Allen Ten Mega Trends
Allen Ten Mega Trends
By "mega-trend," I mean a deep impulse shaping Catholic thought and life at the universal level, a sort of "tectonic
plate" whose shifts lie beneath the fault lines and upheavals of the present. I have in mind not single issues, but
currents of history which cause some issues to rise in importance and others to fall. A mega-trend, by the way, does
not have to be specifically Catholic, but rather something that affects Catholicism in a significant way. For example, the
rise of Islam, especially its more radical forms, certainly belongs on the list.
My request is this: Read this list, and ponder it. Are there major forces I've neglected? Are there items here that don't
belong? Does this list correspond with your own sense of what's happening in the church?
Some readers may want to react using the "comments" box below, which will allow a conversation to develop in this
space. Others may not want to share their thoughts with the rest of the world, but wouldn't mind passing them along to
me. If that's the case, address them to [email protected] [1]. Either way, I will be grateful.
same way that the terrorist attacks of 9/11 put Islam, especially its radical currents, at the center of global
consciousness, the "9/12" of Regensburg did it for the Catholic church. Especially in the wake of 9/12, Islam is coming
to play the role for Catholicism once occupied by Communism, meaning the church's chief ideological rival on the world
stage, the great question mark around which many debates revolve. As with Communism, attitudes towards Islam are
often markers for deeper options on issues such as the Christian identity of Europe, the limits of inter-faith dialogue, the
nature of missionary efforts, and the fate of Christians in the Arab world. Given that Benedict seems determined to take
a more challenging stance in Catholic/Muslim relations on both terrorism and religious freedom, there is likely to be
further drama ahead.
Nevertheless, the Copernican shift of John Paul's papacy was to direct the Catholic gaze to the outside world, to "take
it to the street."
Eight: Globalization
Growing integration of global finance, politics, and culture marks the single most defining characteristic of our era,
creating unparalleled wealth and opportunity for some, while making the misery of others a permanent source of
outrage and instability. While one billion people enjoy standards of living never before achieved, another billion people
get by on less than $1 a day, and some 10 million children each year die from avoidable, poverty-related illnesses.
Those inequities are generating deep concern both for moral and security reasons, and they tend to engage leaders in
the global South in a special way, given that the losers in the new global game tend to be predominantly in developing
nations. As Southern voices become more vocal within Catholicism, therefore, concern for what John Paul II called the
"globalization of solidarity" as well as markets will become an increasingly central Catholic theme. There will likely
continue to be widely differing Catholic opinions on how best to express the church's social teaching in public policy,
and this debate will intensify.
Links:
[1] mailto:[email protected]