"Catholicism and Democracy" is a history of Catholic political
thinking from the French Revolution to the present day. Emile
Perreau-Saussine investigates the church's response to liberal
democracy, a political system for which the church was utterly
unprepared.
Looking at leading philosophers and political theologians--among
them Joseph de Maistre, Alexis de Tocqueville, and Charles
Peguy--Perreau-Saussine shows how the church redefined its
relationship to the State in the long wake of the French
Revolution. Disenfranchised by the fall of the monarchy, the church
in France at first embraced that most conservative of ideologies,
"ultramontanism" (an emphasis on the central role of the papacy).
Catholics whose church had lost its national status henceforth
looked to the papacy for spiritual authority. Perreau-Saussine
argues that this move paradoxically combined a fundamental
repudiation of the liberal political order with an implicit
acknowledgment of one of its core principles, the autonomy of the
church from the state. However, as Perreau-Saussine shows, in the
context of twentieth-century totalitarianism, the Catholic Church
retrieved elements of its Gallican heritage and came to embrace
another liberal (and Gallican) principle, the autonomy of the state
from the church, for the sake of its corollary, freedom of
religion. Perreau-Saussine concludes that Catholics came to terms
with liberal democracy, though not without abiding concerns about
the potential of that system to compromise freedom of religion in
the pursuit of other goals."
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