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The
Next Christianity
We
stand at a historical turning point, the author argues—one that is as epochal
for the Christian world as the original Reformation. Around the globe
Christianity is growing and mutating in ways that observers in the West tend not
to see. Tumultuous conflicts within Christianity will leave a mark deeper than
Islam's on the century ahead
by Philip Jenkins
.....
Ever since the sexual-abuse
crisis erupted in the U.S. Roman Catholic Church in the mid-1980s, with
allegations of child molestation by priests, commentators have regularly
compared the problems faced by the Church to those it faced in Europe at the
start of the sixteenth century, on the eve of the Protestant
Reformation—problems that included sexual laxity and financial malfeasance
among the clergy, and clerical contempt for the interests of the laity. Calls
for change have become increasingly urgent since January, when revelations of
widespread sexual misconduct and grossly negligent responses to it emerged
prominently in the Boston archdiocese. Similar, if less dramatic, problems have
been brought to light in New Orleans, Providence, Palm Beach, Omaha, and many
other dioceses. The reform agendas now under discussion within the U.S.
hierarchy involve ideas about increased lay participation in governance—ideas
of the sort heard when Martin Luther confronted the Roman Catholic orthodoxy of
his day. They also include such ideas as admitting women to the priesthood and
permitting priests to marry.
Explicit analogies to the Reformation have become commonplace not only among
commentators but also among anticlerical activists, among victims' groups, and,
significantly, among ordinary lay believers. One representative expert on sexual
misconduct, much quoted, is Richard Sipe, a former monk who worked at the
sexual-disorders clinic at Johns Hopkins University and is now a psychotherapist
based in California. Over the years Sipe has spoken regularly of "a new
Reformation." "We are at 1515," he has written, "between
when Martin Luther went to Rome in 1510 and 1517 when he nailed his 95 theses on
the door in Wittenberg." That act can reasonably be seen as the symbolic
starting point of the Reformation, when a united Christendom was rent asunder.
Historians continue to debate the causes and consequences of the Reformation,
and of the forces that it unleashed. Among other things, the Reformation broke
the fetters that constrained certain aspects of intellectual life during the
Middle Ages. Protestants, of course, honor the event as the source of their
distinctive religious traditions; many Protestant denominations celebrate
Reformation Day, at the end of October, commemorating the posting of the theses
at Wittenberg. And liberal Catholics invoke the word these days to emphasize the
urgency of reform—changes both broad and specific that they demand from the
Church. Their view is that the crisis, which exposes fault lines of both
sexuality and power, is the most serious the Church has faced in 500 years—as
serious as the one it faced in Luther's time.
The first Reformation was an epochal moment in the history of the Western
world—and eventually, by extension, of the rest of the world. The status quo
in religious affairs was brought to an end. Relations between religions and
governments, not to mention among different denominations, took a variety of
forms—sometimes symbiotic, often chaotic and violent. The transformations
wrought in the human psyche by the Reformation, and by the Counter-Reformation
it helped to provoke, continue to play themselves out. This complex historical
episode, which is now often referred to simply as "the Reformation,"
touched everything. It altered not just the practice of religion but also the
nature of society, economics, politics, education, and the law.
Commentators today, when speaking of the changes needed in the Catholic Church,
generally do not have in mind the sweeping historical aftermath of the first
Reformation—but they should. The Church has developed a fissure whose size
most people do not fully appreciate. The steps that liberal Catholics would take
to resolve some of the Church's urgent issues, steps that might quell unease or
revolt in some places, would prove incendiary in others. The problem with
reform, 500 years ago or today, is that people disagree—sometimes
violently—on the direction it should take.
The fact is, we are at a moment as epochal as the Reformation itself—a
Reformation moment not only for Catholics but for the entire Christian world.
Christianity as a whole is both growing and mutating in ways that observers in
the West tend not to see. For obvious reasons, news reports today are filled
with material about the influence of a resurgent and sometimes angry Islam. But
in its variety and vitality, in its global reach, in its association with the
world's fastest-growing societies, in its shifting centers of gravity, in the
way its values and practices vary from place to place—in these and other ways
it is Christianity that will leave the deepest mark on the twenty-first century.
The process will not necessarily be a peaceful one, and only the foolish would
venture anything beyond the broadest predictions about the religious picture a
century or two ahead. But the twenty-first century will almost certainly be
regarded by future historians as a century in which religion replaced ideology
as the prime animating and destructive force in human affairs, guiding attitudes
to political liberty and obligation, concepts of nationhood, and, of course,
conflicts and wars.
he
original Reformation was far more than the rising up of irate lay people against
corrupt and exploitative priests, and it was much more than a mere theological
row. It was a far-reaching social movement that sought to return to the original
sources of Christianity. It challenged the idea that divine authority should be
mediated through institutions or hierarchies, and it denied the value of
tradition. Instead it offered radical new notions of the supremacy of written
texts (that is, the books of the Bible), interpreted by individual consciences.
