Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Are Roman Catholics more likely to support the EU than Protestants?
Are Roman Catholics more likely to support the EU than Protestants?
Jan 25, 2026 1:30 PM

As the UK sets out its negotiating policies for Brexit this week and next, it is no secret that European nations remain deeply divided over the role of the European Union. But what role does religion play in how nations see the EU, the Single Market, and the promise of an“ever-closer union”administered from Brussels? That underexplored question is the heart ofThePolitical Theology of European Integration by Mark Royce, which is the subject of a new review atReligion & Liberty Transatlantic.

The reviewer, Hans-Martien ten Napel, is well-qualified to offer insight on the book’s theme as an assistant professor of constitutional and administrative law at Leiden University in the Netherlands. He was also a participant in Acton University 2017. He notes at the outset that Roman Catholicism, which sees itself as a transnational and universal church, may have helped create a different “political theology” than Protestantism, which often found itself aligned with local princes and governments. He writes:

At the beginning of his research, Royce expected countries of a Roman Catholic political theology to be more open towards European integration – mon economic area and an “ever-closer union” politically – than countries of a Protestant political theology. Roman Catholicism, after all, represents “the Church that dominated the late Classical and medieval eras,” whereas Protestantism “helped give birth to new Westphalian regimes” (p. 3). While similar research has already been performed at the individual and group levels, parison at the national level was still missing. In order to fill this gap, moreover, Royce employs a qualitative analysis, whereas most previous research relied on statistical measurement.

As Europe reimagines itself as a thoroughly secular entity, studies about the theology of its member states have e increasingly rare. Yet for all its studious efforts to ignore it, the overarching role religion plays in creating culture – including political culture – continues to shake the foundations of Europe. Understanding the influence of faith, even if it is only the faith of our fathers, illuminates the present outlook of member states toward Brussels.

The review traces Royce’s conclusions, scrutinizes his methods, and largely applauds the subject and approach of this “worthwhile” book. The new emphasis this work lays upon Christian Democratic views alone renders a valuable service, according to Hans-Martien ten Napel.

In his review, he points out one noteworthy omission in the book:

[T]he exclusion of Central and Eastern European countries from the study weakens its relevance in relation to the current EU. According to the author, it is questionable whether Eastern Orthodoxy has similar views with respect to, e.g., representative democracy as Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. This may make it defensible to leave Eastern Orthodoxy out of consideration in this study, as does the fact that the countries concerned have only been able to make independent policy choices regarding Europe relatively recently. Yet, fundamental differences in outlook among its member states are a reality that Europe now has to deal with.

The overlapping realities of Orthodox Chistianity’s national – and sometimes, nationalist – orientation on the one hand, and Eastern European nations’ status as net recipients of EU Structural Fundson the other, likely masks a fascinating study of tensions peting narratives. Perhaps it will e the focus of a later study.

As with all European values, European integration may have had its roots in Christian teachings about international relations, whether as a different members of one universal church or as Protestants seeking to dwell with brethren in peace. And as with all other such values, its ability to survive without the foundation of faith is an open question:

Perhaps the most pertinent question which the study raises, is not formulated by Royce until the very end of his book. That question is whether the process of European integration will actually be able to continue with such little attention being paid to its theological foundations. … whether the process of European integration might e to a halt altogether as the influence of both Roman Catholic and Protestant public theologies in present-day Europe continues to decline. … It is clear from the final sentences of this worthwhile book that Royce would not be surprised if the proudly secular EU soon learned the hard way that theology matters after all.

Royce recently discussed his work on the aptly named podcast ofProvidencemagazine, the Provcast. You may hear his interview here.

You will profit from reading the full book review here.

