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The Fortnight for Freedom and the need for vigorous evangelization

Freedom of religion necessarily means the freedom not only to believe, not only to worship within the four walls of a church, mosque or synagogue, but to practice what one believes openly, fearlessly and joyfully.

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For the twelfth year in a row, the bishops of our nation have called for a Fortnight for Freedom to begin on the vigil of the liturgical memorial of St. Thomas More and St. John Fisher and to conclude on the civil observance of Independence Day. Why did the bishops choose that liturgical commemoration? Because those two men were martyred, precisely for their refusal to finesse the libertas Ecclesiae (the freedom of the Church). The battle over this matter did not emerge full-blown from the brow of Zeus during the reign of Henry VIII; we find uncanny parallels four centuries earlier in England.

Henry II was on a collision course with the bishops of twelfth-century England because he was attempting to usurp their rightful authority to govern the Church. Henry needed as primatial bishop a man to harass the other bishops into submission and thought he had found the right man in his hunting and partying buddy, the Lord Chancellor Thomas à Becket. To Henry’s amazement, upon receiving episcopal consecration, the “party animal” saw things differently and would not serve as the rubber stamp for the King’s oppressive policies against the Church. An offhanded remark (“Who will rid me of this troublesome priest?”) was taken as a royal wish by ambitious flunkies, who murdered the Archbishop of Canterbury during Vespers in his own cathedral on December 29, 1170.

Fast-forward to the sixteenth century and we meet a king whose lust was so out of control that he wouldn’t take “no” for an answer to his demand that the Pope grant him a divorce. This Henry, like his namesake of the twelfth century, thought he could count on his Lord Chancellor, Thomas More, to bring the bishops into compliance with his will and in defiance of the Pope. He was distressed to discover that his dear friend was a man of such great conviction and faith that he could not move “the King’s good servant” to cease from being “God’s first.” One of the saddest chapters in ecclesiastical history informs us that every English bishop, save John Fisher, capitulated to the King’s demands that they acquiesce to his usurpation of the role of the Pope. When told that the Sovereign Pontiff intended to make Fisher a cardinal for his loyalty to the See of Rome, Henry quipped, “The Pope can give him the red hat, but he’ll have no head to put it on!”

Interestingly, Hollywood has done well with these stories. Beckett, Man for All Seasons, and The Tudors all gave us great cinema. Becket, More and Fisher, however, did not die for show; they died as martyrs, that is, witnesses to religious liberty. That, my friends, is the historical backdrop to the cause of religious freedom in the Anglophone world. We have seen it played out in different times and places throughout the history of the Church, but always with the same goal: to make the Church the puppet of the State. With our history lesson fresh in our minds, now we are equipped to consider the current American crisis.

Early on in the Obama regime, astute observers of the political scene noted a disturbing trend in the jargon being employed by his Administration as our constitutional right to “freedom of religion” was being spoken of as “freedom of worship.” Is this just quibbling over words? Words, my dear friends, matter. For instance, if you’re living in a house, does it really matter whether you are deemed the “landlord” or the “tenant”? New Yorkers know it does. Coming from an Eastern European background (with a martyr on the Ukrainian side of the family), I have a special sensitivity to religious freedom issues. For decades, the Soviets proudly and boldly proclaimed that they had “freedom of worship” (and even that wasn’t true), but there was certainly no “freedom of religion.” The same situation prevails in Communist China today, as well as in many Islamic states. The assaults of the Obama Regime have been magnified ten-fold under the pious and holy Joe Biden.

Let us be clear. The Church is not lobbying for preferential freedom; she simply expects, indeed demands, the rights which are hers by nature and by the Constitution. Nor are we talking about establishing a theocracy. Here it is important to distinguish between secularity and secularization. There is a good secularity, which the Church has come to recognize, especially as she has viewed the American situation from the vantage point of the twentieth century. Jesuit Father John Courtney Murray helped the Church Universal come to this awareness through his 1960 ground-breaking book, We Hold These Truths, and through his contributions to the decree on religious liberty at Vatican II, Dignitatis Humanae. Father Murray stressed that freedom for religion, not freedom from religion, was the goal of the U. S. Constitution and Bill of Rights. Secularization, on the other hand, is a conscious effort to marginalize religion, religious influence, and religiously motivated citizens.

