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Vincent Chiarello | Remnant Columnist

Reviewed for The Remnant Newspaper
by Vincent Chiarello

"Western civilization owes far more to the Catholic Church than most people - Catholics included - often realize. The Church, in fact, built Western civilization"  -Thomas E. Woods

There are few in this audience who have not heard or read that the Church of Rome has been responsible for the many of the current evils of this world. Everything from being charged with aiding in the genocide of native people, to fostering the institution of slavery, are accusations that have been leveled against the Catholic Church. Several years ago, the professoriate and student body of Georgetown University, the first Catholic university in America, debated "What, if anything, is owed to the descendants of slaves who were sold to help ensure the college’s survival?" As a result of intense student and professorial pressure, in 2016 the university's administrators agreed to remove the names of the Jesuits Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy and Rev. William McSherry, the college presidents involved in the 1832 sale, from two campus buildings. However, that action did not change the aggressive push by the American Left to continue to indict the founders of Western Civilization, the Church among them. Nothing ever does.

A Remnant Book Review. . .

websiteBook by Philip F. Lawler... Reviewed for The Remnant by Vincent Chiarello

(Regnery Gateway, 2018 196 pp.) – The authors of two recently published books critical of the current pontificate take very different initial approaches to their task. George Neumayr, author of The Political Pope (See my review: The Remnant, May 31, 2019) begins his critique of the pope with these words: "From the first moment I saw him, I knew that he was going to be a Modernist wrecking ball."

The other author is not as blunt, at least at the start. He begins thus: "Every day I pray for Pope Francis. And every day (I am exaggerating, but only slightly), the pope issues another reminder that he does not approve of Catholics like me." Philip Lawler, Lost Shepherd.

book cover 002 

"From the first moment I saw him, I knew that he was going to be a Modernist wrecking ball..." - George Neumayr. 

While reviewing The Political Pope, a noted Catholic writer claimed the author of this book about the current pope was "...relentlessly ideological, and too systematic for such a free-wheeling figure." That description puzzled me, for Neumayr had only described events that demonstrated his deep-seated conviction the current Pontifex Maximus was nothing more - or less - than a revolutionary cleric, whose actions served as a wrecking ball to the Church's historical past and traditions. To the contrary, he was not ideological at all; he was simply describing the baleful changes he's noted under Pope Francis. Those changes were initially witnessed when Neumayr was a student, decades ago, at the Jesuit University of San Francisco, where the Modernist mantra ruled. It still does. Is it any wonder, then, that his initial reaction to the first Jesuit pope was not tinged with enthusiasm?

“The true Sweden is Catholic Sweden.” –Fr. Håkan Lindström, SSPX

(Western) Europe is post-Christian.” –Justice Antonin Scalia

On an unusually warm Spring afternoon in Stockholm, an architecturally beautiful city, described by a frequent visitor “as a mixture of Edinburgh and Venice,” I met with Fr. Håkan Lindström, SSPX, to discuss the past, present, and future of the Catholic Church in Scandinavia. (N.B.: when speaking of “Scandinavia,” the only nations that are correctly included are Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. When Iceland and Finland are included, the word “Nordic” is used. Some ethnographers would include the “Sami,” Europe’s only nomads, in that group.)

Also at the meeting was Ferdinand Hellers, an “advokat” (attorney), who, like Padre Lindstrom, is a convert from Lutheranism, and, as the lawyer mentioned, someone who “had enough” of the Novus Ordo Church. He is dedicated to the SSPX in general, and Fr. Lindstrom, who was ordained in 2009, in particular. So much so, in fact, that Herr Hellers has traveled to London to hear Fr. Lindstrom say Mass and preach. To square the circle, I also sought the input of official representatives of the Novus Ordo Churches in Sweden and Norway to assess where the Church of Rome currently stands in their respective countries.

