Christian Crisis - M. de La Bedoyere
Christian Crisis - M. de La Bedoyere
Christian Crisis - M. de La Bedoyere
By
MICHAEL DE LA BEDOYERE
NEW YORK
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
FSINTED IK THI UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
O o ,S
37
Part One
YESTERDAY
I. The Problem 3
II. Christianity and the Last War . . -13
III. Socialism ....... 26
IV. ' Dawnism ' 36
V. Nationalism 43
VI. The ' Dawnist ' Peace ..... 5a
VII. Catholics accept the Post-War World . 59
VIII. The Right Revolutions .... 71
IX. Catholic Right Reaction .... 87
X. Conclusions—I . . . . . .103
Part Two
TO-DAY
I. The Catholic Renaissance "5
II. The Christian Person . 126 /
III. The- Training of British Catholics 140
IV. Where British Catholics Fail 155
V. Catholics and Anglicans 171 /
VI. The Present War . . . . 182
VII. Conclusions—II . 197 »/
vii
INTRODUCTION
YESTERDAY
CHAPTER ONE
THE PROBLEM
!
14 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
who feed on the idealism of others, seeking only personal
gain and power. But these last will never dare come out
into the open and admit their motives, for they know that
their fellow men, whatever the real worth of the ideal that
calls them to action, would turn against this mere self-
seeking as evil.
Accordingly, we must expect, whatever the nature of the
idealism that happens to be in fashion (whether for God or
against God) to see men pursuing it as within a moral-
spiritual system wherein men will have their struggles and
temptations, their successes and fallings-away. Within it
there will always remain an ought, some idea of duty to
which a man may or may not be faithful. That is why man
always makes use of a moral terminology, talking of virtue
and vice and finding it possible to analyse his actions in
terms of such words as justice, charity, honesty, etc., and, in
truth, these words, within whatever moral system it may be,
will bear meaning analogous to the meaning they bear in
true religion and true morality. We must not therefore make
the common mistake of supposing that, because the moral
terminology which we associate with the Christian ethical
order is invoked and often lived up to, these modern move
ments cease to be dangerous or anti-Christian. The
evidence that men are still seeking for the good, as they see it,
is indeed in one way re-assuring, for it gives the hope that
they can be converted by coming to see the full truth, but in
another way it adds to the danger, partly because it is a
potent cause of confusion and partly because it provides for
those who are wrong the only strength that matters, the
strength of moral conviction. Though it is probably true
that so long as a man genuinely seeks what he believes to be
good, there is a limit to the degree in which in the long run
he can be perverted from the right, the more moral con
viction is added to objective error in moral judgement, the
worse the situation is.
When we enter upon the scene of these observations, we
find that, despite the weakening of Christianity, moral
values and moral terminology have become more rather
than less fervently invoked. The last great war was viewed
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 15
as a holier war than any since the Crusades, for moral
motives, though more diffused and infinitely vaguer in
content, certainly penetrated into the consciences of a far
greater number of the people in the belligerent countries
than for centuries before. Never before had whole peoples
supposed that a war could be waged for such glorious moral
causes as the ending of all war, the establishment of per
petual liberty and freedom, the making of the world into a
paradise fit for heroes to live in. Never before even had the
concrete and genuine motive, secondary though it was, of
saving a little country from wanton aggression been raised
to such a degree of spiritual and moral fervour. Here
indeed were spiritual forces in plenty at work.
The Church, face to face with this war, was brought up
against a virtually new problem. Ever conscious of the
sufferings entailed by war and ever aware that a war
revealed a state of disorder within the unity of Christendom,
the Church at her best had endeavoured to prevent war, to
mitigate its sufferings and to restrict this ultimate means of
settling human differences within clearly defined moral
bounds. None the less the occurrence of war had only
gradually become a challenge to the dominating spiritual
force of Christianity. Wars had either been religious or
political. The end of a religious war, from the Christian
point ofview, had been to preserve by the only human means
possible the human instrument through which orthodox
Christianity could penetrate into temporal society. Abuses
there may have been, but the principle did not militate
against the generally recognised understanding of the
spiritual mission of Christianity. Political wars were mainly
fought for motives of temporal advantage on one side or
another, matters to which—unless warfare were considered
intrinsically immoral—the Church might be indifferent.
Moreover, such wars had not affected the lives of peoples
in general, but only professional soldiers and comparatively
limited districts. From the revolutionary wars at the end
of the eighteenth century onwards wars began to be religious
wars again but for aspirations that had little or nothing
to do with Christianity.
i6 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
The war of 1914-1918 in particular presented itself from
the beginning as a matter of conscience. The implication was
that certain universal moral ideals could only be safe
guarded by the military victory of one side which was looked
upon for the time being as something approaching a verit
able religious or moral institution. Secondly, for technical
reasons due to the development of our civilisation, this war
for the first time entered fully into the lives of all the
peoples in the belligerent countries, being, as it were, per
sonally fought by each one of them on the home front, if
not at the actual front. And so the root problem of Chris
tianity confronted with this new kind of war was as follows :
Christians, by hypothesis in agreement with one another
all over the world about the spiritual end of life and the
code of morals according to which temporal life should be
ordered so that it might lead to the attainment of this
spiritual end, found themselves fighting one another all
over the world in a war in which moral motives were deemed
more important than political ones and in which the carry
ing through of the war to victory was made dependent in
an unprecedented measure on keeping up the morale of the
people through a religious or moral fervour. In other
words, unless the moral motives of one side were really
Christian (and therefore those of the other side non-Chris
tian), Christianity had to stand by and watch the faithful
fighting each other for a medley of moral and spiritual
motives, many of which must be cutting across the ideals
of Christianity itself. It was hard indeed to reconcile such
a situation with the effective maintenance of Christianity,
even for Christians themselves, as an important, let alone
a dominating, spiritual force in that Western society of
which the majority was still nominally Christian. Indeed,
this contradiction could not possibly have come about
unless our civilisation had already in many respects alienated
itself from Christianity.
