Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Religion and Power: An Unholy Alliance


The Czech Republic ranks as the most secular country in the whole of Europe. It's easy to understand why. Its history demonstrates the unholy alliance between religion and power. For this part of the world in particular, religion rouses the memory of occupation.

The conquered veer away from the faith of the conqueror, and too many conquerors rolled through Bohemia. Bismarck observed: "Whoever controls Bohemia controls Europe." Many tried. The Bohemian nobility struggled against both the power and the religious sensibilities of Catholic representatives of the Holy Roman Empire and the Habsburgs. Twice, in 1419 and 1618, they met with Catholic legates from to discuss more equitable power-sharing. Twice, each side found the other intractable. The nobles protested in the only way left to them: they threw the ambassadors out the window, resulting in the fabled defenestrations of Prague.

Twice, the impact was disastrous. The first defenestration marked the beginnings of the Hussite Wars, named after a teacher at the prestigious Charles University theologian, restive against the growing wealth, power, and clerical privilege of the Roman Catholic Church. Martin may have regarded Jan Huss (d. 1415) as the "first reformer," but the Bohemian people revered him as a hero of Czech nationalism. He preserved the Czech language against the church's Latin and the imperial German. He elevated the status of the laity, demanding they receive both bread and wine of the sacred Eucharistic meal, where the Roman church reserved wine for the priests. He steadfastly protested ecclesiastical abuse: the sale of indulgences, the practice of secret clerical marriage, the growing wealth and power of the church as a whole. For his efforts, he was invited to a council of the Roman Church in Constance for theological discussion. Upon arrival, however, he was arrested, imprisoned, and burned at the stake as a heretic.

In the Old Town Square of Prague, a statue of Huss faces, not the church, but the Old Town Hall. Huss embodies Czech nationalism, not Czech religion.

The second defenestration marked the beginnings of the Thirty Years' War. After the decisive defeat of the Bohemian estates at the Battle of White Mountain, Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand II had 27 Protestant leaders executed on the Old Town Square in 1621. There was a parallel imperial initiative on the religious front. The Habsburgs sent in the Jesuits to re-Catholicize Bohemia. They worked architecturally, installing huge, clunky Baroque altars in the delicate Gothic and Romanesque churches all over the city. It was a visual protest against the Reformation's emphasis on words, words that could be read in the people's language, words that could be spoken by everyone, Christ as the Word of God, not Ambassador of the Omnipotent God.

I finally found a Gothic church without a Baroque altar inside: it had been turned into an art gallery.

Maybe beauty is the only protest against power searching for sanction and against religion longing clout.










No comments:

Post a Comment