Dear Remnant Reader,

If I were to ask you what the term, “the Lemon test” signifies, how might you respond? I assure you it has nothing to do with the rating of the citrus fruit. If not that, then what? “The Lemon test” refers to the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in 1971 that dealt a serious blow to the concept of religious liberty guaranteed under the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Formulated by then Chief Justice Warren Burger, who wrote the majority opinion in Lemon v. Kurtzman (hence, the name), it dealt with Pennsylvania and Rhode Island programs that supplemented the salaries of teachers in religious-based private schools for the teaching of secular subjects. The Court struck down both programs as “violating the establishment clause of the Constitution;” in short, the 8-1 decision by the Supremes (Justice White the only dissenter) claimed that what the two states were proposing was tantamount to establishing a “state religion.”
The majority also sought to prevent such questionable behavior in the future by other states, so the three-part “Lemon test” began: first, the law had to have a non-religious aspect; second, it must neither advance nor inhibit religion, and last, but not least, the statute in question must not broaden “an excessive government entanglement with religion.” That was not the end of this mischevious finding: to add insult to injury,  “the Lemon test” has served as the basis for many of the decisions in cases that come before the Supreme Court dealing with religious liberty.

While all of this legal talk may prove confusing, in practice what was noticeable was that the federal courts in particular, later followed by state courts, began to use “the Lemon test” to restrict what was meant by “the free exercise of religion” guaranteed under the U.S. Constitution. Although never formally overruled, “the Lemon test” did not escape criticism by legal scholars and jurists, foremost among them the late Justice Antonin Scalia. A longtime opponent of the test, he used it as an example of an area in which the law “originated from judges rather than from society's idea of traditional practices.”  And he added:  “As bad as the Lemon test is, it is worse for the fact that, since its inception, its seemingly simple mandates have been manipulated to fit whatever result the Court aimed to achieve.” (Emphasis mine) The "Lemon test" now provided judges the ability to impose their political philosophy on the law of the land, a power never granted by the Constitution.  In short, it gave the judiciary a greater opportunity to become "politicians in robes."

Others claimed that “the Lemon test” was “unduly subjective” and led to very questionable decisions, and one critic even used a most sinister metaphor: “The Lemon test stalks the constitutional landscape of religion, so menacing in its gait that it scares “little children” and “school attorneys” alike. Its perpetual resurrection, despite repeated stabbings through the heart, confirms the unfettered discretion of judges who employ it (“we can command it to return to the tomb at will”). The monster remains entirely at the judges’ mercy.”

There is no doubt that “the Lemon test” is continuing to influence judicial decisions and to restrict governmental recognition of the religious voice in the public square.  Under its aegis, prayer has been eliminated from public schools and school activities, crèches from public squares, and religious monuments still have a hard time of it.

One of the more egregious cases involved a case in which the  American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued three Kentucky counties in federal district court for displaying framed copies of the Ten Commandments in courthouses and public schools. The ACLU argued the displays violated the First Amendment's establishment clause, which prohibits the government from passing laws "respecting an establishment of religion." The district court and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the displays violated the establishment clause. Apparently, in the lengthy period between the initial display of the Commandments and the suit brought by the ACLU, no one seems to have noticed that "establishment." The basis of that absurd ruling…you guessed it: “the Lemon test.”

There is a bit of irony in that decision: any visitor who enters the courtroom of the U.S. Supreme Court, will, in observing  the marble frieze that surrounds the justices and audience, see representations of the great law- givers of the world.  The visitor can easily make out Moses, prominently displayed among other notable figures, holding the Ten Commandments. Perhaps the ACLU will bring a case before the Justices to airbrush the Ten Commandments from their courtroom.  Does any of this information have any relevance for the future of religious liberty in the U.S.? I believe it does.

In a review of Mary Eberstadt's recent publication, Dangerous to Believe, I spent some time describing the (then) pending case of Trinity Lutheran Church, which had brought its case before the Supreme Court over the refusal of the State of Missouri to expend funds for a church-run playground. (See: The Remnant May 15/30, 2017) If the past were prologue, it would appear that under "the Lemon test," or "Blaine Amendment," which also prevented public funds to religious organizations, Trinity Lutheran was fighting a losing battle, a battle it had lost in both the Federal District and Circuit Courts. But on June 26, 2017, in what may signal a shift in the Court away from "the Lemon test" approach, seven justices, including Justices Kagan and Breyer, neither noted for a  "conservative" legal perspective, along with Chief Justice Roberts, and Justices Alito, Thomas, Kennedy, and Gorsuch, came to the conclusion: "The Missouri Department of Natural Resources has not subjected anyone to chains or torture on account of religion. And the result of the State's policy is nothing so dramatic as the denial of political office. The consequence is... a few scraped knees. But the exclusion of Trinity Lutheran from a public benefit for which it was otherwise qualified, solely because it is a church, is odious to our Constitution all the same, and cannot stand." But that was not all the justices stated in their opinion.

Both Justices Thomas and Gorsuch, the latter replacing Justice Scalia, added further thoughts on the decision. Justice Gorsuch added another dimension to how "the Lemon test" had blurred the distinction between laws that discriminate on the basis of religious status and religious use. (Emphasis in original). "Does a religious man say grace before dinner? Or does a man begin his meal in a religious manner? Is it a religious group that built the playground? Or did a group build the playground so it might be used to advance a religious mission?" Justice Gorsuch's last sentence in his concurring opinion does raise a question: "...general principles here do not permit discrimination against religious exercise - whether on the playground or anywhere else."(Emphasis mine) Had the criticism of the late Justice Scalia been vindicated?But the Court decision is not alone in offering evidence of a possible change in the direction of revisiting the baleful effects of "the Lemon test" on the nation. 

Justices Sotomayor, whose dissent was lengthier than the Court's majority opinion, was joined by Justice Ginsburg, a former lawyer for the ACLU. I've noted in previous articles that Justice Sotomayor has been showing signs that she would take up the role that Justice Ginsburg played earlier as the Court's steadfast liberal, and in the Trinity Lutheran case, that is evident. At the heart of her dissent is this: "At bottom, the Court creates the following rule today: The government may draw lines on the basis of religious status to grant a benefit to religious persons or entities, but it may not draw lines on that basis when doing so would further the interests the Religion Clauses (in the 1st Amendment) protect in other ways." I suggest that Justice Sotomayor's major annoyance is that the members of the Court departed from "the Lemon test" to reach their conclusion.

Now mainly forgotten, Finley Peter Dunne was a humorist and reporter, who wrote at the turn of the 20th century for various publications. In over 500 columns, his major character Mr. Dooley, an Irish bartender, through his wit and insight, captured the meaning of the important issues of the day. In 1901, the United States Supreme Court decided a series of  lawsuits known as the"Insular Cases," which raised the legal question: Do the Constitutional guarantees of U.S. citizens extend to subjects of the newly gained American possessions? The written opinions were difficult to understand, and the court was deeply divided, but the net effect was to hold that the Constitution did not follow the flag in every regard, such as voting in presidential elections. The decision gave Mr. Dooley an opportunity to puncture the court's ivory-tower reputation: "No matter whether the constitution follows the flag or not, the Supreme Court follows the election returns." Can Mr. Dooley's comments be as relevant in 2017 as he believed them to be in 1901?

But if "the Supreme Court follows the election returns," then how have previous and the current presidents viewed their role in supporting and sustaining the idea of religious liberty? While the Courts may "interpret" the laws, the Executive Branch of government is charged with their execution, and in so doing, brings a perspective regarding the role of religious liberty in the nation's founding. Compare the following three statements by Presidents of the United States:

In August of 1947, then President Harry Truman said: "As a Christian nation, (emphasis mine) our earnest desire is to work with men of good will everywhere to banish war and the causes of war from the world whose Creator desired that of every race and in every clime should live together in peace, good will and mutual trust."

In June 2006, then Sen. Obama stated: "Given the increasing diversity of America's population, the dangers of sectarianism have never been greater. Whatever we once were, we are no longer just a Christian nation, (emphasis mine) we are also a Jewish nation, a Muslim nation, a Buddhist nation, a Hindu nation, and a nation of non-believers." 

In July 2017, at a gathering organized by Southern Baptists' Faith and Freedom Coalition's Road to Majority Conference, President Trump, who has consistently recognized his administration's "protection of religious liberty" by specifically mentioning the plight of the Little Sisters of the Poor, said: "Our religious liberty is enshrined in the very First Amendment in the Bill of Rights. The American Founders invoked "Our Creator" four times in the Declaration of Independence. But then, this: "I remind you that we're going to start saying "Merry Christmas again." (emphasis mine)

Last May, a contributor to The Federalist Society Newsletter wrote:  "Without Justice Scalia, religious liberty is in peril." Few, including me, would be foolish enough to believe that one decision by the Supreme Court, or an address by President Trump will immediately change the current course of the protection of religious liberty; yet, to cite the Chinese proverb: "A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step."  I do believe, however, that President Trump's nomination of Justice Gorsuch is a very positive sign, and that the possible retirements of Justices Kennedy and Ginsburg will likely bring about the opportunity to once again bring the Court to the defense of religious liberty that the late Justice Scalia championed during his 30 years on the Court.


