Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Going My Way: An Enduring True Fairy Tale
Going My Way: An Enduring True Fairy Tale
Jan 10, 2026 3:12 AM

The Oscar-winning Christmas classic, starring Bing Crosby, is a mainstay of holiday viewing, and for good reason—despite the sentimentality, it says much about our longing munity, justice, and fathers.

Read More…

Every Christmas, I try to write about Christmas movies, especially about old Hollywood, because the best directors at the time considered it worthwhile to make movies that would chastise and cheer up the nation, indeed remind people of the spirit of Christmas and thus try to fit Christianity into the new entertainment that dominated the American imagination. This year, I’d like to introduce you to Going My Way, which stars Bing Crosby as a Catholic priest looking to save a New York parish, St. Dominic’s.

Going My Way in 1944 summed up America at its most endearing. It was accordingly a blockbuster, the biggest hit of that year, and then the year after it became the big Oscar winner, nabbing the seven major awards out of 10 nominations: Leo McCarey won Best Picture as producer, as well as Best Director and Best Original Motion Picture Story—well, he was simply the most American director of the century. Bing also won Best Actor, as did his costar Barry Fitzgerald in the supporting role category, and Bing’s hit song, Swinging on a Star, by Jimmy van Heusen and Johnny Burke, was also celebrated with a statue.

Bing plays Father O’Malley, a modern or progressive priest from East St. Louis, sent by his bishop to New York to help save a parish led by Father Fitzgibbon, a venerable man but set in his ways. Over the fall and holiday season, O’Malley proceeds to do just that. Progressive in this case turns out to mean three things: he is a consummate singer, he considers discretion the better part of valor, and he has every intention of putting those two skills in the service of paying off the church’s stacking bills, starting with its mortgage. It’s a story about the part religion can play in mercial republic by standing up for democracy, by reminding people that they all depend on a more fundamental faith.

For example, the local policeman one day brings over a runaway girl, who came to New York to try her luck at freedom, being unhappy with her family. She’s of age, but on the other hand, a vagrant. The police could deal with her, but it would be fundamentally unjust. The policeman is also aware that the young woman is herself fundamentally unjust and hence brings her to the priest, to remind her to honor her father and her mother. Where would America be without the Commandments? Old Father Fitzgibbon accepts a church responsibility over the girl and tells her she could have a job as a maid in someone’s home; the modern girl demurs. Father O’Malley figures he can still help her—well, see the movie, it es around.

Discretion is advisable under modern conditions, as people are not obedient and authority e to seem mere curmudgeonliness and hence e ineffective. The modern solution, of course, is what we call charisma, but should more honestly be called charm, talent, flattery. Going My Way makes a spirited effort to restore the divine grace in charisma, hence music. Further, Father O’Malley understands that more is necessary in our ungentle times. He is a modern man, a priest who plays golf, tennis, and baseball, the perfect mix of gentlemanly and everyman activities that do not earn disrepute but add a necessary mix of friendliness and petition and conversation, shared joy and admiration.

The music helps him soothe the spirits of the rowdy local boys whose trust he earns by taking them out to the ballgame, as the song says. Beauty turns them from a gang of poultry truck hijackers into a choir; you may think that you’ll lose your dinner in the bargain, but people have been known, as your loyal author here, to sing for their dinners—it works. This may seem, as everything else in Going My Way, mere schmaltz—a line a music publicist in the movie uses. Another says such choir music is too high for the American public. McCarey & Bing with their success prove both wrong. They suggest a non-moralistic answer to the question of why boys should sing in a choir: because their anger implies a certain fear and suffering and a hope for deliverance. They would willingly obey a man they trust, serve munity they belong to, even if they’re unhappy there to begin with. Religion has a power over the soul that should not be neglected.

This is the discretion of Father O’Malley, the consideration that unjust boys would not be unjust unless in their hearts they believed in justice and felt themselves victims of injustice in the first place. There is a limit to the padre’s powers—e.g., the local atheist, who ends up with his window broken by the local boys playing baseball in the streets. But everyone es around to recognizing a divine providence that underlies justice, because they are pelled to do so, only to look into their own hearts—of course, this is edy, so there are always inducements—it’s also reasonable and neighborly to have munity. Part of the seriousness of the religious message of the movie is the knowledge that Father O’Malley is an orphan himself and has sacrificed romance to follow his calling.

I won’t spoil the plot—let me just say that the McCarey mix of edy of ordinary life with sentimentality and sacrifice is never more perfect than in this movie. The modesty and the pride of American civilization, therefore, are both on display without ostentation, and the civilizing mission of the church is helped along by entertainment. Hard to offer a more beautiful vision munity for Christmas. Bing sings—as do the boys, not to mention Met mezzo-soprano Risë Stevens, then at the beginning of what turned out to be a remarkable career—and gets his best film role, and for once we can see clearly what made him a star, why people wanted to look up to him, what America really longed (and longs) for. The story has a fairy tale character, of course, but that only serves to enhance enjoyment; I think every element of the story makes sense in the way I indicated, a very intelligent psychological and social study dressed up as schmaltz. Enjoy the movie and Happy Christmas!

