December 30, 2006

Pope Rat, Catholic Church Take Aim at Latin America

by Samuel Gregg

Few realize it, but May 2007 could be a decisive moment for Catholic Latin
America. That is when Latin America's Catholic bishops will meet in Brazil
for the Fifth General Conference of Latin American and Caribbean Bishops to
consider the profound challenges confronting the area. The importance
attached to this event by the whole Catholic world is evident from the fact
that Pope Benedict XVI will be attending.

Some of the difficulties to be addressed at this conference were identified
in the event's main preparatory document, drafted by key Latin American
bishops and published in September 2005.

These include the inadequate religious formation [sic] received by many
Catholic Latin Americans, tendencies to mix Catholic and pre-Christian
indigenous religious practices, and some Latin Americans' failure to act
consistently with what they say they believe as Catholics.

The same document also pinpoints particular problems confronting Latin
American societies. It refers to corruption as a disease disfiguring
virtually every sphere of Latin American life, especially politics and the
judiciary. The directness with which the bishops speak about corruption's
evil causes and catastrophic effects is almost without precedent in Latin
America.

Then there is the bishops' condemnation of "a growing tendency to applaud
the rise of messianic leaders... of a populist nature." "They promise
paradise," the bishops add, and engage in the politics of grand gestures,
often at the cost of undermining basic human rights.

Though no names are mentioned, there seems little question the bishops have
in mind figures - such as Presidents Chavez of Venezuela and Morales of
Bolivia - who have subtly and sometimes not-so-subtly promoted attacks on
the Church's presence in Latin America.

Given Latin America's high poverty levels, no-one should be surprised that
the bishops devote considerable attention to this subject. They repeatedly
refer to growing economic inequalities and declining living standards
throughout the continent.

Reading the text, it becomes clear that some bishops view globalization as
partly responsible for these problems. In a 2003 speech, for example,
Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga said, "Only the logic of
financial markets has been globalized. And the absolutism of that capital is
ruinous."

Such claims are somewhat odd, given that it is precisely the failure of much
of Latin America to integrate into the global market that has contributed
significantly to the region's persistently high poverty.

This becomes clearer when we consider China and India's progress over the
past 10 years. Through their continuing assimilation into the global
economy, millions of Chinese and Indians are escaping poverty.

Of course, poverty still plagues these nations. But no-one questions that
real poverty is being steadily reduced in Asia through China and India's
embrace of free trade and economic liberalization. The same, incidentally,
is true of El Salvador and Chile.

Some Latin American bishops' reluctance to acknowledge these facts may
reflect the persistence of what some call "soft-liberationist" thought in
their ranks.

As a serious intellectual force, liberation theology - the embrace of
Marxism by theologians attempting to explain Latin America's problems - is
now widely dismissed as largely irrelevant throughout the region, a relic of
the 1970s. Yet its residual effects can be found in some Catholic Latin
Americans' ongoing tendency to blame the rest of the world for the region's
economic problems, instead of acknowledging that Latin America's economic
difficulties primarily stem from mercantilist economic structures and the
failure to uphold property rights and the rule of law. Prominent Latin
Americans reluctant to acknowledge these facts include not only Cardinal
Rodriguez, but also influential figures such as Brazil's former archbishop
of Sao Paulo, Cardinal Claudio Hummes.

If the bishops meeting in Brazil in May 2007 want to see poverty diminished
throughout the region, they might consider highlighting the role played by
"right-wing oligarchs" and "left-wing oligarchs" in obstructing Latin
America's integration into the global economy.

The right-oligarchs include those Latin American businesses that pressure
governments into providing them with tariffs and special tax benefits that
protect them from competition. The left-oligarchs include populist
politicians and trade-union leaders whose positions depend on large numbers
of people remaining in a state of economic discontent.

Free trade and economic liberty threaten both groups' power. First, it
exposes the right-oligarchs to the disciplines of competition. Second, it
undermines populists and radical unionists by relieving the poverty of large
segments of the population.

Compared to Western European Catholicism - characterized by mass apostasy,
often mediocre bishops, and declining vocations - Latin American Catholicism
is in good shape. It enjoys deep reservoirs of authentic faith, a continuing
rise in diocesan vocations, and strong and prudent leadership from many
bishops. The May 2007 Latin American bishops conference represents a unique
chance for Catholic Latin America to further strengthen itself by breaking
free of the dead weight of fallacious economic thinking and the dregs of a
suspect, moribund theology.

For the sake of Latin America's poor, let's hope they take it.

[Mr. Gregg is director of research at the Acton Institute and author, most
recently, of "Banking, Justice and the Common Good."]

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home