I am reminded that in the darkest days of World War II, Prime Minister Winston Churchill held fast to the belief that the Allies, despite their losses, would emerge victorious in the end. When the Axis forces began to lose their momentum, Churchill, in one of his memorable phrases, said: "Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning."

With the indulgence of the Bard –


To vote - or not to vote - that is the question;
Whether tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,
And by opposing, end them. (Emph. mine)


I asked Fr. Peter Milward, S.J., one of the world’s leading Shakespearean scholars, his interpretation of the meaning of the original lines. His response: “to be” means “to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,” as the poor Catholic recusants were made to suffer increasingly during the reign of that wicked queen, while “not to be” means “to take arms against a sea of troubles”, as some desperate Catholic young men (such as Robert Catesby) were tempted to overthrow the evil regime and die in the attempt.”

(WASHINGTON, D.C., Remnant Newspaper) -- The opening of this session was typical of most days. As in normal procedure, at 10:00 a.m., the Clerk of the U.S. Supreme Court banged her gavel and proclaimed: "Please Rise...." then..."God save the United States and this honorable court," while the Justices, in order of seniority, took their seats perched above the lectern where the attorneys representing both sides of the legal dispute would make their presentations, and respond to questions.

The Justices then began hearing oral arguments regarding the legality of the Affordable Care Act, (ACA) aka "Obamacare," and its impact on religious organizations. But this was not a recent event; indeed, what I have just described were the events that took place on March 25, 2014, when the Hobby-Lobby case was heard regarding the constitutional legality of certain portions of ACA and its possible infringement of religious liberty. History and the Supreme Court were re-playing that role once again, this time with a different set of actors, but would they repeat their earlier performance?

"The worst evil of all is to say that neither good nor evil is anything in itself, but only matters of opinion."   - St. Justin Martyr

They came from far and wide, a veritable sea of humanity whose outer limits could not be easily determined from my vantage point. Printed on their banners, written on their hats, or sewn onto their clothing were the telltale signs of people who had traveled long distances, including contingents from the Netherlands and Canada, to come to Washington's Mall on this day, one that has been called, "a day of infamy."

From Alaska to Florida, from the Bronx to Texas, as well as from areas in-between, tens - no, hundreds - of thousands of people descended on the nation's capital for one, and one purpose, alone: to call for the repeal of the most infamous Supreme Court decision of the 20th century: Roe v. Wade, which now provided a legal "right" to a practice that previously had been outlawed since the founding of the nation.

For Pope Francis to use his influence in support of a police state, albeit with the express purpose of helping the Cuban people, will not end well - for the Church, or for the people he wishes to assist. 

"A high-ranking Vatican official confirmed ...that the Obama administration and the Vatican have been working together for more than a year to end decades of hostility and restore relations between the US and the Caribbean nation."

So began one in a series of similar articles recently that extolled the work of Pope Francis I and Vatican diplomats in securing a normalization of relations between the U.S. and Cuba, something that has not existed since January, 1961, when President Eisenhower broke diplomatic ties to the newly established Cuban Marxist regime headed by Fidel Castro. Not since Ronald Reagan publicly credited Pope John Paul II's role in the collapse of communism has an American president so lauded the diplomatic efforts of a sitting pope.

In my article Nuns on the Bus, Vatican II and the Decline of Women Religious; (Nov. 30 -Dec. 15) I mentioned that in mid-December, the Vatican's Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life would issue a summary of its findings regarding a Vatican inquiry into various aspects of "Women Religious" throughout the United States. I was skeptical about what the report would eventually say, and I wrote: "But will the Vatican....fess up to their responsibility as shepherds to their flocks? If what I suspect will be the tenor and tone of the press conference on the 16th, I doubt it." Was my pessimistic prophecy accurate?

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