Saturday, August 14, 2010

If actual real people could be treated as if they were static ingredients for a recipe, this version of Catholicism might work.  The Vatican is working overtime to make us believe it does work.

John Allen felt compelled to use his Friday column in the National Catholic Reporter to attempt to justify the Vatican's action in not accepting the resignations of Irish Auxiliary Bishops Raymond Field and Eamonn Walsh.  I'm glad he did because I trust his reporting is objective in this instance.  It gives Catholics a great opportunity to look at the kind of reasoning under which the Vatican operates when it comes to the episcopal hierarchy--at least the surface reasoning. 

"First, the Vatican doesn't want to feed impressions that public opinion and media hostility can bring down a bishop. Rome wants bishops to be willing to say and do unpopular things, on matters ranging from abortion to immigrant rights, and it would obviously be a deterrent if the bishop has to worry that Rome might capitulate to pressure campaigns seeking to run him out of town on a rail. (These resignations had nothing to do with taking unpopular moral stands. This is a diversionary excuse.)


Such blowback, of course, is a special risk in the early 21st century, when the Internet and 24-hour cable news channels have created a whole new industry of outrage generation. (A situation from which you yourself and CNN and NCR have derived a great deal of benefit.)

Second, allowing a bishop to resign, even if it's entirely merited, can create an avalanche which buries other bishops who don't share the same level of responsibility. If that happens, a good chunk of a country's episcopacy could be wiped out -- further destabilizing an already volatile situation, not to mention creating pressure to find replacements quickly and perhaps without sufficient thought. ('What if' and slippery slope arguments are both based in accepting a notion of the future which is as valid as the reality of the present. The Church's history in Eastern Europe and China indicate bishops aren't as critical to the local church as the Vatican would have us believe.  Local Churches can manage without them.)

Third, the Vatican also tends not to remove problem bishops because, in the institutional culture of the church, retirement has traditionally been seen as a reward for a job well done. A retired bishop has all the privileges of rank and few of the burdens, so the tendency is not to let a man walk away until he has cleared his desk. (In more ways than this one, this Vatican decision is all about the institutional culture and has nothing to do with the actual good of the Irish Church.)

The case of former Cardinal Michele Giordano of Naples offers an illustration. Giordano, who finally exited the scene in 2006 after turning 75, twice faced criminal charges for shady accounting, and once was actually convicted and sentenced to house arrest. Both times, rumors abounded that Giordano would be removed, and both times the Vatican instead let him stew in his own juices. Officials later said, on background, that they never had any intention of letting Giordano off the hook. That's how they held him accountable: Not by firing him, but by forcing him to stay on the job and clean up his own mess. (It is possible for one to 'clean up' one's own mess without retaining episcopal authority.  This mentality sends the message that it doesn't matter what you do you will still retain your prestige and position.  This is crazy.)

Fourth, and perhaps most fundamentally, the Vatican does not like the idea of a bishop resigning for poor performance because, in their view, it's bad theology. As they see it, a bishop isn't a corporate CEO or a football coach, who should be sacked when profits sag or the team goes on a losing streak. The episcopacy isn't a job but a sacramental bond akin to marriage, with the bishop as the father of the diocesan family. In the early centuries of the church, it was considered almost heretical for a bishop to move from one diocese to another on precisely this basis. (Millions of Catholic women and children through out the global church are aware of this 'pater familias' mentality and have suffered enormous repetitive abuse because of it.  This mentality, which overlooks the behavior in favor of some abstract fantasy, is itself BAD THEOLOGY.)

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The above is another illustration of the kind of thinking that relates to an abstract objectification of a class of people.  In other words, the definition of the class as noun is more important than the actions undertaken by the class as beings, or verbs.  It doesn't matter who or what a bishop does in his being or actions, the operative relationship is with the description for the noun bishop.  This is very bad theology and even worse psychology.

A person can not have a meaningful relationship with a definition, nor can they act authentically when they substitute a definition of themselves as a noun for their actual being.  This is precisely what the Church actually requires of gay people, that they define themselves by the Church's definition of homosexuality and then act as if this definition was the true overwhelming reality of themselves as beings.  This gives the Church the freedom to relate to gays as a defined noun.  This definition equates the defined noun (person) with the acts the definition is based on.  It justifies the church relating to gays on the basis of acts they may not have committed just exactly as it permits the hierarchy to relate to bishops as if acts which don't fit the definition of bishop were never committed.

