“Is prayer a political problem?” This question is an offensive one in today's society, even to Christians. After all, isn’t prayer just a matter of personal faith and only of a purely religious and spiritual nature? Calling it a political problem seems almost vulgar. Yet, this is exactly what the Jesuit priest Jean Daniélou argues in his 1967 book, Prayer as a Political Problem. He believes that “there can be no radical division between civilization and what belongs to the interior being of man; that there must be a dialogue between prayer and the pursuit and realization of public policy; that both the one and the other are necessary and in a sense complimentary.”1
Before I begin, it is necessary to discuss the book itself. I purchased my copy from Cluny Media (one of my favorite publishers) and, with it being only 117 pages, I was able to finish it after only two or three sittings. You could probably finish it in one if you dedicated the time to it. It is broken up into seven chapters, a foreword, and a conclusion. Three of chapters diverge into topics such as technology, art, and even paganism. These chapters are almost a different book altogether, and I plan to devote a separate essay at a later date to covering those chapters. The other four chapters deal more closely with the issue of prayer and politics, and these are the ones I will be drawing from for this essay.
The first argument that Daniélou makes—which lays the foundation for the rest of the book—is that the Church is for the Everyman and not only a select few (he speaks here of the Catholic Church, but you can also imagine him speaking of Christianity more broadly). He believes that the “poor” which the New Testament speaks of are not only the materially poor, but the spiritually poor, and that this represents the masses as a whole—the ordinary, everyday person, if you will. He argues that the idea of protecting Christian purity and zeal at all costs, namely at the expense of bringing the Gospel message to the masses of mankind, is a grave mistake and contrary to the teachings of Christ. To Daniélou, the ideal Church is not that of the underground Church with its house churches, catacombs, and cult-like secrecy, but the public Church of Christendom. He asserts that “the Church was most truly itself in the days of Christendom when everybody was baptized and it is this state of affairs which is to be desired.”2 Daniélou prefers the Church which is a mix of Saints and sinners, and endorses the Augustinian view that the Church is a net where many kinds of fish are caught, and where “the task of separating the good from the bad is for the angels.”3 If Christ can dine with tax collectors and prostitutes, the Church can surely count among its ranks the lowly and the less-than-pious.
Daniélou also points out that there are people for whom “a life of prayer is always possible, whatever the circumstances” and that, on the other hand, there are people who will struggle to maintain a healthy prayer life in a poor or hostile environment.4 There are also people who withdraw from society in order to create an environment that is conductive to prayer, with monks being the most obvious example of this. If they require an environment that is conductive to prayer to live the life they do, doesn't it follow, then, that the masses also require an environment conductive to prayer, though obviously one more fitting for the secular vocation? How can the Everyman be faulted for not having a mature prayer life when all that surrounds him and takes up his time discourages it?
The problem, Daniélou says, is that society is being dechristianized, and he said this in the 60’s. How we have fallen even since then. The simple fact of the matter is that society has developed in such a way that prayer has been made difficult for people. “The first thing that strikes [an observer] is that our technological civilization brings about a change in the rhythm of human existence. This is the speeding up of tempo which makes it more difficult to find the minimum of freedom on which a minimum life of prayer depends.”5 The pace of our daily lives has only sped up in the 21st century, with the hyperactive nature of the internet and social media. Combine this with our rampant consumerism, our secular society’s insistence on so-called “Separation of Church and State,” the 24/7 news cycle, the constant barrage of advertisements, the noise of our machines and our interior spaces, the dissemination of anti-religious propaganda in schools and in media, dis-information, and the breakdown of traditional morality, it is not hard to come to the conclusion that our world is discouraging for religion. As a result of these conditions, “Prayer is thus rendered almost impossible for most men, unless they display a heroism and a strength of character of which—we must face it—the majority of men are not capable.”6
Benedict XVI said the same in his encyclical Caritas in veritate:
When the State promotes, teaches, or actually imposes forms of practical atheism, it deprives its citizens of the moral and spiritual strength that is indispensable for attaining integral human development and it impedes them from moving forward with renewed dynamism as they strive to offer a more generous human response to divine love.7
