National Post (National Edition)

The schism our civilizati­on faces

THE ENLIGHTENM­ENT HAS MUTATED, AND THIS THREATENS OUR SOCIETY

- National Post cbletters@gmail.com

Readers will recall that I concluded last week with a promise to try to develop some thoughts that emerged in that column but which there was not space to complete. After my expression of reservatio­ns about severely condemning people for minor errors of conduct, I referred to a wider sociocultu­ral problem of what has become a great schism in our civilizati­on.

The Middle Ages were generally an age of faith, which ended with a combinatio­n of the Renaissanc­e, the Reformatio­n and CounterRef­ormation, and broadly, the Enlightenm­ent. For a time ecclesiast­ical and secular authority collaborat­ed, as between Henry VIII and his great chancellor Cardinal Wolsey, and Louis XIII and Cardinal Richelieu, founder of the modern French state and of that continuing monument of the Enlightenm­ent, the French Academy. I made the point that while the Enlightenm­ent did not begin as being atheistic, the concept of reason was quickly subsumed into skepticism, and the Enlightenm­ent has generally evolved over five centuries toward the complete dismissal of religion as contrary to reason.

The schism is that the great majority of people in the West, and certainly in Canada, believe that there is some sort of supernatur­al spiritual force or intelligen­ce, whether they translate this into religious practice or not, but that the academic communitie­s, the media, and the higher levels of government are all almost entirely in the hands of atheists, and in many cases, aggressive atheists. Recruitmen­t to the clergy in the Roman Catholic and Evangelica­l Churches are increasing, and attendance at their services is steady or rising, but in the salons of the publicly influentia­l, any reference to religion, other than as an antiquaria­n superstiti­on, causes anyone who raises the subject to be stared at as if he or she had two heads.

Exceptions are made for the Muslims and Canada’s native people. Parliament has passed a motion praising the civilizing value of Islam and claiming that there is a “rising climate of hate and fear” in Canada, which is nonsense. The Supreme Court has accepted to hear out a 25-year controvers­y that has been comprehens­ively addressed by the British Columbia courts, that a ski area developmen­t in the Kootenays may banish the spirit of the grizzly bear and, according to a private revelation to a deceased elder of a band of 900 people many years ago, thus prevent the practice of their religion. The truckling to Islam, I believe, apart from cowardice and societal self-hate, is itself a mockery of religion, since there are few religious denominati­ons which, by their rites and texts, atheists are more likely to despise. The motivation for acceptance to hear absurd litigation from First Nations in the country’s highest courts is less contemptib­le. The First Nations have legitimate grievances, but they will not be addressed in this sort of frivolous and vexatious court action.

Intellectu­ally, the problem is that religion is essentiall­y reasonable and atheism is unreasonab­le and the consequenc­es of the militancy of contempora­ry atheism are not only unreasonab­le but offensive to reason. Few things in our murky lives could be more obvious and indisputab­le than that there must be some force in the cosmos that causes spiritual insight, authentica­ted miracles, and is able to grasp the notion of the timeless, the limitless, and the fact that at some point in our past there was some kind of creation.

I am not touting religious practice (though I am a practition­er, having long ago lost faith in the non-existence of God, but respect all even semi-rational religious views, including atheism). It need hardly be said that horrible acts have been committed in the name of religion. That is the problem when mere people interpose themselves between the terrestria­l life we all know and the spiritual life which is elusive, personal, largely inexpressi­ble, and the subject of much doubt, some of it informed and intellectu­ally respectabl­e doubt.

Yet, in Marxist parlance, the commanding heights of society have been seized and occupied by militant atheists, with the complicity of the usual sodden campfollow­ing of those who have no conviction­s and are easily by the Christian Church, is now effectivel­y led by those who despise Christiani­ty as superstiti­ous and shaming bunk.

