The New Anti-Catholicism: The Last Acceptable Prejudice
by Philip Jenkins ISBN: 0195154800
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The New Anti-Catholicism: The Last Acceptable Prejudice by Jeremy LottThe last few years have not been kind to the American arm of the
Catholic Church. Aggressive reporting by the Boston Globe exposed
Cardinal Bernard Law as a prevaricator, a bully, and a protector
of sexually abusive clerics. The success of the Globe prompted
journalists across the country to dig into the histories of the
local white collar set. Many of these excavations uncovered skeletons.
By the time The New Anti-Catholicism went to press, bishops in
Boston, Milwaukee and Florida had resigned over accusations that
they mishandled what one newsroom editor ingeniously dubbed the
"pedophile priest crisis," or were implicated in sexual
misconduct themselves.
While he believed the investigations fully warranted, Pennsylvania
State University historian Philip Jenkins was frustrated by the
media storm that rained down on the Church. Necessary criticism of
corrupt priests and bishops, he says, "segued effortlessly
into grotesque attacks on the Catholic Church as an institution,
together with a sweeping denunciation of Catholic faith and
practice." These attacks were much more extensive than a few
nasty editorial cartoons or the ribald jokes of late night talk
show hosts. Some priests quit wearing their trademark black and
white in public to avoid unprovoked insults and saliva. A few states
introduced disclosure legislation that would have subjected the
confessional seal to legal challenges; none of them passed but
Connecticut was a close call.
It may have been a close call, but the bile was neither unexpected
nor unprecedented. Anti-Catholicism as a powerful influence in the
U.S. may pre-date even the Revolutionary War. During a recent stint
at a Canadian newsmagazine, this reviewer learned the local high
school history texts point up the role the Quebec Act played as an
instigator in that conflict. I am not a trained historian, but it
sounds plausible. The Puritan colonists' own religious sensibilities
were too radical for the Church of England. That they would object
violently to the Crown recognizing the Catholic Church as an official
religious body in their own backyard does not strain the bonds of
credibility overmuch.
Over the course of ten tightly written chapters, Jenkins does not
attempt a comprehensive or chronological history of anti-Catholicism
in America. Instead, he hits the high points-or, rather, the low
points-by subject. Several chapters lay out the case against the
Church's position on x, including plenty of hysterical and overheated
remarks (e.g. "The Church Hates Women," "The Church
Kills Gays"-actual chapter titles) but also the saner substantive
arguments. Jenkins then rebuts the claims that can be rebutted and
adds some insight to those that cannot be brushed away so easily.
Other chapters look at how the Church is covered in the press and
by the entertainment industry.
In terms of book sales, it's probably good that The New Anti-Catholicism
does not try to be comprehensive; the impressionistic portrait that
we see is depressing enough. Start with nineteenth century ravings
from Protestant pulpits against the "whore of Babylon"
and the "mother of all harlots." Newspaper cartoons
dramatized the various Catholic migrations with cartoons such as
"The American River Ganges," in which the bishops' mitres
become crocodile jaws, as they slithered from the water to menace
innocent Protestant children. In the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan struggled
against "Kike, Koon and Katholic." The reactionary and
anti-modern critics of the Catholic Church were often joined by
liberals and progressives, who questioned the compatibility of
Catholicism with "American values." In the 1940s, the
left-liberal Nation ran a series of hard-hitting articles that
became the basis for Paul Blanshard's American Freedom and Catholic
Power. The bestseller imagined a dystopian future only slightly
less grim than Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, in which the
second half of its title effectively extinguished the first.
"While Blanshard does not actually conjure up crocodilian
bishops," writes Jenkins, "the image is certainly
implied."
Given some of the most recent charges against the Church, crocodilian
caricatures of bishops may be the least of her worries. Several
prominent academics and intellectuals have replaced the historical
picture of Pius XII with a stick figure who, as Daniel Goldhagen
said in the New Republic's excerpt from his new book, was in league
with the Anti-Christ. Events from the Crusades to the Inquisition(s)
to the trial of Galileo are routinely ripped from their historical
contexts and used as a bludgeon with which to beat the Church. The
explosion of sex abuse cases has tapped into old anti-clerical
propaganda of priests as cowardly effeminate predators who prey on
children; thus, the moniker "pedophile priest crisis."
As the author of what may be the benchmark book on priest sexual
abuse (Pedophiles and Priests) as well as a number of books on moral
panics (Moral Panic, Using Murder, Intimate Enemies, etc.), Jenkins
was struck by the biases in the language used to describe the whole
fiasco. The number of alleged actual pedophile priests is tiny. If
the definition of pedophilia is restricted to its historic
definition-sex between adults and pre-pubescent children-then maybe
a baker's dozen pedophiles have been exposed in the last few years.
A study of 2,200 priests in Boston, a hotbed of reported sex abuse,
found only one priest in this category. Jenkins adds, helpfully,
"one priest, not one percent of priests."
Most often, the abuse is between priests and older teens or
adults-usually males. Such relationships are truly abhorrent, in
the eyes of the Church and society in general, and it's not a
judgment the present work tries to challenge. A man of the cloth
who abuses his office to seduce adolescents is rightly shunned for
a great number of reasons, says Jenkins. But-and here's the catch-he
insists that the offense is not of the same moral or legal gravity
as sodomizing children, and that the term "pedophile priest"
should only be applied where it is truly warranted, which would
paint the present crisis in a slightly different light. The incidence
of sexual abuse of any kind by Catholic priests is committed by two
to three percent of clerics, which, so far as we know, is in keeping
with abuse rates among Protestant ministers.
If the incidence of sex abuse among Catholic priests is indistinguishable
from the abuse of ministers of other faiths, Jenkins wants to know,
why the disproportionate fuss over Catholic malfeasance? The
hierarchical nature of the Catholic Church is one answer. American
Protestantism is a moving target. If the minister from the local
community church is caught having sex with one of the teenagers,
he is usually fired and cut loose. The news coverage is likely to
focus on the man himself rather than the church that fired him, and
people hesitate to blame all of Protestantism (if there is such a
thing) for his indiscretions. Because of the nature of their office,
abusive priests are much more difficult to cut loose and their
actions are seen as being more representative of the Church as a
whole.
Granted, Americans tend to be suspicious of any large institutions,
but the institutional answer goes only so far. At the end of his
book, Jenkins professes shock at the adaptability of what Peter
Viereck called the anti-Semitism of the intellectuals. However,
Viereck's appellation was far too limiting. With the clerical sex
abuse issue, as with so many others, anti-Catholicism in the U.S.
is as inexplicable as it is pervasive.
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