Acknowledging this fact urges us to accept that an environment which allows the masses of men to cultivate a life of prayer is absolutely necessary for the salvation of souls and the living of a good life. The question, then, is how to bring about such an environment. The answer does not really lie in a withdrawal from society or the making of all men into monks. The Catholic Church is very clear that marriage and living a secular life with a secular job is the calling of the vast majority of Christians. The Second Vatican Council puts it well:
The laity, by their very vocation, seek the kingdom of God by engaging in temporal affairs and by ordering them according to the plan of God. They live in the world, that is, in each and in all of the secular professions and occupations. They live in the ordinary circumstances of family and social life, from which the very web of their existence is woven. They are called there by God that by exercising their proper function and led by the spirit of the Gospel they may work for the sanctification of the world from within as a leaven. In this way they may make Christ known to others, especially by the testimony of a life resplendent in faith, hope and charity. Therefore, since they are tightly bound up in all types of temporal affairs it is their special task to order and to throw light upon these affairs in such a way that they may come into being and then continually increase according to Christ to the praise of the Creator and the Redeemer.8
We cannot tell people that they need to exit society, as this is not a choice most can practically make, nor is it their vocation to exit society. On the contrary, their calling is to engage in temporal affairs by “ordering them according to the plan of God.” Does this not include the political sphere? The Church certainly thinks so, but such an idea is in direct opposition to the current neo-liberal order and even the thought process of many so-called conservative Christians (I think of David French and the National Review types). We are constantly told that it is impossible to mix the spiritual and the temporal and that the Church, with its faith and morals, must stay far away from politics.
However, as Daniélou points out, “if we accept a complete disassociation of the sacred and the profane worlds, we shall make access to prayer absolutely impossible to the mass of mankind.”9 The political order has been understood to have an influence on the hearts, minds, and souls of men since Plato and his Republic (and certainly far before this). The Church understands that there are two spheres, the temporal and spiritual, each with their own unique responsibilities and varying degrees of autonomy. But, as has been taught consistently by the Church from the time of Pope Gelasius, “There are two powers…by which this world is chiefly ruled, namely, the sacred authority of the priests and the royal power. Of these that of the priests is the more weighty, since they have to render an account for even the kings of men in the divine judgment.”10 This is due to the fact that our highest end is eternal happiness in heaven and that the eternal state of our soul is the most consequential matter of all. If this is true, and if our social conditions shape our very soul, then the political order must acknowledge its role in salvation and be ordered towards the ultimate end of eternal life. Because of this, it must also recognize that the Church has a right to be involved in the political order, not, as Jacques Maritain says, “because of political things, but because of the spiritual principle involved.”11
Some will counter this by saying that the political order exists merely to secure our rights or to establish peace and order in society. This could not be further from the truth. We know that law is intimately tied to morality, and the laws of a place reflect its values and moral spirit. We also know of the concept of the common good, and that the common good is not merely concerned with the material. Rather, “An essential element of the common good is that man should be able to fulfill himself at all levels. The religious level cannot be excluded.”12 When the religious aspect of the common good is neglected or outright denied, you arrive at the state of affairs that exists today. But when religion is denied, something else must take its place, insufficient as it may be.
Today it is often “science” which guides (or misguides) us. Everything revolves around science. Yet, “Science, in particular, is totally unable to guide a movement which it has itself set in train. Men feel that science has sent them on a journey without benefit of steering wheel or brakes.”13 When we look at the debates surrounding abortion, transgenderism, euthanasia, and artificial intelligence, we know that there is more than mere “science” in these issues, and that morality is of paramount importance. Of course, modernity has absolutely no issue with the total destruction of any constraints and believes religion to be nothing more than a private practice which must be kept within the walls of a church—a coping mechanism of sorts—merely existing to console men. Unfortunately, many conservative Christians uncritically absorb this argument, believing that they can somehow achieve a political order that simultaneously excludes them and respects them. They are content with the Liberal-Leftist demand of privatizing religion and compartmentalizing it. Religion becomes nothing more than yet another consumable identity, a social club, a thing that makes you feel good when you're down, instead of a transcendent and reality defining belief with real consequences for every aspect of life on earth.