Public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Acton Institute to Sponsor ‘Faith at Work Summit’
Conversations about “faith-work integration” are alive and well, whether in the church, workplace, or academia, and the Acton Institute continues to offer a variety of resources on the subject, from its growing series of tradition-specific primers to various books and lectures to educational video curricula. In keeping with these efforts, the Acton Institute will be a co-sponsor to the very first Faith @ Work Summit in Boston, MA from October 24-25, where a diverse group of businesspeople, students, pastors, and...
Will A Sharing Economy Be A Growing Economy?
John O. McGinnis, the George C. Dix Professor in Constitutional Law at Northwestern University, says we are in the midst of a sharing economy, and that’s a good thing. (Don’t get all socialist on me; a sharing economy is one driven by service and technology. We are not going to have to pool our food in mune.) McGinnis says this type of economy is good for liberty as well. There are three basic features of a sharing economy: It reduces...
ISIS and Christian Just War Teaching
Christians from a broad range of traditions — from Chaldean Catholics to Southern Baptists — are uniting in a call for military action against mon enemy: ISIS. As Mark Tooley notes, the persecution of religious believers by the Islamic extremists has “reanimated talk about Christian Just War teaching.” Citing the call by Iraq’s Chaldean Patriarch for military intervention, a group of prominent Christian thinkers, with others, has declared that “nothing short of the destruction of ISIS/ISIL as a fighting force...
‘Obscene’ Persecution Of Christians Requires Response
Ronald S. Lauder is the president of the World Jewish Congress. He wants his fellow Jews to speak out and stand up against the persecution of Christians, especially at the hands of ISIS. He calls the current situation in Iraq “Nazi-like,” and that the situation has failed to garner attention from political leaders, aging rock stars, and the world in general. He maintains that ISIS is not a loosely organized group of rag-tag jihadists, but …a real military force that...
Why the Looters Will Have the Most Lasting Impact on Ferguson
“They say they want justice for Mike Brown,” says Mumtaz Lalani, an store owner in Ferguson, Missouri, “Is this justice? I don’t understand. What justice is this? Lalani was referring to the looters who, on Saturday, robbed his store and attempted to burn it down. The events in Ferguson are heartbreaking, but they will soon be all-but-forgotten. Within a few weeks the media—and the public’s limited attention—will move on to another story. Within a few months the criminal justice system...
Upcoming Event: Common Grace in Business
Mark your calendars! On Friday, October 31, The Acton Institute and Calvin College’s Calvin Center for innovation in Business will present a Symposium on Common Grace in Business. This event will bring members of the faith, academic, and munities together to explore and consider Abraham Kuyper’s works mon grace and how it applies to various business disciplines. It will also celebrate the publication of the Acton Institute’s first translation of Kuyper’s works mon grace into English. It will take place...
Radio Free Acton: The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, Part II
This week on Radio Free Acton, Michael Matheson Miller continues his conversation with David Bromwich, Sterling Professor of English at Yale University, on the thought of Edmund Burke. Bromwich is the author of The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, the first volume of what will be a two-volume intellectual biography of Burke. We kick off this portion of the conversation with some analysis of Burke’s position on free markets and crony capitalism.. To listen to Part 2 of Miller’s interview...
Why We Get Stewardship Wrong
Christians frequently talk about “stewardship,” but what do we mean when we use that term? And more importantly, what should we mean by it? At The Gospel Coalition, Stephen J. Grabill,director of programs and international for the Acton Institute, discusses what it means to havea holistic understanding of stewardship and what it means to “make the kingdom of God visible and tangible to the world”: Although Christians across denominational lines often use stewardship language to describe our calling to live...
Unlikely Mercenaries In The Fight Against Human Trafficking
A petite woman in pink, in a Filipino red-light district, is picked out by a “tourist” as a possible sex partner for the evening. A pimp panying him tells him she’s not a good choice. She’s a nun. The Mary Queen of Missionaries (MQHM) are a group of Catholic sisters who serve the sex workers in the Philippines. Their order was established solely for this purpose: To seek thestray and fallen away in the person of the victims of prostitution...
Borger on FLOW: A ‘Visually Enjoyable’ and ‘Thoughtfully Inspiring’ Series
Over at Capital Commentary, Byron Borger offers some valuable reflections and rather extensive praise for the Acton Institute’s new educational DVD series, For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a visually enjoyable Christian educational video curriculum,” he writes, “and I know I’ve never seen one so thoughtfully inspiring about a foundational Christian view of creation, culture, social life, and redemption.” Indeed, FLOW offers a peculiar blend of artistic beauty and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved