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Catholicism and Political Mythology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2024
Extract
In our day the Church is present, as it were, only on the margin of politics. Even in those countries, such as Ireland and Spain, where the Church is in one sense an obvious power in politics, the action of the Church is still marginal; for the substance of politics, however it may be constituted and whatever analysis of it we may offer, is what it is by reason of those secular forces which determine the character of politics in other states where the Church institutionally is of little or no account; and the fundamental decisions of the political authorities are always in the last resort swayed by secular considerations of precisely the same kind as those operative in non-Catholic societies. There is, outside the Soviet Union, the popular democracies, and China, a common social pattern, diversified in appearance and in its degree of maturity and in the political superstructure it bears, but still a common pattern: that of the capitalism of the mid-twentieth century.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © 1960 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 Not all sections of the Christian Democratic parties are imprisoned within the myth. The French M.R.P. and the left wing of the Italian Christian Democrats are notably independent in their thinking.
2 A striking instance of this disregard of truth is to be found in a broadcast talk recently delivered over the Nairobi (Kenya) Radio by the Reverend E. Colleton, c.s.sp. ‘At the very beginning of the Russian Revolution a decree was passed declaring that all women between the ages of seventeen and thirty-two were the property of the State.’ Thus Father Colleton. It is many years since we came across this fabrication. The talk is reprinted in Christian Order, Vol. 1, No. 1, Jan. 1960, edited by Paul Crane, s.J.
3 I have discussed this qucstion in two Third Programme broadcasts, ‘Problems of Communist Language’, reprinted in The LiSknn, 3 and 10 September, 1953.
4 Acts ii, 42.
5 1 Peter ii, 9.