Let me anticipate one of my ultimate conclusions by submitting at this moment that vigorous secularization demands vigorous evangelization: for the sake of the Church’s future and for the sake of society’s future.

There is a basic religiosity still operative among Americans, despite many secularizing forces exercised by a vocal, even if tiny, minority. The liberal media elite consistently attempt to drive public opinion in a leftward direction, but numerous studies have demonstrated that those people are very far removed from the average citizen. Indeed, their positions on matters like the existence of God, the importance of church membership and attendance, abortion, pornography and issues of sexuality are polar opposites to those of the vast majority of the population.1 Or again, visitors (especially from Europe) are always astonished at the friendliness of the populace toward clergy and religious on the street, even in such a rough-and-tough environment as New York City. Being greeted as a priest in public is a commonplace in the United States; it is a rarity in Rome!

What kind of secularity would be beneficial to the Church – and society? One which promotes pluralism, a concept espoused by most modern democracies – an approach which enables diversity to flourish within a unity of purpose, achieving unity without uniformity. From a religious perspective, that would mean not mere toleration of religious influences but encouragement of them. Indeed, the very nature of a free society demands that all voices be raised and that all be respectfully heard, including religious voices.

Believers need to be convinced – and then need to convince everyone else – that the Fathers of Vatican II got it right when they declared in Gaudium et Spes: “Without the Creator, the creature vanishes” (n. 36). History supports that assertion. Just look at the bloodshed of every godless movement of modernity from the French Revolution to the Mexican Revolution and the Spanish Civil War to the murderous campaigns of the Nazis and Communists. Clearly, “without the Creator, the creature vanishes.”

Freedom of religion, as you should be able to see by now, is far more than being able to go to one’s house of worship once a week. Because faith makes a claim on the totality of our lives, it permeates every dimension of a believer’s existence and all the institutions with which he is involved. For the Catholic Church which, by her very nature, exhibits a public face and presence, that means freedom for all our corporate works emanating from our schools, health-care facilities, and charitable programs.

For the Church to be the Church, she cannot be muzzled in her proclamation of the truth of Jesus Christ, whether that truth is proclaimed from the pulpit, in the classroom, in counseling sessions, or in lobbying for programs that seek to make the City of Man look more and more like the City of God. Freedom of religion, as envisioned by our Founding Fathers and as understood by the Catholic Church for two millennia, necessarily means the freedom not only to believe, not only to worship within the four walls of a church, mosque or synagogue, but to practice what one believes openly, fearlessly and joyfully. Anything less is no more than the charade served up by every totalitarian regime in history that has sought to “chain the word of God.” However, Saint Paul reminds Timothy and everyone else since: “But there is no chaining the word of God!” (2 Tim 2:9)

Intelligent and committed Catholics, then, must know what their God-given rights are, as well as their constitutional rights founded on those God-given rights, and to resist mightily in every forum possible any effort to reduce “freedom of religion” to “freedom of worship.” As Holy Joe Biden and his ilk doggedly move toward inhuman, ungodly and unconstitutional violations of conscience against Catholic (and other religiously based) institutions, we must be prepared to fight every such attempt while a fight is still possible. The success of opposition to all the gender-bending insanity and the recent show-down with the Los Angeles Dodgers shows that our battle is not in vain; the war can still be won.

Twenty years ago, anyone talking like me today would have been dismissed as a madman, so far removed was religious persecution from the American radar screen; in less than five years, we have seen a complete turn-around on that score. As Catholics and Americans, we have both the right and the duty to position ourselves in that long line of witnesses to the truth that Christ and His Church can never be silenced by any earthly power. Failure to represent that cause would be a failure in both moral courage and civic responsibility, for which we would have to answer before the throne of the only Power who matters in the final analysis, the One who is the King of kings and Lord of lords.

