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“MORAL” CRUSADE AGAINST CATHOLICISM
Daniel Goldhagen’s Unsavory
Treatment of the Wartime Church
By Bronwen Catherine McShea
(book review from Catalyst
January-February 2003)
Daniel J. Goldhagen’s latest book,
A Moral Reckoning: The Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust
and its Unfulfilled Duty of Repair, purports to be a much-needed
“moral philosophical” contribution to a troubled field of
scholarship. Standing on the shoulders of other critics of Pope Pius
XII’s wartime Church—James Carroll, Garry Wills, David Kertzer, to
name a few—Goldhagen calls upon all Catholics to own up to the
deep-seated antisemitism in their Church’s past which he calls “a
necessary cause” of the Holocaust.
As Goldhagen’s “inquiry” proceeds, it becomes increasingly clear
that his program for “moral reckoning” has less to do with the
historical record of Catholic involvement in the Holocaust, criminal or
otherwise, than it does with the author’s opinion of Catholicism
itself—that it is inherently flawed, and must be reformed out of all
recognition.
At first Goldhagen focuses his attention on the hypocrisy of a Church
whose wartime leaders preached “love and goodness” but failed in
many instances to exhibit Christ-like heroism in defense of innocent
Jews. In his excitement over what he considers an insightful use of the
Catholic “sins of ommission” concept, Goldhagen allows its
definition to balloon to the point where he faults the Church for
failing “to tend to the souls of the mass murderers and of the other
persecutors of Jews.” One wonders what Goldhagen pictured in his mind
when writing such a line: a toddling Hitler and Goebbels in
kindergarten, given less tender, loving care by their nuns and priests
than they deserved? Does Goldhagen honestly believe the Church was in a
position to reach and reform all those who chose the demonic descent
into Nazism?
The integrity of Goldhagen’s arguments seem less a priority than
taking swipes at the Church wherever he can. How else can we explain his
frequent demands that the Church be held to the highest of
standards—to live Christian love and goodness to perfection—and his
simultaneous suggestions that the very faith which is the lifeblood of
such love and goodness should be rejected? For indeed, while he asks the
question, “What would Jesus have done,” his contention that he is
only concerned for Catholics to strive more fully in their faith quickly
breaks down as soon as his program for a Catholic “moral reckoning”
takes shape. Catholics, he proposes, to do right by the Jews, must
effectively cease to be Catholics—must abandon their Scriptures, their
Pope, and even the Cross itself.
“The Catholic Church has a Bible problem,” writes Goldhagen
matter-of-factly in the latter part of the book. “The antisemitism of
the Bible is not incidental to it but constitutive of its story of
Jesus’ life and death and of its messages about God and humanity.”
Adding that “the structure of the Gospels in particular is antisemitic,”
Goldhagen proposes that the Pope and all those who teach the Catholic
faith must teach as “falsehoods” some 80 “antisemitic” passages
in Matthew, 40 in Mark, 60 in Luke, 130 in John, 140 in Acts, and so on.
He then begs the question whether it would not also be just to demand
that the Church expunge these several hundred passages from the
Christian Scriptures.
Goldhagen defines as “antisemitic” any passage in the Bible which in
any way implicates Jews in the death of Christ, or which in any way
suggests that Christianity has superceded Judaism as the faith of
God’s people. Apparently, we are supposed to reject as “null and
void” the Gospels accounts of Judas’s betrayal of his Lord,
Christ’s mockery of a trial before the Sanhedrin and His being handed
over to the Roman authorities, and the crowds of men and women who
cheered for Christ’s death sentence. Also, Goldhagen explicitly says
that the phrase “New Testament” is itself offensive to Jews, as it
implies the Old has been superceded or fulfilled by Christ’s divine
mission. His suggestion to Rome for righting this offense? It must
declare and teach every last Catholic that Christianity has in no way
superceded Judaism, and it must “renounce the Church’s position that
the Catholic Church is universal.”
For it was fervent belief in the universality of the Church, Goldhagen
argues, which animated Christian persecutions of Jews in the past, and
made Europe’s soil fertile for the Holocaust. Likewise, it was the
Catholic identification of their Pope as the divinely-appointed leader
of all Christians which encouraged them in “imperial aspirations”
that were deadly for many Jews. Goldhagen’s recipe for “moral
reckoning” in this area is for Catholics, first, to renounce the
doctrine of papal infallibility, and to acknowledge that its
“authoritarian structure and culture, undergirded by the infallibility
doctrine, is inherently dishonest.” Second, the Church must “cease
to be a political institution” and abdicate its rule over the Vatican
city state. Additionally, the Church must stop its missions around the
world, as missions are, in Goldhagen's opinion, inherently
“political” ventures designed to forward the Pope’s ultimate aim
of acquiring “suzerainty” over all mankind. Lastly, this
depoliticized Catholic Church must at every opportunity support and
advocate for the interests of the state of Israel—this, Goldhagen
believes, is the proper way of repaying a modicum of the debt Catholics
owe the Jewish people.
