4. There Is No Way to Avoid
This Problem
The usefulness of such an investigation may perhaps
appear questionable to some hasty spirits, who will try to avoid this complex problem
by means of preliminary allegations which seem to us altogether questionable.
To illustrate this point, we present some of these
allegations now, followed, in each case, by the answers that can be made to
them:
a) It is evident that relative religious tolerance is
merely a Communist maneuver and, therefore, the prospect Of a "modus
vivendi" between the Church and a Communist regime cannot be taken
seriously. In response to this we may answer that nothing prevents us from
supposing that manifestations in many different forms of certain internal
tensions may make it necessary for some Communist governments to adopt a more
relaxed attitude in religious matters. This relaxation may perhaps have a
certain durability and consistency, thereby opening up new prospects for the
Church.
b) Any agreement with people who, like the Communists,
deny God and morality, offers no guarantee of being fulfilled. Thus, even
though one admits the Communists to be really disposed today to tolerate
religion up to a certain point, one still knows that tomorrow, if it suits
them, they will unleash against it the most brutal and complete persecution.
We recognize this to be so in principle. We also recognize, however, that the
Communist State may not take such an action for a time because of political
reasons. The religious tolerance of the Communist State is certainly not based
on respect for promises, but on the essentially political interest of
preventing or reducing internal difficulties. Since this is so, an attitude of relative
religious tolerance can endure as long as those difficulties continue.
Moreover, it is conceivable that it could eventually last for no short time.
Therefore the Communist authority might possibly fulfill for a long time the
conditions of an accord proposed to some religion by it, doing this not for
considerations of honor but out of political interest.
c) This study will be of no use to the peoples behind
the iron Curtain, since it will not be able to circulate freely among them. in
addition, it is of no interest to the peoples on this side of the Iron Curtain.
For them the problem of the legitimacy of a possible coexistence of the Church
with the Communist regime is not posed, since that regime does not exist in
the non‑Communist Occidental nations. The problem which interests the
Occidental peoples is not how one can coexist with such a regime, but what can
be done to prevent its being implanted. Consequently, this study does not
interest anyone, It is not true that this study cannot come to the knowledge of
the peoples on the other side of the Iron Curtain. The fact is, it has. The
weekly Kierunki of Warsaw, edited by the association "Pax," an influential
"Catholic" Polish movement of the extreme left, published, March 1,
1964, on its first page and with great emphasis, an "Open Letter to Dr.
Plinio Correa de Oliveira," which was an extensive and indignant protest
against this essay by Mr. Zbigniew Czajkowski, an outstanding member of the
"Pax" movement. Moreover, we have reason to see an answer to the
present study in an article published in the weekly Wiez by authors Mr. Tadeuz
Mazowiecky, senior editor of that review and representative in the Polish Diet
of the Catholic group Znak, and Mr. A. Wielowieyski, his collaborator.
("Otwarcie na Wschod," Wiez,
Nos. 11‑12, Nov.‑Dec. 1963). If it was necessary to refute our
article, it is because it has in some way penetratedthe Iron Curtain and has
had reprecussions in areas under Communist domination. Now, to answer the
assertion above about the interest this essay has for Occidental peoples, we
say that really, it is better to prevent an evil than to remedy it.
Furthermore, it may well happen that an Occidental nation, or several
Occidental nations at the same time, could be forced to choose between two
evils, that is, the acceptation of a Communist regime or modern warfare with
all of its horrors, internal and external, conventional and thermo‑nuclear.
In such an event, it would be necessary to choose the lesser evil. And the
problem will inevitably arise; if the Church can accept coexistence with a
Communist government and regime, perhaps the lesser evil consists in avoiding
the hecatomb of war, admitting the victory of Marxism as a "fait
accompli." Only if coexistence is considered to be impossible and the
implantation of Communism to represent a grave risk of complete or almost
complete extirpation of the faith in a certain people, only then would the
acceptance of the struggle be the lesser evil. For the loss of the faith is a
greater evil than the destruction of everything that an atomic war can touch.
As is evident,
all of these preliminary allegations tending to avoid the study of the question
under consideration are inconsistent. The problem of the legitimacy of
coexistence between the Communist regime and the Church must be considered head‑on
and can be resolved satisfactorily for all Catholics only by analyzing it in
all of the profundity of its doctrinal aspects.
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