Among the accounts of the Kings of Israel in the Catholic Bible, a prophet named Elisha prays for the eyes of a blinded servant (2 Kings, Chapter 6). There is nothing wrong with that servantâs eyes. But what he cannot see are mountains âfull of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha.â Here, maybe, are the Popeâs divisions Joseph Stalin infamously derided. Here, too, is what foreign policy scholars have called the spiritual power of religious movements that can topple states and empires, mediate peace, and propel to war. This, certainly, is the heritage and promise of Vatican foreign policy in the world today: a force that is real, but also one that is necessarily limited, case studies of which are afresh and aplenty in our world today.
Just in the last several years, there has been a renaissance not only in the study but in the practice of Vatican diplomacy. We have found the Holy See intervening in Cuba, mediating conversations between then-President Obama and the Cuban President RaĂșl Castro. Vatican diplomats have been on the ground in Venezuela, attempting to mediate peace between the government of NicolĂĄs Maduro and the opposition. The Holy See has been at the forefront of a big push at the United Nations on a new global treaty banning nuclear weapons. And this is just the front-page news. Dig into the inglorious grunt work in dusty committee rooms, and youâll find Vatican diplomats at the 2013 Geneva peace talks to end the Syrian war, at the Truth and Reconciliation process in post-Apartheid South Africa, in the Solidarity movement in Poland, and the list goes on.
But even with all these interventions, of course, the Holy See can still seem like an old-world relic in a hyper-modern world of hard power and economic globalization. What does a small quasi-sovereign mini-state really bring to the table on the ârealâ issues of international relations? Where, after all, are Elishaâs angel legions in the failed states of Somalia, the civil war in Yemen, the desolate destruction of Mosul, and more? The Vatican might specialize in a kind of boutique moral-diplomacy, but the heavy lifting of the international order will always be left to states with carrier groups and IMF voting blocks.
Part of the argument of this volume is that this is not true. What counts as ârealâ and, indeed, what counts as âheavy liftingâ in a world often consumed by growth rates and security dilemmas needs to be reconsidered. Just as the Vatican by its very existence challenges our common understanding of things like sovereignty and power in the international system, so its boutique diplomacy is also the âtipâ of the iceberg of what the Vatican can, and has, done in foreign relations.
Legally speaking, the âVaticanâ refers to two political entities of international relations: the Vatican City State and the Holy See. The minor actor is the Vatican City State founded in the Lateran Treaties between Mussoliniâs Italy and the Curia of Pius XI in 1929 to solve the territorial Roman question almost fifty years after the end of the Papal State in 1870. The mini-state provides the Pope with sovereign territory with such remarkable properties like St. Peterâs Basilica, St. Peterâs Square, the Vatican Museums and the Vatican Gardens, and a few extraterritorial real estates like a Hospital, some ancient Roman Churches, and Castel Gandolfo. The Vatican City State is a state with radio and railway stations, mail and money, and which participates in various treaties on the international stage, bringing the papal face on Euro coins (at least until Pope Francisâ decision to replace the face with the coat of arms in January 2017) and on stamps as a member of the Universal Postal Union.
The ârealâ actor in world politics, however, is the Holy See. The Holy See is a separate legal entity that âhasâ a stateâthe Vatican City Stateâbut is none. In Canonical law, it serves as the entity which governs the Catholic Church. Dating back to the beginning of the practice of European diplomacy, the Holy See has also full legal personality as a subject in international public law. In current practice, it is the Holy See that established diplomatic relations to almost all states and obtains a member or special status in almost all international organizations with a political mission, in contrast to more functional organizations like the Universal Postal Union in which the Vatican City State is a member.
The power of the Catholic Church, and of the Holy See, is enormous in a world that is so rapidly losing a moral vocabulary beyond profit/loss, power/order, and security/strength. The language of international diplomacy has hollowed out words which that Church still remembers: dignity, the image of God, faith, and hope. It is precisely on the back of catastrophe, of systemic and terrible evil, that the liberal-secular worldview cannot bear the weight of its own inadequacies without gesturing beyond itself. Once impelled to tone down his âprayersâ for a secular crowd at the Truth & Reconciliation Commission in South Africa, Desmond Tutu triedâbut haltedâdeclaring they could not bear the weight of those proceedings apart from prayer. No purely material theory can make sense of the mystery of the human condition, its evils, or its joys, and no purely secular diplomacy is fit for the work of mediation, repentance, and reconciliation.
