Sunday, October 25, 2009

James Carroll on Roman Catholicism's Next Big Scandal

Catholic author James Carroll has written an excellent commentary on the “greatest failing” of the Roman Catholic bishops of Africa, that being the ignoring of the HIV/AIDS crisis. Carroll also provides a succinct historical perspective that explains how current Roman Catholic leadership is “trapped in a dilemma of its own making.” Following is an excerpt.

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Unlike Protestant and Muslim fundamentalisms, which are tied to fixed readings of holy texts, Catholic fundamentalism derives from a rigid defense of papal authority and boils down to a fixation on sexual morality. That has turned the Catholic hierarchy into a raging enemy of condom use — even when it comes to preventing the spread of AIDS.

When Pope Benedict visited Africa last March, he caused a storm of rebuke by asserting that condoms “increase the problem” of HIV/AIDS. The Catholic campaign against condoms has included a bishop claiming, according to a BBC report in 2007, that some condoms from Europe are purposely infected with HIV to kill Africans. Less crackpot, but still damaging are more typical claims, including one made last week by the synod general secretary, that condoms don’t work well in tropical heat. Church leaders assert that condoms give people a false sense of security, which leads them to have more sex, thereby increasing their chances of infection. All of this ignores what has become an international scientific consensus — that prevention is the key to stemming the epidemic, and condoms properly and consistently used are an essential part of prevention. “Properly and consistently used” is the operative phrase there, of course, and that assumes widespread programs of sex education, which are also inhibited by the Catholic hierarchy’s preference for the “just say no” abstinence approach.

The Catholic leadership is trapped in a dilemma of its own making. A brief history helps understand why. More than a century ago, when the pope lost his temporal authority over the papal territories in Italy and was humiliated by becoming a “prisoner in the Vatican,” Catholics rallied to him as never before. Only then, in 1870, was he declared infallible in “matters of faith and morals.” When the pope condemned “artificial contraception” as gravely sinful in 1930 while endorsing “natural” modes of preventing conception like “rhythm,” it was widely assumed by Catholics that he was speaking infallibly. Papal authority was tied directly to the most intimate choices Catholic men and women could make.

But ideas of “natural” changed. With the invention of the birth control pill (by a Catholic doctor) in the 1960s, church leaders openly began reconsidering the question. Pope John XXIII appointed a commission to study it, which led many Catholics to assume change was coming. The commission was almost unanimous in recommending that the ban be lifted, not only on the Pill, but on all forms of birth control. This was a watershed moment, showing that Catholic leaders, too, could grasp that static notions of “nature” could give way to more open and dynamic ideas. But what about the other Catholic prohibitions that depended on a pre-modern idea of “natural law” (including masturbation, and, especially, abortion)? More dramatically, what about all the Catholics who’d already been condemned to hell for using birth control? John’s successor, Paul VI, panicked, thinking a change would open a door to moral confusion and undermine papal authority. And so, against the commission’s recommendation, he reaffirmed the ban in 1968.

By then, the issue was no longer contraception: It was papal authority. Most Catholics had seen through the old logic and began to make their own decisions about birth control — the true undermining of authority. Popes and bishops ever since have played a double game — condemning birth control for the sake of “consistent teaching,” while taking for granted that they are being ignored both by lay people and the priests who hear their confessions.

The game became deadly when the tsunami of HIV/AIDS hit — especially in Africa, where Catholic bishops, presiding over a grassroots network of service and education, still have wide influence and prestige. Yet with their one-note insistence on abstinence as the only solution, they have been an obstacle to the urgent project of putting in place institutions of prevention, harm reduction, and safer sex. With logic that is anything but divine, Catholic leaders even forbid condom use for married couples with one infected partner. Meanwhile, Catholic priests, nuns, and lay workers who run health centers, schools, and orphanages throughout Africa quietly help clients understand how to reduce their risks of infection. A few bishops discretely promote condoms as a lesser evil, and one (Kevin Dowling of South Africa) has openly challenged the Vatican to change its teaching. But the overwhelming institutional weight of the Catholic Church continues to be thrown on the side of the virus. The result has been and will be the deaths of Africans. The virus of Catholic fundamentalism infects that beleaguered continent. At the Vatican, that, the church’s most grievous failure, is not being discussed.

To read James Carroll’s commentary in its entirety, click here.



For more of James Carroll at The Wild Reed, see:
James Carroll on Catholic Understandings of Truth (Part 1)
James Carroll on Catholic Understandings of Truth (Part 2)
James Carroll on Catholic Understandings of Truth (Part 3)
James Carroll on Catholic Understandings of Truth (Part 4)
James Carroll on Catholic Understanding of Truth (Part 5)
The Catholic Embrace of Americanism
A Brave Hope
A Christmas Reflection by James Carroll


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Pope Accused of “Distorting Scientific Evidence” on Condom Use
The Pope’s Message of Ignorance in Africa
Vatican Considers “Lesser of Two Evils”
Robert McClory on Humanae Vitae
Eugene Kennedy on Roman Catholicism’s “Post-Hierarchical Blues”


2 comments:

  1. One of the many scandalous elements of this rigidity is that the prohibition applies to married couples. With the very high rates of infection (upwards of 30% in Southern Africa), there are huge numbers of couples with one infected partner. To comply with church teaching, this forces them into a choice between total abstinence and accepting infection.

    It is timely to raise the issue of contraception now. Commonweal has pointed out that alongside conflicting approaches to clerical celibacy,contraception is another area where the Anglicans differ sharply from Rome. With the overwhelming majority of Catholics agreeing with the Anglicans, and more intimately affected by the present ruling, this silent dissent may well again surface more openly.

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  2. Michael:

    Since you don't seem to believe in very much of what the Roman Catholic Church teaches, it might be a good service to readers to explain why you still think you are a Catholic and what things you do agree with?

    My only thought is that, being a "physical" person, driven by the attractions of the physical senses, the architecture and maybe the music must be what keeps you from leaving.

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