The Reformation made possible a religion that could be practiced privately,
rather than mainly in a vast institutionalized community.
This move toward individualism, toward the privatization of religious belief,
makes the spirit of the Reformation very attractive to educated people in the
West. It stirs many liberal Catholic activists, who regard the aloof and
arrogant hierarchy of the Church as not only an affront but something inherently
corrupt. New concepts of governance sound exciting, even intoxicating, to
reformers, and seem to mesh with likely social and technological trends. The
invention of movable type and the printing press, in the fifteenth century, was
a technological development that spurred mass literacy in the vernacular
languages—and accelerated the forces of religious change. In the near future,
many believe, the electronic media will have a comparably powerful impact on our
ways of being religious. An ever greater reliance on individual choice, the
argument goes, will help Catholicism to become much more inclusive and tolerant,
less judgmental, and more willing to accept secular attitudes toward sexuality
and gender roles. In the view of liberal Catholics, much of the current crisis
derives directly from archaic if not primitive doctrines, including mandatory
celibacy among the clergy, intolerance of homosexuality, and the prohibition of
women from the priesthood, not to mention a more generalized fear of sexuality.
In their view, anyone should be able to see that the idea that God, the creator
and lord of the universe, is concerned about human sexuality is on its way out.
If we look beyond the liberal West, we see that another Christian revolution,
quite different from the one being called for in affluent American suburbs and
upscale urban parishes, is already in progress. Worldwide, Christianity is
actually moving toward supernaturalism and neo-orthodoxy, and in many ways
toward the ancient world view expressed in the New Testament: a vision of Jesus
as the embodiment of divine power, who overcomes the evil forces that inflict
calamity and sickness upon the human race. In the global South (the areas that
we often think of primarily as the Third World) huge and growing Christian
populations—currently 480 million in Latin America, 360 million in Africa, and
313 million in Asia, compared with 260 million in North America—now make up
what the Catholic scholar Walbert Buhlmann has called the Third Church, a form
of Christianity as distinct as Protestantism or Orthodoxy, and one that is
likely to become dominant in the faith. The revolution taking place in Africa,
Asia, and Latin America is far more sweeping in its implications than any
current shifts in North American religion, whether Catholic or Protestant. There
is increasing tension between what one might call a liberal Northern Reformation
and the surging Southern religious revolution, which one might equate with the
Counter-Reformation, the internal Catholic reforms that took place at the same
time as the Reformation—although in references to the past and the present the
term "Counter-Reformation" misleadingly implies a simple reaction
instead of a social and spiritual explosion. No matter what the terminology,
however, an enormous rift seems inevitable.
Although Northern governments are still struggling to come to terms with the
notion that Islam might provide a powerful and threatening supranational
ideology, few seem to realize the potential political role of ascendant Southern
Christianity. The religious rift between Northern and Southern Europe in the
sixteenth century suggests just how dramatic the political consequences of a
North-South divide in the contemporary Christian world might be. The Reformation
led to nothing less than the creation of the modern European states and the
international order we recognize today. For more than a century Europe was rent
by sectarian wars between Protestants and Catholics, which by the 1680s had
ended in stalemate. Out of this impasse, this failure to impose a monolithic
religious order across the Continent, there arose such fundamental ideas of
modern society as the state's obligation to tolerate minorities and the need to
justify political authority without constantly invoking God and religion. The
Enlightenment—and, indeed, Western modernity—could have occurred only as a
consequence of the clash, military and ideological, between Protestants and
Catholics.
Today across the global South a rising religious fervor is coinciding with
declining autonomy for nation-states, making useful an analogy with the medieval
concept of Christendom—the Res Publica Christiana—as an overarching source
of unity and a focus of loyalty transcending mere kingdoms or empires. Kingdoms
might last for only a century or two before being supplanted by new states or
dynasties, but rational people knew that Christendom simply endured. The
laws of individual nations lasted only as long as the nations themselves;
Christendom offered a higher set of standards and mores that could claim to be
universal. Christendom was a primary cultural reference, and it may well
re-emerge as such in the Christian South—as a new transnational order in which
political, social, and personal identities are defined chiefly by religious
loyalties.
he
first Reformation was a lot less straightforward than some histories suggest.
The sixteenth-century Catholic Church, after all, did not collapse after Luther
kicked in the door. The Counter-Reformation was moving in a diametrically
opposite direction, reasserting older forms of devotion and tradition, and
reformulating the Church's controversial claims for hierarchy and spiritual
authority. The Counter-Reformation was not just survivalist and defensive, as is
commonly assumed; it was also innovative and dynamic. For at least a century
after Luther's Reformation, in fact, the true political, cultural, and social
centers of Europe were as much in the Catholic South as in the Protestant North.
