by his


party’s orthodoxy on abortion. Or alternatively, it’s in danger of being effectively taken over from within by rival forms of faith, like the new progressive orthodoxies that are likely to


set our Catholic president’s agenda on the social questions of the day. This is a challenge for any form of faith that aspires to supply a new religious center to our divided society — how


to find a place to stand that’s actually outside partisanship, that’s clearly religious first and liberal or conservative second. On this count it’s fair to say that religious conservatives


of every tradition have often failed or fallen short. But it’s equally fair to doubt that liberal Catholicism, brought back from what had seemed its twilight years to this unexpected


apotheosis, is prepared to pass the test. _The Times is committed to publishing __a diversity of letters__ to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles.


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