Is America Just a Protestant Botch? 
Crisis Magazine
_http://www.crisismagazine.com_ (http://www.crisismagazine.com)    
December 16, 2011

 
 
 
 (http://www.crisismagazine.com/?attachment_id=41232) This essay is part of 
today’s symposium of lay Catholic opinion on  immigration. For other 
contributions see _this piece _ (http://www.crisismagazine.com/?p=41040) by  
Mark 
and Louise Zwick, this _one _ (http://www.crisismagazine.com/?p=41035) by 
John Zmirak, and _this _ (http://www.crisismagazine.com/?p=41203) news report  
from Zenit. For Deal Hudson’s view, see _this  article _ 
(http://spectator.org/archives/2011/12/15/heeding-archbishop-gomez) in The 
American Spectator. 
In the nineteenth century, German Catholics came to America by the 
millions, with surges following the  revolutionary unrest of 1848 and the 
unification of Germany in 1871 that brought  on Bismarck’s persecution of 
Catholics 
during the Kulturkampf. With  them came heroic _religious  orders _ 
(http://books.google.com/books/about/Their_quiet_tread.html?id=jvw8AAAAIAAJ) 
and 
devout laymen like those who founded _Der Wanderer_ 
(http://www.thewandererpress.com/ee/wandererpress/index.php) , a Catholic 
weekly in Saint Paul, Minnesota 
that  was published in German into the 1950s (and was banned by Hitler, who 
stopped  its distribution to thousands of Germans in the 1930s). 
For decades, those German-American Catholics refused to give up their  
language. In his massive study of American identity, _Who Are We_ 
(http://www.betterworldbooks.com/who-are-we-the-challenges-to-america-s-national-identity-i
d-9780684870540.aspx) , the late Harvard historian _Samuel P. Huntington _ 
(http://www.mmisi.org/ma/47_03/zb.pdf) writes that for years, “[a]mong the 
original British settlers antagonism  existed towards [the newly-arrived] 
German-Americans, focused largely on the  efforts of the latter to continue to 
use their language in churches and schools  and other public institutions 
and events.” By the end of the nineteenth century,  James Cardinal Gibbons, 
Archbishop of Baltimore and Primate of the Catholic  Church in America, 
confronted the issue and insisted that the German-Americans  use no German in 
homilies. 
The German-Americans appealed to Rome, claiming discrimination. They also  
demanded their own German-speaking bishops. Gibbons countered that their  
position would invite the charge that “the Catholic Church … exists in 
America  as a foreign institution, and that she is, consequently, a menace to 
the  
existence of the nation…. The Germans are shining examples of industry, 
energy,  love of home, conservatism, and attachment to their religion,” Gibbons 
conceded,  but he insisted that they assimilate nonetheless. When the 
Vatican supported  him, the patriotic Gibbons proudly informed President 
Benjamin 
Harrison of his  triumph. Harrison responded warmly, writing that “Of all 
men, the Bishops of the  Church should be in full harmony with the political 
institutions and sentiments  of the country.” 
Well, times have changed—changed utterly. Several prominent Catholic 
prelates at a _conference _ (http://www.napa-institute.org/) in Napa,  
California, 
last summer, _limned their vision _ 
(http://www.the-tidings.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1539:immigration-and-the-next-america-persp
ectives-from-our-history&catid=101:viewpoints&Itemid=389) of “The Next 
America,” taking for granted  that the old America was… over. Their comments 
focused on immigration: Cardinal  Roger Mahony, the recently retired 
Archbishop of Los Angeles, reviewed various  passages from Scripture and 
Catholic 
teaching to advocate amnesty for illegal  aliens. Cardinal Mahony has made 
amnesty his principal political goal for years,  to the point that, when he was 
asked about abortion and health care in 2009, he  replied, “This is way 
beyond my field. My field is immigration.” When Obamacare  finally passed in 
March 2010 (still including abortion) the Cardinal was  ecstatic. “Now that a 
health care bill will help millions of uninsured people  receive affordable 
medical care,” he rejoiced, “it’s time for the government to  address the 
millions of people who are living in the shadows because they lack  legal 
immigration status.” 