This alienation was, ofcourse, the direct result ofthe progress
made by two of the new spiritual forces which characterised
the history of the nineteenth century : faith in Nationalism
and faith in ' Dawnism.' Julien Benda in one of the most
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 17
striking books written since the last war, The Treason of the
Clerks, indicted the whole of the modern intelligentsia for
having betrayed their calling and used their arts to preach
brute nationalism instead of defending the universal values
of religion and culture. ' The clerks,' he wrote, ' adopt
political passions. No one will contest to-day that through
out Europe the immense majority of men of letters, artists,
a considerable number of savants, philosophers, ministers of
God take their places in the choir of race hatreds and
political factions.'1
It is conceivable, however, that some of the elect would
have resisted the temptation of prostrating themselves
before the altars of Nationalism if the service of the nation
had not been carried through in the ritual of ' Dawnism.'
On the side of the Allies the temptation was especially
subtle, for the philosophy of a new era of progress, enlighten
ment and justice had been so closely associated with the
future of the Western democracies that a man might be
pardoned for confounding the establishment of imperial
power with the establishment of liberty, the securing of the
world's wealth with the securing of the reign of social
justice, the dissemination of Anglo-Saxon tradition with the
dissemination of toleration, humanitarianism, etc. In fact,
we are faced with the curious paradox of nations like France
and Britain, which had for generations rejected the Christian
God as a factor of any importance in the determination of
temporal society, claiming to be fighting to the death for the
defence of values and decencies in the name of God. We
get a vivid idea of the degree to which the Allies succumbed
to the temptation of identifying their cause with that of
God when we remember that so pontifical an English news
paper as the Tablet of the day rejected the peace proposals
of Benedict XV on the ground that the military situation
made possible an eventual peace nearer to its British heart's
desire and, presumably, British religion. The rejection by
the most orthodox Catholics of Papal proposals for making
peace is, of course, a commonplace in Christian history,
but this was done either because the Pope was acting in a
1 La Trahison des Clercs, p. 56.
i8 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
political capacity or because no bones were made about the
purely political ends of the war. It was a new and, under
the circumstances, a scandalous thing for Catholics, at the
very heart of the Church, to reject what amounted to the
Pope's spiritual advice in a conflict waged ostensibly for
spiritual and moral reasons. And the fact that the Pope
was so wholly right, whereas the Nationalists in France and
Britain were so wholly wrong, confirms the scandal.
From the beginning of the war it had been generally
considered in the Allied camp that the Vatican was pro-
German. This in itself was another sign of the times. We
were the leading spiritual force, and the Vatican's outlook
had been reduced to mere temporal taking of sides to spite
anti-clerical France and defend clerical Austria. Actually
Benedict XV, faced by an insoluble problem through the
wholesale, though unconscious, betrayal of Christianity by
Christians in all belligerent countries, could for the moment
do no more than set a personal example of unimpeachable
Christianity. Where there was a genuine moral issue he
spoke out, his condemnation of ' every injustice by what
soever side committed ' being meant, as Cardinal Gasparri
explained in a letter to the Belgian Minister at the Vatican,
to include the invasion of Belgium.1 But it is doubtful
whether he could see anything more noble in the moral
protestations and phrases under cover of which the Allies
fought for complete conquest than in the more openly
admitted political designs of Germany. The real test of
sincerity did not come in 1914, but in 191 7, when the Pope
thought that there was some chance of impartial peace
proposals being accepted. If a new era of ' peace and
justice ' could be concretely envisaged it was surely to be
found in the Pope's proposals for ' simultaneous and recipro
cal diminution of armaments,' ' the establishment of arbi
tration with sanctions ' and ' complete and reciprocal con
donation ' in regard to damage and cost of war. Germany's
crime in invading Belgium was to be set right by ' complete
evacuation of Belgium,' which, however, in view of German
complaints must have ' a guarantee of military, political
1 Rev. Humphrey Johnson : Vatican Diplomacy and the World War, p. 16.
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 19
and economic independence towards all Powers what
soever.' ' On the part of other belligerents there must be a
similar restitution of German colonies.' And the incredibly
complicated and artificial conquest settlement, which finally
embodied the high moral cause of the Allies to make the
new world in which the trinity of Nature, Man and Reason
could be safely worshipped, was completely ' debunked '
before the event by the Pope's gentle and wise advice :
' The same spirit of equity and justice must reign in the study
of the other territorial and political questions, notably those
relating to Armenia, the Balkan States and to the territories
forming part of the ancient Kingdom of Poland, to which,
in particular, its noble historical traditions and the sufferings
endured, especially during the present war, ought justly to
assure the sympathies of the nations.'
