Pope’s visit, week’s stories show divisions, rays of hope

Three important stories washed across the Catholic radar screen this week, each with something to say about where things stand vis-à-vis the church in the early 21st century. They were:

  • The conclusion of Pope Benedict XVI’s improbably successful Sept. 16-19 trip to the United Kingdom, which, according to British Prime Minister David Cameron, made the secular Brits “sit up and listen”;
  • A new Vatican Bank scandal, with $30 million in bank funds frozen by Italian authorities and its top two officials placed under investigation for alleged violations of anti-money laundering protocols;
  • A strong statement from the Committee on Doctrine of the U.S. bishops’ conference accusing two Creighton theologians of distorting the Catholic moral tradition on issues such as homosexuality, contraception, and artificial reproduction.

Taken together, these three developments confirm that the Catholic church is beset by important challenges, both from within and without, but also suggest that it may possess some surprising residual strength.

Below, I’ll offer background on each story and then offer some fleeting thoughts about what they all mean.

* * *
Heading into Benedict’s U.K. trip, the prophets of doom had a field day. They warned that the U.K. is a thoroughly secular nation, one with a long history of anti-papal resentment, and that Benedict XVI would arrive carrying massive baggage due to the sexual abuse crisis.

As I’ve observed before, it’s the perverse effect of such predictions that they set the bar terribly low, so anything that happens can be styled a success. It’s not a shocker, therefore, that Benedict XVI exceeded expectations, drawing warm and enthusiastic crowds and often disarming his critics with his gentle, warm personality.

One British tabloid enthused that the “Rottweiler” had been transformed into a “holy grandfather.”

What’s more surprising is that the U.K. trip was a rare case in which the message Benedict came to deliver was more or less the one his public actually heard. Aside from a minor contretemps when Cardinal Walter Kasper compared arriving in London’s Heathrow Airport to stepping into a Third World country, the Vatican largely avoided any new PR stumbles. Because Benedict tackled the sexual abuse crisis right out of the gate, he was not seen as ducking the issue, allowing media outlets and public interest to focus on something else.

Subscribe to NCR

Want to read more about important issues in the life of the Church? A subscription to NCR will keep you up to date and informed.

Subscribe now!

That “something else” was Benedict’s forceful argument about the role of religion in public life. In effect, Benedict XVI conducted a four-day national seminar in the U.K. about the relationship between faith and secular society, and the miracle of it is, people actually seemed to be listening.

Arguably the trip’s peak moment came with the pope’s Sept. 17 speech in Westminster Hall, delivered in the same building where St. Thomas More was tried and condemned in 1535 for refusing to acknowledge King Henry VIII as head of the church. Benedict spoke before the cream of the political and social crop in Britain, including four former Prime Ministers: Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Tony Blair, and Gordon Brown.

The heart of the speech was a pitch for constructive dialogue between faith and reason, and therefore between church and state. As he has before, Benedict argued that reason shorn of faith becomes destructive ideology; faith without reason shades off into a distorted “sectarianism and fundamentalism.”

One measure of the pontiff’s success is that at trip’s end, Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg of the New North London Synagogue and Dr. Muhammad Abdul Bari of the Muslim Council of Britain went on national television to say that the experience had been good for all faiths in the U.K., not just Christianity.

To be sure, Benedict remains a somewhat polarizing figure, and that ferment was visible in the London streets. Some 10,000 atheists and secularists, gay rights activists, people scandalized by the sex abuse crisis, and even a few radical Protestant Evangelicals marched on Saturday night, massing in Downing Street to hear Richard Dawkins declare the pope an “enemy of humanity.” It was the largest public protest this pope has ever seen, and one of the largest in modern times.

Nevertheless, as Benedict left, the basic feeling was that the trip had been a triumph for the pope. Catherine Peppinster of The Tablet said the mood among local Catholics was “euphoric,” while Cardinal Keith O’Brien of Edinburgh said people are already talking about a “Benedict bounce.”

One British paper editorialized that in the run-up to the trip, some feared the pope would be shouted down, but instead he was heard with “respectful attention.” In a culture whose ethos was once memorably expressed by a spin doctor for Tony Blair as “We don’t do God,” that alone should probably be considered a breakthrough.

* * *
Benedict scarcely had a chance to towel down from the U.K. outing before yet another crisis threatened to break out in Rome. This time it centers on the Vatican Bank, as Italian authorities announced Monday that they had frozen $30 million in assets and placed Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, the bank’s president, along with general director Paolo Cipriani, under investigation for alleged violations of money-laundering safeguards.

The formal name for the Vatican Bank is the “Institute for the Works of Religion,” or IOR. The charge is not necessarily that the Vatican Bank was actually laundering money, but rather that two transactions were “suspicious” because they didn’t fully comply with disclosure requirements about the source of the funds.

In response, the Vatican promptly declared itself “perplexed and astonished.” Ordinarily, I suppose, such reactions carry about the same credibility as Captain Renault in “Casablanca” expressing shock at finding gambling at Rick’s, and then collecting his winnings. In this case, however, the dismay seems genuine.

