OPINION/ANALYSIS:
There’s a haunting similarity between modern conservatives and 16th-century Catholics. We both screwed up. I’m both a conservative and a Catholic. So I hope that I can avoid the libel label. But it’s true. We really botched it. The Renaissance papacy, palaces, triple tiaras, the high life, ermine trim to clerical robes and the sale of indulgences. It was not the next world. It was the underworld. Too much Borgia rendering to Caesar. Too little Wojtilla rendering to God.
The Protestant Reformation that followed rewrote history. It remade the face of Christendom and created a kaleidoscope of faith communities of frequent snapping and sniping rivalries.
In some instances, it really got grim. Could you imagine living in John Calvin’s Geneva? Or the Massachusetts Bay Colony? Lord, we Catholics must have been naughty. The revulsion to our excess brought the banning of drinking. And dancing. And singing. And gambling. And bright clothing and stage plays. And a whole other assortment of wickedness and tawdriness that would make modern Las Vegans stay indoors.
Many Europeans concluded that Catholic bad behavior deserved not just a healthy scrubbing but the throwing out of the baby with the bath water - and the tub, sink, soap, towels and every other soiled accoutrement associated with the baby.
We conservatives abandoned our Scripture. We long stood for low taxes, less government, reasonable regulation, a strong national defense and noninterference in the affairs of other nations, unless our security was first at risk.
We stood for federalism, problem solving, politics as sacrifice and a duty of citizenship. We believed that the best government enables and protects a level playing field and permits and expects its citizens to make it on their own. No quotas, set-asides, favoritism, artificialities, excuses.
No bureaucrat as coach, public schools that work and assure the maintenance of a classless society. Strong families, traditional marriage, a righteous regard for the value of every human life, respect for the military as the defender of freedom.
The party of Abraham Lincoln and emancipation believes in the strength of a Joseph’s Cloak society. E Pluribus Unum. A Norman Rockwell America of many different hues.
Conservatives won elections because we won hearts and minds. We believed in something. Policy and solid middle American policy prescriptions drove politics. Politics should never drive policy. Conservatives knew that politics would always catch up to the right policy.
We were not the Weather Vane party. It was “the theology, stupid.” If you stand for something, you won’t get knocked down at the next election. You will win the next election.
Good men and women were called to service during the past eight years, as they are in all administrations at all times. But politics moved to the front of the room.
Frequently, credible and proved conservative orthodoxy was left in the anteroom. Seniors vote, so a huge new entitlement was rolled out for them. The federal government determined what and when schools should test. Spending soared and no spending bills were vetoed. Arguments were advanced that civil liberties and the Bill of Rights are repealed in time of conflict by the all-encompassing presidential power of Article II of the Constitution.
When an energy security policy was called for, none was advanced. No border security, either. Bad politics.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were mortgaging our children’s future, but even with the White House and both houses of Congress in conservatives hands, nothing was done. Oh, there was some political complaining and a headline or two, and that was about it. No one mounted the barricades. Jack Abramoff’s black fedora became the symbol of the New Washington.
The government became a principal owner of banks, automobile companies and an insurance giant. New Harmony, Ind., had finally arrived.
What saved Catholicism was the Catholic Counter Reformation. We returned to basics. Thank goodness for Ignatius of Loyola, Gregory the Great and the Council of Trent of the church reclaimed its orthodoxy. It embraced virtue, humility, the purity of its legacy and the Magi Star’s call to the faithful to return to Christ’s Gospel message.
For us conservatives, our challenge is not dissimilar. We need a conservative counter-reformation - a return to basics - and it’s not hard. Advance an agenda - simple and pure - of what’s right, how to grow and prosper and remain the light on the mountaintop, all those things that elevate and advance ordinary Americans, your neighbors and mine. Be true to Lincoln, conservatives first consul, and all those good people who followed.
Don’t embrace the past eight years. Chart a new, old course.
There’s a final analogy to my church. In the 14th century, St. Catherine of Siena, a laywoman, laid the groundwork for the renaissance of Catholic integrity when she upbraided popes, bishops and priests for their moral timidity and corruption. To Pope Gregory XI, she wrote: “You are in charge of the garden of the Holy Church. So uproot from the garden the stinking weeds full of impurity and avarice and bloated with pride. I mean the evil pastors and administrators who poison and corrupt the garden … use your authority, you who are in charge of us.”
Some of Catherine’s purple rage would advance today’s debate. We should be mad. We lost our way. We went off track. We fertilized the “stinking weeds” that threaten our freedom.
It’s time to break out the Roundup.
• Frank Keating, a Republican, was governor of Oklahoma from 1995 to 2003.
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