*2012ja:WiQuarterly| Review by Reston,James Jr. of
Cullen Murphy, GOD'S JURY: The Inquisition and the Making of the Modern World
(2012)
- Reviewer Reston is a senior scholar at the Wilson Center and author of
- Galileo: A Life (1994)
- Dogs of God: Columbus, the Inquisition, and the Defeat of the Moors (2005) [noUO]
- Defenders of the Faith: Christianity and Islam Battle for the Soul of Europe, 1520-1536 (2009) [noUO]
- The Nineteenth Hijacker (forthcoming, a novel)
Here is a summary of Reston's review =
Murphy identifies three major categories of Inquisition
=
- Medieval
- Spanish
- Roman
He strives to show contemporary relevance in the contemporary era of globalization
He also identifies 5 essential elements of the Inquisition(s)
=
- bureaucratic machine
- secret monitoring and surveillance
- censorship
- moral certainty (perhaps the most important element). "Moral certainty," he writes, "ignites every
inquisition and then feeds it with oxygen."
- 1200s: Machinery of the Inquisition was established when the Roman Catholic Church
confronted the so-called Cathar heresy
[ID] in southern France. Cathars
deviated from official doctrine with their belief in a Manichaean
[ID] world
of good and evil, in which God could be responsible only for the good, not the evil. Cathars viewed Rome
as the offspring of the Whore of Babylon and regarded its priests as licentious and corrupt.
- After the assassination of a papal legate in Languedoc, Pope Innocent III
initiated a bloody holy war called the Albigensian Crusade
[ID]. When agents
of the Church massacred all the residents of a town to rid it of the few
heretics in its midst, the mantra was, "Kill them all. Let God sort them
out."
- Reston continues = With this anecdote, as with many sprinkled throughout the
book, Murphy leaps from the past to the present, linking episodes of
medieval history to current reality. In this instance, he points out
that the same rallying cry [IE=the mantra above] appears on bumper stickers and T-shirts at
U.S. military installations.
- After the violence subsided and the heretics moved underground, the Dominican Order came into existence,
named for its founding father, St. Dominic. The Dominicans were to be
the Church's policemen, charged with defending and protecting official
doctrine by rooting out the wayward. These militant priests became known
as the Hounds of God.
- In the decade that followed the end of the
Albigensian Crusade, the rituals, procedures, and punishments of the
Medieval Inquisition were codified.
- 1242:Council of Tarragona| Catholic Church defined varieties of heresies and graded them according
to severity. Record keeping and data collection became a central element
of the Inquisition. This could be pushed to absurd lengths, such as
accounting for the cost of wood and straw for burning the worst
heretics, along with the fee for the civilian executioner. Burning
convicted heretics at the stake, a procedure known as "auto-da-fé" (in
Portuguese, "act of faith"
(ID)), was delegated to a secular arm, for a
priest was forbidden to shed blood. And so the culprits were "relaxed"
to laymen for the dirty work.
- Hence [with "auto-da-fé" and "relax"] begin the euphemisms for aberrational punishment
[so ubiquitous in our time]
- Peering through his
lens, Murphy cites "extraordinary rendition" in our time as one such
modern euphemism for an act that really means kidnapping, spiriting away
to secret prisons, and, usually, torture.
- Spanish Inquisition| The infamous Grand Inquisitor, Tomás de Torquemada
[ID], presided and became the
poster-boy of the most hideous and perverted extremes of this system for
enforcing doctrinal purity.
- In each case before the tribunals for
the Holy Office, precise notes were kept, including a record of
everything said or screamed during interrogations.
- 1998:The Vatican opened its Inquisition records to scholars. This new access is partially
responsible, Murphy asserts, for the golden age of Inquisition
scholarship. In a number of rooms in the Vatican Archives, millions of
pages await perusal.
- One of the more intriguing interviews Murphy
conducts is with the preeminent Inquisition scholar, Henry Kamen.
Together they focus on the most profound question in this undertaking,
at least as it applies to America after 9/11 =
What turns a society, any society, from one thing into another? What combination of
factors -- economic distress, ethnic hostility, physical threat, moral
fervor, latent envy, political manipulation -- can alter the historic
character of a people or place?
But we do not get an answer.
- Murphy's bold purpose is to link the past and present and suggest their
relationship. Suggest he does, but occasionally the links can be
breathtaking. After briefly treating the Spanish Inquisition's methods
of torture, for example, he jumps to George W. Bush's methods. "The Bush
administration's threshold for when an act of torture
begins is the
point at which the Inquisition stipulated that an act of torture must
stop." Earlier, we were told that Torquemada burned 2,000 people at
the stake.
- Roman Inquisition| Murphy shifts focus to censorship =
- 1542 (a leap of 300 years from early history of Inquisition):Index of Forbidden Books was established as a response to the
challenge of Martin Luther [SAC].
- Luther is mentioned only briefly in
God's Jury, and this seems like a missed opportunity. Luther's
wrangles with Rome over his many deviations from Catholic doctrine are
among the most dramatic examples of pushing back against this
awe-inspiring, fear-inducing institution. That rebellion, of course, was
a turning point in Church history.
- Murphy misses another opportunity
for drama as well as explication with the trials of Galileo
[ID] a century
later, first in the examination by Cardinal Robert Bellarmine over the
nature of scientific proof, but more important, in the four
interrogations of the scientist by the Grand Inquisitor, before
Galileo's humiliating recantation on the altar of the Basilica di Santa
Maria sopra Minerva in 1633.
- The transcripts of these crushing interrogations were released in the early 1990s as part of the Church's
re-examination of the Galileo case.
- As a prelude to the onset of the third millennium of Christianity, Pope John Paul II announced that the
Church would engage in a process he called historical purification,
forthrightly addressing the darkest aspects of its history.
- This bid for renewal began unsteadily with the Galileo case; the re-examination
took 13 years before the Vatican feebly admitted that errors were made
without saying who made them.
- The next case was supposed to be that of
Jan Huss [sic! for Hus], the 15th-century Bohemian [Czech] reformer
[SAC] whose offenses included
challenging the hierarchical power structure of the Church and
questioning the use of papal indulgences. Huss refused to abjure his
beliefs and was burned in 1415. But the Huss case has not been formally
reopened.
- Roman Catholicism maintains a "ban" or excommunication on
Luther and all his followers, even to this day. When two years ago I
asked the provost of the Cathedral in Worms, Germany (where Luther was
examined for his disobedience at the Diet of Worms in 1521), whether,
after 500 years, the Church shouldn't, in the spirit of ecumenism, scrap
its anti-Luther stance, he replied, "The time has not yet come to lift
the ban."
- But the elephant in the room remains the Inquisition. The
most the Church could muster by way of apology was John Paul II's
pastoral letter in 1994 admitting that some "children" of the Church may
have "departed from the spirit of Christ and his Gospel," and a
penitential Mass at St. Peter's in the Jubilee Year of 2000 in which the
pope asked for forgiveness for all the transgressions committed by sons
and daughters of the Church. Murphy leaves it to the Vatican scholar
Carlo Ginzburg to provide the response =
What I didn't hear the pope say today, and what I haven't heard anybody in this discussion say, is that
the Catholic Church is ashamed of what it did. Not sorry. Sorry is easy. I want to
hear the Catholic Church--I want to hear the pope--say he is ashamed."
- Cullen Murphy has written a wonderfully
interesting and courageous book. His command of Inquisition literature
is impressive, as are his interviews and the literary and biblical
connections he makes in his argument. The questions he raises about
repression, torture, censorship, corruption, and contrition are
profound.
- If God's Jury is also a frustrating book, perhaps it is
because, as a Catholic and an American, Murphy cannot quite bring
himself to argue pointedly what this link between past and present means
for his church and his country.
- Is it fair to talk about an American Inquisition after 9/11? Did the repressive measures that were
brought to bear after that devastating attack fundamentally change the
nature of the land? With the abuses of Abu Ghraib, enhanced
interrogation, and extraordinary rendition, has America lost the moral
high ground? And did America ever really occupy that lofty perch? Murphy
does not ask these questions, much less answer them.