
Our Northern Neighbors
By Dr. James Hitchcock Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 1/15/04)
Years ago I heard that a group of American publishers, playing a little
game over lunch, asked each other to name a book with a worthy subject which
would be guaranteed to sell poorly. The winning suggestion was Canada, Our
Good Neighbor to the North.
If the book really would have been a worst-seller, I suspect it was
because most Americans assumed that Canada was much like the United States
and that they had little to learn about it. Until recently that might have
been true. But apparently it is no longer, and the differences between the
two countries are a fascinating example of what is occurring everywhere in
the West.
A recent news story offered vignettes of how the two cultures are now
different — Canadian Premier Jean Chretien boasting that he uses marijuana,
a majority of Canadians accepting homosexual "marriage," church attendance
steadily declining north of the border. Two societies once so similar are
now moving apart.
Canada is by no means unique in this regard, however. Rather it seems to
be getting more Europeanized, manifesting the same secular, morally
relativistic spirit which has been characteristic of Western Europe for
decades. What needs explaining is not why Canada is the way it is but why
the United States is not.
Before Americans become self-righteous, it is of course necessary to
acknowledge the moral corruption of American life. Americans too are
self-indulgent and hedonistic, and our list of sins is very long. But most
Americans still profess belief in the idea of sin. They acknowledge a moral
law higher than themselves, even if they often violate it. Thus they retain
at least the possibility of repentance, whereas in most other Western
countries a genuine sense of morality has been replaced by trendy
pseudo-moralities, which quickly come and go — feminism, environmentalism,
multiculturalism, homosexual liberation, animal rights — whatever next
manages to attract the attention of the media.
The phenomenon called the Sixties, which actually lasted from about 1966
to 1973, was a revolution in manners and morals which deeply affected the
entire Western world, and what is now manifest in Canada and Western Europe
is the inevitable working out of that revolution. It did of course affect
the United States as well; perhaps it even began here. But American culture
also generated powerful and successful counter-forces.
There is such a thing as "American exceptionalism" — the claim that there is
something unique about the United States. The idea that America might be
specially favored by God is indeed a dangerous one. But from a historical
point of view it is simply true that America is distinctive among the
nations of the West in its moral traditionalism, at least in terms of what
people believe.
The key to understanding this lies in not treating religious practice as one
among a number of cultural differences between the United States and other
countries but in recognizing that religion underlies all the others. However
shallow it may seem, Americans far exceed all other Western people in their
professed belief in religious doctrines and in their religious activity. In
some European countries virtually nobody goes to church.
Why this should be so is not clear. One possible factor is that almost
alone we have never had a state church, so that religion has always been
something freely chosen and political liberty did not entail rejecting
religion.
The dominant American religiosity is now evangelical, meaning a strong
personal response to the Gospel and a palpable sense of God’s presence in
the lives of believers. It is a style of religion with deep roots in
American culture. On the other hand, the secularization of Western Europe,
and the moral weakening of those cultures, has been due to the decline of
churches which are not evangelical in style — Catholicism, Anglicanism,
Lutheranism, some forms of Calvinism.
As our own critics never tire of reminding us, the United States is now
unpopular in the world, even among our erstwhile allies in Western Europe,
and some Canadians boast that their country is a haven for Americans who do
not feel comfortable on the other side of the border. There are various
reasons for this, but it would be naive and short-sighted not to realize
that people who think they have freed themselves from the burdens of their
Christian past now look askance at the fact that the most powerful and
materially advanced nation in the world to a considerable extent still
embraces those supposedly outmoded beliefs.
Hitchcock is a professor of history at St. Louis University.
Copyright ©2004 Arlington Catholic
Herald. All rights reserved.
|