The Catholic states—Spain, Portugal, and France—were launching missionary
ventures into Africa, Asia, North and South America. By the 1570s Catholic
missionaries were creating a transoceanic Church structure: the see of Manila
was an offshoot of the archdiocese of Mexico City.
By about 1600 the Catholic Church had become the first religious body—indeed,
the first institution of any sort—to operate on a global scale. Even in the
Protestant heartlands of Northern and Western Europe—England, Sweden, and the
German lands—the heirs of the Reformation had to spend many years discouraging
their people from succumbing to the attractions of Catholicism. Conversions to
Catholicism were steady throughout the century or so after 1580. It looked as if
the Reformation had effectively cut Protestant Europe off from the mainstream of
the Christian world. Only in the eighteenth century would Protestantism find a
secure and then strategically preponderant place on the global stage, through
the success of booming commercial states such as England and the Netherlands,
whose political triumphs ultimately contained and in some cases pushed back the
earlier empires.
The changes that Catholic and other reformers today are trying to inspire in
North America and Europe (and that seem essential if Christianity is to be
preserved as a modern, relevant force on those continents) run utterly contrary
to the dominant cultural movements in the rest of the Christian world, which
look very much like the Counter-Reformation. But this century is unlike the
sixteenth in that we are not facing a roughly equal division of Christendom
between two competing groups. Rather, Christians are facing a shrinking
population in the liberal West and a growing majority of the traditional Rest.
During the past half century the critical centers of the Christian world have
moved decisively to Africa, to Latin America, and to Asia. The balance will
never shift back.
The growth in Africa has been relentless. In 1900 Africa had just 10 million
Christians out of a continental population of 107 million—about nine percent.
Today the Christian total stands at 360 million out of 784 million, or 46
percent. And that percentage is likely to continue rising, because Christian
African countries have some of the world's most dramatic rates of population
growth. Meanwhile, the advanced industrial countries are experiencing a dramatic
birth dearth. Within the next twenty-five years the population of the world's
Christians is expected to grow to 2.6 billion (making Christianity by far the
world's largest faith). By 2025, 50 percent of the Christian population will be
in Africa and Latin America, and another 17 percent will be in Asia. Those
proportions will grow steadily. By about 2050 the United States will still have
the largest single contingent of Christians, but all the other leading nations
will be Southern: Mexico, Brazil, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Ethiopia, and the Philippines. By then the proportion of non-Latino whites among
the world's Christians will have fallen to perhaps one in five.
The population shift is even more marked in the specifically Catholic world,
where Euro-Americans are already in the minority. Africa had about 16 million
Catholics in the early 1950s; it has 120 million today, and is expected to have
228 million by 2025. The World Christian Encyclopedia suggests that by
2025 almost three quarters of all Catholics will be found in Africa, Asia, and
Latin America. The likely map of twenty-first-century Catholicism represents an
unmistakable legacy of the Counter-Reformation and its global missionary
ventures.
These figures actually understate the Southern predominance within Catholicism,
and within world Christianity more generally, because they fail to take account
of Southern emigrants to Europe and North America. Even as this migration
continues, established white communities in Europe are declining
demographically, and their religious beliefs and practices are moving further
away from traditional Christian roots. The result is that skins of other hues
are increasingly evident in European churches; half of all London churchgoers
are now black. African and West Indian churches in Britain are reaching out to
whites, though members complain that their religion is often seen as "a
black thing" rather than "a God thing."
In the United States a growing proportion of Roman Catholics are Latinos, who
should represent a quarter of the nation by 2050 or so. Asian communities in the
United States have sizable Catholic populations. Current trends suggest that the
religious values of Catholics with a Southern ethnic and cultural heritage will
long remain quite distinct from those of other U.S. populations. In terms of
liturgy and worship Latino Catholics are strikingly different from Anglo
believers, not least in maintaining a fervent devotion to the Virgin Mary and
the saints.
European and Euro-American Catholics will within a few decades be a smaller and
smaller fragment of a worldwide Church. Of the 18 million Catholic baptisms
recorded in 1998, eight million took place in Central and South America, three
million in Africa, and just under three million in Asia. (In other words, these
three regions already account for more than three quarters of all Catholic
baptisms.) The annual baptism total for the Philippines is higher than the
totals for Italy, France, Spain, and Poland combined. The number of Filipino
Catholics could grow to 90 million by 2025, and perhaps to 130 million by 2050.
he
demographic changes within Christianity have many implications for theology and
religious practice, and for global society and politics. The most significant
point is that in terms of both theology and moral teaching, Southern
Christianity is more conservative than the Northern—especially the
American—version. Northern reformers, even if otherwise sympathetic to the
indigenous cultures of non-Northern peoples, obviously do not like this fact.