It was these proposals which were frigidly received by
every belligerent Power, the Catholic population in each
one showing no signs of disagreement with the verdict of
their rulers, but it is an English Catholic historian who
concludes from a study of the actions taken in the different
countries that ' had the Allies made an honest declaration of
their willingness to conclude a moderate peace, the Pope's
efforts in Berlin and Vienna would certainly have led to
very different results.'1 And it was left to the High Priest
of the New Dawn, Woodrow Wilson, to make the most
crushing reply to the whole Christian intention of the Pope's
efforts : ' To deal with such a power (Germany),' said the
President, ' by way of peace upon the plan proposed by
His Holiness the Pope, would, so far as we can see, involve
a recuperation of its strength and a renewal of its policy ;
would make it necessary to create a permanent hostile com
bination of the nations against the German people who are
its instruments.' Such was in effect the ' Dawn ' seen
through Nationalist spectacles, the distortion which the
moralists tried to bring into being and to-day threatens to
repeat precisely the same sins.
But the indictment here is not directed against the lay
States which had long ceased to take Christianity into
1 Rev. Humphrey Johnson : Op. cit., p. 36.
20 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
serious consideration, nor against the peoples into whose
ears had been preached the new Faiths with their simple
moral codes urging to glorious action for the new Cause ;
the indictment here is directed against all who in their
degree were responsible for the weakness shown by Chris
tians in succumbing, almost without realising it, during the
nineteenth century to the new Paganisms. The result of
this was that the masses of Christians themselves, having
found themselves at the beginning of the war in a contra
dictory moral position, fighting against each other for
opposite moral faiths, did not so much as lift a hand to
help the Father of Christians when he, in a statement of a
few hundred words, tore to shreds the charters of the new
moralities and indicated the only possible way out for
Christianity. Not only did they not lift a hand to help ;
most of them lifted one hand to shield their eyes against
the advice of the Pope and the other to God for complete
victory that their country might conquer and create a
better world than the Pope, apparently, could envisage.
One could scarcely wish for a better example of the ineffec
tiveness of Christianity as a social force in our days, the more
so in that the individual Christian could hardly be blamed
so late in the day for faithfully serving his country during the
war : indeed, on the face of it it was his duty to do so, for
obedience to legitimate temporal authority in all that is not
sin has ever been taught by the Church. And when did
war, pursued for such lofty moral motives, ever seem so far
removed from sin and injustice ! The Christian, while he
could most certainly have entertained doubts as to the
soundness of his country's ends, was by now caught up in a
false position from which there was no escape. If he did
his duty to his country, he implicated himself in a spiritual
and moral atmosphere that was far from Christian ; if he
refused to do his duty he failed his country where, according
to Christian teaching, his country had the right to expect
his service.
The advent of peace released him from his dilemma,
and it should have given him his opportunity to labour for
a settlement that would guarantee Europe against another
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 21
such contradiction between Christianity and the civic
duties of Christians. All the more was this his duty in that
the Pope, who was able to speak in war-time, had been
silenced for the duration of peace-time by the clause in the
secret Treaty of London in which Britain supported the
Italian demand that the Pope should not be represented
at the Peace Treaty—another article of ' Dawn ' morality for
which Italian and British Catholics shed their blood !
The treaties that settled international order after the
war have by now been fairly generally condemned as the
embodiment of the real political aims of the victor countries.
But that was far from being the general view of the time.
It is a mistake to condemn Versailles simply for its severity.
As a political treaty it was no worse and no better than
previous political treaties. The real evil of Versailles lay in
the fact that it attempted to carry through to a permanent
peace settlement the moral emotionalism under which the
Allies had fought. In fact, in this respect it was not a treaty
at all ; it was a religious-moral judgement passed against
the vanquished by the victors who embodied the roles of
God, judge, counsel for the prosecution and witnesses all
rolled into one. Remarkable as such an assumption of
supernatural and natural powers might be, the general moral
exaltation for the triumph of ' Dawnism ' might have carried
it through had the actual judgement shown any signs of
being consistent with this high idealism. Unfortunately, the
essence of the judgement, as mentioned above, was the
imposition of severe political terms in the full tradition of
the bad old political history which the future was to
transcend. And the Allies made no attempt to carry out those
self-denying ordinances, e.g. disarmament, that alone might
have excused the moral indignation. Between the unfulfilled
moral aspirations which probably did tend to mitigate a
little the political severity (and therefore consistency and
effectiveness) of the Treaty and the political severity which
made those moral aspirations intolerable to the condemned
(and ultimately to the wiser of the victors), the Treaty
turned out to be a worse calamity even than the war which
had preceded it. It literally let loose all the non-Christian
22 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
forces, that had been simmering before the war and harnessed
during it, and thereby imposed upon Christianity a peace
task which, if not as impossible as its war problem, made
even greater demands upon the Church and the faithful.
After the war Catholics, for the most part, fully shared
the widespread hope that a new era of peace, justice, liberty
and international understanding had been ushered in.
What was concrete in these aspirations was, after all, a
Christian heritage and, at any rate as abstract ideals, they
can be fitted into any and every social system which man
kind can devise. Even Socialism, Bolshevism, Nazism,
Fascism declare themselves to be aiming at precisely these
ends, differing from one another and from Liberalism or
Christianity solely as regards the means whereby they are
to be attained. The nationalistically inspired and war-
heated suspicion of Germany was still too strong to enable
the masses to appreciate the contradiction between the
moral and political sides of the peace treaties ; the estab
lishment of the League of Nations appeared to be a greater
practical advance towards Christianising the spirit of inter
national relations than anything the Church could hope to
effect or, for that matter, ever had effected since the dim
days of the Middle Ages ; and the visible enemy lay revealed
in Russian Sovietism, around which a cordon sanitaire was
being diligently created after the failure of Anglo-French-
supported counter-revolution. Those whose Christian con
sciences had not been troubled by the war between Chris
tians would certainly not be worried by this religiously-
neutral dawn of practical Christianity. The loss of a for
mally Catholic empire in Central Europe, the surrender of
Eastern Europe to the persecuting Soviet, even the complete
absence of any reference to God and Christianity in the
new settlement, these seemed to be a small price to pay for
an all-comprehending natural philosophy of international
behaviour (in all its details in close harmony with the
teaching of theologians on this subject) and for the ushering-
in amid States, old and new, of liberal regimes wherein
Christians could make themselves freely felt either as
individuals or as political parties.