In the case of gay bishops, the definition of bishop relationally supersedes the definition of homosexual.  Hence Catholicism can logically have a significant number of gay bishops who are free to be sexually active because they know they will not be expected to pay a price for their activity. Unless that is, they are dumb enough to get caught red handed and exposed in the media.  In the case of the priesthood, the definition of priest is not far enough up the noun hierarchy to protect them from the gay definition.  Hence, a gay priest can be celibate but if he admits to being gay he will be treated by definition as sexually active and chucked out of the priesthood--without perks and benefits and the opportunity to clean up his mess.

I believe one of the most important steps a given Catholic can take on an authentic spiritual path is to stop relating to people as catechismically given definitions, and start relating to them as people.  It is then that ideas like accountability and transparency take on real meaning, and an understanding of why Christians are called on to 'see' themselves in others and 'see' Christ in others becomes operative.  "Seeing" is a verb and implies an active real time relationship.  We may over look this, but Jesus continually stressed the importance of seeing people as they actually are, not as some class defined noun or a reduction to a given behavior.

Jesus refused to 'see' or relate to the Temple Priests and Pharisees as self defined authoritative nouns. He didn't relate to any defined class of people as if they were nouns.  He asked Peter, "Who do you say that 'I am'". Peter says "You are the 'living' God."  Neither Jesus nor Peter are relating to Jesus as some kind of defined static category based in past events or future speculation.  Jesus is the undefined 'living' God in the present moment. 

To stay in the moment and relate to people as beings rather than nouns is difficult to do and takes a great deal of energy. To do other wise is easier and takes less energy.  The Vatican's insistence in relating to the entire church on the basis of definitions of law, past history, and a consistent refusal to engage with the present are symptomatic of a tired depleted spiritual energy.  Returning to a fantasy liturgical past and reasserting the preeminence of classes of canonically defined nouns is not going to bring a resurgence to the Church.  It will not restore the 'living' God as the center of the Church's 'BEING'. 

The only noun that realistically defines a state of 'being' is death--the absence of life.  Jesus came to overcome that definition of a state of being.  That's why He is called the 'living' God. It is that dynamic notion of a 'living' God that fueled early Christianity.  It's time to make this Being real and present in modern Christianity before dead is the last true descriptive word for the Church.

13 comments:

  1. A very interesting and powerful analysis. I will think about this all weekend. I like the idea of nouns and verbs and the differnt ways of relating. I am not so sure the church will be dead, but I think the hierarchy is very close to being in that comotose state.

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  2. I agree wild hair. The greater body of Christ is far from dead, and some parts of it are very alive, but as you say, the hierarchy itself is very close to comatose. Maybe even brain dead.

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  3. Wonderful post, Colleen! And I cannot help but think that the convergence of complementary thinking going on between posts and comments (here and elsewhere) is an indication of the Holy Spirit powerfully at work.

    There is so much meat in what you've written today that it's hard to know what to comment on. First of all, I love that quote about the Bible! More and more I see the necessity of grounding arguments in scripture - something which seems to be sorely lacking in edicts from the Vatican.

    I guess the main thing I was thinking as I read through the post was: What if society let abusive parents be the ones to clean up the mess they've made? Well, of course we all know that sometimes society does mess up and leave abused kids with abusive parents. But at the very least society sets up ways to track such problems and investigate people and has ways of taking children out of abusive environments.

    But in the church, the guilty are protected and the innocent must fend for themselves. In the end, however, this is a losing strategy. For ultimately even the good leaders may get tarred with the same brush. For church prelates and priests may just as well be objectified by nouns themselves. I'm pretty sure that's already happening. Indeed, gay persons are being more and accepted by society at large, just as catholic priests and hierarchs seem to be more and more reviled.

    Thanks for a great post! Happy to be on a similar wavelength with you! We have to take our happiness where we get it! :-)

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  4. The irony is that bishops, according to tradition, were meant to be selected on the basis of their "spiritual experience".

    Spiritual experience is a verb, not a noun.

    Unfortunately, spiritual experience is not looked on with favor by the Vatican, ( unless it accords with their nouning of it- of course, that contradicts its very nature).