The liberal Catholic writer James Carroll has complained that "world
Christianity [is falling] increasingly under the sway of anti-intellectual
fundamentalism." But the cultural pressures may be hard to resist.
The denominations that are triumphing across the global South—radical
Protestant sects, either evangelical or Pentecostal, and Roman Catholicism of an
orthodox kind—are stalwartly traditional or even reactionary by the standards
of the economically advanced nations. The Catholic faith that is rising rapidly
in Africa and Asia looks very much like a pre-Vatican II faith, being more
traditional in its respect for the power of bishops and priests and in its
preference for older devotions. African Catholicism in particular is far more
comfortable with notions of authority and spiritual charisma than with newer
ideas of consultation and democracy.
This kind of faith is personified by Nigeria's Francis Cardinal Arinze, who is
sometimes touted as a future Pope. He is sharp and articulate, with an
attractively self-deprecating style, and he has served as the president of the
Pontifical Council for Inter-Religious Dialogue, which has given him invaluable
experience in talking with Muslims, Hindus, Jews, and members of other faiths.
By liberal Northern standards, however, Arinze is rigidly conservative, and even
repressive on matters such as academic freedom and the need for strict
orthodoxy. In his theology as much as his social views he is a loyal follower of
Pope John Paul II. Anyone less promising for Northern notions of reform is
difficult to imagine.
Meanwhile, a full-scale Reformation is taking place among Pentecostal
Christians—whose ideas are shared by many Catholics. Pentecostal believers
reject tradition and hierarchy, but they also rely on direct spiritual
revelation to supplement or replace biblical authority. And it is Pentecostals
who stand in the vanguard of the Southern Counter-Reformation. Though
Pentecostalism emerged as a movement only at the start of the twentieth century,
chiefly in North America, Pentecostals today are at least 400 million strong,
and heavily concentrated in the global South. By 2040 or so there could be as
many as a billion, at which point Pentecostal Christians alone will far
outnumber the world's Buddhists and will enjoy rough numerical parity with the
world's Hindus.
The booming Pentecostal churches of Africa, Asia, and Latin America are
thoroughly committed to re-creating their version of an idealized early
Christianity (often described as the restoration of "primitive"
Christianity). The most successful Southern churches preach a deep personal
faith, communal orthodoxy, mysticism, and puritanism, all founded on obedience
to spiritual authority, from whatever source it is believed to stem.
Pentecostals—and their Catholic counterparts—preach messages that may appear
simplistically charismatic, visionary, and apocalyptic to a Northern liberal.
For them prophecy is an everyday reality, and many independent denominations
trace their foundation to direct prophetic authority. Scholars of religion
customarily speak of these proliferating congregations simply as the
"prophetic churches."
Of course, American reformers also dream of a restored early Church; but whereas
Americans imagine a Church freed from hierarchy, superstition, and dogma,
Southerners look back to one filled with spiritual power and able to exorcise
the demonic forces that cause sickness and poverty. And yes, "demonic"
is the word. The most successful Southern churches today speak openly of
spiritual healing and exorcism. One controversial sect in the process of
developing an international following is the Brazilian-based Universal Church of
the Kingdom of God, which claims to offer "strong prayer to destroy
witchcraft, demon possession, bad luck, bad dreams, all spiritual
problems," and promises that members will gain "prosperity and
financial breakthrough." The Cherubim and Seraphim movement of West Africa
claims to have "conscious knowledge of the evil spirits which sow the seeds
of discomfort, set afloat ill-luck, diseases, induce barrenness, sterility and
the like."
Americans and Europeans usually associate such religious ideas with primitive
and rural conditions, and assume that the older world view will disappear with
the coming of modernization and urbanization. In the contemporary South,
however, the success of highly supernatural churches should rather be seen as a
direct by-product of urbanization. (This should come as no surprise to
Americans; look at the Pentecostal storefronts in America's inner cities.) As
predominantly rural societies have become more urban over the past thirty or
forty years, millions of migrants have been attracted to ever larger urban
areas, which lack the resources and the infrastructure to meet the needs of
these wanderers. Sometimes people travel to cities within the same nation, but
often they find themselves in different countries and cultures, suffering a
still greater sense of estrangement. In such settings religious communities
emerge to provide health, welfare, and education.
This sort of alternative social system, which played an enormous role in the
earliest days of Christianity, has been a potent means of winning mass support
for the most committed religious groups and is likely to grow in importance as
the gap between people's needs and government's capacities to fill them becomes
wider. Looking at the success of Christianity in the Roman Empire, the historian
Peter Brown has written, "The Christian community suddenly came to appeal
to men who felt deserted ... Plainly, to be a Christian in 250 brought more
protection from one's fellows than to be a civis Romanus." Being a
member of an active Christian church today may well bring more tangible benefits
than being a mere citizen of Nigeria or Peru.