Cardinal Mahony’s successor at the Napa conference joined him in supporting 
 amnesty, but, curiously, he did so by attacking Huntington’s book. “
[Huntington]  made a lot of sophisticated-sounding arguments, but his basic 
argument was that  American identity and culture are threatened by Mexican 
immigration,” the  prelate charged. He continued, “[a]uthentic American 
identity ‘
was the product  of the distinct Anglo-Protestant culture of the founding 
settlers of America in  the 17th and 18th centuries,’ according to 
Huntington. By contrast, Mexicans’  values are rooted in a fundamentally 
incompatible ‘
culture of Catholicism’  which, Huntington argued, does not value 
self-initiative or the work ethic, and  instead encourages passivity and an 
acceptance of poverty. These are old and  familiar nativist claims, and they 
are easy 
to discredit,” he claimed. 
Not easy to discredit, perhaps, but easy to ignore. Unfortunately, the  
prelate’s caricature of Huntington falls so far from the mark that one hopes 
his  remarks were based, perhaps, on an unfavorable review somewhere. In fact, 
 Huntington’s focus—masterfully presented and exhaustively researched—is 
not the  “Culture of Catholicism” but rather of a single country, Mexico. It 
is this  culture that the overwhelming majority of Hispanic immigrants, 
legal and  illegal, bring with them across the border into the United States. 
The character  of that culture is so important because of the profound 
reality that Mahony’s  successor—an American citizen born in Monterrey, Mexico—
delicately avoids:  Mexicans in America will not assimilate, and, this time 
around,  America’s Catholic bishops don’t care. 
Not only does the attack on Huntington bash a straw  man which is “easy to 
discredit”; it then conjures up an  idealized image of Mexican immigrants. 
Mexican immigrants “will bring a new,  youthful, entrepreneurial spirit of 
hard work to our economy,” the archbishop  says. They “are not afraid of hard 
work or sacrifice [and] the vast majority of  them believe in Jesus Christ 
and love our Catholic Church. They share  traditional American values of 
faith, family and community.” 
A brief particular of interest to the faithful: recent in-depth studies by  
the Pew Charitable Trust indicate that, contrary to the situation decades 
ago,  many Hispanic immigrants today are in fact Protestant or evangelical; 
moreover,  the longer a Catholic Hispanic is in the U.S., the more likely it 
is that he  will leave the Church. More than 80% of Latino evangelicals in 
the U.S. are  former Catholics. 
The issue has nothing to do with the personal character of the immigrants:  
Cardinal Gibbons thought the Germans were fine people, too. They “are 
shining  examples of industry, energy, love of home, conservatism, and 
attachment 
to  their religion,” he warmly observed, but for the common good of the new 
country  they chose to enter, they must assimilate to it. 
And the Germans did. How about the Mexicans? Has any American bishop 
followed  Cardinal Gibbons’ lead, and insisted that Mexicans in America speak 
English at  Mass? That Hispanic Masses be celebrated only in English (or 
better, 
Latin), and  that all homilies and formation be conducted in English? Quite 
the contrary.  Most bishops are probably looking for more Spanish-speaking 
priests, just as our  own parish has. Today, it is America that is expected 
to assimilate to its  immigrants. 
Gibbons cherished America; but some current bishops have their  doubts, and 
with good reason: “Our culture is changing,” the Napa speech says.  “We 
have a legal structure that allows, and even pays for, the killing of babies  
in the womb. Our courts and legislatures are redefining the natural 
institutions  of marriage and the family. We have an elite culture … that is 
openly 
hostile to  religious faith.” 
All too true. So what is to blame for this travesty? Pope Benedict XVI 
credits the “Dictatorship of Relativism” that infects  the secular societies of 
the West. Undoubtedly, the American Church’s  abandonment of Humanae Vitae 
has played a central role. The new  archbishop, however, aims his arrows at 
other targets. For him, the culprit is  Old America, specifically “the idea 
that Americans are descended from only white  Europeans and that our culture 
is based only on the individualism, work ethic  and rule of law that we 
inherited from our Anglo-Protestant forebears.” Our  national heritage somehow 
encourages “a wrong-headed notion that ‘real  Americans’ are of some 
particular race, class, religion or ethnic background,”  he insists. It smacks 
of “
nativism” and “bigotry.” 