It is perhaps when discussing the “political” nature of the Catholic
Church where Goldhagen strays into his most offensive diatribes. “Seen
from the outside, and certainly from the vantage point of a political
scientist,” he writes, “Catholic doctrine, theology, and liturgy
looks, historically and even today, more like the ideology of an
imperial power, sometimes an antagonistic power, than a mere set of
beliefs about God.” And an “antagonistic power,” of course, must
be fended off by a society concerned for its well-being generally and
the well-being of its Jews specifically. It is quite remarkable that
Goldhagen feels so free to attack Catholic “doctrine, theology, and
liturgy” in a book that is ostensibly about the Church's comportment
during the Nazi era. It is in such diatribes where Goldhagen shows his
hand as a bigot whose concern is to actively undermine a faith he
detests, rather than simply to seek justice for Jews in a manner
appropriate to one who professes allegiance to the ideals of a
pluralistic society.
At the heart of Catholic theology is the Crucifixion—the redemptive
death of the God-man Christ, who was born of a Jewish virgin. The
Crucifixion symbolizes many things for Catholics (not least the
supernatural, self-sacrificing love and goodness Goldhagen reminds
Catholics to imitate), but among them is the tragedy foretold in the Old
Testament that the Messiah would be rejected by many of his own
nation—the necessary, painful tragedy of the New Israel’s birth
amidst the Old. Goldhagen, as a Jew, has every right as a free man to
reject all such teachings about the Crucifixion, and every right to
state his own belief in their error in a scholarly text on the subject.
Yet he goes farther than this: he makes the inflammatory suggestion that
the Cross, historically seen as “an antisemitic symbol and weapon,”
is “all too likely to provoke further antipathy toward Jews.”
Elsewhere in the book Goldhagen describes any such provocation as
veritably criminal in light of the horrors endured by the Jewish people
in the last century, and that the Church must take every step possible
to avoid even “planting the seed” of antisemitism in any human
heart.
We are left to conclude— though Goldhagen is not bold enough to state
it outright—that Goldhagen sees it as a duty, or at least a welcome
idea, for Catholic leaders to remove the Cross from their
churches—inside as well as out. If he can call for the expurgation of
Catholic Holy Writ, surely he is capable of calling for the removal of
all Catholic sacred symbols from any wall, any steeple, if those symbols
give any kind of encouragement to antisemitism.
Goldhagen, for all his moral outrage at one of the most criminal
treatments of any religious group or people known to history, openly
encourages the suppression of Catholic teachings, Catholic symbols, and
even Catholic autonomy from the world’s political powers as it is
entailed by the existence of the Vatican city state. How such a posture
can benefit the cause of greater tolerance of, and accommodation for,
any religious community is a great mystery which Goldhagen does not even
attempt to answer in his fustian “moral philosophical inquiry.”
After reading A Moral Reckoning, it is very easy to see why Rabbi
David Rosen, international director of interreligious affairs at the
American Jewish Committee, a year ago criticized Goldhagen for his
“unconcealed antagonism against the Catholic Church.” Rosen is among
many Jews who are embarrassed and angered by Goldhagen's imprudent,
vicious posture against Catholics. Goldhagen is upsetting and retarding
the already stormy (though recently fruitful) efforts by Jews and
Catholics to arrive at better understanding of each other’s
communities. Jews and Catholics alike rightly regard Goldhagen’s brand
of “scholarship” as poison to productive dialogue and genuine moral
philosophical inquiry.
The lukewarm to negative reviews the book has elicited from the critics
have been its one saving grace. Even New York Times critic
Geoffrey Wheatcroft threw up his hands at the close of his review and
asked how Goldhagen “can in good faith plead with the church to
abandon the very doctrines that define it.” Nevertheless, such
critiques have not prevented the editors of the Times and other
newspapers from naming A Moral Reckoning one of the “best
books” of 2002. That the organs of the popular press react with such
knee-jerk favorability to any book—no matter its merits—which
attacks the Catholic Church is perhaps the most important lesson to be
drawn from Goldhagen’s efforts. In a way, Goldhagen ought to be
thanked for reminding us yet again that unabashed anti-Catholicism is
alive and well both in the press and in the academy.
Bronwen Catherine McShea was a policy analyst for the Catholic
League. She is now enrolled in a Master of Theological Studies program
at Harvard Divinity School.
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