A. "The
Counter-Revolution Is Out of Date"
The
most prevalent and harmful of these slogans claims that the Counter-Revolution cannot
flourish in our day because it is contrary to the spirit of the times. History,
it is said, does not turn back.
If
this peculiar principle were true the Catholic religion would not exist, for it
cannot be denied that the Gospel was radically contrary to the milieu in which
Our Lord Jesus Christ and the Apostles preached. Also, Germano-Romanic Catholic
Spain would not have existed, for nothing is more like a resurrection, and
hence in a certain way like a return to the past, than the full reconstitution
of the Christian grandeur of Spain after the eight centuries from Covadonga to
the fall of Granada. The Renaissance, so dear to revolutionaries, was itself,
from various points of view at least, a return to a cultural and artistic
naturalism that had been petrified for over a millennium.
History, then, contains comings and goings along the paths of good and the
paths of evil.
Incidentally, whenever the Revolution considers something to be consistent with
the spirit of the times, caution has to be exercised, for all too often it is
rubbish from some pagan time that it wishes to restore. What is new, for
example, about divorce, nudism, tyranny, or demagoguery, all of which were so
widespread in the ancient world? And why is the advocate of divorce regarded as
modem while the defender of indissoluble marriage is considered outdated? The
Revolution's concept of modern amounts to everything that gives free rein to
pride and egalitarianism as well as to pleasure-seeking and liberalism.
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