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 23
The almost universal feelings of Christians, and indeed
of all men of goodwill, were expressed by Benedict XV in
his Encyclical, Pacem Dei, of May, 1920, in which the newly
created League was welcomed as a first step along the path
leading to a real society or family of nations which would
make modern war unthinkable and create a situation in
which the demand for justice and charity could be met.
' To the nations,' wrote the Pope, ' united in a league founded
on the Christian law, the Church will faithfully lend her
active and eager co-operation.'
Two years later Pius XI in his Christmas Encyclical,
Ubi Arcano, sounded more emphatically the Christian warn
ing note : ' There still exists,' he wrote, ' a Divine institu
tion to which all nations belong and yet which is over them
all, which is furnished with the highest authority and is
worthy of reverence for the fullness of its piety, the Church
of Christ. She alone can undertake this task, thanks to her
age-long glorious history.'
Though, of course, neither Pontiff intended to emphasise
one aspect at the expense of the other, we may conveniently
take these two quotations as representing a dualism of
Christian attitude towards the new era. On the one side
there was the strong force, destined rapidly to weaken,
which, hoping that a natural morality had emerged from
the non-Christian spiritual forces that had developed in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, put its faith in the peace
settlement as a foundation from which Catholicity could
rise ; on the other side the weaker force, destined rapidly
to grow, which suspected the possibly deceptive appearances
and found it hard to conceive how positive and workable
religious and moral convictions could develop from so
negative, neutral and naturalistic a basis. Both subsequent
history and any serious analysis of the elements that went
to make up the philosophy of the ' Dawn ' have justified the
doubts and condemned the optimists. None the less it is
even now a task of some difficulty to persuade many a
sincere Christian that the League which—to quote a recent
Catholic moral code—' belonged to Christian tradition, was
embodied in the Christianity of the Middle Ages and was
24 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
invoked in memorable circumstances by the Holy See M
could justifiably be criticised by Catholics. Evidently it is
not the idea of the League nor the general sense of the
Covenant (which strove to fulfil the suggestions made by
Benedict XV in time of war) which can be criticised, but
the use to which so admirable a theory would inevitably
be put by the three real faiths which still held sway,
striving to ' by-pass ' the Christian faith : faith in
Nationalism defended by the conservative elements, faith
in the ' Dawnist ' and neo-pagan destruction of the religious,
social and cultural traditions of Christianity and national
entities defended by the intellectual Liberal elements, and
faith in a new, class-less, economic, authoritarian State
defended by the Socialist or Marxist elements. These were
the real forces, often of a genuinely spiritual character,
which drove the politicians to make the League in the
first place an instrument in the service of whichever faith
or combinations of faiths they happened to serve and in the
second an object of abuse when the League, in serving one
faith better than another, became in turn an object of hatred
for one side and then a useless encumbrance for the other.
The reality was, as it always is, a question of the spiritual
and moral driving power behind the machine ; the illusion
lay in believing that the perfection of the machine could
compensate for the intentions of those who worked it. The
story of the League is seen in retrospect to have been little
more than the recording by the convenient Geneva gauge
of the hectic risings and fallings and interactions in post-war
Europe of precisely these non-Christian spiritual forces.
And the gauge was rarely able (except in non-political
fields) to record the effect of the sincere spiritual force
behind its aspirations, a force which at the beginning had
behind it the weight of Catholic opinion, because that force
was not sufficiently rooted in any effective social structure
or in any passionate conviction to make its influence felt in
competition with the others.
If, then, we are to trace the action of the Church and
the fidelity to Christian principles of the faithful during the
1 Code of International Ethics, p. I S3.
CHRISTIANITY AND THE LAST WAR 25
interval between the two wars, we must try to see where
and when and how the spiritual force of Christianity
encountered the rapidly developing and altering forces of
Nationalism, Liberalism and Socialism. The real story is
there, not in the sequence of political events and the antics
of statesmen which are but recordings of the stages in the
clash of spiritual and moral forces.
CHAPTER THREE
SOCIALISM
« DAWNISM '
NATIONALISM
s
THE 'DAWNIST' PEACE 53
The loathsome mask has fallen, the man remains
Sceptreless, free, uncircumscribed, but man
Equal, unclassed, tribeless and nationless,
Exempt from awe, worship, degree.
(Prometheus Unbound.)
grew and grew, in almost complete dissociation from the
facts of contemporary history, reaching their climax during
the war and the peace-making that followed it.