And yet there are also real limits. The Church speaks best and most powerfully when it does so on principleâout of the clear conviction of its confessionsâand is wisely discrete on particularities, policy, and procedure. That Church has real power as convener, mediator, and prophet in a world dominated by secular elites, but peopled by the resurging religious. That Church must also see its limits where leadership will not relent, repent, or redirect. The Vatican, then, is part of foreign policy in what Monica Duffy Toft, Daniel Philpott, and Timothy Samuel Shah (2011) have aptly described as âGodâs Centuryâ; it is not the panacea. It has real promise, but it is no silver bullet.
For these reasons we are delighted to draw together in this book a collection of recent research articles and past commentary essays on the papacy in world politics published in The Review of Faith & International Affairs. Most of the research articles emerged from a major conference at the Vatican in 2017 titled âPopes on the Rise! Mobilization, Media, and the Political Power of the Modern Papacy.â1 The gambit of that conference was that the Holy See made, makes, and will make substantive contributions to global policy and politics. The Vaticanâs mediators and its diplomats can give the world of global politics back a language it so desperately needs: a language of virtue, morality, dignity, and meansânot just endsâas more than long-term expedience. Its very existence and confessions are a cap and check on unrestrained capital, tyrannical governance, and hyper-individualism. But that witness is strongest when made prophetically, and it is sometimes limited and compromised when it delves too deeply into policy. It is rhetoricâit is a witnessâthat can ennoble and mediate, but it cannot coerce nor prescribe. It has promise, but it also has limits. This book, then, is concerned with both the promise and limits of the Holy See in world affairs.2
Part I of the book begins with a research article by Timothy A. Byrnes, who structures papal politics along three spheres: (1) sovereignty and international relations; (2) supranationalism and the Church; and (3) soft power in the global public sphere. First, in the sphere of international relations the Holy See is a sovereign actor with the status of a legal person in international law and has as such diplomatic relations to most of the states and is member to many international organizations. The Holy See represents the Pope not as the sovereign of the Vatican City State but as sovereign of the Catholic Church; as such the Holy See is accepted among states as a sovereign peer. Second, being the leader of the Catholic Church turns the Pope, however, also into a supranational leader who has transnational ties in every country. In this supranational capacity, the Pope is involved in the internal affairs of almost every country and can influence in some cases the majority or a major minority of a national population. Third, the media attention allows the pope to develop a soft power capacity that reaches beyond the Catholic flock and diplomatic relations into an emerging global public sphere. Nevertheless, the soft power approach reminds us also that the pope has no means of coercion to secure a chain of command. The Pope is always as powerful as his authority or advice is accepted on the different stages he tries to perform.
Drawing on system theory, the next article by Mathias Albert explains the soft power of the Holy See in international relations through its structural position within in the world system. The Holy See has a historical tradition as hard power in diplomatic relations which explains the diplomatic and legal legacy still vibrant in the modern system. The old religiously backed legacy is not able to structurally bridge the differentiation of the modern international system and the balance of power of its units and turn the pope into a real global leader. Despite the impossibility of integrating the international system, ascribing such an integrative function to the Holy See is a useful move to bridge tensions in world politics. The Holy See is ready to represent this necessary but impossible task of integration. The ability for the impossible secures its soft power in world politics.
From the perspective of the English School in International Relations, Thomas Diez explains why and how the rise of the pope in international relations was possible and is likely to continue, while also likely to be continuously contested. In an international society that rests only on pluralist principles of sovereignty, territory, and nation, the legal entity of the Holy See is an outside relict from the past. In a world, however, that increasingly develops solidarist principles, the Holy See is no longer an alien but in tune with transnational, global, and universal ambitions. To be sure, the story of solidarism in international society and the Catholic idea of one world under God do not necessarily go together smoothly. At times, harsh contestations on what values the solidarist world should be built come up; gender issues or abortion are the most salient ones. However, also environmental issues, migration, and capitalism are contested. It is open, if, how, and to what extent the Holy See can influence these debates in the future.
Capitalism and Catholicism have a long and difficult relationship. Parts of Latin American Liberation theology once even allied with Marxism to overcome the shortcomings of capitalism. While the magisterium of the Church was ready to suppress any (mis)alliances with Marxism, papal critique on capitalism continues. Robert Joustra highlights in his contribution the continuing importance of the first social encyclical of modern timesâRerum Novarum (1891) of Pope Leo XIII. The encyclical laid the ground for a sophisticated and moderate stance of the Church towards the conflicts of the modern economy. Joustra shows that Leoâs concept is still the blueprint of the social teaching of the popes, while it has been adapted and adjusted to newer developments during the following pontificates. Economic relationships, the popes argue, need not become conflictual, but can be built on a just relationship between labor and capital as both need each other. Labor unions play a crucial part in the papal teaching and are at the center of Joustraâs example of the Right-to-Work Legislation in North America, particularly in the United States, but also in Canada.
