Liz Di Nunzio (not a Trump enthusiast) posted a short
item yesterday about understanding your opponents; she defended Trump
supporters from blanket charges of racism and xenophobia. She is emphatically
not a Trump supporter, but is serious about understanding the other side.
Understanding: it’s admirable.
I saw a good friend at Mass this morning. Fr. Francis Martin
is slip-sliding toward the fullness of the life, and so he’s not celebrating
Mass in the morning any more; I went to St. John Neumann. There, I saw Susan
Abel, who spends many mornings in front of the Germantown third-trimester
abortion clinic. She shared a vignette. There was a woman approaching clinic, with
someone already inside doing paperwork for her. She avoided the pro-life
counselors outside, stood off by herself. After some tension and hesitation,
Susan walked over to about ten feet away from the troubled woman, and said
quietly, “I understand the pain of abortion.” The woman came over immediately,
talked a bit, and left with her child intact. Understanding saved a life.
Understand. I have chosen to live my life in the crack –
the divide, the chasm, the abyss, whatever – between the left and the right. I
believe I am supposed to make each side comprehensible to the other. Whoo-ee,
am I bad at it! Over four decades of practice, and I’m still a beginner, likely
to cause trouble instead of helping anything. I admire Liz and Susan, and try
to do the same. Try.
So here’s a scrap of an idea from a failed bridge. This
is a scrap from a Catholic pro-lifer, to a Catholic pro-lifer, about the Catholic
left.
I think it would be worthwhile to study “social sin.”
Most conservatives don’t like the term, but I think it’s indispensable for
understanding most of the divisions in American (and Catholic, and global) life.
#1! Permit me to urge you: Start here, with a poem by Pope John Paul II, “The Armaments Factory Worker”:
#1! Permit me to urge you: Start here, with a poem by Pope John Paul II, “The Armaments Factory Worker”:
I cannot influence the fate of the globe.
Do I start wars?
How can I know
whether I’m for or against?
No, I don’t sin.
I only turn screws, weld together
parts of destruction,
never grasping the whole,
or the human lot.
I could do otherwise (would parts be left out?)
contributing then to sanctified toil
which no one would blot out in action
or belie in speech.
Though what I create is not good,
the world’s evil is not of my making.
But is that enough?
Is it “sinful” to make weapons? How can it “sinful” to
turn screws? Am I really responsible for the things that go out the door of a
factory where I work? The Pope does not answer this question, at least not in
this poem. It’s a question, not a thesis. If you wrestle with this question,
you can talk to the denizens of the 20th and 21st
centuries; but if you don’t, you can’t. (Or: so says one leftie.)
#2! Sticking with Pope John Paul II. In 1984, he wrote a
letter about penance and reconciliation. It’s worth reading the whole thing,
but it’s over 30 thousand words, with 207 footnotes. So you might not race out
to get your copy today. But it’s definitely worthwhile to read paragraph 16, “Personal
Sin and Social Sin” (1,410 words).
(It’s available at http://w2.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/en/apost_exhortations/documents/hf_jp-ii_exh_02121984_reconciliatio-et-paenitentia.html.)
The Pope said that people use the term in at least four
different ways. The first is probably too fuzzy to be useful, although it
contains an important idea: in a sense every sin, regardless of how private,
damages the Body of Christ, and can therefore be called “social.” The fourth usage
is completely bogus, he says: contrasting personal and social sin, watering
down and almost abolishing the idea of personal sin, recognizing only social
guilt and responsibility.
Between these two extremes, there are two legitimate definitions
– both useful. The left uses them; the right does not. And these conceptual
tools are fundamental to clear thought about our times. If you avoid them, you
are crippled.
One paragraph:
“Whenever the church speaks of situations of sin or when she condemns as social sins certain situations or the collective behavior of certain social groups, big or small, or even of whole nations and blocs of nations, she knows and she proclaims that such cases of social sin are the result of the accumulation and concentration of many personal sins. It is a case of the very personal sins of those who cause or support evil or who exploit it; of those who are in a position to avoid, eliminate or at least limit certain social evils but who fail to do so out of laziness, fear or the conspiracy of silence, through secret complicity or indifference; of those who take refuge in the supposed impossibility of changing the world and also of those who sidestep the effort and sacrifice required, producing specious reasons of higher order. The real responsibility, then, lies with individuals.”
