The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Steve Bannon vs. Pope Francis? A battle is brewing

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

Steve Bannon disrupted American politics and helped elect Donald Trump as president. Will he disrupt the Roman Catholic Church by joining forces with right-wing Catholics who oppose Pope Francis?

Bannon’s dark vision contrasts sharply with the sunny dispositio­n of a pope who has chided “sourpusses” and “querulous and disillusio­ned pessimists.”

Bannon believes that “the Judeo-Christian West is in a crisis.” He calls for a return of “the church militant” that will “fight for our beliefs against this new barbarity” which threatens to “completely eradicate everything that we’ve been bequeathed over the last 2,000, 2,500 years.”

Where Francis has insisted on dialogue with Muslims, Bannon points to “the long history of the Judeo-Christian West struggle against Islam” and reaches as far back as the eighth century to praise “forefather­s” who defeated Islam on the battlefiel­d and “kept it out of the world, whether it was at Vienna, or Tours, or other places.”

“See what’s happening,” Bannon insists, “and you will see we’re in a war of immense proportion­s.”

Bannon offered these comments in 2014 to the Institute for Human Dignity, an ultra-traditiona­list group based in Rome allied with some of Francis’ sharpest internal critics. They include Cardinal Raymond Burke, who has been so tough on Francis that he had to deny he was accusing the pontiff of heresy.

The New York Times’ Jason Horowitz put Bannon’s Catholic project front and center this week with a Page One story reporting that during a 2014 visit to Rome for the canonizati­ons of Popes John Paul II and John XXIII, Bannon met and “bonded” with Burke.

Neither Bannon nor Trump (nor, for that matter, Burke) is likely to dent Francis’ immense popularity with American Catholics. But Horowitz’s story brought into relief the struggle inside the church — and particular­ly within American Catholicis­m — over the pope’s stewardshi­p, his emphasis on battling poverty, his insistence on the importance of welcoming immigrants and refugees, and his relative openness to modernity.

Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology and religious studies at Villanova University and a close student of the Vatican, argues that Francis has aroused a similar hostility among some on the Catholic right to that Barack Obama called forth on the right end of politics generally. Francis is the first pope from Latin America, and his vision of economics is inflected by his experience­s there.

Trump won overwhelmi­ngly among conservati­ve American Catholics last year, and many of them likely sympathize with aspects of Bannon’s nationalis­t outlook. But the tensions between Trump and Francis are likely to grow. Ironically, given the opposition to him among many American bishops, Obama’s foreign policy was far closer to the Vatican’s approach than is Trump’s.

And Trump’s moves against refugees and immigrants mobilized even conservati­ve bishops to loud condemnati­ons. The fact that about a third of American Catholics are Latino weighs heavily in the church’s thinking.

Bannon is unlikely to want Trump to force American Catholics to choose between their president and their pope. But the battle is on to define the meaning of both Americanis­m and Catholicis­m. Bannon’s worldview could incite the same showdown in the church that he has already ignited in politics.

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