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Angelus News | September 23, 2022 | Vol. 7 No. 19

On the cover: The logo used for the Catechism of the Catholic Church, published in 1992, is adapted from an image found in the Catacombs of Domitilla in Rome thought to symbolize “the rest and the happiness that the soul of the departed finds in eternal life.” Ahead of the 30th anniversary of the catechism’s release next month, Russell Shaw explains on Page 10 what prompted the Church to undertake such an immense project. On Page 26, Greg Erlandson offers a perspective on the text’s relevance to ordinary Catholics — like his own mother.

On the cover: The logo used for the Catechism of the Catholic Church, published in 1992, is adapted from an image found in the Catacombs of Domitilla in Rome thought to symbolize “the rest and the happiness that the soul of the departed finds in eternal life.” Ahead of the 30th anniversary of the catechism’s release next month, Russell Shaw explains on Page 10 what prompted the Church to undertake such an immense project. On Page 26, Greg Erlandson offers a perspective on the text’s relevance to ordinary Catholics — like his own mother.

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On the throne<br />

of soft power<br />

Both Queen Elizabeth<br />

II and modern popes<br />

illustrate the punch<br />

of a different kind of<br />

authority.<br />

BY JOHN L. ALLEN JR.<br />

ROME — As the world mourns<br />

the loss of Queen Elizabeth<br />

II, there’s a grand irony about<br />

the reaction, which carries important<br />

lessons for all other potentates, up<br />

to and including popes: The respect<br />

and love people felt for Elizabeth was<br />

almost inversely proportional to the<br />

amount of hard power she actually<br />

wielded.<br />

Yes, technically power in the United<br />

Kingdom is exercised in the name of<br />

Her Majesty’s government, and yes,<br />

technically, Elizabeth also reigned as<br />

the sovereign in 14 other states that<br />

are part of the Commonwealth of<br />

Nations.<br />

Yet as early as the Magna Carta in<br />

1215, the real power of the British<br />

monarchy has been progressively<br />

limited, to the point where today<br />

it’s almost entirely symbolic and<br />

ceremonial. For her 70 years on the<br />

throne, Elizabeth never had to make<br />

a controversial choice on tax policy,<br />

never had to decide whether or not to<br />

go to war, never sentenced anyone to<br />

prison, and never decided whether to<br />

join, or to exit, the European Union.<br />

All those choices were made by officials<br />

invested Queen Elizabeth II and her<br />

with what Harvard<br />

political 2015. | SHUTTERSTOCK<br />

husband, Prince Philip, in<br />

scientist Joseph<br />

Nye famously<br />

called “hard<br />

power,” meaning the power of the<br />

state to coerce compliance, while<br />

Elizabeth’s stock in trade was “soft<br />

power” — the moral authority that<br />

comes from representing ideals, values,<br />

and principles, from projecting<br />

personal dignity rather than realpolitik.<br />

It’s intriguing to compare the spontaneous<br />

outpouring of grief at the death<br />

of Elizabeth to the somewhat more<br />

muted reaction to the loss of former<br />

Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev<br />

10 days earlier.<br />

Inside Russia, Gorbachev’s reputa-<br />

20 • ANGELUS • <strong>September</strong> <strong>23</strong>, <strong>2022</strong>

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