The fragile force in the above quote from Henry
Adams—faith—lies at the heart of both Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and the institution that built it, the Roman Catholic Church. After the news
broke on Monday of the fire that destroyed the spire and most of the roof of
the 12th-century French cathedral, a co-worker remarked to me: “Sort of like
the Catholic Church right now, isn’t it? Collapsing of its own weight.”
I could not support such a bald assertion said
aloud, but it wasn’t as if a similar notion hadn’t occurred to me in somewhat
different form.
In both cases, a structure had been built on
religious conviction and sustained, improbably, over centuries. Now, in a time
of testing, both Notre Dame and the Catholic Church face an uncertain future
that calls for a long-term, fundamental recommitment.
It escaped few people’s notice (especially those who
are already positing terrorism as the cause of the blaze) that the fire
occurred during Holy Week. But the Catholic Church as a whole has been undergoing
an agonizing reminder of the most holy seven days on its calendar, through the
sex-abuse scandal that has assumed global dimensions, even as it shows no signs
of abating 17 years after bursting out in earnest in the Archdiocese of Boston.
Nearly two millennia after the followers of Christ
were engulfed in a round of embarrassment, guilt, and shame, the Church He
founded has been plunged into its own intense crisis. It is impossible to
convey adequately the disgust and anger—and, in all too many cases,
disillusionment and desertion—that have followed in the wake of these
revelations.
Given that background, the wave of sentiment
surrounding Notre Dame Cathedral surprised me. One Facebook friend of mine,
whose comments on Catholicism have been so critical as to verge on hostility
and even outright prejudice, expressed intense sorrow over the fire. Others,
with somewhat more lukewarm feelings about the Church, responded in a similar
way to the sad news.
Some of this might simply stem from a site that has accrued
cultural and patriotic associations along with its original spiritual purpose.
Numerous observers recalled, for instance, how it became a center of
thanksgiving and celebration after the liberation of Paris from the Nazis in
1944. Others have remembered Victor Hugo’s 18931 novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame and
its various film adaptations. Musicologists have pointed to the medieval hymns
heard there that became the bedrock of Western harmony. And, of course,
Adams—not only an agnostic but a descendant of New England Congregationalists
actively hostile to “papist” sentiment in the new republic they founded—fell
under the spell of its architecture.
But some dared to go further. The other night, while
listening to Chris Matthews’ Hardball, I
heard Jean-Bernard Cadier, U.S. correspondent for BFM-TV, state bluntly: “We
are a catholic country.”
I almost blinked in disbelief when I heard this
because—perhaps more so in France than anywhere else—the Roman Catholic Church
has periodically damaged its credibility and reputation with the faithful:
*Under the ancient
regime, it possessed extensive properties and privileges, making it a prime
target when the French Revolution burst out.
*At the start of the 20th century, the
church hierarchy maintaining a careful silence during the Dreyfus Affair, even
as many of its most reactionary adherents in the media engaged in the most
savage anti-Semitism against the French captain unjustly convicted of treason.
The fallout from the firestorm resulted in legislation dedicating the nation to
the principle of laicite, or the
absence of religion in public life. (See, for instance, Rachel Donado's piece on The Atlantic Web site this week.)
*During the nation’s Nazi occupation in WWII, the
Church hierarchy again remained silent, this time about the collaborationist
Vichy regime, leading to a formal request for forgiveness to the nation’s Jews
during a 1997 visit by Pope John Paul II.
*At the end of the century, the sex-abuse crisis
further signaled the Roman Catholic Church at bay.
What does the outbreak of emotion surrounding the
cathedral signify, then? In her Wall
Street Journal column this weekend, Peggy Noonan proposed one short but
elegantly stated idea: “Destroyed beauty is a spiritual event.”
But I think the answer might be found in the
structures lost during the fire: the spires. The architects of the 80 French
cathedrals built from 1170 and 1270 knew that the sky was the source of
greatest mystery and aspiration for churchgoers.
There is another way of looking to this spot,
though. In his opening chapter of Mont
Saint Michel and Chartres, Adams explains that in the island abbey, the
archangel Michael appears at the heights because this was “where the danger was
greatest.” Balance is hardest to maintain here and the fall is the worst from
this point.
But God help us if we lose the tower we once assumed
would always be there for us, come what may. That might explain why fundraising
for the cathedral’s restoration had been lagging these last five years, but the
Church has already been able to pull together in the last five days a similar
sum what it took for the restoration.
Rebuilding will be more protracted—and perhaps even
more perilous—than the restoration effort. Similarly, the Roman Catholic Church
itself will need a massive campaign to preserve even what it has right now,
let alone the faith of those they wronged. But both efforts must begin in
earnest now. Many will not want to find the extent of the loss when it becomes too
late.
(The photo accompanying
this post, taken by Nicolas von Kospoth—i.e., Triggerhappy—in December 2005,
shows Notre Dame de Paris as seen from the rive gauche.)
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