A world-war, in fact, exactly suited the mentality of the
' Dawnists.' Subconsciously aware that their noble ideals
are in fact far removed from the day-to-day nature of man
and, still more, of society as it works in practice, and sub
consciously doubtful of the practicability of a peaceful
evolution of man to angel, they welcome an explosion from
which, like the conjuror, they hope to bring out a marvel
lous surprise that in the ordinary course of things cannot
be reached. Violence, whether of internal revolution or
external war (though not consciously desired and generally
reprobated in words), is not unwelcome. It was in this
sense that Anatole France wrote : ' When one starts with
the supposition that all men are naturally good and vir
tuous, one inevitably ends by wishing to kill them all.'
This world-war, then, was greeted as a gigantic bonfire
in which once and for all could be consumed all the evil
men, all the evil forces and all the litter, left over from the
ancien rigime, which stood in the path of progress. That is
why the war raised to fever pitch the moral enthusiasm of
millions : the war to end war ; the war to make democracy
safe ; the war to make the world safe for heroes ; the war
to free small nations and small men in large nations ; and
so on. And the peace-making (put into operation through
the charter of Wilson's fourteen points) was undertaken in
exactly the same spirit.
But human nature is a dangerous and a double-sided
force. This humanitarian love of violence is not only a
subconscious confession of weakness ; it closely represents
the inevitable working of a fallen nature, a nature in which
reason rapidly comes under the empire of irrational passion.
If you want something very much, you are tempted to do
54 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
almost anything which will procure it ; and the more
sublime the end, the less regard is paid to the means. The
cruelty of modern warfare (while due in large measure to
technical causes) is a natural response to the sublimity of
the ends for which men believe themselves to be fighting.
The same reason accounts for the increase in hatred and
the desire for revenge. Those who felt most strongly the
righteousness and holiness of the last war tended to be the
very persons who refused to consider a negotiated peace.
It was they who welcomed or fanned propaganda, they
who demanded the extermination of the enemy, they who,
when it came to peace, called loudest for the hanging of the
Kaiser and making Germany pay, they who made them
selves judge, counsel for the prosecution and witnesses,
when the enemy was to be tried. Why not ? Were they
not fighting for a new ' Dawn ' ? And who stood in the
way of this glorious future ? The enemy. ' Down with the
enemy, at any cost.'
From the French Revolution onwards, this close associa
tion between noble idealism and cruel passion can be
traced. The attempt to deny the doctrine of the Fall of
Man always leads to behaviour which sinks deeper than
the Fall itself would warrant.
' Dawnism ' automatically yields excessive Nationalism
and revolutionary Socialism. But perhaps this apparent
law of nature would not have such evil consequences, if
it did not lend itself to an important and never-failing abuse.
I have tried to insist throughout that these forces are
spiritual, sincerely held, meant to raise the moral level of
human society ; and I would certainly not make an excep
tion in this regard for the philosophers of the ' Dawn,' the
patriotic leaders, the prophets of Socialism and Bolshevism.
But behind these and their myriad of followers there lie
two kinds of people : the self-seekers and the servants of
the times. In every society and religion there are men and
women in whom selfishness definitely overcomes idealism
and who ruthlessly seek power for power's sake, wealth for
wealth's sake, career for career's sake. In whatever walk
of life they may be, they are on the look out for the main
THE 'DAWNIST' PEACE 55
chance of getting ahead. I think one may say without lack
of charity that they are common among politicians and the
financial community. They are also to be found in numbers
among the uprooted Jewish race. Far more honourable,
but unconsciously dangerous also are the servants of the
times. This is the army of experts who by profession are
solely concerned with carrying through and improving
whatever their particular business may be. Civil servants,
scientists, doctors, judges, lawyers, the main body of the
clergy—their life's work consists in blind and faithful
service to their jobs, which they, as it were, pick up at a
certain stage of development and influence on the com
munity and drop, when they retire, at a later stage. What
ever be the line of development—from the point of view of
the community, whether good, bad or indifferent—their
profession makes them its servants. Thus they serve
inevitably the prevalent forces of the day without concerning
themselves about their actual value. (In private life, they
may of course be, and often are, supporters of a spiritual
force, but their influence on the community is infinitely
stronger in their professional capacity than in their private
views.)
Now the common conjunction of idealism of ends with
indifference to means, where the great spiritual forces of a
period of history are concerned, provides, as it were, the
junction between spiritual forces and the actual changes in
history. The prophets with their numberless followers set
the ideal, but, under cover of the idealists' indifference to
forceful, revengeful and cruel means of attaining the ideal,
the self-seekers find their opportunity and the servants of the
times blindly work for the attainment of the next stage of
history which will inevitably prove to be very different from
what the prophets had hoped.
We have seen how this way of evolution was exemplified
in the French Revolution. The Prophets of the ' Dawn,'
in preaching a golden age, stimulated the use of violence.
Under cover of this the self-seekers found an opportunity
of gaining their ends, impressing in their service the pro
fessionals. Thus France passed from idealist revolution to
56 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
Napoleonic Empire. In its turn Nationalism became an
ideal with its own prophets, and self-seekers in the political
and economic field made use of the excesses of Nationalism
to advance themselves, while the professionals laboured
hard to develop the impersonal, expert tyrannic State
which suited the seekers after wealth and power. Exactly
the same process can be traced in the evolution of Socialism
and the creation of Bolshevism. Our main concern for the
moment, however, is the development that took place
during and after the world-war.
By this time ' Dawnism ' and Nationalism seemed equally
strong. The vast majority, moreover, of those who would
have called themselves Socialists were still ' Dawnists,' in
the sense that their Socialism was a moderate international
ism for the benefit of the workers of all countries, in a
better world.