This mindset inevitably leads to religion being pushed out of politics. After all, why should the State bother itself with this kind of religion? This religion has no justification for existing, since it does nothing to fundamentally change existence. Therefore, Daniélou asserts that “Churches have to establish their claim to a place in technological civilization of tomorrow. They have to show, through their self-evident vitality, that there is indeed a function in the building of this civilization which they and they alone can fulfill.”14 Christianity must realize its imminent quality, and must rise to the occasion; the Churches cannot shirk their duties as moral guides, nor can they be disinterested in politics and secular affairs. Moral authority is desperately needed in our time. “The Church cannot disclaim any interest in temporal society, for that also is subject to the law of God of which the Church is the interpreter,”15 and “Christianity ought for the sake of its own final end to seek to influence the institutions of the earthly city,”16 though with the understanding that the Heavenly City cannot be achieved here on Earth. The next logical step is to understand what this looks like in practice.
First, Daniélou makes it clear that a Christian being uninterested in political affairs is the cause of a “faulty formation of conscience.”17 Rather, “the duty of building the earthly city proceeds directly from the demands of the Christian conscience.”18 He uses the Old Testament prophets to make his case here, pointing out that Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Amos were “assiduous in denouncing injustices and in occupying themselves with international problems” and that “The role of the prophet is continually to denounce these violations of [the alliance between Yahweh and his people], to recall to men's minds what is God's law in the earthly city, and thus to set in train some concrete action against the breaches of it.”19 He goes on to refute the argument that Christians should not get involved in politics lest they get their hands dirty dealing with imperfect people, parties, and institutions, saying, “When, whether in unions, politics, or cultural matters, a Christian becomes wholly involved in struggles to bring the earthly city into conformity with its charter, or, what is the same thing, with the true ends of man, he does not quit God nor God's sanctuary to lose himself in a foreign world, as all too often he is led to think”20 Finally, Daniélou seems to endorse what is called the theory of indirect power, that is, that the institutional Church ought not to be directly involved in temporal governance in a hands-on, theocratic manner, but that it be involved indirectly and still seek to influence the earthly city. “Of course, there is a distinction of powers, and this world is not subject directly to the authority of the Church. But to say that this world is not directly subject to the Church's authority is not to say that it is not subject to the law of God, of which the magisterium of the Church is the interpreter.”21
This, too, follows the thought of Jacques Maritain in his book The Primacy of the Spiritual which I referenced earlier. In that he writes, “The terrestrial State, being a moral whole, as such owes duties to God. In its own sphere it is subject to the universal temporal sovereignty of Christ; for Christ, as Man, received from God dominion 'over the works of His hands' and 'all things have been subjected under His feet,' and it is from Him that kings and the heads of States and every human power derive their authority; the State, as such, is bound to observe His Law and the precepts of His morality. As a moral and religious agent, it is, therefore, itself part of the Church.”22 Maritain concludes that, “If the end of the terrestrial government is subordinate to the end of the spiritual government, the latter must have power over the former, must be able to direct it by its counsel, and, if the interest of souls so require, control it by its orders.”23 With that being said, we must clarify that the role of the spiritual in the temporal is only that of directing away from sin and towards God’s law; the Church must not meddle in the temporal powers’ rightful jurisdictions and must not oppress the temporal in its own sphere.
What this actually looks like in real practice largely depends on the relationship between the Church, the State, and the civilization itself. If, for instance, the population as a whole is mostly comprised of Catholics, or if the government formally recognizes the Catholic Church as the official religion of the nation, or if the State is simply predisposed to listen to the Church, then the power of the Church would be far greater. But, “In modern times, when the conception of the State has attained its full 'laic' structure, the exercise of this same 'indirect power' appears simply in [the] form of a counsel not proceeding so far as a formal order compelling obedience...and the use of it therefore tends to diminish considerably.”24
Daniélou seems to agree with Maritain's conception of the indirect power as laid out here, as earlier in the book he writes, “On the one hand, the earthly city is subject to the Law of God, not, it is true, in its particular applications, but in the principles which govern them. The Church has always asserted its right and duty to intervene in this domain, basing its claim to do so on the fact it has the care of the Natural law. (We would prefer to call this the divine law, for it is from God that it acquires its whole authority in the eyes of the Christian).”25 He also adds, “The Church cannot fail to have an interest in civilization to the extent that the city of this world must be subordinate itself to the city of eternity. The Church has been given by God himself the task of leading men to this heavenly city, and has therefore the right to ask of the earthly city that it put no obstacle in the way...In this sense, Christianity ought for the sake of its own final end to seek to influence the institutions of the earthly city.”26
Even the Second Vatican Council seems to endorse the indirect power:
There are, indeed, close links between earthly things and those elements of man's condition which transcend the world. The Church herself makes use of temporal things insofar as her own mission requires it…It is only right…that at all times and in all places, the Church should have true freedom to preach the faith, to teach her social doctrine, to exercise her role freely among men, and also to pass moral judgment in those matters which regard public order when the fundamental rights of a person or the salvation of souls require it.27
This could not be any further from the modern, Liberal-Leftist view of things. Liberalism does not recognize any right of the Church or of religion in general to influence the government and the temporal order, especially in the way that Daniélou and Maritain put forth, nor does Liberalism see prayer—and the spiritual life more broadly—as a necessary part of human fulfillment. As far as the Liberal is concerned, religion is nothing more than a private practice, a belief one holds to themselves which is, ultimately, inconsequential to the grand scheme of things. Consequently, the Liberal demands that all religious beliefs be left at the doorstep of the church or home, and not taken outside into the public realm or, God forbid, the voting booth. This idea is so ingrained into Western thought at this point, particularly in the American mind, that many people believe that “separation of Church and State” is actually in the First Amendment (while, in fact, blasphemy laws were in place across the United States at one time, and punishment was not seen as a violation of free speech).
What is the alternative to Liberalism, then? One emerging alternative in the last several years is called “Integralism.” For those that don't know what Integralism is, I will simply quote The Josias on the issue: “Catholic Integralism is a tradition of thought that, rejecting the liberal separation of politics from concern with the end of human life, holds that political rule must order man to his final goal. Since, however, man has both a temporal and an eternal end, integralism holds that there are two powers that rule him: a temporal power and a spiritual power. And since man’s temporal end is subordinated to his eternal end, the temporal power must be subordinated to the spiritual power.”
This sounds quite similar to the writings of Daniélou and Maritain. However, as with many ideologies and philosophies of political order, there is a spectrum of beliefs one can hold while still maintaining the core principle of subordination. The most immediately obvious is the difference between direct and indirect power, or the Church being directly involved in government and indirectly involved. The former would have the Church be nearly synonymous with government. The Church would formulate laws, have its clerics in positions of power, have the right to depose officials and even heads of states, and even enforce the law by force—ecclesial or secular. This situation really existed in history for much of Medieval Christendom. On the other hand, the latter concept of the indirect power does not see the Church as involved, though it certainly does not see the Church as being detached from politics either. It is more fluid because, as Maritain points out, the relationship between Church and State and the circumstances of the society each exist in will determine how and when the indirect power is practiced. It may be the case, such as today, where the indirect power is incredibly weak, since the Church has been effectively pushed out of the public sphere and the culture has been thoroughly dechristianized.
Integralism, at least by the definition presented by the Josias (it has many others), is essentially just a re-presentation of the theory of the Two Powers and of subordination. Many people have accused Integralists of being anti-democracy, anti-freedom of religion, and other such things. As far as I can tell, none of this is necessarily true, but it certainly can be. Integralism, still being relatively new to the political scene and, frankly, mostly online, is simply not a fully coherent movement, so it is hard to say what exactly a modern Integralist state would look like. Someone like
has a very different vision compared to, say, the folks at New Polity. This is still a new frontier, inasmuch as there are still many discussions to be had on the issue and lots of theorizing still left for political philosophers and theologians to address. With that being said, it is valuable to look back at people like Daniélou and Maritain to see what they wrote, since their times were not so different from our own. I aim to continue bringing the thought of these two Catholics to this ongoing discussion.As for how Prayer as a Political Problem applies to the modern Catholic living in the United States, I think Daniélou would agree with these selections from the Church's Magisterium:
Consequently, no one can demand that religion should be relegated to the inner sanctum of personal life, without influence on societal and national life, without concern for the soundness of civil institutions, without a right to offer an opinion on events affecting society. Who would claim to lock up in a church and silence the message of Saint Francis of Assisi or Blessed Teresa of Calcutta? They themselves would have found this unacceptable. An authentic faith – which is never comfortable or completely personal – always involves a deep desire to change the world, to transmit values, to leave this earth somehow better that we found it…If indeed “the just ordering of society and of the state is a central responsibility of politics”, the Church “cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice”. All Christians, their pastors included, are called to show concern for the building of a better world. This is essential, for the Church’s social thought is primarily positive: it offers proposals, it works for change and in this sense it constantly points to the hope born of the loving heart of Jesus Christ.28
Once again we exhort our children to take an active part in public life, and to contribute towards the attainment of the common good of the entire human family as well as to that of their own country. They should endeavor, therefore, in the light of the faith and with the strength of love, to ensure that the various institutions–whether economic, social, cultural or political in purpose — should be such as not to create obstacles, but rather to facilitate or render less arduous humanity’s perfectioning of itself both in the natural order as well as in the supernatural.29
Daniélou, Jean, S.J., Prayer as a Political Problem. Cluny Media, 2020, pg. 15.
2.
2.
20.
23.
23.
Caritas in veritate ¶ 29.
Lumen Gentium ¶ 31.
Daniélou, 27.
Maritain, Jacques. The Primacy of the Spiritual: On the Things that are Not Caesar’s. Cluny Media, 2020., pg. 10.
Daniélou, 29.
29.
32.
36.
41.
111.
111.
111-112.
112.
113.
Maritain, 5.
Maritain, 10.
Maritain, vi.
Daniélou, 40.
40-41.
Gaudium et Spes ¶ 76.
Evangelii Gaudium ¶ 183.
Pacem in Terris ¶ 146.
For the past couple years I've had this notion growing in my mind about the separation of life into different spheres being an entirely artificial construct. Some kind of effect of the modern age.
I'm not educated in these matters all that well, but I think your essay helps me understand better.
Life is life. Why would religion get shoved in a box from Amazon?
I’ve been spending a great deal of time listening to different Christian leaders, newly born again Christians, and many in between. I’m trying to believe more fully in a faith that depends so deeply on self interpretation. There is no direct contact with the spiritual, i.e conversation, witnessing the miraculous, or other 5 sense discernible event. I’m searching for the all in kind of faith that you speak of in this essay. Where every minute of every day I seek the wisdom of my God through the teachings of the Bible. Where prayer isn’t only resorted to in times of need or adversity, but and immediate response in all daily life. Prayer upon awakening to a new day not promised, prayer to relinquish my control over anything, seeking God’s will over everything, and prayer in the quiet moments when my mind can, and often does, run rampant in fear through the newest events in a gone crazy world. I remember specifically, a conversation with an elder mentor at my church as we studied a book we were reading together. I expressed my desire to just “Be.” She completely understood what I meant by that. I couldn’t have articulated that then, but we seemed to be able to communicate without words. I am now able to explain, and what I think I meant was that I didn’t want to have to think about any wrong choices, only to immediately make the right choices. As I write this, I understand what that actually looks like. It’s like the Garden where everything was perfect and there was no knowledge of ‘good and evil.” I understand the idea of free will and the need to choose. I know your essay is bigger than what I’ve boiled it down to. It more than just prayer. But, I may be wrong, but prayer is where it all starts. It’s prayer where we accept our brokenness. Where we give up our control and abide in God’s will. Where we seek wisdom for decisions.
So many misinterpret separation of church and state. The believe, as you wrote, that the church should have nothing to do with politics and the state should have nothing to do with church: Church should be left at the doors out into the world. Again I may be wrong, but I interpret it to mean that the church should NOT be the state. The way I understand it, the forefathers came from a place where they were ruled by the King, who was actually ruled by the church. The wanted a government that was ruled by the people who were guided by God.