Readers who’d like some more Christmas viewing and perhaps some thoughts about the America we’ve inherited could look to my previous essays: Cary Grant as an angel in The Bishop’s Wife, Jimmy Stewart finding love and respect in The Shop Around the Corner, Barbara Stanwyck falling in love with American nostalgia in Christmas in Connecticut, Maureen O’Hara finding a father for her child in Miracle on 34th Street, and Humphrey Bogart as a cutthroat with a heart of gold in We’re No Angels.

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
Baseball at the Abyss
The recent controversy over the anti-Catholic group hosted by the L.A. Dodgers recalls scandals of baseball’s past. Yet the all-American game always manages to bounce back. You can thank great performances on the field—just don’t forget the fans. Read More… On June 16, some 2,000 people gathered outside Los Angeles’ Dodger Stadium to protest the team’s having chosen to honor, on the field before that night’s game, a group whose core mission and purpose is the open mockery and parody...
When the Church Becomes the State
A new book challenges the revived threat of “integralism,” which would seek to use the coercive power of the state to enforce religious canon law. This is bad not only for civil and human rights but also for religious faith. Read More… Until a few years ago, I was not even familiar with the term “integralism,” which refers to the Catholic political doctrine that calls for the subordination of the state to the church. As a believer from the Islamic...
Hope and Opportunity for Formerly Incarcerated Women
The Lovelady Center in Alabama is proving a model for care when es to women released from prison. Faith-based and holistic, it is showing results and providing hope in ways government-run agencies simply cannot. Read More… Each year, over 80,000 women are released from state prisons. Within five years, around half of these women are predicted to return. Most of them experienced childhoods sabotaged by violence, sexual abuse, trauma, and broken families. Many are battling addiction and mental health disorders....
“Rich Men North of Richmond” Is Whatever You Want It to Be
Oliver Anthony’s controversial #1 Billboard hit stands in a long line of protest songs. But doth he protest too much? Read More… A song addressing such salient political issues as currency debasement, the displacement of miners in our green economy, and the Fudge Rounds Question achieved a feat Taylor Swift’s “Anti-Hero” and Miley Cyrus’s “Flowers” could not. Oliver Anthony’s “Rich Men North of Richmond” hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 for the second consecutive week. It looks unlikely to...
Three Years After Chinese Communist Crackdown, Hong Kong Continues to Suffer
Despite a push to draw young talent back to the city, Hong Kong is suffering grievously as the Chinese Communist Party crushes civil rights, pursuing dissidents even beyond its borders. Read More… At the end of August, the Hong Kong government charged a Cantonese language group with “threatening national security.” The latter had posted online an essay, cast in the form of fiction, that emphasized the city’s loss of liberty. Andrew (Lok-hang) Chan, who headed Societas Linguistica HongKongensis,explained thatthe group,...
What Does the Bible Really Teach?
Catholics and Protestants have long been at odds over how to interpret Scripture. What role do tradition, the Church Fathers, and ecumenical creeds play? Or is the Bible alone sufficient ing to “the knowledge of the truth”? The editor of First Things has a few suggestions. Read More… Protestants classically believe in sola scriptura, but they also know that some Protestants have conjured exotic beliefs based on appeals to the Bible alone. At a Baptist church where I was once...
Negotiating with a Domestic Extremist
A new book wants to be a slam-dunk take-down of feminism and hook-up culture. But whatever its good intentions, an overly rosy picture of its “trad” opposite does young women—and men—no favors. Read More… Domestic Extremist: A Practical Guide to Winning the Culture War by Peachy Keenan—a pseudonym used by a seriously Catholic humorist deep in the bowels of blue California—is a heated polemic about how feminism has failed women and how they can take back their lives and femininity...
The Countess of Huntingdon: Challenging the Established Church
Selina, countess of Huntingdon, cared about one thing more than any other: that the gospel of Jesus Christ be preached freely. She was willing to take on the Church of English itself to ensure it was done. Read More… Among the central figures of the British evangelical revival that we have been revisiting is Selina, Countess of Huntingdon, (1707–1791). She was a source of finance and a steadying influence, and through her aristocratic connections Selina provided opportunities for the preaching...
Elisabeth Elliot and the Mystery of Divine Providence
Bestselling author Ellen Vaughn (The Jesus Revolution) has just brought out the second volume of an authorized biography of Elisabeth Elliot, who was, and remains, an inspiration to evangelical Christians around the world. Read More… With over 24 books to her credit, renowned biographer and New York Times bestselling author Ellen Vaughn is out with her second volume on the life and work of Elisabeth Elliot, the noted Christian author, speaker, and philosopher who died in 2015 after a 10-year...
Student Loans and the Sin of Usury
President Biden’s attempts to erase large portions of student loan debt miss the larger moral picture. Read More… A new school year has just begun, and students and their parents are faced once again with the high cost of higher education. The Supreme Court ruled President Biden’s executive order on student loan forgiveness unconstitutional. Undeterred, the president has since expanded e-based repayment. Predictably, Democrats defended it and Republicans attacked it. Meanwhile, many continue to struggle with student debt. Tuition has...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved