National Catholic Reporter
 
 
 
 
Demographics don't spell an end to the culture  wars



 
 
 
_John L. Allen Jr. _ (http://ncronline.org/authors/john-l-allen-jr)  |  
May. 17, 2013 




    
To no one's surprise, the Monday release of the Vatican's 2013 statistical  
yearbook, which surveys the global Catholic population as of 2011, 
confirmed the  shift in Catholicism's center of gravity _away from Europe and 
North  
America_ (http://ncronline.org/node/51861)  to the southern hemisphere. 
The Annuario shows that the global Catholic population, now 1.2  billion, 
kept pace with overall growth in 2011, but with major regional  disparities. 
Catholicism in Africa increased by 4.3 percent and in Asia by 2  percent, 
both twice the general rate, but in Europe only 0.3 percent. The trend  
applies to Christianity generally. According to the Center for the Study of  
Global Christianity, the demographic heart of the faith is now in Timbuktu,  
Mali, and by 2100, it will have shifted even further south to Sokoto,  Nigeria. 
On the lecture circuit, Catholics in North America and Europe curious about 
 how this will play out often ask two very intriguing questions: 
    *   Will the rise of the "global south" mean a shift away from issues 
that  loom large in the West, especially the "culture wars" -- contraception, 
gay  rights, abortion and so on? 
    *   Will it mean a less political church, as Catholicism is 
increasingly  shaped by cultures without the European legacy of church/state  
entanglement?
The Philippines is one good place to go looking for answers, especially in  
light of congressional elections this week in which a controversial law  
requiring the state to distribute contraception played a prominent role. Based 
 on that experience, the most convincing response to both questions is 
probably  "no." 
The Philippines is a good Catholic bellwether for four reasons.
 
First, it's a demographic powerhouse. It's the third-largest Catholic 
country  in the world at 75.3 million believers, projected to rise to 105 
million 
by  2050. Second, Cardinal Luis Antonio "Chito" Tagle of Manila is the most 
 charismatic prelate in Asia, and at just 55, he'll be a force for a long 
time.  Third, the church still has considerable social capital, partly 
related to its  role in the _People Power movement_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_Power_Revolution)  that brought down the 
regime of  Ferdinand Marcos. 
Fourth, there's a swelling Filipino diaspora, bringing their  experiences 
and outlooks to other Catholic cultures. (One proof of the point:  There are 
an estimated 1.5 million Catholics in Saudi Arabia today, 1.2 million  of 
whom are Filipino guest workers.) 
Surveying the situation in the Philippines, it doesn't exactly seem a  
prescription for a truce in fights over sexual morality or for a less political 
 
