Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Review of Lawler on Boston Catholicism
Review of Lawler on Boston Catholicism
Nov 23, 2025 1:41 PM

Appearing in the next issue of Religion & Liberty will be my review of Philip F. Lawler’s The Faithful Departed: The Collapse of Boston’s Catholic Culture (Encounter Books, 2008). There is no point in dwelling on how well-written and insightful the book is, as it has already won plaudits from other, more significant reviewers, but I can give my own “Acton spin” to Lawler’s exceptional work. Here is the piece in full, an exclusive preview for PowerBlog readers:

Lord Acton’s quotation concerning the corrupting effect of power is widely known. Less so is the fact that the target of his criticism on that particular occasion was the power possessed not by government but by church officials. Acton’s understanding of ecclesiastical authority (as distinct from power) is debatable, but his insight into human nature is not. A case study—not that we need another to file away in the vast archives of the history of human frailty—is the collapse of the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston.

Philip Lawler documents the details in this skillfully written account of the triumphs and travails of Boston’s Catholics. The history is episodic rather than thorough, but Lawler chooses his episodes well. The bulk of his attention goes to the last forty years, and much of that is focused on the sexual abuse scandals of the last ten. For anyone who has followed these developments closely, there will be little in the way of new revelations. Yet Lawler’s style, at once sympathetic and bluntly critical, is engrossing. The devout Catholic reader who was dismayed by the character and scale of the abuse scandal will be drawn back to those unpleasant times when it seemed that each new day brought fresh reasons to be ashamed of one’s faith.

This kind of reaction is exactly what Lawler wants. The more tractable problems within the Church have been addressed, he admits, but the more difficult have not. Shame, indignation, even anger, are the emotions he wishes to incite in the faithful Catholic and in every friend of the Church, for he doubts that the major unsolved problem will be tackled otherwise. That problem is the leadership of the Church, the bishops, and that returns us to Acton’s quotation and to the story of Boston Catholicism.

Lawler’s account operates on three levels. In places it is a general history and assessment of Catholicism in the United States. It is the story of a tiny minority, its numbers swelled by immigration and high birth rates, gradually gaining economic, cultural, and political clout. The second level is the local church in Boston, whose prises the largest part of the book. Lawler brilliantly evokes the personalities of Boston’s prelates, from Cardinals O’Connell (1930s), to Cushing (1950s), to Medeiros (1970s), to Law (1990s). In fact, one might interpret the book as a critical assessment of Boston’s bishops.

It is more than that, though. It is an account of the relationship between the archdiocese’s shepherds and their flock. Lawler possesses a significant attribute that presses him never to lose sight of the laity: he is one of them. Lawler’s personal involvement in parts of the story is the third level, lending it an emotional edge that never slips into maudlin self-pity or self-righteous apologia.

The book opens with an anecdote demonstrating episcopal power: Cardinal William O’Connell’s single-handed quashing of a proposed state lottery in 1935. It was a time when archdiocesan leadership carried appellations such as “Number 1” (Boston’s O’Connell) and “The Powerhouse” (New York’s Spellman).

As Lawler recognizes, however, political influence for American bishops is built not on government prerogative but on spiritual authority. Bishops’, and by extension the Church’s, “power” in the secular sense depends utterly on their ability mand allegiance in the spiritual realm. O’Connell’s impact on legislation derived not from constitutionally enumerated powers, but from his capacity as respected head of a munity of believers. One might say that the power was the laity’s, and the bishop was their mouthpiece.

Gradually this spiritual authority dissipated. The reasons are many and one can read about them in any number of books printed over the past forty years. Catholics in the latter half of the twentieth century became virtually indistinguishable from other Americans, most critically in areas that contradicted the official positions of their Church: contraception, divorce, and abortion politics. Simultaneously, bishops squandered their authority by making ill-advised stands on policy issues less central to the moral teaching of the Church and failing to support vigorously those Catholics who mitted to the traditional teachings.

The value of Lawler’s account is that it avoids the easy story lines mon in analyses of the Catholic Church in the post-Vatican II era. Fully appreciative of the assets of early twentieth-century Boston Catholicism, Lawler never dons rose-colored glasses that would blind him to the fact that the apparently indomitable church bore within it the seeds of decline. The sorry state of the Boston church in 2008 cannot be blamed solely on the inadequacies of the post-Vatican II era. At the apex of its influence before the Council, the church in Boston confused the spiritual and temporal realms. The Democratic political machine that provided ladders to success so desperately needed by impoverished immigrants also lured the church into cooperation with the expanding government of the New Deal and Great Society eras. Presiding over a coherent and devoted laity, Boston’s archbishops enjoyed the perquisites of secular esteem. They enjoyed them so well that they forgot that such deference came grudgingly from a non-Catholic world and, with the crumbling of the spiritual authority at the foundation of the edifice, would be quickly withdrawn.