    The result is that bishops are picked for their "administrative" ability, ( ironically, the same abilities as for CEO's and executves).

    What is dying is "administrative hierarchy".

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  5. Anon, yes bishops were supposed to be chosen for their spiritual experience. It's what Pentecost was all about--facillitating spiritual experience.

    I maintain that the entire Way Jesus taught was to facillitate spiritual experience--real practical useful spiritual experience. A dynamic which is based in love and service assures the most beneficial expression of spiritual experiences.

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  6. Spiritual experience. That makes God first! Not exactly what the Vatican is after... Or so it would appear.

    Word is: "sorri"!

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  7. Discovered this on the Far From Rome blogsite;

    http://www.amazon.com/Deeper-Than-Words-Living-Apostles/dp/0307589617/ref=tmm_pap_title_0#_

    This is the future.

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  8. Excuse the use of another important noun - the Faithful. Notice that, in the whole set of Vatican reasons described by Allen, there is complete disregard of any needs and welfare of the Faithful. Relations among all the people involved might improve a lot if that were to change.

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  9. You are right Jack, there doesn't seem to be any consideration for the faithful at all. Unless this counts:

    "First, the Vatican doesn't want to feed impressions that public opinion and media hostility can bring down a bishop."

    If it does count, the concerns of the Faithful are actually numero uno--if inverted.

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  10. Colleen, great post! This is exceptional bread to take in and digest.

    A few rambling thoughts
    When we include the Gospels & the great mystery of Christ into our view, conscious sight and outlook, we are apt or enabled to bring all the verbs of creation into our own vision & being from this Supreme Being. This, I believe, was Jesus' intent - to open the channels of communication, communion with Him, which the chief priests claimed only they had.

    The word Communicate is a verb. Since God is a living God, when we communicate to God, or are in communion with God, and have faith enough to believe that this living God will communicate back to us without any necessity for anyone else to mediate this back and forth sacred communication, communion, prayer, interchange, it would nullify any interference of external excommunication by or of an organization predicated on a group of nouns.

    I would agree that the hierarchy is itself brain dead for the reason above: they are not communicating to the Living God or getting answers back from the living God that would bring Life into their own consciousness and into the Church. They have the meaning of God to being essentially a noun as well, and one in which they seem to believe they can control. Their belief has become disbelief and therefore they are not in communion with God, or the Saints. That would indicate massive brain wave dysfunction and deterioration.

    word verif is shotte

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  11. Great thoughts butterfly. One can not make a noun of God anymore than they can put Jesus in a box or the Holy Spirit behind opaque windows.

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  12. Colleen -

    "One can not make a noun of God anymore than they can put Jesus in a box or the Holy Spirit behind opaque windows"

    Please tell the 'noun' concept to the good folks at "Opus Dei".....

    One often hears Opusan priests (liberal AND conservative) speaking of the 'static' (in the tabernacle) Vs 'active' (on the altar) presence of Jesus. There are many problems with this.

    1) It implies that one is somehow superior to the other, or "more real". That the 'static' is of lesser importance. This is used as rationale for playing "hide the Tabernacle". Implicit in this is the utter lack of belief in the Real Presence in either 'presence'.

    Cute, eh?

    2) It implies that the 'active' presence is somehow in conflict if not contradiction to the 'static'. Thus further rationale for #1 & diminuation of the import of both.

    3) It implies that the priest is 'making Jesus' when he says Mass. Nothing could be farther from the truth.

    In a VALID mass, a time portal in Eternity is opened, literally. One is spiritually present at Calvary. Thus Jesus is only crucified once - NOT in every mass! Transubstantiation has occurred prior to the Elevation. Not because of the priest, but rather by the action of the Holy Spirit through the priest - as a vessel.

    One reason many masses are invalid is as many priests were not taught/do not believe this. Without projection of the correct intention, there is NO transubstantiation. Regardless of rite said.

    So few priests really believe in the Catholic Faith that it is frightening.

    Anon Y. Mouse

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  13. I would agree with you Mouse, with one exception. It's the same thing that Native elder's have described as to the mechanism with a sweat lodge. It's an intentionally opened diminsional portal. An invititation which may or may not be accepted.

    Mass should be a guaranteed occurence because Jesus said as much. We are all priests by baptism and our intent matters too.
    So do the altar servers. In this sense everyone concelebrates.

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