During this Fortnight for Freedom, it behooves us to keep ringing in our ears the wise words spoken by the late, great Archbishop Fulton Sheen, who warned us: “A religion that doesn’t interfere with the secular order will soon discover that the secular order will not refrain from interfering with it.” Each day, Radio Vatican begins and ends its transmissions with an ancient hymn of praise, which inspired the battle cry of the valiant Cristeros of Mexico and should inspire us as well. The moving chant proclaims: “Christus vincit, Christus regnat, Christus imperat!” (Christ conquers, Christ reigns, Christ rules!).

All you holy martyrs, witnesses to the truth of the Gospel and the freedom of the Church, pray for us as we strive to be as faithful in our time as you were in yours.

(Editor’s note: This homily was preached at the Church of the Holy Innocents, New York City, on June 22, 2023, during the Fortnight for Freedom XII.)

• Related at CWR: “Conscience and leadership in the lives of Saints Thomas More and John Fisher” (March 22, 2023) by Bishop Thomas John Paprocki

Endnote:

1This was documented in a most impressive way in Lichter and Rothman’s study in 1980; their work has become the standard point of departure for all subsequent discussions of this “disconnect” between “regular” people and those in control of the media. See: Bernard Goldberg, Arrogance: Rescuing America from the Media Elite. New York: Warner Books, 2003.


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About Peter M.J. Stravinskas 289 Articles
Reverend Peter M.J. Stravinskas founded The Catholic Answer in 1987 and The Catholic Response in 2004, as well as the Priestly Society of Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman, a clerical association of the faithful, committed to Catholic education, liturgical renewal and the new evangelization. Father Stravinskas is also the President of the Catholic Education Foundation, an organization, which serves as a resource for heightening the Catholic identity of Catholic schools.

7 Comments

  1. I applaud all our bishops for their tremendous marketing of this year’s “Fortnight of Freedom.” Every Catholic I speak to mentions this effort on the part of our bishops to promote freedom of religion in the USA in 2023. Why, my calendar is now full of activities I will be attending because of the tremendous planning our bishops’ conference has done in this regard.

    • First I have heard of it. It was not mentioned in our bulletin. I clicked the link: under Catholic Healthcare was this: “Pray that governments will respect the consciences of all individuals and institutions that care for the sick and vulnerable.”
      .
      Heck, I will settle for the Church to simply respect my decision (and many health care providers) to take fetal-cell vaccine issue seriously, and not try to force the SC2 vax–or any other vaccine–on me and mine through emotional manipulation and sometimes outright denial of assistance with vaccine exemption paperwork.
      .
      The clerical class should practice what they preach.

  2. Thank you Father Stravinskas for sharing your homilies. I learned so much about our faith and Church teachings in the classes you taught in the Poconos. God bless you and your work.

  3. Thank you, Father Stravinskas. I am strengthened and encouraged by this very direct and clear article to move to the forefront in defense of Christ’s One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. This is especially evidenced in the weak devotion of our Catholic Community to the Most Holy Eucharist. Clearly, Satan and his minions are running wild and rampant in the USA. Time to make a stand!

  4. Dear Father. With all deference. Your message is commendable. I am a recovering Catholic with concerns about some of your comments both spiritual and political.

    You say “freedom of religion” to “freedom of worship. the need for vigorous evangelization. Our Founding Fathers understood by the Catholic Church for two millennia, necessarily means the freedom not only to believe, not only to worship within the four walls of a church, mosque or synagogue, but to practice what one believes openly, fearlessly and joyfully.”

    Does that not present a paradox? Evangelizing vigorously others of different faiths.
    My concerns is with political references…
    Your reference of “Holy Joe Biden” is childish. The President’s position on abortion must be challenged, but not by nickname. Your disparaging reference causes me to point to once Catholic “champion” of Right-to-life, the Caligula of lies and nicknames, Trump. His enraged narcissistic ego causes him to label AG Bill Barr, (a fat pig), Rep Adam Schiff, (Adam Schi*), E. Jeanne Carroll, (a wackjob) and so many others to mention. Note that the Catholic Church remains silent to Trump’s and Fox News, who are no longer “fair and balanced” incessant lying are influencing our citizens and our innocent children. Moreover, Trump’s actions are causing the “Slouching Towards Gomorrah” and an autocracy.

    Thank you

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