“From the first days of the Catholic ascendancy,” Lawler writes, “Church leaders in Boston experienced the temptation to build up that influence and power for their own sake, rather than nurturing the religious solidarity on which they depended. Cardinals became preoccupied with the needs of the archdiocese as a secular institution, sometimes even to the detriment of the archdiocese as munity of faith.” (248)

There is incalculable wisdom in those words, and it is applicable to all religious groups. American Catholics and their bishops have not yet learned the lesson, Lawler thinks, and the evidence is with him. Lord Acton’s warning about power, however famous it may be, has not been taken seriously often enough.

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
Lawlessness Keeping India in the Dark
Earlier this month, India experienced the worst blackout in global history. Over 600 million people—more than double the number of people in the U.S. and nearly one in 10 people in the world—were left without power. The crisis highlights the fact that corrupt governance and lawless institutions can keep even an entrepreneurial people in the dark: Along with a lack of investment in infrastructure, the crisis also had roots in many of India’s familiar failings: the populist tone of much...
The Vocation of the Politician
This morning the online publication Ethika Politika, the journal of the Center for Morality in Public Life, published my response to a previous article by Thomas Storck on natural law and political engagement. In his article, Storck contents that though the natural law exists as a rationally accessible, universal standard of justice, due to the disordered passions of our fallen condition political engagement on the basis of natural law is all but fruitless. Instead, he mends a renewed emphasis on...
Acton Commentary: Spiritual Competition and the Zero-Sum Game
In this week’s Acton Commentary, “Spiritual Competition and the Zero-Sum Game,” I examine a plaint against the market economy: that it engenders what Walter Rauschenbusch called “the law of tooth and nail,” petitive ethos that ends only when the opponent is defeated. In the piece, I trace some of the vociferousness of such claims to the idea of economic reality as a fixed or static pie: The moral cogency of the argument petition is enhanced in a framework where the...
Another Reason We Can’t Afford the Affordable Care Act
In addition to internal logical inconsistencies which raise serious concerns of long term economic sustainability regarding the Affordable Care Act (ACA), recently analyzed by John MacDhubhain, Robert Pear reports in the New York Times over the weekend how confusion over certain ambiguities in the law (ironically over the meaning of the word “affordable”) would end up hurting some of the people it is precisely designed to help: working class families. Pear writes, The new health care law is known as...
Irony of Ironies: Samuel Gregg on Vatican II and Modernity
Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, has an article in Crisis Magazine entitled ‘Irony of Ironies: Vatican II Triumphs Over Moribund Modernity‘. Challenging the incoherence of modern thought, Gregg remarks Another characteristic of late-modernity is the manner in which moral arguments are increasingly “settled” by appeals to opinion-polls, choice for its own sake, or that ultimate first-year undergraduate trump-card: “Well, I just feel that X is right.” For proof, just listen to most contemporary politicians discussing the ethical controversy of...
Education and Incentives
I have written on several recent occasions about the role of incentives in education, both for teachers and for students (see here, here, and here). Yesterday, David Burkus, editor of LDRLB, wrote about a recent study by Harvard University economic researchers on the role of incentives in teacher performance. Interestingly, they found that incentives (such as bonus pay) are far more effective if given up front with the caution that they will need to be returned if the teacher’s performance...
Metaphysical Business
Work is at the core of our humanity, says Anthony Esolen, and our ownership of what we produce precedes laws demanding that we give it back to munity” in the abstract. “You didn’t build that!” is probably the mostpreposterousstatement I have ever heard from an American politician. A high bar to clear, no doubt, but let me justify the choice. It puts the effect before the cause. Suppose someone were to say, “If it weren’t for cities, there wouldn’t be...
The FRC Shooting and the Vocation of a Hero
The key-card was required to get into the building and to operate the elevator, a security precaution added years earlier when protestors chained themselves together in the lobby. But when I forgot my key—and I was always forgetting my key—he plained. He never uttered a sarcastic remark or had a passive-aggressive sigh to remind me of my absent-mindedness. He’d just leave the guard-desk and quietly help me out. I suspect Leo Johnson exhibited the same stoic friendliness today, when a...
The Strength in Checking In
As an older teen and early twenty-something I hated checking in. I thought telling others where I was or what I was up to was a sign of dependence and immaturity. In my invincible state of mind, I did not see the dangers and pitfalls of pletely on my own. I saw our natural human need to look out for each other as a weakness and not the strength that it is. Allowing others a window into our lives by...
Gregg: A Book That Changed Reality
Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg is featured in The American Spectator today with an article titled, “The Book That Changed Reality.” The piece lauds Catholic philosopher, journalist and theologian Michael Novak’s groundbreaking 1982 book, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism. Called his magnum opus, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism synthesized a moral defense of capitalism with existing cultural and political arguments. Gregg notes this ments on the book’s timely publication and lasting influence: From a 2012 vantage point, it’s easy to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved