D. The Opposition of the Banal
Others, instead of using foresight, will simply do what banal and timid souls
have been doing throughout the centuries. Smiling, they will term such
transformations impossible. Why? Because they clash with their mental habits;
these transformations violate common sense, and for banal men, history normally
follows the path of common sense. So, in face of these perspectives, they will
incredulously and optimistically smile, just as Leo X smiled about the trivial
"quarrel of friars," which was all he saw in the nascent First
Revolution. Or they will smile like the "Fenelonian" Louis XVI smiled
when he saw the first ferments of the Second Revolution in splendid palace
salons, lulled at times by the silvery sound of the harpsichord, or glittering
discreetly in bucolic ambiences and scenes like his wife's Hameau. His smile
was no different
from that of many high – and some of the highest – dignitaries of the
Church and of Western temporal society before the manipulations of smiling
post-Stalinist communism or the upheavals announcing the Fourth Revolution.
If
one day the Third or Fourth Revolution, aided by ecumenical progressivism in
the spiritual realm, takes over the temporal life of humanity, it will be due
more to the carelessness and collaboration of these smiling optimistic prophets
of common sense than to all the fury of the revolutionary hosts and their propaganda.
COMMENTARY
Opposition From the Prophets of Common Sense
These
are strange prophets indeed, since their prophecies invariably amount to
affirmation that nothing will happen.
Eventually their various forms of optimism conflicted so flagrantly with the
post-1976 facts that, to retain them, their adepts adopted the fallacious and
totally hypothetical hope that the recent events in Eastern Europe will lead to
the definitive disappearance of communism and therefore of the revolutionary
process it spearheaded until recently. 92
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