church. 
Among the most contentious issues in Filipino politics of late has been the 
 Responsible Parenthood and Reproductive Health Act, a long-proposed and  
much-debated measure finally enacted last year. In a nutshell, it guarantees  
universal access to contraception and family planning, including  
government-funded distribution of condoms, intrauterine devices and birth  
control 
pills. President Benigno Aquino III signed the measure in December 2012,  and 
the federal Department of Health issued implementing regulations in  March. 
Critics of the law, mainly faith-based groups, have filed multiple 
petitions  with the Filipino Supreme Court challenging it on three basic 
grounds: 
the law  undermines constitutional prescriptions describing the family as the 
fundamental  social unit; it fosters abortion, which remains illegal; and it 
violates  religious freedom by using public money to fund procedures many 
Filipinos oppose  on the basis of religious beliefs. 
In mid-March, _the  Supreme Court granted a temporary restraining order_ 
(http://ncronline.org/node/48271)  blocking implementation  and is set to hear 
arguments June 18. 
Even without the law, the Philippines would not be immune to Western-style  
cultural conflicts. This week's elections also included a party called Ang  
Ladlad, created to advocate for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender 
persons.  Its main candidate was Bemz Benedito, a woman born a man seeking to 
become the  world's first parliamentarian representing an explicitly LGBT 
party. Her core  issue was an antidiscrimination bill crafted by gay rights 
supporters that's  faced strong opposition from the Catholic church. 
Early returns suggest the party failed to win enough votes to gain a seat 
in  Congress, but its leaders vowed to keep pressing the fight. Powerful  
international nongovernmental organizations such as Amnesty International and a 
 variety of pro-choice groups are investing considerable resources in the  
Philippines, seeing it as a beachhead for changing the climate across the  
developing world. 
The Catholic church is an active player in these battles to an extent that  
actually can seem jarring by Western standards of church/state separation. 
Heading into the recent elections, for instance, a church-sponsored voter  
education campaign in Cebu, the country's second-largest city, asked 
Massgoers  to sign a pledge to support only candidates who oppose the 
reproductive 
health  law. The dioceses of Bacolod and Kabankalan distributed sample 
ballots with  pictures of pro-life senatorial contenders, urging Catholics to 
back them. The  Lipa archdiocese also issued a list of favored candidates based 
on their stands  on the reproductive health law, as well as abortion, 
divorce and the  environment. 
Most spectacularly, a poster was displayed on the façade of the cathedral 
in  Bacolod with pictures of senatorial candidates who opposed the 
reproductive  health law under the heading of "Team Life" while those who 
supported 
the law  were labeled "Team Death." 
To be fair, Filipino Catholics live in a neighborhood where religious 
actors  are encouraged to play politics. For instance, the Iglesia ni Cristo, 
the 
 largest indigenous Christian denomination in the country with a following  
estimated at 27 million, practices what's known as bloc voting, in which 
all  members are expected to vote for candidates endorsed by the church's 
leadership.  Polls suggest somewhere between 70 and 85 percent actually do, 
making the  Iglesia ni Cristo a powerful political force. 
Across the developing world, religious groups tend to play a strikingly  
direct role in politics -- endorsing candidates, taking positions on  
legislation, even allowing clergy to serve as interim heads of state or on  
constitutional conventions. In part, that's because in countries that are  
effectively one-party states or where the political class is perceived as  
corrupt, 
churches tend to be the only spheres of life where civil society can  find 
its voice. 
Moreover, it's Political Science 101 that social movements tend to be most  
politically active when they think they have a shot at winning. 
That rule of thumb, for instance, helps explain why U.S. bishops tend to be 
 more aggressive about the culture wars than their European counterparts: 
Issues  like abortion and gay rights are settled to a greater extent in 
Europe. During  the fall's synod in Rome, Bishop Kieran Conry of Arundel and 
Brighton captured  the point in explaining why his diocese didn't contest the 
2006 "Equality Law"  in the U.K., which made it illegal for adoption agencies 
to refuse to serve  same-sex couples: "We try not to fight battles we're 
likely to lose." 
In most of the developing world, the situation is different. Religious 
groups  command respect, and the social climate is receptive to traditional 
morality,  making church leaders more inclined to believe they have a winning 
hand. In the  case of the Philippines, opposition to the reproductive health 
law even includes  celebrities such as boxing icon Manny Pacquiao, despite 
the fact that Pacquiao,  like so many erstwhile Catholics in the "global 
south," has reportedly joined an  evangelical church. 
Three caveats are in order. 
First, traditional sexual morality is only part of the picture vis-à-vis  
faith and politics in the developing world. Catholics in regions such as 
Africa,  Asia and Latin America also tend to have what most Westerners would 
perceive as  progressive views on many other issues, such as the economy, the 
environment,  international relations, war and peace, and so on. 
Second, contraception and gay rights are rarely the first things most  
Catholics in the developing world mention when asked about their priorities.  
Generally, they point instead to poverty and violence. (On Thursday, 
Archbishop  Gabriel Mbilingi of Lubango, Angola, wrote to a European Union tax 
summit 
to  plead for more effective measures to combat tax avoidance by 
multinational  corporations, estimated to cost poor nations $725 billion to 
$810 
billion per  year. He was joined by Bishop Ludwig Schwarz of Linz, Austria. 
That's the sort  of thing prelates and activists in the developing world tend 
to 
get out of bed  thinking about.) 
Third, opposing the reproductive health law was not the only way the 
Filipino  church engaged this week's elections. Catholics were also involved in 
trying to  promote a free and fair ballot, including an initiative in the 
Pasig diocese  that brought Muslims, Catholics and other Christians together to 
form watchdog  teams at polling places. In general, religious activists in 
the "global south"  tend to be on the front lines of pro-democracy efforts. 
All that said, here's the bottom line: Anyone thinking (or, perhaps, 
hoping)  that the rise of a world church means the end of the culture wars or 
of a 
robust  role for Catholicism in those conflicts is likely destined for  
disappointment.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to