Jan 9, 2009
Book written by: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom Press, $30, 332 pages
Since September 11, and the subsequent campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, the West has been engaged in a period of intense self-scrutiny. Some commentators, like Christopher Hitchens, believe the West will survive as a secular culture and applaud its supposed rejection of its religious heritage. Others contest the conclusion that growing modernization requires reduced religious feeling, arguing instead that religion is in fact growing in importance across the world, including the West. At the same time, and straddling both of these trends, books like Charles Taylor's monumental A Secular Age examine what is different between being religious now, and being religious in the pre-modern world.
During the 1920s and 1930s, a group of Catholic intellectuals explored the same questions. At that time, the threats were from the materialist ideologies of communism, Nazism, and fascism; more broadly, the West was faced with a general rejection of religious belief and with it a rupture from its cultural past, what the Welsh poet David Jones and others at the time called "the Break." Among the most important of these Catholic figures was Christopher Dawson (1889-1970), who in a series of influential books and articles crafted a Catholic understanding of, and response to, the immense changes brought about by modernity and advocated a new understanding of the place of religion in cultural history.
Dawson examined the same flashpoints that have so occupied our contemporary commentators. In his influential 1948 Gifford lectures, later published as Religion and Culture, Dawson set out his theory of secularization. Secularization -- what Taylor calls the "disenchantment" of the world -- went hand in hand with scientific methods and techniques, joined at first with Western ideals and, it should be said, Western colonialism. The idea that civilization in the absolute sense means only the West collapsed along with colonialism, but "the process of social and economic unification which it generated still continues with undiminished intensity. The emphasis to-day however is no longer on Western ideas but rather on the Western scientific techniques."