Perhaps the prelate’s argument is not with Huntington, but with 
Tocqueville.  He does not hesitate to tell audiences of wealthy Catholics that 
critics 
of  illegal immigration are “angry and frustrated,” and their views are “
not worthy  of the Gospel.” However, his animus pales when compared to that of 
his brother  bishops back home. Last week, an editorial in _Desde La Fe_ 
(http://www.siame.mx/apps/aspxnsmn/templates/?a=5721&z=5) , the newspaper of 
the Catholic  Archdiocese of Mexico City, lambasted what it called “the 
arrogant, xenophobic,  and racist attitude of the United States.” Of course, 
this 
is the same  propaganda line that the Mexican corruptos in government, 
business, and  culture have expounded for years—blaming the gringos, and not 
the 
criminal  cronyism and corruption of Mexico’s elites, for Mexico’s 
dysfunctional poverty.  Alas, when the victims of that propaganda cross the 
border 
into the U.S., no  bishop greets them to disabuse them of that deep-seated 
anti-American resentment  (or typically, even to catechize them). In Mexico, 
they had to game the system  to survive. In the U.S., they discover that our 
comparatively extravagant  welfare system is a sitting duck, virtually 
inviting manipulation. Yet they  rarely hear the voice of the Church tell them, 
“
Thou shalt not steal.” 
Instead, last Monday, the Archbishop of Los Angeles and 32 other Hispanic  
Bishops in the United States published a _letter _ 
(http://www.archsa.org/UserContent/file/San%20Antonio%20Archdiocese-Letter%20of%20the%20Hispanic-Latin
o%20Bishops%20to%20Immigrants.pdf) addressed to “unauthorized” immigrants. 
In their  letter, our beloved shepherds apologize for those Americans who “
disdain”  illegals, lamenting that many of those who disagree with them are “
sowing  hatred” instead of supporting amnesty. And what callous souls could 
possibly  disagree with the personal political views of their bishops? “
Many of our  Catholic brothers and sisters,” that’s who. It’s breathtaking, 
really: America’s  Hispanic bishops have apparently joined their Mexican 
brothers and declared war  on the hating, xenophobic, hard-hearted “Old 
America,”
 many Catholics  included. 
It is worth noting that the Hispanic bishops’ letter condemns anti-amnesty  
Catholics in language more scathing than our bishops have ever used to 
condemn  pro-abortion “Catholic” politicians who flagrantly perpetuate a grave 
public  scandal by continuing to receive the Eucharist while brazenly 
championing  “abortion rights.” Of course, abortion is an objective evil, a 
heinous moral  crime that all Catholics must condemn, while immigration is an 
issue on which  good Catholics can and do disagree. I wonder, have America’s 
Hispanic bishops  ever published a joint pastoral letter using similarly 
strong language  condemning abortionists and the “Catholic” politicians who 
enable them? I hope  so. After all, Hispanic and black children are in the bull’
s eye for those who  exterminate the unborn: proportionally they are killed 
in much larger numbers  than are children of other races. 
Nonetheless,  the charge leveled at Americans by the Mexico City  
Archdiocese is refreshing for its candor: Mexican bishops say outright what  
American 
bishops and their USCCB staff have darkly intimated for years. In July  
2008, Cardinal Mahony blatantly charged that opponents of amnesty are immoral.  
He told an immigration rally that enforcement of current law was “fanning 
the  flames of intolerance, xenophobia and, at times, bigotry.” His brother 
bishops  usually tend to use a slightly lighter touch. 
But Cardinal Mahony is certainly not alone. In  their 1979 “Pastoral Letter 
On Racism,” his brother bishops blamed the evil of  racism not on the human 
heart but on “racial injustices in society and its own  structures.” So it 
is structures, not hearts, that must be changed. In the  meantime, we all 
must be racists if we’re not revolutionaries. Such intoxicating  Marxism has 
pervaded the “social justice” movement in Catholic circles for  decades. It 
might help to explain why our bishops today appear to be so helpless  in 
confronting the blatantly anti-Catholic culture war being waged by the Obama  
Administration. 
