Skip to content
Catholic Herald flag

Madison Catholic Herald Archive (2001-2025)

Official newspaper of the Diocese of Madison, Wisconsin

  • News
    • Around the Diocese
    • State News
    • National-World
    • Obituaries
    • Older Editions
    • Diocese of Madison’s 75th anniversary
  • Bishop
    • Bishop Hying’s Columns
    • Bishop Hying’s Letters
    • Bishop’s Schedule
    • About Bishop Hying
    • About Bishop Morlino
    • About Bishop Bullock
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Letters to the editor
    • Columns
    • Columns by name and author
  • Faith
    • Faith
    • Year of Faith
    • Faith Alive
  • Calendar
  • Obituaries
    • Clergy obituaries
    • Religious obituaries
    • Lay person obituaries
  • Multimedia
  • Advertising
    • Advertise with Us
      • Ad Policies
      • Ad Specifications
      • Classifieds Information
    • Rates & Specs (PDF)
    • Special Section Calendar (PDF)
  • About
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Links
    • Catholic Herald Promotion Materials
    • Rates & Specs (PDF)
    • Subscriptions
  • Youth
  • Español
 
  • Home
  • Columns
  • Word on Fire
  • 1917 and remembering who we are
  • Word on Fire

1917 and remembering who we are

On January 22, 2020
Bishop Robert Barron

I saw the film 1917 on the vigil of the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord, and I think there’s a connection between the movie and the liturgical celebration.

Bear with me.

First, as everyone who has seen it remarks, the editing and cinematography of 1917 are so astounding that it appears to unfold completely in real time, the result of one continuous shot.

Think of the famous scene from Scorsese’s Goodfellas, in which Ray Liotta and his date walk into the night club — but now stretched out for two hours.

What this produces in the viewer is an almost unprecedented sense of being there, experiencing the events with the characters in the film. And to be inserted into the First World War is, to put it mildly, horrific.

Obviously, all wars are terrible, but there was just something uniquely appalling about World War I: the oppressiveness of the trenches, the rampant disease, the hopelessness of fighting over a few hundred yards of blasted earth, the rats (which play a prominent and disgusting role in 1917), and above all, the mass killing that was the result of combining antiquated military strategy and modern weaponry.

As witnessed to by so many thinkers and writers who participated in it — Paul Tillich, J.R.R. Tolkien, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Ernest Hemingway, etc. — the First World War represented, as did no other war to that date, a collapse, a sea change, a cultural calamity.

Christian combatants

And a principal reason for the disaster of the War, too often overlooked in my judgment, is spiritual in nature. Almost all of the combatants in the First World War were Christians.

For five awful years, an orgy of violence broke out among baptized people — English, French, Canadian, American, Russian, and Belgian Christians slaughtering German, Austrian, Hungarian, and Bulgarian Christians.

And this butchery took place on a scale that still staggers us.

The 58,000 American dead in the entire course of the Vietnam War would be practically a weekend’s work during the worst days of World War I.

If we add up the military and civilian deaths accumulated during the War, we come up, conservatively, with a figure of around 40 million.

And what precisely were they fighting for? I would challenge all but the most specialist historians of the period to tell me.

Whatever it was, can anyone honestly say it was worth the deaths of 40 million people?

Mind you, I am not advocating pacifism. But I am indeed invoking the Church’s just war principles, one of which is proportionality — that is, that there must be a proportion between the goods attained by the war and the cost involved in achieving those goods if the war is to qualify as justified.

Did such a proportionality obtain between means and ends in regard to World War I? I think the question sadly answers itself.

Connection with Baptism

My point, again, is that this moral catastrophe unfolded in the heart of Christian Europe, almost exclusively among baptized people, all presumably schooled in the moral principles of Jesus Christ.

How many Christians of that time raised their voices in protest, refused to cooperate with the folly of the war, placed their religious identities above their ethnic or national identities?

Those questions, too, answer themselves — which brings me to the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord.

