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Speaking Notes With the Bishop of London on how and why the Church might be losing its nerve and its role in the modern society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Extract

THE FUTURE OF MODERN DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY APPEARS TO depend on the amount of political participation, i.e. on how much its individuals will have to participate in political interests and activities. To be sure, the way industrial society functions requires an increasing involvement of the individual in public activities. But is there a danger that the private lives and aspirations of all individuals will be increasingly absorbed by the ‘public cause’? And that the Church, the intellectuals, the artists, the trade unions, and last but not least, the media might become transmission-belts of the ideological-political organizations?

The welfare state gives in principle a due primacy to man's free choice of how to fulfil himself, for himself and not by the state and for the state. But within the welfare state, which could continue this balancing act, which is this balancing act, it is the individuals themselves who seem now to be more and more attracted, for stark economic reasons, but also because of ideological fallacies by the ‘external goods’ rather than by the ontological and interiorized raison d'être. Are we witnessing the transformation of the real man into the citizen, or comrade, of man into fan?

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Government and Opposition Ltd 1982

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References

1 Pierre Chaunu: La mémoire et le sacré, Paris, 1978, p. 166.

2 Edward Norman: ‘The Political Christ’, First BBC Reith Lecture, 1978 in The Listener, 2 November 1978, p. 567. See also his Christianity and the World Order, O. U. P. 1978.

3 ‘Why should men love the Church? Why should they love her laws? She tells them of Life and Death, and of all they would forget. She is tender where they would be hard, and hard where they would like to be soft/ They constantly try to escape/ From the darkness outside and within/ By dreaming of systems so perfect that no one will need to be good/.’ T. S. Eliot: The Rock, Faber, 1934, p. 42.

4 Quoted in Graham Leonard: God Alive, Darton, 1981, p. 19 and p. 32.

5 T. S. Eliot, The Rock, op. cit., p. 53.