The Holy See was not brought âback from exileâ when religion arguably returned to international relations. The Holy See was always around. Adrian HĂ€nni delves back into the time of the Cold War and the pontificate of Pius XII where he finds the remarkable story of the Commission for the Persecuted Church. Founded in 1950, the Commission was set up under the auspices of the Holy See as an umbrella organization of international lay activities to ensure that the Church behind the Iron Curtain should not be forgotten but supported. During the 1950s, the small leading circle of the Commission established a network supported by the Vatican and by Western secret services to organize a strong network of charity, propaganda, and prayer to fight communism East and West beyond the Iron Curtain.
Jodok Troyâs analysis of papal human rights discourse starts also in the pontificate of Pius XII who introduced the human rights vocabulary into papal documents. In his rigorous analysis, Troy shows that the classical liberal discourse of individual rights reached a high in the pontificate of John Paul II and the context of the Cold War. Already Benedict XVIâs pontificate marked a change as more universalist notions like the âright of the environmentâ were introduced and egalitarian demands on wealth distribution gained momentum. The pontificate of Francis remains inside the human rights discourse but accelerated the transformation to a more universal notion of human rights.
Petr KratochvĂl and Jana HovorkovĂĄ lay out a papal geopolitical map by analyzing a decade of Urbi-et-Orbi Messages in the pontificates of Benedict XVI and Francis between 2005 and 2015. These speeches, delivered each Christmas and Easter by the Popes at St. Peterâs Square and broadcasted worldwide, focus on what is important for the Pope in religious but also, deeply intertwined, in political perspective. KratochvĂl and HovorkovĂĄ show that in both pontificates global de-territorialized problems of world politics, such as war, construct the earthly space in contrast to the heavenly. Both pontificates have their focus on Africa and the Middle East while neither Benedict nor Francis prioritized their continent of origin. The popes have an eye on the global challenges of the Church and world politics.
Melanie Barbato analyzes the Deepavali messages of the Holy See as a cornerstone of Christian-Hindu dialogue and as an example of high level interreligious dialogue. Deepavali, the festival of lights, is a happy occasion in the Hindu calendar when greetings among friends and relatives are exchanged. The Holy See, more specifically the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, uses this opportunity to engage in a friendly, sometimes also critical dialogue with the Hindu community. In her rigorous analysis, Barbato shows that a shared humanity and a shared understanding as religious people are emphasized to build a bridge between the very different languages of religious discourse of the Catholic and the Hindu communities. While discussing the messages as a form of public diplomacy, she also shows that persecution of Christians in India lead to at least two different approaches in the messagesâone year much more critical than is typical for these documents, and the next year with an emphasis on Hinduismâs own resources of non-violence.
Scott M. Thomas examines Louis Massignon (1883â1962), one of the most important European scholars, and Catholic scholars of Islam in the 20th century. His views on Islam changed the Catholic Churchâs approach to Islam at the Second Vatican Council. Massignon was influenced by Francis of Assisi and his encounter with the Sultan of Egypt during the Fifth Crusade. Thomas argues that both St. Francis and Massignon were engaged in a counter-cultural critique of Christendom, a âtrajectory towards the peripheryâ regarding peacemaking, Muslim-Christian relations, and interreligious dialogue, which gained for St. Francis, and for Massignon, the support of popesâand is today also reflected in Pope Francisâs approach to global issues.
Part II of this book presents a selection of shorter commentaries from the essay archive of The Review of Faith & International Affairs. This collection includes contemporaneous reflections on the papacies of John Paul II and of Benedict XVI, as well as insightful analyses of major areas of Vatican social teaching and practice in world affairs, such as religious freedom, peacebuilding, and economic development. Contributors include a diverse and highly distinguished array of experts on global Catholicism including Kenneth L. Grasso, Robert P. Hunt, Allen D. Hertzke, George Weigel, Drew Christiansen, Bernard J. OâConnor, and Scott M. Thomas.
Taken together, the various research articles and commentaries included in this volume shed light on the strengths and limits of the Holy See in international relations and stress jointly that the Vatican is not only an interesting object of study in its own right but a telling example how transformations in world politics are at work. Religion is a force in world affairs and secularizing processes add only a twist on that force instead of annihilating it. The Holy Seeâs soft power in world politics seems to rest on the ability to secure its position in a small niche of the international system while playing on various stages of world politics and public diplomacy, thereby addressing and contesting continuously a wide range of crucial issues of world politics. Solving the puzzle of the unexpected rise of the Holy See in modern world politics is a task for international relations scholars that can not only help to explain the ...