Inquisitor attacks womens rights
Joseph, Cardinal Ratzinger, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith (formerly known as the Holy Office and earlier as the
Holy Inquisition) has published a document entitled Letter to
the bishops of the catholic church on the collaboration of men and
women in the church and in the world. It was issued with the
approval of His Holiness Pope John Paul II. Given the frailty of the
Holy Fathers health (though Parkinsons disease has not
impaired his intellectual faculties) and given the fact that the 77-year
old cardinal, though not papabile himself, may have great influence
in determining who next ascends the throne of St Peter, it behoves
us to listen to his words.
On the face of it, the letter seems to be a curiously anachronistic
attack on feminism - anachronistic in the sense that bourgeois feminism,
having joined the 1960s and 70s rebellion against sexist attitudes,
blatant discrimination and the domination of the middle class professions
by men, has become thoroughly incorporated. Nowadays bourgeois feminism
is part of the establishments furniture, along with quotas and
targets for female recruitment and promotion. Tony Blair, Charles
Kennedy and George Galloway all pay lip service. Full equality there
is not, but women can now pursue successful careers, along with having
children. Even in Cardinal Ratzingers homeland of upper Bavaria,
where catholicism is as much an integral part of the landscape as
the beautiful mountains and lakes, one suspects that not all women
still wear the Dirndl and stay at home all day preparing pigs
knuckle, potato dumplings and sauerkraut while rearing a large family.
The days of Kinder, Kirche, Küche are long gone. |

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But the point about rights in this system (not least those concerning
abortion, contraception, equal pay for equal work, and measures
outlawing overt discrimination - conceded only grudgingly by the
BMA, the courts, employers, government ministers and union bureaucrats)
is that they can easily be eroded or taken away altogether. Look
at what happened to trade union rights under Thatcher and the situation
now under the premiership of her spiritual heir.
The thing which really began to change the position of women in
our society was World War II. Men were sent away to kill or be killed;
the women took their places in the factories and offices and it
transformed their lives. They got money, found comradeship and won
a real degree of autonomy. However, after the war was over, in many
industries, it was made clear to the women: Thank you very
much, but your jobs belong to men. Time for you to get back into
the kitchen. And the women who did stay, like this writers
mother, ended up doing a mans work for a fraction of the pay
and then being a housewife as well. It took countless petitions,
campaigns, trade union resolutions, court cases, demonstrations
and strikes before Harold Wilsons government finally agreed
to enshrine the principle of equal pay in legislation.
On one level, the essential message of His Eminences letter
- notwithstanding the multiplicity of biblical references (where
there embarrassingly is no alternative but to rely on the creation
story and the Book of Genesis for authority) is perfectly clear.
Leaving aside all the compliments to the genius of woman,
the letter is saying: Get back in your proper place.
On another level, however, and more profoundly, it represents a
more wide-reaching restatement of the churchs views on human
sexuality, affecting the rights of all human beings, not just women.
The opening paragraphs make this clear:
Recent years have seen new approaches to womens issues.
A first tendency is to emphasise strongly conditions of subordination
in order to give rise to antagonism: women, in order to be themselves,
must make themselves the adversaries of men. Faced with the abuse
of power, the answer for women is to seek power. This process leads
to opposition between men and women, in which the identity and role
of one are emphasised to the disadvantage of the other, leading
to harmful confusion regarding the human person, which has its most
immediate and lethal effects in the structure of the family.
Ones first comment is to say, where have you been, your eminence?
Recent years? The process you describe - of women struggling against
unjust subordination and the abuse of power - led, in a limited
sense, to their liberation. The struggle goes on and can only be
successful in the context of the liberation of humanity as a whole
from the alienation which afflicts them. The harmful confusion
and lethal effects you attribute to this struggle (women
enjoying a measure of equality in the workplace; women having the
opportunity to fulfil themselves outside, as well as inside, their
traditional role) reflect what seems to be the determination
of the catholic church (at least its leadership) to go on maintaining
a view of woman and the family which rests on a basis that is not
only morally and theologically unsustainable, but politically too.
The cat comes out of the bag in the next paragraph: A second
tendency emerges in the wake of the first. In order to avoid the
domination of one sex or the other, their differences tend to be
denied, viewed as mere effects of historical and cultural conditioning.
In this perspective, physical difference, termed sex, is minimised,
while the purely cultural element, termed gender, is emphasised
to the maximum and held to be primary. The obscuring of the difference
or duality of the sexes has enormous consequences on a variety of
levels. This theory of the human person, intended to promote prospects
for equality of women through liberation from biological determinism,
has in reality inspired ideologies which, for example, call into
question the family, in its natural two-parent structure of mother
and father, and make homosexuality and heterosexuality virtually
equivalent, in a new model of polymorphous sexuality.
So those awful feminists have not just produced lethal effects
on family life, but their struggle for equality has dangerously
blurred the difference between men and women on a biological
basis, to the point where people dont know what they are supposed
to be doing or with whom. In the concept of polymorphous sexuality
(a splendid new piece of Vaticanese) you have a nightmare vision
of a world in which men love other men; women other women; and they
might actually want to get married and raise children by adoption
or whatever. An assault, then, on the rights and human dignity of
gays and lesbians.
The problem is not really about feminism (as if feminism ever turned
anybody into a lesbian or a queer): it is about the churchs
view of the role of sexuality in human life, which is perfectly
straightforward. The essential purpose of sex is the procreation
of the species. Therefore the only morally licit form of sexual
activity consists of vaginal intercourse between a married couple.
The ejaculation must take place in the vagina and there must be
no physical impediment to conception of whatever kind. Simple really.
All other forms of sex are intrinsically evil. If you engage in
them and die without first having confessed and repented, then you
are damned. It rests on an idea of natural law deriving from Aristotle
and St Thomas Aquinas. The notion of natural law in this moral theological
context is a complex one and rather fascinating. Readers should
turn, for example to the Encyclical Veritatis splendor (The splendour
of the truth August 1993), issued by the Holy Father.
Do catholics observe these strict injunctions? Of course not. For
example, in Italy, France, Spain and Germany - all with notionally
large catholic populations - demographics clearly show that people
are limiting their families, presumably by using the contraceptive
pill or other such devices. Even in holy Ireland the
situation is comparable. This is and always should have been a matter
for peoples own consciences. It now perversely becomes an
opportunity for cash-strapped governments who have spent billions
on weapons to say that state pensions will have to be reduced or
replaced with personal ones because there are not enough workers
to fund them.
Many millions of catholics have gone through agony of various kinds
trying to keep faith with the churchs teaching. In 1968 it
looked as if a change was possible, but an anguished Pope Paul VI,
who they say came near to a nervous breakdown over the issue, reportedly
overruled the advice of his experts and confirmed the ban on contraception
in the Encyclical Humanae vitae. The chance of any change under
the current papacy is zero, of course. But there is always the so-called
rhythm method: periodic continence ... the methods of birth
regulation based on self-observation and the use of infertile periods,
which is in conformity with the objective criteria of morality,
can be used (Catechism of the catholic church London 1995, paragraph
2,370).
Even a novice would recognise that for the days a month in question,
whatever the objective criteria of morality involved,
the method does not work effectively, is beyond the practical resources
of the millions of people who could best benefit from it and - no
small matter - tends according to research to increase the chance
of conceiving a damaged foetus. As the popular adage has it, What
do you call people who use the rhythm method? Answer: parents.
But, while subjectively it aims to avoid conception, objectively
it is in accordance with the natural law. Only a celibate theologian
could sit down and come up with such distinctions.
At least in theory married couples using the rhythm method and doing
the dreaded deed according to the instruction of their parish priest
can, other things being equal, evade eternal punishment in hell.
But what about homosexuals? No chance at all. Following Genesis
again, and St Paul (who hated queers - perhaps he was a bit of a
one himself?), homosexual acts are always intrinsically disordered
and intrinsically evil, because, in the words of catechism, they
close the sexual act to the gift of life because they do not proceed
from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances
can they be approved (ibid paragraph 2,357). Back to natural
law.
But there is a way out of the conundrum. It is acknowledged that
gays and lesbians do not choose their homosexual condition;
for most of them it is a trial. They must be accepted with respect,
compassion and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination
in their regard should be avoided ... homosexual persons are called
to chastity (ibid paragraphs 2,357 and 2,358). So, if you
are a gay or lesbian catholic, all you have to do is not fall in
love, or at least ensure that your love remains governed by chastity.
Given that human sexuality is ordered to the conjugal love
of man and woman, you as a homosexual have no chance of meeting
the criteria for salvation, unless you make the conscientious decision
to abstain from any sexual expression of your personality in relation
to the man or woman you love.
Yet the catechism appears to accept that homosexuality is a condition:
ie, an illness or disorder for which the individual is not responsible.
Who made them gay? Was it god or society? If it was god, then why
should he create beings whose orientation and desires
would lead them either to damn or neuter themselves? None of it
makes any sense. You cannot have your Genesis both ways, especially
since, as even a rational conservative theologian would tell you,
the book is a myth, a profound allegory about the human condition.
What lies at the heart of Cardinal Ratzingers missive is no
more than a desire to turn the clock back. He should know better.
Life and the evolution of society moves on. Would he agree that
the outright condemnation of democracy, let alone socialism, in
the Blessed Pope Pius IXs Syllabus of errors is no longer
remotely sustainable, either rationally or morally? Who knows? The
Cardinal will hopefully enjoy a long retirement and then a splendid
funeral. What happens afterwards nobody knows.
But the job of communists and socialists lies in this world. Preserving
and greatly extending the hard-won victories of the working class
- including, of course, womens rights and the rights of gays
and lesbians - is a central part of our task. The threat to those
rights comes from many sources. We must battle against them all.
Patrick Presland
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