Often the new churches gain support because of the way they deal with the demons
of oppression and want: they interpret the horrors of everyday urban life in
supernatural terms. In many cases these churches seek to prove their spiritual
powers in struggles against witchcraft. The intensity of belief in witchcraft
across much of Africa can be startling. As recently as last year at least 1,000
alleged witches were hacked to death in a single "purge" in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. Far from declining with urbanization, fear of
witches has intensified. Since the collapse of South Africa's apartheid regime,
in 1994, witchcraft has emerged as a primary social fear in Soweto, with its
three million impoverished residents.
The desperate public-health situation in the booming mega-cities of the South
goes far toward explaining the emphasis of the new churches on healing mind and
body. In Africa in the early twentieth century an explosion of Christian healing
movements and new prophets coincided with a dreadful series of epidemics, and
the religious upsurge of those years was in part a quest for bodily health.
Today African churches stand or fall by their success in healing, and elaborate
rituals have formed around healing practices (though church members disagree on
whether believers should rely entirely on spiritual assistance). The same
interest in spiritual healing is found in what were once the mission
churches—bodies such as the Anglicans and the Lutherans. Nowhere in the global
South do the various spiritual healers find serious competition from modern
scientific medicine: it is simply beyond the reach of most of the poor.
Disease, exploitation, pollution, drink, drugs, and violence, taken together,
can account for why people might easily accept that they are under siege from
demonic forces, and that only divine intervention can save them. Even radical
liberation theologians use apocalyptic language on occasion. When a Northerner
asks, in effect, where the Southern churches are getting such ideas, the answer
is not hard to find: they're getting them from the Bible. Southern Christians
are reading the New Testament and taking it very seriously; in it they see the
power of Jesus fundamentally expressed through his confrontations with demonic
powers, particularly those causing sickness and insanity. "Go back and
report to John what you hear and see," Jesus says in the Gospel according
to Matthew (11: 4-5). "The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who
have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is
preached to the poor." For the past two hundred years Northern liberals
have employed various nonliteral interpretations of these healing
passages—perhaps Jesus had a good sense of the causes and treatment of
psychosomatic ailments? But that is not, of course, how such scenes are
understood within the Third Church.
Today, as in the early sixteenth century, a literal interpretation of the Bible
can be tremendously appealing. To quote a modern-day follower of the African
prophet Johane Masowe, cited in Elizabeth Isichei's A
History of Christianity in Africa, "When we were in these
synagogues [the European churches], we used to read about the works of Jesus
Christ ... cripples were made to walk and the dead were brought to life ... evil
spirits driven out ... That was what was being done in Jerusalem. We Africans,
however, who were being instructed by white people, never did anything like that
... We were taught to read the Bible, but we ourselves never did what the people
of the Bible used to do."
Alongside the fast-growing churches have emerged apocalyptic and messianic
movements that try to bring in the kingdom of God through armed violence. Some
try to establish the thousand-year reign of Jesus Christ on earth, as prophesied
in the Book of Revelation. This phenomenon would have been instantly familiar to
Europeans 500 years ago, when the Anabaptists and other millenarian groups
flourished. Perhaps the most traumatic event of the Reformation occurred in the
German city of Münster in 1534-1535, when Anabaptist rebels established a
radical social order that abolished property and monogamy; a homicidal
king-messiah held dictatorial power until the forces of state authority
conquered and annihilated the fanatics. Then as now, it was difficult to set
bounds to religious enthusiasm.
Extremist Christian movements have appeared regularly across parts of Africa
where the mechanisms of the state are weak. They include groups such as the
Lumpa Church, in Zambia, and the terrifying Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), in
Uganda. In 2000 more than a thousand people in another Ugandan sect, the
Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God, perished in an
apparent mass suicide. In each case a group emerged from orthodox roots and then
gravitated toward apocalyptic fanaticism. The Ten Commandments sect grew out of
orthodox Catholicism. The Lumpa Church began, in the 1950s, with Alice Lenshina,
a Presbyterian convert who claimed to receive divine visions urging her to fight
witchcraft. She became the lenshina, or queen, of her new church, whose
name, Lumpa, means "better than all others." The group attracted a
hundred thousand followers, who formed a utopian community in order to await the
Second Coming of Jesus Christ. Since it rejected worldly regimes to the point of
refusing to pay taxes, the Lumpa became increasingly engaged in confrontations
with the Zambian government, leading to open rebellion in the 1960s.
