Diabolic Digest
A
church wedding
In this permissive age, there are, of course,
certain members of the EU who blush at calling it a political marriage in
polite society. But, for better or worse, that is invariably where it is
heading. Just as these cautious amours, after decades of courting, were finally
reconciling themselves to the idea of tying the knot, an old scorned lover has
to storm onto the scene and embarrass the guests.
Well, actually, Pope John Paul II is in no fit
state to be doing any stomping around. Still, his message was clear: he felt
slighted and he demanded to be part of the future happy family, too. But is
Europe, desperately grappling with the notion of political unification between
once fiercely independent nation states, ready for a second marriage between
Church and State?
As the pontiff argues, the historic influence
of the church on European civilisation cannot be underestimated. But there’s a reason why his holiness was
not invited to the party he’s now trying to gate crash.
Eurosceptics often complain that the whole
European project suffers from a crisis of legitimacy. They balk at the idea that
unelected Eurocrats can dictate certain aspects of our lives for us. But, even
the Commission, the EU’s executive arm, imperfect as it may be, is ultimately
accountable to elected leaders.
We are also, for various reasons, apparently
living through a crisis of democracy at all levels. But, with electoral
participation usually over the halfway mark, the status of democracy in Europe
appears a damn sight healthier than the embattled Church.
The state of the Church in Europe today is as
frail as the ailing pontiff’s health. Regardless of denomination or country,
the proportion of regular church goers is plummeting to the low single digits.
In fact, ever since the Enlightenment formalised the split between Church and
State, the institutional status of religion has been in constant decline.
The Church may have represented a cornerstone
of Europe’s past. But, for better or worse, it holds little sway in the
continent’s present. And so, should a charter that deals with the future and
one that may form the basis of the hotly-debated ‘European Constitution’ devote
so much attention to the past?
If it does, why stop at the Church? Much of our
modern ideology is underpinned in Ancient Greek philosophy. So let’s give them
a mention too, after all they gave us the word ‘democracy’ – that elusive state
towards which we all strive.
The ascendancy of reason over superstition that
started in the Renaissance is partly thanks to the Arabs and Muslims, who gave
modern Europe its scientific, medical and mathematical basis. Hell, they even
preserved and interpreted the Greek masters who inspired Europe to build its
democracies. I would implore Mr Giscard, despite his obvious aversion to
Turkish entry to the EU, to give the much maligned Muslims a mention in his
convention.
Finally, I have a personal interest in having
the charter mention the Ancient Egyptians for giving us the first civilisation,
without which none of what is being attempted today would have been possible.
Is the burden of history getting a bit much for
you?
Well, the burden of the present is no less
significant. The days of referring to Europe as Christendom are long gone.
Modern day Europe is a secular, multi-faith entity. More importantly, whether
or not you lament the death of spirituality and the emergence of the dogma of
consumerism, most people today are ‘undecided’, ‘non-practicing’, ‘atheists’ or
‘agnostic’. Religion may still be important to some people, but that is largely
a private matter. Practicing believers are in the minority, whether they be
Catholic, Protestant, Muslim or Jew.
Europe’s higher ideals and morality may be
founded on religion. But it is a more universal form of religion, one that is
common to most of the major faiths, and not the exclusive domain of the Church.
The EU is suffering from a major
image problem. Millions of European citizens associate it with the grey
machinations of bureaucracy in far-off Brussels. Giscard and his crew
desperately need to overhaul the EU and make the project more relevant and
inspiring for the average citizen. But, one wonders if the Convention were to
bring the Vatican onboard, whether they would also be assigning the Union to
the annals of history.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.