According to the theology of the Church, Baptism involves the grafting of a person on to the Son of God, implying a share in the relationship between the Son and the Father in the unity of the Holy Spirit.

It is infinitely more than the joining of a club or society; it is a participation in the inner life of God.

Another way to put it is this: Baptism inserts a person into the Mystical Body of Jesus, which is an organism rather than an organization.

Therefore, all of the baptized, despite even dramatic differences at the cultural, political, or ethnic levels, are related to one another, implicated in each other, like cells and organs in a body.

To forget this truth, or even to underplay it, is to lose what it means to be a Christian.

Loss of faith

For the past many years, I have been studying the phenomenon of disaffiliation and loss of faith in the cultures of the West. And following the prompts of many great scholars, I have identified a number of developments at the intellectual level — from the late Middle Ages through the Enlightenment to postmodernism — that have contributed to this decline.

But I have long maintained — and the film 1917 brought it vividly back to mind — that one of the causes of the collapse of religion in Europe, and increasingly in the West generally, was the moral disaster of the First World War, which was essentially a crisis of Christian identity.

Something broke in the Christian culture, and we’ve never recovered from it.

If their Baptism meant so little to scores of millions of combatants in that terrible war, then what, finally, was the point of Christianity?

And if it makes no concrete difference, then why not just leave it behind and move on?

I wonder whether we might take the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord as an opportunity to think more deeply about the moral implications of being a son or daughter of God, and hence a sibling to everyone else in the Mystical Body of Jesus.

And I wonder whether we might look long and hard at this wonderful and disturbing film in order to see what happens when Christians forget who they are.


Bishop Robert Barron is an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and the founder of Word on Fire Catholic Ministries. Learn more at www.WordOnFire.org

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
In Word on FireIn 1917 , baptism , Barron , bishop , Jesus , Lord

Post navigation

Presentation on immigration
Pam Payne retires after over 45 years on Catholic Herald staff

This webite, madisoncatholicheraldarchive.org, covers Catholic Herald content from October 11, 2001 to September 18, 2008 (HTML-based website) and September 19, 2008 to October 8, 2025 (WordPress-based website).

To view content prior to 9/19/2008, browse our older editions (FreeFind site search no longer available).

To search content from 9/19/2008 to 10/8/2025, use the search box above.

For newer content, please visit madisoncatholicherald.org (FAITH Catholic-based website).

e-Edition:

click to go to the Catholic Herald e-Edition

Access our e-Edition here. For more information, contact the Catholic Herald office at 608-821-3070 or email: [email protected]

Most popular:

  • Priest announcement
  • Msgr. William DeBock, pastor emeritus, dies
  • The ‘expendable children’
  • Msgr. DeBock celebrates 60th jubilee as priest
  • Brighten your own island by the virtue of kindness

Bishop Hying’s videos:

'A Moment with the Bishop' videos on YouTube

Promote the Catholic Herald:

click for Catholic Herald promotion materials

Click here for information and materials to promote the Catholic Herald in your parish.

RSS feeds

RSS feed

You May Like

  • Word on Fire
Kevin Wondrash
On January 7, 2015

Ridley Scott’s film misses the point

  • Word on Fire
Fr. Robert Barron
On December 17, 2014

How to solve the bullying problem

  • Word on Fire
Bishop Robert Barron
On March 8, 2017

Well-ordered soul lives with Christ at its center

  • Word on Fire
Bishop Robert Barron
On January 16, 2019

Foiling Spinoza as path to evangelization

  • Word on Fire
Bishop Robert Barron
On March 9, 2016

Blasting holes through the buffered self

  • Word on Fire
Bishop Robert Barron
On March 7, 2018June 18, 2024

Dr. Billy Graham: remembering a titan of faith

  • Catholic Herald on Facebook

Copyright © 2001-2025 Diocese of Madison, Catholic Herald. All rights reserved.
Website created by Leemark.com and Catholic Herald staff using Telegram theme.