Another prophetic Alice appeared in Uganda during the chaotic civil wars that
swept that country in the 1980s. Alice Lakwena was a former Catholic whose
visions led her to establish the Holy Spirit Mobile Force, also pledged to fight
witches. She refused to accept the national peace settlement established under
President Yoweri Museveni, and engaged in a holy war against his regime. Holy
Spirit soldiers, many of them children and young teenagers, were ritually
anointed with butter on the understanding that it would make them bulletproof.
When Lakwena's army was crushed, in 1991, most of her followers merged with the
LRA, which is notorious for filling its ranks by abducting children. Atrocities
committed by the group include mass murder, rape, and forced cannibalism. Today
as in the sixteenth century, an absolute conviction that one is fighting for
God's cause makes moot the laws of war.
he
changing demographic balance between North and South helps to explain the
current shape of world Catholicism, including the fact that the Church has been
headed by Pope John Paul II. In the papal election of 1978 the Polish candidate
won the support of Latin American cardinals, who were not prepared to accept yet
another Western European. In turn, John Paul has recognized the growing Southern
presence in the Church. Last year he elevated forty-four new cardinals, of whom
eleven were Latin American, two Indian, and three African. The next time a papal
election takes place, fifty-seven of the 135 cardinals eligible to vote, or more
than 40 percent, will be from Southern nations. Early this century they will
constitute a majority.
It may be true that from the liberal Northern perspective, pressure for a
Reformation-style solution to critical problems in the Church—the crisis in
clerical celibacy, the shortage of priests, the sense that the laity's concerns
are ignored—seems overwhelming. Poll after poll in the United States and
Europe indicates significant distrust of clerical authority and support for
greater lay participation and women's equality. The obvious question in the
parishes of the developed world seems to be how long the aloof hierarchy can
stave off the forces of history.
From Rome, however, the picture looks different, as do the "natural"
directions that history is going to take. The Roman church operates on a global
scale and has done so for centuries. Long before the French and British
governments had become aware of global politics—and well before their empires
came into being—papal diplomats were thinking through their approaches to
China, their policies in Peru, their views on African affairs, their stances on
the issues facing Japan and Mexico. To adapt a popular activist slogan, the
Catholic Church not only thinks globally, it acts globally. That approach is
going to have weighty consequences. On present evidence, a Southern-dominated
Catholic Church is likely to react traditionally to the issues that most concern
American and European reformers: matters of theology and devotion, sexual ethics
and gender roles, and, most fundamentally, issues of authority within the
Church.
Neatly illustrating the cultural gulf that separates Northern and Southern
churches is an incident involving Moses Tay, the Anglican archbishop of
Southeast Asia, whose see is based in Singapore. In the early 1990s Tay traveled
to Vancouver, where he encountered the totem poles that are a local tourist
attraction. To him, they were idols possessed by evil spirits, and he concluded
that they required handling by prayer and exorcism. This horrified the local
Anglican Church, which was committed to building good relationships with local
Native American communities, and which regarded exorcism as absurd superstition.
The Canadians, like other good liberal Christians throughout the North, were
long past dismissing alien religions as diabolically inspired. It's difficult
not to feel some sympathy with the archbishop, however. He was quite correct to
see the totems as authentic religious symbols, and considering the long history
of Christian writing on exorcism and possession, he could also summon many
precedents to support his position. On that occasion Tay personified the global
Christian confrontation.
The cultural gap between Christians of the North and the South will increase
rather than diminish in the coming decades, for reasons that recall Luther's
time. During the early modern period Northern and Southern Europe were divided
between the Protestantism of the word and the Catholicism of the
senses—between a religious culture of preaching, hymns, and Bible reading, and
one of statues, rituals, and processions. Today we might see as a parallel the
impact of electronic technologies, which is being felt at very different rates
in the Northern and Southern worlds. The new-media revolution is occurring in
Europe, North America, and the Pacific Rim while other parts of the globe are
focusing on—indeed, still catching up with—the traditional world of book
learning. Northern communities will move to ever more decentralized and
privatized forms of faith as Southerners maintain older ideals of community and
traditional authority.
On moral issues, too, Southern churches are far out of step with liberal
Northern churches. African and Latin American churches tend to be very
conservative on issues such as homosexuality and abortion. Such disagreement can
pose real political difficulties for churches that aspire to a global identity
and that try to balance diverse opinions. At present this is scarcely an issue
for the Roman Catholic Church, which at least officially preaches the same
conservatism for all regions. If, however, Church officials in North America or
Europe proclaimed a moral stance more in keeping with progressive secular
values, they would be divided from the growing Catholic churches of the South by
a de facto schism, if not a formal breach.
