The Sins of the High
Court’s Supreme Catholics
The overturn of Roe v. Wade is part of ultra-conservatives’ long history
of rejecting Galileo, Darwin, and Americanism.
(No it isn't!) Gene
August 19,
2022
Five Catholics on the Supreme Court are undermining not only basic
elements of American democracy but also the essential spirit of Catholicism’s
great twentieth-century renewal.Photograph by Jabin Botsford / The
Washington Post / Getty
As part of the Vatican’s war on “modernism” in 1899, Pope Leo XIII
condemned as heresy the set of principles known as “Americanism.” But, by 1965,
at the Second Vatican Council, the Church had begun to embrace such supposedly
odious ideas: pluralism, the separation of church and state, the primacy of
conscience, the preference of experience over dogma, and—for that
matter—freedom of the press. This was a historic reversal of the Church’s
panicked nineteenth-century repudiation of, in Pope Leo’s words, “modern
popular theories and methods.”
Now five Catholic Justices on the Supreme Court are reversing the Church’s reversal. (Neil Gorsuch, who is now an Episcopalian but was raised and educated as a Catholic, joined his five colleagues in overturning Roe v. Wade.) These Justices are undermining not only basic elements of American democracy, such as the “wall of separation,” but also the essential spirit of Catholicism’s great twentieth-century renewal. It’s no secret, of course, that the Second Vatican Council, or Vatican II, which had been summoned by the renewal-minded Pope John XXIII, generated a powerful pushback from traditionalists within the Church. The reforms set in motion by the council—composed of more than two thousand Catholic bishops, who met in St. Peter’s Basilica in four sessions, between 1962 to 1965—upended sacrosanct doctrines and traditions, ranging from the language used in Mass to the idea of “no salvation outside the Church,” to the repudiation of the ancient anti-Semitic Christ-killer slander. Indeed, Vatican II took a step away from monarchy and toward democracy.
An ultra-conservative blowback ensued, defining the
papacies of Paul VI, John Paul I, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI, and it proved
to be obsessed, above all, with issues related to sexuality and the place of women. This focus emerged even
before Vatican II ended, when a nervous Paul VI, who had succeeded Pope John
after his death, in 1963, made an extraordinary intervention in the proceedings
by forbidding the Council from taking on the question of contraception. Paul’s dictum
signalled what was to come when, in 1968, he defied a consensus that was
emerging among Catholics—even among the bishops—to accept birth control, and
formally condemned it in his encyclical “Humanae Vitae” (“Of Human Life”). As
if foreseeing that clash, during the council’s deliberations, one of its most
powerful leaders, Cardinal Leo Joseph Suenens, of Belgium, protested the Pope’s
intervention by rising in St. Peter’s and saying, “I beg you, my brother
bishops, let us avoid a new Galileo affair. One is enough for the
Church.”
But a new Galileo affair is what the Church got.
This one, though, is about the relationship not of the Earth to the Sun but of
women to men. Moving from condemnation of birth control to a new absolutism on
the question of abortion, a backpedalling succession of increasingly
reactionary prelates ignored the Belgian cardinal’s warning. Over the last
several decades, the Church hierarchy effectively turned the female body into a
bulwark against the changes that the Vatican II generation had embraced.
The elevation of the issue of abortion as the
be-all and end-all of Catholic orthodoxy echoes the anti-modern battles that
the nineteenth-century Church fought. A pair of dates tells the story. In 1859,
Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of Species,”
and the idea of biological evolution began to grip the Western imagination. In
1869, Pope Pius IX, in his pronouncement “Apostolicae Sedis,” forbade the
abortion of a pregnancy from the moment of conception forward—an effective
locating of human “ensoulment” at the joining of the ovum and sperm, an all but
explicit rejection of evolutionary theory.
