May 23, 2005
CAN'T BECOME EURABIAN FAST ENOUGH:
European, Not Christian: An aggressive secularism sweeps the Continent (Jay Tolson, 5/30/05, US News)
For a while last winter, Ruth Kelly, Britain's newly appointed education secretary, had to feel that she was getting the Buttiglione Treatment. Rocco Buttiglione, that is: Italy's nominee to the European Union's executive commission, who had only a few months before come under sharp attack--both from EU parliamentarians and the press--for his traditional Catholic views about the sinfulness of homosexual acts. He tried to hang in, but ultimately the controversy compelled him to stand down.
advertisementSo what was Kelly's problem? She had been receiving spiritual counseling from the Roman Catholic organization Opus Dei. The British press went to town with lurid myths and half-truths about that organization, from its past associations with Franco's Spain (even though there were Opus Dei members opposed to Franco) to the fictive portrait of the murderous Opus Dei "monk" in Dan Brown's wildly popular novel, The Da Vinci Code (even though there are no monks in Opus Dei). The suggestion, clearly, was that anyone under the influence of such an organization could not support her party's position on such things as abortion and condom use.
Tough crowd. While Kelly survived the mini-tempest, her experience captures what many say is the prevailing attitude of European elites toward religion, particularly traditional religion and particularly in the public sphere. From the ban on the wearing of visible religious symbols in French public schools to the refusal of the EU to include specific mention of Christianity's influence on Europe's distinctive civilization in its first constitution, a mountain of anecdotal evidence suggests that an aggressive form of secularism--what the British religion writer Karen Armstrong calls "secular fundamentalism" --is afoot in Europe.
Numerous analysts suggest that the spreading "Christianophobia" is tied to a Europe-wide spiritual malaise that is pushing the Continent toward broad cultural and economic decline. Others describe a more complicated process, in which--as the last vestiges of established religions are disappearing in various European nations--a new spiritual awakening may be taking place. Either way, popular attitudes toward religion in Europe now stand in bold contrast to those in the United States. While 59 percent of Americans say that religion is very important in their lives, only 11 percent of the French, 21 percent of Germans, and 33 percent of Britons do, according to the Pew Research Center. More to the point, a growing part of the U.S. electorate--and not just those associated with red America--would like religious values to play an even more prominent role in shaping the nation's laws and public life.
There's still some small hope for Britain, but the others aren't just rivals but enemies, even if feeble ones. Posted by Orrin Judd at May 23, 2005 7:19 PM
You mean, they wish they were powerful enough to be considered rivals or enemies.
Posted by: Tom at May 23, 2005 8:13 PMThey're really gonna have confusing times over there in a decade or two, when the new majority religious group wins all the elections and starts passing laws about chopping off hands and toppling walls onto people.
Posted by: at May 23, 2005 8:25 PMThey had religious laws back when they were great nations.
Posted by: oj at May 23, 2005 9:34 PMOJ: history is not linear and not over. European Elites and the American Elites who ape them (the Blue State Elite or BSE) have indeed shuned religion, but that does not mean that all non-Arab Europeans always will.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at May 24, 2005 12:47 AM