"A MAN WITH A CHEST" by Father
Thomas Hopko
Retired Dean of St. Vladimir's Seminary
from the "International Herald Tribune"
Monday, April 18, 2005
As the cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church
cloister themselves to choose a successor to John Paul II, we may ask
one more time what it was about the late pope that elicited the love and
respect of millions of people, including many not sharing his
convictions. And what it was about him that also produced the confusion,
as well as the contempt, of many, including some identifying themselves
as Christians, and Catholics.
I'm convinced that the answer to this question is
found in a little book by C.S. Lewis, published in 1944, "The Abolition
of Man." It is also found in Karl Stern's spiritual autobiography "The
Pillar of Fire," first printed in 1951, especially in the addendum
called a "Letter To My Brother." And it is found in the early writings
of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Lewis, Stern and Solzhenitsyn were all committed Christians. But these
writings are not about Christianity as such. They are about a vision and
experience of human life in our modern, and now postmodern, European and
North American worlds that are being enforced, and emulated, all over
the earth.
The conclusions of Lewis's "reflections on education" may be clearly
stated. If students absorb, however unconsciously, what they are taught
in modern schools, the result will be a world of "men without chests."
People will no longer be human in the traditional sense, he said. They
will be deprived of the uniquely human intuitions of goodness, truth and
beauty that their humanity obliges them to acknowledge, honor and serve.
They will be nothing but brains and bodies, computers and consumers,
calculators and copulators. They will be conquered by the very nature
they strive to conquer in the name of freedom and autonomy, as they
constantly reinvent humanity under the enslaving control of their elite
conditioners.
Karl Stern put it a bit differently. In 1951, before the
self-destruction of Communism, the mass production of computers, the
construction of the Internet and the proliferation of genetic projects,
Stern claimed that Western societies, and the societies that they would
inevitably come to influence and control, held out only four
possibilities for human beings. One is despair, moral nihilism and
suicide. Another is nationalist ideology and sentiment that would bring
nothing but suffering, destruction and death. Another is the Marxist
materialism that would attract myriads of good-willed idealists but
would prove itself corrupt to the core. The fourth possibility was what
Stern called "rationalist pragmatism" and "scientism," which he
predicted would be actualized in a "global experiment" that would
produce a "form of nihilism unequaled in history." "Compared with it,"
he wrote, Nazi Germany and Communist Russia, "would look like children's
playgrounds. Man's life on this earth would come about as close to the
idea of hell as anything on earth may."
Solzhenitsyn described the same thing artistically. His world was not
only Communist Russia; it was humanity as such. His heroes are human
beings who in Lewis's terms still have "chests." His villains are
ideologues, hypocrites and liars, whom he characterizes as wholly
"without an upper story." He said that the Russian "Baba" identified the
cause of the world's problems when, seeing evil in the village, she
would shake her head and solemnly declare that we "have lost the
likeness [of God in us]."
What this has to do with Pope John Paul II is clear, at least to me. The
masses, whatever their religious convictions, admired and loved the late
Pope, and mourn his passing with apprehension, because they saw him to
be a man with "a chest" and an "upper story" who preserved "the
likeness." And those who found him bewildering, as well as those who
despised and scorned him, did so, and still do, for the very same
reasons.
Pope John Paul II was not only a human being, but, amazing to say, he
was a male human being in a world where prominent and popular people,
particular men, are hardly human. He was the polar opposite of the men,
and now also the women, who are ready to do whatever it takes to get
whatever they want for the sake of personal power, position, prestige,
profit and pleasure.
Whatever he was, John Paul II was not an ideologue, politician, actor or
media manipulator. He did not continually remake himself for
self-serving purposes. He never lied in word, deed or gesture. He did
not act to be seen by people, yet he was not afraid to act as he saw fit
to be seen. He did not pray to be observed by people, yet he was not
afraid to be observed praying, or laughing, weeping, drooling, groaning
or gasping for breath.
Pope John Paul II embraced everyone in the same way. He was not a man of
contradictions, as many think, but was all of one piece. His convictions
on sexual morality, for example, were wholly consistent with his views
on war and peace, art and science, and politics and economics. In a
word, whatever he was, the pope was what he was. That is why the masses
adored him, while others despised him.
We will soon see if there is another like John Paul II among the
cardinals of the Roman Church. We hope that there is, however he may
differ in manner and style from the late pope. Our common humanity
depends largely on there being such a man.
MANY YEARS
to newly elected Pope Benedict XVI
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