The outbreak of war had at once proved that Nationalism
went much deeper than ' Dawnism.' We know the reasons
why. Nationalism was not only the outcome of ' Dawnism,'
in the sense that most of those who looked for a golden age
had been easily persuaded that the use of national force
against bad peoples was the way to bring it about, but the
self-seekers and the professionals had for generations been
strengthening the power of the State as against the in
dividual. As soon, then, as war came, the ' Dawnists ' all
became violent Nationalists in the belief that victory would
bring the ' Dawn ' ; the Nationalists (and most ' Dawnists '
had by this time become Nationalists as well) obviously had
it all their own way ; and most of the Socialists at once
threw over their international hopes for the workers and
joined the national ranks. (Christians, as we have seen,
had become so imbued with ' Dawnism ' and Nationalism
that they did not hesitate for one moment to kill one another
for these new spiritual ends, while the Church herself,
strong in her own ecclesiastical fortress, was impotent to
make a sortie to save either the world or her own subjects.)
When peace came, it seemed as though the ' Dawn ' had
really arrived. Everywhere there was a feeling that
democracy, with all the noble ideals of liberty, justice,
THE 'DAWNIST' PEACE 57
toleration, peace, etc., which it connoted, could be estab
lished across the breadth of the civilised globe. And as for
the relations between nations, these would at last be settled
once and for all by the League or Community of Nations.
(Christians could scarcely help being leaders in a cause so
evidently in harmony with the social and international ends
of Christianity. Curious, no doubt, that it had all come
about by ' by-passing ' Christian dogma, but there the
ideal clearly was.)
Alas ! the fatal junction between noble aspirations and
mean feelings had not been avoided. A peace, weak where
it should have been severe (if Nationalism alone was to be
served) and unprecedentedly cruel and revengeful where
it should have been charitable (if the noble ideals of
' Dawnism ' were to be attended to), was imposed. The
' Dawnists ' wanted the ' Dawn ' through the throttling
of the defeated enemies of the ' Dawn '—and then began
to have scruples. The Nationalists (and remember that the
two ideals were generally to be found in the same person)
wanted national greatness and security at the expense of
the conquered. And under cover of this the politicians and
the financiers sought power and wealth in every article of
peace which they dictated. The professionals set to work
to fit the peace into the inevitable framework imposed by
the economic, financial, technical, industrial, scientific
forces which they alone understood, pressing, as it were,
from under, so that what was impracticable in the peace
was broken and trying to force the course of history to
follow their impersonal and silent dictation. ->
The absurdity and artificiality of the whole settlement was
not long in manifesting itself. The ' Dawnists ' began to
regret the effects of their harshness, and, feeling that their
opportunity was lost, worked to destroy the peace settlement
in seeking after new opportunities, chiefly of a ' pink '
socialist character. The Nationalists regretted that they had
listened to the ' Dawnists ' at all, and watched with horror
the growth of their own sentiments among the defeated
enemy countries ; they too nursed their lost opportunity
and made frantic and futile efforts to repair the damage by
58 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
creating more. The Socialists, most thoroughly caught of
all, either abandoned themselves to the Nationalist-State-ist
forces, hoping sooner or later to control them by Parliament
ary majority, or looked with longing eyes to Moscow where
world-Bolshevism had been established, not by national
victory but by national defeat. Meanwhile the day was left
in the hands of the politicians and financiers, on the one
hand, and the professional experts, on the other, who tried
to make sense of the whole business, the first (not without
success) to strengthen their own position ; the second (with
out much success) to provide some sort of working order for
the communities.
Such then was the general distribution of forces as they
were to govern the twenty years separating the two wars.
I hope that the reader will bear their general nature in
mind so that he may the better understand the meaning of
the chief events during these years, as I try once again to
relate them to the spiritual force of Christianity.
-
CHAPTER SEVEN
CONCLUSIONS—I
TO-DAY
CHAPTER ONE
J
THE CATHOLIC RENAISSANCE 119
had been the pluto-democratic secularism of London, Paris
and New York. Though this view is bound to influence
some national hierarchies, there is reason to believe that it
makes little appeal to the spiritual authorities of the Vatican.
The great question of the future is whether Christianity
is sufficiently prepared to be able .to hold out against the
temptation to associate itself too closely with the new
' Dawnism ' that would follow a British victory or the new
Authoritarianism that would follow a German victory. In
other words, it is a question of examining whether
Christianity, despite its easy surrender in the past to un-
anchored ' Dawnism ' and to Nationalism, whether mani
fested in the Totalitarian reaction or in the capitalist
imperialism of the Democracies, has sufficiently increased
its sensitivity to these evils so that it can slowly spiritualise
the general sense of disillusion on the Allied side and temper
the possible triumph of the enemy cause.