“Whenever the church speaks of situations of sin or when she condemns as social sins certain situations or the collective behavior of certain social groups, big or small, or even of whole nations and blocs of nations, she knows and she proclaims that such cases of social sin are the result of the accumulation and concentration of many personal sins. It is a case of the very personal sins of those who cause or support evil or who exploit it; of those who are in a position to avoid, eliminate or at least limit certain social evils but who fail to do so out of laziness, fear or the conspiracy of silence, through secret complicity or indifference; of those who take refuge in the supposed impossibility of changing the world and also of those who sidestep the effort and sacrifice required, producing specious reasons of higher order. The real responsibility, then, lies with individuals.”
He wrote that over three decades ago. And yet, today,
there are still many Catholics whose view of sin does not include: xenophobia
and anti-immigration laws, religious bigotry and Islamophobia, dismantling
health care for the poor without rebuilding a better system, breaking contracts
with small and independent entrepreneurs and underpaying workers, expanding an
arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, to mention just a few.
Third step: my ideas, not the Pope’s. Having quoted Pope
John Paul II, I should specify firmly and repeatedly that the following is my
thought, emphatically not his. Even if you reject my thoughts, go get his. You
need them. You NEED them.
An oddity: pro-lifers struggle to explain what’s wrong
with abortion. Part of the explanation seems so obvious that pro-lifers don’t
believe for a moment that someone who misses the bloody-photo argument will
listen to anything else. And yet: if a pro-lifer explains abortion as a
structure of evil, as a social sin, how many pro-choicers stop and listen? This
a language that takes the message across many barriers. It’s not magic; people
don’t become pro-lifers in one quick moment. But if you’re having trouble
communicating, maybe it’s worthwhile trying something new. Abortion is a social
sin.
Here’s another oddity, and this is the one that got me
writing this morning. Off the top of my head, I can’t think of anyone who
supports the Pope and American bishops on immigration – AND supports Cardinal
Burke in his confrontation with the Pope over marriage and divorce and
communion. I am sure such people exist, but offhand I can’t identify any. (What
do Grisez and Finnis say about immigration? For sure, I listen to them on
marriage, because of what they say about war.) In general, it seems to me that there’s
an overwhelming congruence: “conservatives” on immigration are “conservatives”
on divorce, and “liberals” are “liberal.” But why? What’s the connection? Why
does your view on immigration serve as a moderately reliable predictor of your view
on divorce?
Perhaps, just perhaps, this: liberals use the thought and
language of social sin, and conservatives don’t. It’s been 32 years since the Pope’s
letter defining the term. Using that term makes it possible to see xenophobia
as a sin. So Pope Francis says it’s not Christian to build a wall. If you
insist on seeing that assertion without reference to social sin, it was a
ridiculous thing to say. There are good Catholic bricklayers, building sin-free
walls. And yet, an honest reader who understands social sin, and is aware of
the Pope’s repeated forceful pastoral exhortation that we break free of the sin
of xenophobia, can and will understand what Francis said without a split second’s
hesitation.
But Cardinal Burke – God bless him – rejects the Pope’s
teaching on immigration, does not accept the repeated pastoral exhortations to
open our hearts to refugees. And so when he talks about sin, I find it
impossible to take him seriously. I think that a moral teacher who overlooks
xenophobia and bigotry and abusing workers and ending health care for the poor
and proposing new nukes – but wants an audience for his theories about divorce
and remarriage – has absolutely no credibility. If you overlook huge evils, but
want to keep the sinners out of the communion line, it’s just not possible to
hear you.
Xenophobes are welcome to communion. Bigots are welcome.
Bombers are welcome. Torturers are welcome. Tax evaders are welcome. Abusive
employers are welcome. Liars who won’t pay bills are welcome. But the divorced
and re-married: they are a public scandal.
I can’t get my head around that. I cannot take seriously
the moral teaching of someone who is unaware of social sin, doesn’t use the
category, seems unaware of the problems, or even dismisses the structures of
sin as irrelevant and sides with the perpetrators.
Constructive communication between the left and the right
within the Church can (and should?) begin with the teaching of St. John Paul II
– not only of the theology of the body, but also on structures of sin. Without
it, we have little or no hope of understanding each other.