Speaking of racism, I can find no record of Cardinal Mahony, his successor, 
 or any other bishop condemning the blatant racism of their pro-amnesty 
allies  like _La Raza_ (http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=13863) —“The 
Race”—a virulent agitation machine that  is very powerful right there in 
the Los Angeles Archdiocese. One wonders, does  self-serving moral posturing 
with such allies serve the Church’s mission to “go  and teach all nations” —
or does it pervert it? 
Robert Royal, who has written on immigration for years and whose wife is an 
 immigrant, notes thatin simple terms, since the beginning of the new 
millennium  alone, about 3.6 percent of 312,596,746 Americans are new arrivals. 
Almost one  in every twenty-five people. And that’s not counting another 
million plus in  2011 and tens of millions before 2000…. This picture hardly 
squares with the  usual complaints including those from people in the Church, 
that Americans are  xenophobic and do not welcome the ‘stranger and the alien’
 among us (cf.,  Leviticus 19:33-34). Indeed, such Biblical moralizing has 
been, I believe, a  hindrance, more than a help, in the debate about illegal 
immigration, because  most Americans resent such patent untruth. 
Let’s get beyond the slander and back to the  issue at hand: assimilation. 
The attack on Huntington said, a tad defensively,  “One could point to the 
glorious legacy of Hispanic literature and art, or to  Mexican-Americans’ and 
Hispanic-Americans’ accomplishments in business,  government, medicine and 
other areas.” It said not a word about the culture of  civic corruption that 
Mexicans have endured for over a century. Nor does it  mention, even as 
serious problems for possible consideration, the murders of a  Catholic 
Cardinal, a major presidential candidate, numerous mayors, prosecutors,  and 
thousands of innocents, reflecting what can only be called a culture of  
violence. 
As Thomas Sowell recently _observed_ 
(http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2011/11/29/gingrich_and_immigration_112205.html)
 , “When you import 
people, you import cultures.” Given  that Cardinal Mahony, his successor, and 
their brother bishops will not  encourage Mexicans to assimilate, it’s only 
fair to ask, what culture are they  importing? 
Aristotle recognized and underscored the importance of good habits to 
social  survival and prosperity. He gave these habits names: virtues. He 
delineated  certain virtues required of a polis, virtues known to us all, 
because  
they have remained virtually unchanged for the past two millennia. The 
prelate  at Napa insisted that Mexicans “share traditional American values of 
faith,  family and community,” and Newt Gingrich agrees. At the recent GOP 
presidential  debate, Gingrich thought it _unwise _ 
(http://www.crisismagazine.com/2011/debates-that-will-live-in-infamy) to deport 
many illegals if “they’
ve been law-abiding  citizens for 25 years.” 
But whose laws have they been obeying? As a volunteer translator for law  
enforcement here in the Shenandoah Valley, I constantly encounter “law-abiding
”  immigrants, many of whom have been here for years, who routinely use 
false  identification, multiple aliases, false or borrowed Social Security 
numbers (a  federal felony), and who pay “coyotes” regularly when they come 
back  into the U.S. illegally after returning to Mexico for a visit. “Tell ’em 
to get  their hands out of their pockets,” the sheriff wants me to tell 
such people,  fearful that they are reaching for a weapon. No, I tell him, they 
are reaching  for their wallet, because back in their home country every 
man in uniform they  have ever encountered expected a bribe. Yet our police 
rarely arrest these  immigrant felons: “They’ll just let’em go at ICE,” they 
complain. 
I have never heard a bishop admonish Hispanics to leave behind the corrupt 
and violent habits that they were forced to  adopt in order to survive in 
their home country. Why is every decent house in  Mexico surrounded by a wall 
topped off with broken glass and barbed wire? Why  has Mayor Antonio 
Villaraigosa decided, for the first time in Los Angeles  history, to build a 
wall 
around the mayor’s mansion? Why do illegals in the U.S.  complain that they 
have to send back money not only to their relatives, but to  the mayor, the 
police chief, and the local gang leader so their families will  not be 
assaulted or plundered in their absence? 