Yet dynamic change was coming to be seen as the rule of life, transforming ideas not only of how humanity came into being but of how individual humans do. Traditional ways of reading the Genesis story, of course, posed an immediate obstacle to any substantial overturning of assumptions about human origins. But, with Darwin as a starting point, many religious believers, including Catholics, proved capable of viewing Genesis and its seven-day creation calendar as metaphor, and of seeing that God’s creative act had, in fact, unfolded across many eons. Still, the idea that people had been created in a single moment of miraculous divine intervention proved tenacious. Michelangelo’s image of God’s finger touching Adam’s, endowing the creature with the instantaneous gift of human life, seemed fixed in the Western consciousness
However, despite Pius IX’s nineteenth-century
rejection of Darwin’s evolutionary theory, the idea that ensoulment unfolds
during the process of fetal development, at some indeterminate point weeks or
months after conception, more or less meshes with long-held
understandings—expressed by writers including Aristotle and St. Jerome, in the
ancient world, and St. Thomas Aquinas, in the Middle Ages. But the great
purpose of the Genesis story is not necessarily to explain life but to account
for human suffering: its most consequential assertion is that the inevitable
miseries of human existence are the fault of Eve, who serves as a stand-in for
all women. It was Eve who supposedly yielded to the devil’s temptation, and, in
turn, tempted Adam, thereby dooming both themselves and all their progeny.
This story gives us the concept of “original sin”—a
phrase that does not appear in the Bible—and represents the ultimate form of
fraudulent originalism. To read the Book of Genesis as a literal account of how
the world and human life began is pure fundamentalism, and it poses a danger to
the rule of reason on which the common good depends. So, too, do ahistorical
readings of the U.S. Constitution. “Originalism is a legal philosophy of
stasis, which reifies a historical moment,” the writer Siri Hustvedt points out in
a recent piece for Literary Hub. But such historical fundamentalism, she argues,
also applies to attitudes toward the creation of the individual: “The reduction
of a dynamic, metamorphosing conceptus to a single abstract entity—‘the
unborn’—denies both time and change.” And that denial has led to the legal, medical, economic, and personal calamities facing a post-Dobbs America, with women experiencing the
brunt of the threat.
The Catholic experience of such fundamentalism is a
warning. Back in the fourth century, St. Augustine, whose influence on theology
surpasses even that of Aquinas, centered the Adam and Eve narrative on sex. The
forbidden fruit, he believed, was the pleasure that the first couple took in
sexual arousal. From then on, the sanctioned Catholic imagination was radically
corrupted by fear of and contempt for autonomous female sexuality. The Church’s
unfettered campaign against women (elevating virginity, requiring female
subservience in marriage and at the altar, restricting women’s ability to
control their own bodies) was launched. Now it has been joined by the Supreme
Court’s Catholic majority.
For decades, that campaign has been faltering among
Catholics in the United States. Shortly after Pope Paul VI’s condemnation of birth
control, in 1968, a group of ten priests and theologians at the Catholic
University of America, in Washington, D.C., resoundingly denounced that papal
teaching. It was, they said, “based on an inadequate concept of natural law”
and on “a static world view which downplays the historical and evolutionary
character of humanity.” And most American Catholics agreed, demonstrating that
a transformation of attitudes about sex and women had already taken root among
them; in the years since, polls have shown that a large majority of
Catholic women use birth control. Declining birth rates among Catholics,
mirroring those of the broader U.S. population, confirm what the faithful
thought of that papal pronouncement.
Now that the Supreme Court, with an extreme originalist misreading of the Constitution, has
revoked the constitutional right to obtain an abortion, the renewed political
and religious tensions surrounding the issue can be clarifying, perhaps
especially for Catholics. They can begin to reclaim the evolutionary character
of their own history and beliefs, as well as of the understanding of when
personhood begins. Indeed, many Catholics already do this, with
leading Catholic politicians, for example, Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi,
affirming abortion rights. They may cloak that affirmation in language about
not wanting to impose their own religious views on others, but this really amounts
to an implicit rejection of the idea that human life—and human rights—begins at
conception. That rejection should be made explicit.
Freedom of conscience, historical consciousness,
the rights of other people to be other people, the idea that sacredness is
everywhere, not just in religion—such are aspects of the onetime heresy,
Americanism. Catholics in the United States can finally and openly affirm these
views. Americanism helped bring about the renewal of the Church, when the
Second Vatican Council embraced those very principles, the foundation of
liberal democracy.
With the threat to the Church’s unfinished renewal
now coming from Catholic Justices, that renewal, with its underlying American
ideals, is worth retrieving and advancing, especially as a way to challenge the
anti-abortion Catholic legislators who are taking what they perceive as moral
instruction from a throwback Supreme Court. Indeed, the defiance by legions of
Catholic women of Pope Paul VI’s condemnation of birth control can itself be a
model of conscientious objection. Birth control and abortion are not the same
thing, but the autonomy of women, the primacy of conscience, and the rejection
of overreaching male-supremacist authority add up to an American refusal to
obey draconian new laws that claim to defend human life yet do the
opposite. ♦
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