The preparation for this tremendous responsibility goes
back to the pontificate of Leo XIII who was the first modern
Pope not only to offer the principles of a positive Christian
solution to the particular problems and grievances upon
which ' Dawnism ' and Socialism fed, but also to indicate
the great guiding lines upon which a Christian intellectual
revival should proceed. The Encyclical, JEterni Patris,
decreeing the return to the living philosophy of the Middle
Ages which culminated in the thought of Aquinas, was the
answer to the state of affairs in Catholic intellectual training
thus graphically described by Lecanuet :
' They (teachers) are given chairs quite beyond their
capacity. And there are deplorable gaps in the curricu
lum ! In most seminaries there is no course in the
Sciences to prepare the students to meet scientifically the
objections against revelation : no course in Civil Law
or Canon Law. The most incredible thing of all one
hardly dares to write : in many seminaries there is no
course in Church History. Scripture means only an
hour or two a week given to a running commentary—from
the pointofview ofpiety—upon the Psalms or the Gospels.'1
1 Quoted by Maisie Ward in Insurrection versus Resurrection, p. 27.
120 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
Pius X developed the Renaissance in two ways, negatively
by putting an end to Modernism and positively by
strengthening the devotion of the Church and restoring the
Liturgy to its rightful and fruitful place. Modernism was,
of course, the violent reaction of the Catholic intellectuals
to the Church's apparent inability or unwillingness to take
notice of what was happening in the world around. It
fastened on to what appeared to be good and right in
' Dawnism ' and modern Science and, adopting the manners
of the ' Dawnists ' whose single-minded fervour turns so
easily to violence against their rivals or opponents, many of
the Modernists indulged in a hostility and mockery that
ruined their own cause. Modernism was stamped out, but
the lesson was learnt. The Church broadened her outlook
where a broadening was needed, and the intellectuals
served her without eating away at the foundations of then-
own philosophy. But the saintly Pius was more concerned
to ward off the errors and growing paganism of the times by
purifying the Church's religious and devotional life, in
particular by centring it around the celebration of the
Sacrifice of the Mass and the frequentation, especially
among the young, of the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
During and after the war, as we have seen, Benedict XV
endeavoured to make applicable to the times and the
tempers of peoples the traditional teaching of the theo
logians to the Natural Law as i% refers to international
society, but this philosophic foundation was swept away by
passions and uncritical optimism, so that too many Christians
were caught in the flood. Meanwhile the many seeds sown
by Leo XIII and Pius X were germinating, and Pius XI,
while faced with insuperable problems in trying to make
contact between the spiritual force of Christianity and the
many non-Christian forces driving civilisation to its doom—
the effort on this plane was coming too late—was able to
tend and strengthen the rapid growth of these springs of
new spiritual life and action within the Church. One
phrase conveniently labelled this many-sided effort : it is
Catholic Action.
Catholic Action was a phrase in use before the war and
THE CATHOLIC RENAISSANCE 121
even before the present century. In Italy and France it
stood for a number of movements, attracting especially the
young and more vigorous Catholics, promoting Christian
ideas in social and political questions among the faithful
themselves and among secularist society. As such, these
movements were among the first spontaneous expressions
of a Christian renaissance in the face of a world becoming
ever more pagan. These movements, however, tended to
come under ecclesiastical censure or shadow because of
political or social or philosophical connections that seemed
dangerous to the authorities, and every offort was made to
discipline such ' Catholic Action ' by fixing it into a diocesan
framework, under the direct authority of the Bishops, and
limiting its scope to ecclesiastical, devotional or, at most,
cultural ends.
The insistence that Catholic Action should remain
wholly non-political has endured, but, under Pius XI, the
movement gradually took on a fuller and wider character
in keeping with the rapid development of the Church's own
action. The realisation that the Church, despite the enrich
ing of her own spiritual and moral life, was remaining out
of touch with what was vital and dynamic in society was
spreading, and, springing from many sources, a new system
of spiritual strategy developed. Essentially it consisted of
organising the Catholic laity to accomplish the sort of apos
tolic work which was becoming ever more difficult for the
clergy to perform. By vocation the clergy are cut off from
the world. This suited the traditional apostolic work of
the Church which is really based upon the supposition that
men on the whole have the right ideas about the meaning
of life, moral values and the way society should be ordered.
Tradition and a Christian education are expected to guar
antee this, while weakenings of the fabric here and there
can be dealt with by the Christian State in the first instance
and by exhortations and, if necessary, disciplinary action
on the part of the Church, when the action of the State does
not suffice. What the Church does expect is human failure
to live up to the ideal. To keep mankind up to the mark,
to strengthen his will by the sacraments and preaching and,
122 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
above all, to mediate through the sacrament of penance
God's forgiveness for the past, a clergy, separated from the
world, amply suffices. Even so it was found at different
times in the Church's history, notably at the time of the
foundation of the Friars and, later, of the Jesuits, that
avenues into the heart of society were needed with a clergy
specially equipped to advance along them. But, as we have
seen, the nineteenth century ushered in a very different
problem : the problem of a world which was rejecting the
Christian ideal, rather than not living up to it, and sub
stituting for it other and alien ideals. The separated clergy
and the traditional apostolic and pastoral methods became
less and less able to cope with the danger. Those who
accepted the new ideas not only rejected their authority—
and this was as true for Protestantism as for Catholicism—
but never came into any sort of contact with them. Even
worse than this, the faithful themselves, bound to live their
week-day lives in intimate contact with men and women
professing anti-Christian ideas and working within a society
governed more and more by such ideas, were rapidly being
affected by these spiritual forces, some to the extent of reject
ing Christianity altogether, but most to the extent of living
double lives, a Christian life in private and personal matters
and a more or less non-Christian life in public and business
matters. The obvious answer was to associate and organise
Catholic men and women in the world to do some of the
work of the clergy, namely in maintaining Catholic fidelity
to Christian ideals in public life and in gradually winning
back their fellow-workers and citizens to Catholicity.