For thirty years Northern liberals have dreamed of a Third Vatican Council to
complete the revolution launched by Pope John XXIII—one that would usher in a
new age of ecclesiastical democracy and lay empowerment. It would be a bitter
irony for the liberals if the council were convened but turned out to be a
conservative, Southern-dominated affair that imposed moral and theological
litmus tests intolerable to North Americans and Europeans—if, in other words,
it tried to implement not a new Reformation but a new Counter-Reformation. (In
that sense we would be witnessing not a new Wittenberg but, rather, a new
Council of Trent—that is, a strongly traditional gathering that would restate
the Church's older ideology and attempt to set it in stone for all future ages.)
If a future Southern Pope struggled to impose a new vision of orthodoxy on
America's Catholic bishops, universities, and seminaries, the result could well
be an actual rather than a de facto schism.
The experience of the world's Anglicans and Episcopalians may foretell the
direction of conflicts within the Roman Catholic Church. In the Anglican
Communion, which is also torn by a global cultural conflict over issues of
gender and sexuality, orthodox Southerners seek to re-evangelize a Euro-American
world that they view as coming close to open heresy. This uncannily recalls the
situation in sixteenth-century Europe, in which Counter-Reformation Catholics
sent Jesuits and missionary priests to reconvert those regions that had fallen
into Protestantism.
Anglicans in the North tend to be very liberal on homosexuality and the
ordination of women. In recent years, however, liberal clerics have been
appalled to find themselves outnumbered and regularly outvoted. In these votes
the bishops of Africa and Asia have emerged as a rock-solid conservative bloc.
The most ferocious battle to date occurred at the Lambeth World Conference in
1998, which adopted, over the objections of the liberal bishops, a forthright
traditional statement proclaiming the impossibility of reconciling homosexual
conduct with Christian ministry. As in the Roman Catholic Church, the
predominance of Southerners at future events of this kind will only increase.
Nigeria already has more practicing Anglicans than any other country, far more
than Britain itself, and Uganda is not far behind. By mid-century the global
total of Anglicans could approach 150 million, of whom only a small minority
will be white Europeans or North Americans. The shifting balance with-in the
church could become a critical issue very shortly, since the new Archbishop of
Canterbury, Rowan Williams, is notably gay-friendly and has already ordained a
practicing homosexual as a priest.
The Lambeth debate also initiated a series of events that Catholic reformers
should study carefully. Briefly, American conservatives who were disenchanted
with the liberal establishment in the U.S. Episcopal Church realized that they
had powerful friends overseas, and transferred their religious allegiance to
more-conservative authorities in the global South. Since 2000 some conservative
American Episcopalians have traveled to Moses Tay's cathedral in Singapore,
where they were consecrated as bishops by Asian and African Anglican prelates,
including the Rwandan archbishop Emmanuel Kolini. By tradition an Anglican
archbishop is free to ordain whomever he pleases within his province, so
although the Americans live and work in South Carolina, Pennsylvania, and other
states, they are now technically bishops within the province of Rwanda. They
have become missionary bishops, charged with ministering to conservative
congregations in the United States, where they support a dissident "virtual
province" within the church. They and their conservative colleagues are now
part of the Anglican Mission in America, which is intended officially to
"lead the Episcopal Church back to its biblical foundations." The
mission aims to restore traditional teachings and combat what it sees as the
"manifest heresy" and even open apostasy of the U.S. Church
leadership. Just this past summer Archbishop Kolini offered his protection to
dissident Anglicans in the Vancouver area, who were rebelling against liberal
proposals to allow same-sex couples to receive a formal Church blessing.
ltimately,
the first Christendom—the politicoreligious order that dominated Europe from
the sixth century through the sixteenth—collapsed in the face of secular
nationalism, under the overwhelming force of what Thomas Carlyle described as
"the three great elements of modern civilization, gunpowder, printing, and
the Protestant religion." Nation-states have dominated the world ever
since. Today, however, the whole concept of national autonomy is under
challenge, partly as a result of new technologies. In the coming decades,
according to a recent CIA report, "Governments will have less and less
control over flows of information, technology, diseases, migrants, arms, and
financial transactions, whether licit or illicit, across their borders. The very
concept of 'belonging' to a particular state will probably erode." If a
once unquestionable construct like Great Britain is under threat, it is not
surprising that people are questioning the existence of newer and more
artificial entities in Africa and Asia.
For a quarter of a century social scientists analyzing the decline of the
nation-state have drawn parallels between the world today and the politically
fragmented yet cosmopolitan world of the Middle Ages. Some scholars have even
predicted the emergence of some secular movement or ideology that would command
loyalty across nations like the Christendom of old. Yet the more we look at the
Southern Hemisphere, the more we see that although supranational ideas are
flourishing, they are not in the least secular. The parallels to the Middle Ages
may be closer than anyone has guessed.
