Crusading
for God
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
What
a difference a decade can make. Had Ridley Scott’s film Kingdom
of Heaven which portrays the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem
in the 12th century between the second and third crusade
come out ten years ago, the film and its message would have
looked very different and far less plausible than it looks now.
The
Scott film leaves you with a sense that the Crusades were a moral
disaster, an example of how religion can be abused. Ten years ago,
this might have seemed like a stretch. The secular elite ruled the
White House and therefore the world. The Christians seemed like
an embattled bunch, fighting only for their right to worship, or
so they said. And so the criticism of this film ten years ago, in
my mind and that of many like-minded people at the time, might have
run this way:
Here
is a director with no true ear for faith presenting a rather predictable
thesis about the hundreds of years of crusades to capture and control
Jerusalem and to extend the viability of Christendom in a time of
political turmoil. There are good guys and bad guys on all sides,
the movie tells us, in battles that pit political forces against
each other in bloody battles undertaken in the name of God. If they
really cared about God, naïvely says the film, they would put down
their weapons and try to get along. The director even seem blind
to the very meaning of the Holy Land, and asks: What’s all this
fuss about real estate?
Oh
how tedious this is, we might have said ten years ago, at the height
of the Clinton era when wars were "humanitarian" and not
religious in fact no one would have imagined a US war conducted
for religious reasons. And haven’t we had enough of Hollywood smears
of the Christian religion? Must we once again slog through the history
of these wars which killed far fewer than modern wars undertaken
in the name of secular causes? And must we forever endure ever more
elaborate sermons from the film industry about the merits of tolerance
and the need to push aside doctrinal differences? Also, this movie
surely whitewashes the brutality of the Muslims and exaggerates
the mendacity of Christians, particularly Christian clerics.
And
so, predictably, right-wing religious bloggers (1,
2,
3,
4)
are taking that precise position on this film: that it is nothing
but clever anti-Bush propaganda masquerading as history. But even
the history is false, they say. The armor was wrong. The military
tactics were wrong. And the caricatures of Christianity were unbearable.
At one point, a monk yells out: "If you kill an infidel you
go to heaven." Absurd! Surely no Christian ever believed that!
Nor is it the case that a Christian cleric would have prohibited
burning bodies on theological grounds!
Many
of these bloggers are resting their cases against the film on the
condemnation
issued by Jonathan Riley-Smith of Cambridge, whose criticisms read
just as you might expect from any academic expert writing on a popular
film in his subject area. He thinks the movie oversimplifies. No
doubt. Others say that the film adopts a silly, 19th
century view of the Muslim military leader Saladin as a romantic
hero, when in fact he was quite the brute. Probably so.
In
any case, this film has the emotions running very high. The Christian
critic
says: "Christian Crusaders are crass, violent murderers. They
lie, sleep around with multiple women, and father multiple illegitimate,
abandoned children. They are stupid, foolish, power-hungry, and
vengeful. They are boors warring for land, not principles, and kill
fellow Christians even priests over nothing."
And
yet the Muslim critic
is just as passionate. ''I believe this movie teaches people to
hate Muslims,'' he said. ''There is a stereotype of the Muslim as
constantly stupid, retarded, backward, unable to think in complex
forms. It's really annoying at an intellectual level, and it really
misrepresents history on many levels.''
And
so who is right? Well, it seems to me that the film shows good and
bad motives on all sides. There were scenes of both Muslim and Christian
evil and Muslim and Christian good just as real life shows the same.
As for the thematic core that says that wars between peoples result
from extremists on both sides, there is nothing implausible about
that. Christianity never taught that killing the infidel is a holy
act, but some of its finest theologians said that it was permissible
until that position was definitively rejected. As for the picture
of bishops and priests pursuing selfish interests above the common
good, the doctrine of clerical impeccability has never been a Christian
teaching.
Indeed,
the entire outlook of the film takes on new plausibility in light
of what we have learned since 2001, when the US undertook the closest
modern parallel to a holy war against Muslims. Of course the White
House doesn’t put it that way. Or rather, it stopped putting it
that way after Bush was hammered by the world press for calling
for a "crusade" exactly one week after 9-11.
However
much the White House has distanced itself from the crusade language,
it is a view encouraged among the Republican faithful. You don’t
need to spend more than a few hours with any religious conservative
who supports Bush to find him muttering darkly about the new battle
of our time, which is all about the war to the death between Christianity
and Islam. What they once said about communism an inherently terroristic
ideology that cannot be placated but rather must be fought until
it is destroyed, lest it destroy us is precisely what conservatives
today say about Islam. It’s the same model, reapplied, and they
don’t even know it.
Whereas
the evangelicals of the Bush variety were out of power ten years
ago, they are in power today, and the results have not been a Kingdom
of Heaven but the predictable results of untrammeled power.
Of
course the people who believe that the real basis of the war on
terror is religious are merely dupes. They are looking at a religious
gloss painted over what is really a matter of power politics. The
doctrinal basis of the war on Iraq is (changing metaphors) nothing
more than a potion whipped up for consumption by the warmongering
citizenry, but it serves the power elite very well. At the same
time, it is difficult to speculate on the motives of Bush himself.
He is a religious man. But he is also not naïve. His own theological
outlook seems to tempt him to believe that his own "salvation"
gives him a pipeline to the mind of God, such that all his actions
are blessed by Heaven. God and oil are probably about as mixed up
in his mind as his syntax is mixed up in his mouth.
Looking
at this example, is it so hard to believe that Christianity could
be used by ambitious politicians, power-chasing clerics, and avaricious
merchants to dupe the public into backing a bloody war that only
appears to be undertaken in the name of noble causes but which is
in reality nothing but a cover for a political crime? Is it utterly
out of the question that the Crusades might have collapsed into
just such an undertaking? Must we rule out without examination the
possibility that Crusading for Christ might introduce certain moral
hazards? Can we not see the dangers lurking behind any use of arms
to defend and spread the faith?
It
wasn’t Ridley Scott who first observed that religious wars weren’t
always and genuinely about religion, at least not true religion.
Such is the substance of many historians’ judgments since the 16th
century, particular since the Conquistadors saw themselves as fulfilling
the original promise of the 12th century visions. It
does not require an agnostic to see how power can corrupt anything,
and how power can use any stick at hand including religion to advance
its aims.
I
believe it was Jörg Guido Hülsmann who first pointed out
to me that the state always reaches first for the most compelling
cultural symbols in its own defense. If the cultural theme is secularism,
the state will use it. If it is religion, the state will use it.
So too for socialism, freedom, individualism, civil rights, equality any
and every ideological theme is a ripe target for cooption by the
state.
Lord
Acton historian of liberty and devout Catholic provides a summary
judgment on the Crusades that actually supports the film version
but goes even further. The conquest of Jerusalem was not the goal,
in fact, but merely the prize. The real purpose was to establish
a clerical hierarchy in the East to counterbalance the rise of states
that were injuring trade and commerce and therefore the wellbeing
of the West. Once the religious fervor to take back holy sites had
been unleashed, it couldn’t be stopped, not even by the Popes. The
Crusades, in Acton’s view, had the tragic effect of bolstering the
temporal power of the papacy, and, paradoxically, assuring the loss
of the Holy Lands and finally harming the faith itself.
In
Acton’s words: "no idea can be popular without some alloy of
error to recommend it to the vulgar mind, and this sacrifice was
fatal…. The Church could not either guide or restrain the enthusiasm
she had awakened. St Bernard discouraged at first the project of
the second Crusade. It is better, he told the king of France, to
combat our own vices than to fight the Turks…. But as there was
at first more enthusiasm than policy in the Crusaders, so afterwards
there was more selfishness than religion; and the Popes who had
been unable to control the first impulse were helpless before the
reaction."
The
worst effects of the Crusades, wrote Acton, were "the decay
of the great families by impoverishment" and "the prolonged
absence and the loss of life which the Crusades involved."
This "developed the power of the kings." (Lord Acton,
Essays
on Church and State, New York: Viking Press, 1953, pp. 459461).
In
short, the wars were the health of the state, not the faith. Somehow
it is difficult for conservative Christian Bush supporters to come
to terms with this, but war for Christ is not a great idea. It corrupts
both the Church and the world. Christians are themselves not immune
from temptation toward the evil that war unleashes. Christians can
be crass. They can be violent murderers. They can lie. They can
be stupid, foolish, power-hungry, and vengeful. They can kill people
for no good reason. Most of the time, they do not do this with impunity.
But when the state encourages them to do so, and tells them that
they are acting in a godly manner, Christians, just like Muslims,
can convince themselves that all their behavior is in a good cause.
And they can get away with it for long periods of time. Christians
have done this in the past. They are doing it in the present.
The
romance of a great religious war survives in our time, mainly among
those who cannot imagine that possibility that people of different
faiths and different cultures can get along even though they do
not fully agree. Defenders of the Crusades say that they were essential
for paving the way for the trade between East and West that finally
brought peace. Far better to just skip the war part and go through
trade to find the most direct path to peace. It is through commercial
exchange that people discover that their interests in getting along
rather than fighting are mutual interests.
There
is a moment in the film when Balian, the son of Godfrey of Ibelin,
surrenders Jerusalem to Saladin, in exchange for which all the people
and soldiers are given a safe passage out. When Balian announces
the deal he is cheered by all. One can only imagine the soldiers
in Iraq, Afghanistan, all around the world, cheering in the same
way. Balian himself was inspired by the vision of the enlightened
King of Jerusalem Baldwin IV, who uses the phrase Kingdom of Heaven
to refer to peace among all peoples.
And
yet, somehow, I can’t imagine that if Bush made such a truce and
adopted a diplomatic course, that his evangelical supporters would
praise the peace. No, they have been acculturated to the idea that
doing right means waging war and killing people. At worse, they
believe this for religious reasons. They believe that peace is for
another place. This is and should be the Kingdom of something else
entirely. Let’s call it Hell.
Lord
Acton understood the role that religion has played in covering crimes.
Many draw attention to the religious gloss as a way of condemning
religion. Lord Acton saw it differently: he kept the focus on the
evil of power, and refused to give in to the distracting temptation
to believe that political criminality is rooted in the evil of faith.
But, he said, to understand a religious motivation is not to justify
anything. "Religion cannot excuse them, unless the end justifies
the means. Instead of excusing, it aggravates the fault."
Maybe
it is just me or maybe it is the time in which we live, but it strikes
me that it is a far better use of one’s hands to make things that
people want to buy rather than to kill people. If you don’t like
the way people pray, or you think their faith or lack of faith is
going to send them to Hell, it’s better just to put up with it rather
than wreck the social peace, which is the precondition for all good
in this world. There is a reason why the Crusades are not listed
among the accomplishments of the Popes in Thomas Woods’ How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (Regnery,
2005). Negotiation, diplomacy, exchange, human rights, religious
freedom, tolerance these are the watchwords of the Kingdom
of Heaven as it can exist on Earth.
It’s
too bad that it takes Ridley Scott how they hate him for condemning
their love of violence to drive the point home. The Crusades were
a horrific mistake and a crime against person and property. But
if you can’t count on the Christians to condemn bloodshed in God’s
name, someone has to do it.
June
1, 2005
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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