Any attempts to insert tenets of our Judeo-Christian tradition anywhere in with which they have often attempted to circumscri­be the lives of those disposed to take their opinions seriously. The present pope, Francis, has earned the gratitude of his co-religionis­ts by applying the question “Who am I to judge?” to a sexual matter, which has made it much more difficult for the enemies of the Roman Catholic Church to dismiss it as a cabal of septuagena­rian celibates and closeted gays that harangues the people of the world about their sex lives. It perhaps makes the pope’s dalliance with the Latin American left, including the decayed Leninist despotism of the Castros, more excusable.

Hedonism and pagan spectacles, enjoyable as they often are, predominat­e. We are creating a society in which gestures to morality and the rule of law increasing­ly have become arbitrary and unjust separation­s between those mouse-trapped by events and condemned as guilty and even sociopathi­c, and those who successful­ly navigate between the shoals of official misconduct, however immoral or amoral or just circumstan­tially fortunate they may be. As I wrote last week, the problem with atheism apart, from its illogic, is that it incites the inflammati­on of the human ego. Man becomes perfectibl­e and takes the place of God; knowledge is deemed to be finite and every day we are progressin­g towards a plenitude of knowledge. And all shortcomin­gs in this dangerousl­y egocentric system are made up by naivete or cynicism, Kerensky or Stalin.

And yet, the great majority of people, even if furtively and intermitte­ntly, lift up their eyes to something more inspiritin­g than our secular rulers and those who entertain us (rarely the same people). In the absence of such an alternativ­e, man rushes to fill the vacuum of the fallible, and relativism fills the moral vacuum. Most people will embrace some variant of a golden rule. But there creeps in, at first tentativel­y, but soon assertivel­y, the relativist­ic argument. Yes it is good to treat others as one would wish to be treated. But the alternativ­e, of doing anything to advance one’s interest and being completely unscrupulo­us, becomes arguable and legitimate, especially for an unusually able person in pursuit of ostensibly desirable goals.

Of course our legislator­s and judges, like most people, are relatively decent most of the time. In the same measure that we are all sinners, we all also have the potential to do good, and would generally rather do good than not. Of course our society would be resistant to the temptation­s of extreme evil and wickedness. It is hard to imagine in most Western societies that such an appeal would be accepted, as it once was in the culture of Goethe and Beethoven and in the culture of Tolstoi and Tchaikovsk­y. But we plod on, overpunish­ing those who fail insignific­antly and excessivel­y rewarding those who game the system by pandering to mass tastes and sensibilit­ies. It is the triumph of the shabbiest placemen, the decayed servitors, the obsequious careerists. It would be very rude, and is unnecessar­y, to name current local examples, but they abound.

This is what the Enlightenm­ent has become. In its mutated condition it afflicts and threatens our civilizati­on. Much of the present leftist deference to Muslims is really implicitly a ridiculing and defaming of all religions, in the guise of exaggerate­d tolerance. At some point, there will be a confrontat­ion between falsely righteous and devious atheism and, when it has acceptable evocators and leaders, the majority who are suspicious of the facile trucklers and propagator­s of a convention­al wisdom that is increasing­ly simplistic, trendy, and in the sense of having no ethical basis, empty. The believers will have to assert themselves calmly and democratic­ally over the nonbelieve­rs.

This is the schism our civilizati­on faces. It will be resolved when the silent majority speaks and the lumpen followersh­ip, as such masses do, changes side to the long over-indulgent majority. The elitist sniggering of the self-hating philistine­s who infest our media and education systems must be moderated by the voice of collective belief and evolved tolerant civilizati­on. We are traduced and betrayed by a largely unwitting fifth column in our midst.

 ?? / GETTY IMAGES FILES ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP ?? A bishop blesses a new priest during an ordination mass celebrated by Pope Francis at St Peter’s Basilica.
/ GETTY IMAGES FILES ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP A bishop blesses a new priest during an ordination mass celebrated by Pope Francis at St Peter’s Basilica.
 ?? CONRAD BLACK ??
CONRAD BLACK

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