And why does Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the proto-Communist candidate in  
Mexico’s presidential next year, come to Chicago to deliver a  campaign 
speech before an auditorium packed with Newt Gingrich’s  “law-abiding citizens”
? Why? Because they still consider themselves to be  citizens of Mexico, 
not the United States. The laws and social mores they are  abiding by are 
Mexican ones, not ours. And the Mexican government encourages  them to 
participate in Mexican elections by contacting their nearby Mexican  consulates 
that 
are _conveniently located _ (http://www.mexonline.com/consulate.htm) 
throughout the United States. Why?  Because these folks send back some $80-$100 
billion a year to their extended  families in Mexico. 
Univision, a Spanish-language television network headquartered in New York  
City, owns dozens of broadcast stations alongside its cable and satellite  
operations. Their programming perpetuates the cultural connection of 
Mexicans  with Mexico. Intermingled with its numerous entertainment shows 
saturated 
with  sex are newscasts that depict the U.S. as a foreign country in which 
its  millions of Mexican viewers just happen to live. When it covers 
non-Hispanics at  all, it depicts them as “the arrogant, xenophobic, and 
racist” 
Americans that  the Mexican elites and the Mexican Church have warned them 
about all their  lives. Assimilate? Are you kidding? After such a drenching 
indoctrination, why  on earth would they wish to? 
The Catholic Church in the United States undoubtedly has a Hispanic future. 
Surveys indicate that a  majority of today’s Catholic population in America 
under the age of thirty are  Hispanic. Perhaps the bishops are simply 
acquiescing to what they perceive as  inevitable. Moreover, the Dictatorship of 
Relativism and the collapse of the  family have played a role, bringing our 
culture to the brink of collapse—or  perhaps beyond the brink. Ask your 
pastor how many marriages your parish has  performed, compared to ten or twenty 
years ago. The Napa bishops can certainly  find plenty about today’s America 
that doesn’t measure up to Tocqueville.  Imagine a president – or any 
politician, for that matter – who would echo John  Adams, in a letter to his 
friend Benjamin Rush: 
The Bible contains the most profound philosophy, the most perfect morality, 
 and the most refined policy, that was ever conceived upon the earth. It is 
the  most Republican book in the world, and therefore I will still revere 
it. The  curses against fornication and adultery, and the prohibition of 
fornication or  libidinous ogle at a woman, I believe to be the only system 
that 
did or ever  will preserve a Republic in the world. 
Clearly our beloved country has fallen on hard times, and no race or ethnic 
 group has been spared. But even in the midst of such difficulties, there 
is  merit in honestly discussing the question that Huntington asks at the 
beginning  of Who Are We: 
The massive Hispanic immigration after 1965 make America increasingly  
bifurcated in terms of language (English and Spanish) and culture (Anglo and  
Hispanic), which could supplement or supplant the black—white racial 
bifurcation  as the important division in American society. Substantial parts 
of 
America,  primarily in southern Florida and the Southwest, would be primarily 
Hispanic and  culture and language, while both cultures and languages would 
coexist in the  rest of America. America, in short, would lose its cultural 
and linguistic unity  and become a bilingual, bicultural society like Canada, 
Switzerland, or  Belgium. 
Is this “Next America” inevitable? Are there alternatives? Can Catholics  
disagree with the views of the Napa bishops without getting called ugly,  
destructive names? Can anybody? 
Only time will tell. But until recently, under the leadership of USCCB  
President Archbishop Timothy Dolan, our bishops have seldom reminded  us  that 
their political views are their own – that good Catholics can and _do 
differ_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Immorality-Illegal-Immigration-Alternative-Christian/dp/1449001858)
  on the application of Catholic precepts on specific  
legislative issues; in fact, that the Church _calls on_ 
(http://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-
gentium_en.html)  the laity to lead on practical legislative issues  like 
immigration and federal spending. The Hispanic bishops’ letter to illegal  
aliens starkly reflects the sad politicization of some segments of the  
hierarchy, where favorite private political agendas like the welfare state and  
amnesty have in some cases virtually crowded out the Magisterium altogether.  
Perhaps we should pray that our bishops will bring eternal and objective 
truths  like those in Humanae Vitae “out of the shadows,” and let the laity,  
not the hierarchy, deal with practical legislative particulars that Holy 
Mother  Church calls us to address, in charity and in truth, to pursue the 
common good  for all. 
 








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