Supreme Court Catholics -- Sightings

One of the more overlooked elements of this newest Supreme Court appointment is her religion, and what that means to the religious balance of the Court. With Sonia Sotomayor's appointment, assuming confirmation, that would make six of nine. I actually find that fascinating. It's not really surprising that the first Latina/Latino appointment would be Catholic. A majority of Hispanics are Roman Catholic. But just think back a generation, and the concern people had about the election of John F. Kennedy. Would he take his orders from the Pope. Now, a generation later we have a majority of justices being Catholic.

Martin Marty writes -- yesterday -- in Sightings about this selection, the presence of anti-Catholicism today and at the founding of the nation. Indeed, many of the most vociferous supporters of church-separation in the 19th century were afraid of Roman Catholic intrusion. Yes, how the times have changed.

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Sightings 6/1/09



Supreme Court Catholics

-- Martin E. Marty

If/when Judge Sonia Sotomayor is sworn in as a member of the United States Supreme Court, there would/will be six Roman Catholics on it. My trained and focused eye -- trained to do "sightings" of public religion in the various media, including the internet, and focused on the chosen subject of the week -- has been seeking evidence of anti-Catholicism among mainline Protestant and Evangelical leaders, in the form of expressions of worry and prejudice. Unless between Saturday (when I write) and Monday (when readers read) some surprise occurs, public controversies over her appointment will not yet have attracted the voice of any non-Catholic bishops, moderators, denominational presidents, church-body newspapers, or representative columnists.

Why is this remarkable? This week I reread Philip Hamburger’s Separation of Church and State, a five-hundred-page examination of the subject. His thesis is the partly substantiated claim -- here’s the dust jacket speaking -- that "separation became a constitutional freedom largely through fear and prejudice" voiced by militants who "adopted the principle of separation to restrict the role of Catholics in public life." They were Know Nothings, members of the KKK, and eventually "theologically liberal, anti-Christian secularists." Hamburger offers abundant sad and scary quotations from olden days, from sad and scared Protestants and non-Catholic religionists.

Alas for their heirs: Pope John XXIII and President John F. Kennedy, as well as vast cultural and churchly changes, ended the olden days and ruined the old show. If mainline Protestants, who make up one-fifth of the populace, and evangelical Protestants, who make up at least a third, want to make a point of being anti-Catholic and showing it by commenting on this appointment, they surely are stealthy attackers. Mainline Protestants turned "ecumenical" two-score years ago, as they and most Catholics became buddies. Evangelical Protestants, who decades ago called the Pope the Antichrist foretold in the Book of Revelation, now link with his successors on selected social issues which are in contention. Were it not for professional Catholic defense organizations which are ready to pop up to represent their interests on cable TV, we would find that Catholics and non-Catholics pick and choose whom and what they will support or reject in public life.

Wait a minute! What about the blogs? Yes, they reveal an underground of anti-Catholics, including many ex-Catholics. The Washington Post "On Faith" column, edited by Jon Meacham and Sally Quinn and crafted by David Waters, which includes a stable of diverse characters, I among them, stimulated discussion of the "Six Catholics on the Supreme Court" issue, referenced below. Waters first deals with the comment by Catholic editors left and right, and then turns it over to the bloggers. "On Faith" screens out the vile kind of bloggers who invent new variations on obscenity, blasphemy, and, well, bad manners. Still, along with good stuff, there is some venom.

What strikes me is how unrepresentative the self-named angry Christians in the string of commentators are, if measured against the wider church bodies and leadership. Some simple, raw, old-fashioned anti-Catholicism is present, but it has to share space with Catholics who argue how Catholic someone has to be to be Catholic, and all the rest. At the end, such blogs give us a license to yawn when the Catholic defense people rise to complain and rage about anti-Catholicism. We have instead important things to discuss. One hopes they can be argued amid the noisy and predictable debate this season.

References:

For the Washington Post "On Faith" blog, see: http://newsweek.washingtonpost.com/onfaith/undergod/2009/05/is_she_catholic_does_it_matter.html?hpid=talkbox1

Philip Hamburger, Separation of Church and State (Harvard, 2002).

Martin E. Marty's biography, current projects, upcoming events, publications, and contact information can be found at www.illuminos.com.

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“I would like to consider why – and precisely how – attention to media might prove important for an account of religion in the contemporary world,” writes historian of religion Richard Fox in this month’s Religion and Culture Web Forum essay. Attempting to parse out the various assumptions made about media in studies of religion, Fox’s “Religion, Media, and Cultural Studies” argues – via a historical survey of Media Studies and an examination of the notion of “sacred books” in Friedrich Max Müller, Fox calls for more self-critical and politically responsible analysis on the intersections of religion and media. Responding to Fox’s work will be Stewart Hoover, Kathleen Moore, Diane Winston, and Ghada Talhami.

Visit the Religion and Culture Web Forum:
http://divinity.uchicago.edu/martycenter/publications/webforum/index.shtml

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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

Comments

Anonymous said…
You're blaming the Catholics for the 1st amendment? I always assumed freedom of speech was the foundation of this shared American value.

I know I'm hard on the Catholic Church. I’m not hard on the members. They're used to it and seem to understand. The bad is almost all connected to their autocracy.

David Mc
Robert Cornwall said…
Although I wouldn't blame the Catholics for the 1st Amendment -- the interpretation of that amendment in the 19th century may have been influenced by anti-Catholicism. Remember that in the 19th century Protestants were without doubt the dominant player. So, even though there was no official establishment, there was a de facto sense that true Americans were Protestants. As Catholics began to immigrate to the US, there was great fear of what that would mean. We are in a very different place today. Catholics are now part of the "Christian" side of things -- with Muslims, ect. being the threat to Christian dominance. Now, this isn't my view, but it is the view of many.
Anonymous said…
I guess "blame" is the wrong word since freedom is so dear.

So we don't fear the Catholics or the Jews anymore. That's progress. Perhaps we can now show some bravery in the face of the Muslim religion, whose adherents pray to the same Father as I understand.

I know it’s a two way street, but if we can’t be true the dearest ideals as Christians, we fail.

I guess Barack will address this on Thursday, so I’ll wait for his view forward.

David Mc

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