Across the global South cardinals and bishops have become national moral leaders
in a way essentially unseen in the West since the seventeenth century. The
struggles of South African churches under apartheid spring to mind, but just as
impressive were the pro-democracy campaigns of many churches and denominations
elsewhere in Africa during the 1980s and 1990s. Prelates know that they are
expected to speak for their people, even though if they speak boldly, they may
well pay with their lives. Important and widely revered modern martyrs include
Archbishop Luwum, of Uganda; Archbishop Munzihirwa, of Zaire; and Cardinal
Biayenda, of Congo-Brazzaville.
As this sense of moral leadership grows, we might reasonably ask whether
Christianity will also provide a guiding political ideology for much of the
world. We might even imagine a new wave of Christian states, in which political
life is inextricably bound up with religious belief. Zambia declared itself a
Christian nation in 1991, and similar ideas have been bruited in Zimbabwe,
Kenya, and Liberia. If this ideal does gain popularity, the Christian South will
soon be dealing with some debates, of long standing in the North, over the
proper relationship between Church and State and between rival churches under
the law. Other inevitable questions involve tolerance and diversity, the
relationship between majority and minority communities, and the extent to which
religiously inspired laws can (or should) regulate private morality and
behavior. These issues were all at the core of the Reformation.
Across the regions of the world that will be the most populous in the
twenty-first century, vast religious contests are already in progress, though so
far they have impinged little on Western opinion. The most significant conflict
is in Nigeria, a nation that by rights should be a major regional power in this
century and perhaps even a global power; but recent violence between Muslims and
Christians raises the danger that Nigerian society might be brought to ruin by
the clash of jihad and crusade. Muslims and Christians are at each
other's throats in Indonesia, the Philippines, Sudan, and a growing number of
other African nations; Hindu extremists persecute Christians in India.
Demographic projections suggest that these feuds will simply worsen. Present-day
battles in Africa and Asia may anticipate the political outlines to come, and
the roots of future great-power alliances. These battles are analogous to the
ideological conflicts of the twentieth century, the alternating hot and cold
wars between advocates of fascism and of democracy, of socialism and of
capitalism. This time, however, the competing ideologies are explicitly
religious, promising their followers a literal rather than merely a metaphorical
kingdom of God on earth.
Let us imagine Africa in the throes of fiery religious revivals, as Muslim and
Christian states jostle for political influence. Demographic change alone could
provoke more-aggressive international policies, as countries with swollen
populations tried to appropriate living space or natural resources. But
religious tensions could make the situation far worse. If mega-cities are not to
implode through social unrest and riot, governments have to find some way to
mobilize the teeming masses of unemployed teenagers and young adults. Persuading
them to fight for God is a proven way of siphoning off internal tension,
especially if the religion in question already has a powerful ideal of
martyrdom. Liberia, Uganda, and Sierra Leone have given rise to ruthless
militias ready to kill or die for whatever warlord directs them, often following
some notionally religious imperative. In the 1980s the hard-line Shiite mullahs
of Iran secured their authority by sending hundreds of thousands of young men to
martyr themselves in human-wave assaults against the Iraqi front lines. In
contemporary Indonesia, Islamist militias can readily find thousands of poor
recruits to fight against the nation's Christian minorities.
Some of the likely winners in the religious economy of the new century are
precisely those groups with a strongly apocalyptic mindset, in which the triumph
of righteousness is associated with the vision of a world devastated by fire and
plague. This could be a perilously convenient ideology for certain countries
with weapons of mass destruction. (The candidates that come to mind include not
only Iraq and Iran but also future regional powers such as Indonesia, Nigeria,
the Congo, Uganda, and South Africa.) All this means that our political leaders
and diplomats should pay at least as much attention to religions and sectarian
frontiers as they ever have to the location of oil fields.
Perhaps the most remarkable point about these potential conflicts is that the
trends pointing toward them have registered so little on the consciousness of
even well-informed Northern observers. What, after all, do most Americans know
about the distribution of Christians worldwide? I suspect that most see
Christianity very much as it was a century ago—a predominantly European and
North American faith. In discussions of the recent sexual-abuse crisis "the
Catholic Church" and "the American Church" have been used more or
less synonymously.
As the media have striven in recent years to present Islam in a more sympathetic
light, they have tended to suggest that Islam, not Christianity, is the rising
faith of Africa and Asia, the authentic or default religion of the world's
huddled masses. But Christianity is not only surviving in the global South, it
is enjoying a radical revival, a return to scriptural roots. We are living in
revolutionary times.
But we aren't participating in them. By any reasonable assessment of numbers,
the most significant transformation of Christianity in the world today is not
the liberal Reformation that is so much desired in the North. It is the
Counter-Reformation coming from the global South. And it's very likely that in a
decade or two neither component of global Christianity will recognize its
counterpart as fully or authentically Christian.
There's no place
like home... There's no place like home...