And while this idea was popularising itself and being
slowly put into practical effect the theologians, spiritual
writers and intelligentsia, clerical and lay, were re-stating
Catholic teaching and outlook in a form at once more
fundamental and more suited to the way the contemporary
world was thinking. Typical of this change, for example,
was the renewed insistence upon the social or organic
nature of the Church, a point constantly stressed by St. Paul,
but stated less and less emphatically in the post-Reformation
period when the Church concentrated upon the work of
THE CATHOLIC RENAISSANCE 123
saving individual souls in a society too divided and disturbed
to be considered as a whole. An interesting example of
the great change in this direction that came about in these
years is provided by the fact that the Catholic Encyclopedia,
published in 1907, gave only a few lines to the explanation
of the doctrine of the Mystical Body of Christ. In a con
temporary edition of this publication, this great Pauline
doctrine of the oneness of all members of the Church in
Christ would undoubtedly be given an important treatise
covering many pages. The renewed emphasis upon the
Liturgy as the great corporate act of worship and prayer,
the dynamism, as it were, of the Mystical Body, is another
example of the new spirit.
It is easy, therefore, to understand how ' Catholic Action '
gathered under itself these different but harmonising ten
dencies. It stood, on the one side, for the co-operation of
the laity in the apostolic work of the Church and, on the
other, for the carrying into this modern apostolate of this
social restatement of the spiritual force of the Church.
Thus it was like a new army, trained in the most up-to-date
tactics and expected to carry out a new strategy (which, as
it happened, was nothing but the presentation in a form
suited to modern times of the older tradition which had in
some degree been allowed to lapse after the Reformation).
This Catholic Action was not thought out by one com
mander, even the Pope, and imposed from above : it was
rather spontaneously generated and developed everywhere
under the vigorous encouragement of the Popes in order
to meet the perplexing situation. For this reason it has taken
many forms and concentrated upon different aspects of the
Christian attack upon the world. Thus in France and
Belgium where a democratic regime allowed considerable
freedom of social and political action the relatively numerous
Catholics have organised themselves in all walks of life,
factories, workshops, universities, businesses, for the purpose
of strengthening and developing their own corporate sense
of oneness in Christ and for the infiltrating into French
society of Christian values, especially in the social sphere.
Political action which might at first sight seem to be the
124 CHRISTIAN CRISIS
natural development of such a movement is, of course,
barred. In Italy the presence of a Fascist regime made
this form of Catholic Action impossible, and the movement
is in effect limited to diocesan and parochial formations for
maintaining a high level of religious fervour and protecting
Christian morals and decency in social intercourse. In
Great Britain, where Catholics are relatively few, and still
far from conscious of the meaning of Catholic Action, the
organised movement is limited to the Italian model with
considerable vagueness about its precise aims. In the
United States the rapidly growing Catholic community
still relies for the most part upon a machinery calculated to
make Catholicity a spiritual force, alongside rather than
within the general community, but there are signs that this
machinery may rapidly adapt itself to something more like
the spirit of Catholic Action, and the present Pope appears
to set great store on the development of Catholicity in the
United States.
But whatever the local differences may be and however
varied the rates of progress in different countries, we can
discern the spirit of Catholic Action as a new, consistent
and potentially strong force at work for the precise purpose
of regaining the lost contact between Catholic Christianity
and the secularist world. The notes common to its spirit—
which is far wider than its organised expression—are as
follows. It incorporates the laity in the work of re-Christian
ising society and individuals. It aims at effecting this by
strictly spiritual action under the direction of the Bishops,
thus, as it were, forming a more or less organised elite of
devout and world-conscious Catholics, drawn from the
world for the purpose of carrying out their mission within
the world, i.e. the actual places where the world's work is
carried on, whether it be Government departments, par
liaments, stock-exchanges, businesses, factories, shops, etc.
The dynamism working the movement is spiritual fervour
drawn from corporate participation in' the Church's sacra
mental life lived in the full spirit and meaning of the
Liturgy. The all-important intellectual and moral force of
the movement is derived from the being trained to under
THE CATHOLIC RENAISSANCE 125
stand the meaning of the doctrine of the Mystical Body of
Christ whereby all Christians are members of one another
in an all-comprehensive organic unity whose spiritual and
moral life should be a ' form ' ordering and vivifying the
manifold temporal orders and activities of human societies.
By being trained to understand the nature of this form or
pattern, as it should apply to this or that temporal activity
of society, whether it be economic or cultural or political or
industrial or recreational, the Catholic Actionist, as an
individual and as a part of the Body of Christ, should by
example and encouragement be a constant element of
' re-ordering ' within secularist society.
Evidently the ideal is a high and ambitious one, but it
is genuinely dynamic and practical, for it depends upon the
work and training of small bodies of generous and fervent
Christians that should be easily found and whose influence
must necessarily be felt among ever widening (if also
weakening) circles of both Christians and non-Christians.
The reader may recall that political theorists, like Aldous
Huxley and Middleton Murry, who have a deep sense of
the disorder of the world and yet of its immense self-pro
tective armoury, are driven to the idea of the cell of devoted
reformers, converted to right ideas themselves and con
stantly at work to convert their fellows, as the only hope
of saving the world. And we also know that it is through
the hidden work of the small cell that revolutionary move
ments begin their work of undermining an existing order
and adapting it to the ends which they propagate.
Such then, in brief outline, are the armoury and organi
sation of the Church at the present time as she awaits the
problems of a post-war world.
Are they sufficient ? Do they warrant the hope that
Christianity can play a major part in the determination of
the order that is to follow war, if either Germany or Britain
are crushed, or if the war end in a tired stalemate ?
We shall see.
CHAPTER TWO
CONCLUSIONS—II