Inside the Vatican, it’s well known that Benedict XVI has long been worried about the potential for precisely this sort of embarassment. That’s why he brought in the distinguished Italian economist Gotti Tedeschi, a former member of the board at the Italian banking giant Sanpaolo, to run the Vatican Bank in 2008, and it’s also why an “office of information” was created inside the bank under Cardinal Attilio Nicora, President of the Apostolic Patrimony of the Holy See, to coordinate disclosure requirements.

Nicora is widely known as the Vatican’s “numbers man.” He was the architect of the financial dimension of a 1984 revision to the concordat with Italy signed under Mussolini in 1929, known as the “Lateran Pacts.” Gotti Tedeschi was a contributor to Benedict’s social encyclical Caritas in Veritate, an important theme in which was precisely the need for greater ethical responsibility in matters of finance.

Secular financial experts have long feared that because of the Vatican Bank’s special status, it could inadvertantly become a sort of Cayman Islands-esque haven for depositors squeamish about revealing where their money comes from. Especially in a post-9/11 world, the idea of large amounts of money moving around the globe without an adequate paper trail makes people rightly nervous.

Sensitive to that concern, the Vatican Bank has been working with the Bank of Italy since the beginning of the year to comply with international anti-money laundering protocols. Vatican officials also say that Benedict is considering a global restructuring of Vatican finances in the direction of greater transparency, which could culminate in a new motu proprio, or legal document under his personal authority.

L’Osservatore Romano asserted that the probe announced this week rests on a “misunderstanding” that can be resolved “quickly and easily.” If so, why the big public splash from Italian prosecutors?

One possibility is that civil authorities realize that not everyone in the Vatican is thrilled about the looming reforms. That’s not because anyone seriously wants the Vatican Bank to protect terrorists and tax cheats, but rather on the principle that too much interference by secular regulatory bodies could compromise the church’s independence. The whole point of Vatican finance, they argue, is to ensure the pope’s freedom of action, and allowing the EU or other international organisms to dictate how the Vatican Bank can operate might call that into question.

In that sense, one could read the actions this week as a “shot across the bow,” a warning about what might be in store if the reforms now underway were to be aborted. If that’s the case, the unfortunate collateral damage is that the Vatican personnel most directly targeted are the ones already on board -- Nicora and Gotti Tedeschi.

In any event, it will be fascinating to see what effect these events have -- accelerating the process of reform, or stiffening the resolve of those in the Vatican dubious about its long-term consequences.

* * *
Stateside, the Committee on Doctrine of the U.S. bishops’ conference issued a strong statement this week condemning a book by two theologians from Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, which argues for a more permissive view of homosexuality, contraception, and other contentious issues in sexual morality.

The two theologians are Michael Lawler, now retired, and Todd Salzman, who is chair of the theology department at Creighton. Their 2008 book, The Sexual Person: Toward a Renewed Catholic Anthropology was published by Georgetown University Press. It proposes a “person-centered” morality, as opposed to what the authors see as a more physical analysis of moral acts in official Catholic teaching.

In concrete, Salzman and Lawler suggest that the church’s prohibitions on a wide variety of sexual topics ought to be softened.

The 24-page statement from the doctrine committee doesn’t dwell on the specific conclusions that the two theologians reach, but rather their premises, specifically their approach to scripture and natural law. In both cases, the thrust of the criticism is that Lawler and Salzman take an overly skeptical stance -- suggesting that the Bible is conditioned by its socio-historical setting, and that “natural law” is a social construct.

At the moment, it doesn’t seem that any disciplinary consequences, such as a period of silence or a prohibition on publishing, are on the immediate horizon. The Committee on Doctrine has no authority to impose such measures, and Archbishop George Lucas of Omaha has expressed “confidence” that Creighton will handle the situation in a way consistent with its Catholic identity.

It remains to be seen whether the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith might take an interest in The Sexual Person, and what steps it might consider should an official review be launched.

Salzman declined a request to comment, but Creighton University issued a statement saying that it’s committed both to Catholic doctrine and to academic freedom, and thanking Lucas for fostering a “positive working relationship.”

For the record, this is not the first time that Lawler and Salzmann have been in hot water. Back in 2007, articles published by the two theologians, anticipating many of the themes of their book, were criticized by Omaha’s then-Archbishop, Elden Curtiss, for expressing “serious error…[that] cannot be considered authentic Catholic teaching.”

* * *
Now for three broad observations about these developments, two of which speak to endemic challenges facing Catholicism at the dawn of the 21st century, and a third which points to some encouraging signals.

Church/state tensions

The Vatican Bank probe probably ought to be viewed in tandem with the police raids on church properties in Belgium earlier this year as part of an investigation of sex abuse allegations, or for that matter revisions to church subsidies in Spain and the 2007 “equality law” in the United Kingdom that denied church-run adoption agencies which receive public funding the right to refuse to place children with same-sex couples.

Across the board, the tendency in the West these days is to eviscerate anything that looks like privilege or “special treatment” for religious institutions, especially the Catholic church. The days in which civil authorities treated the church with kid gloves are basically over, even in ultra-Catholic Italy.

Increasingly, prosecutors and police and crusading activists in civil society look at the Catholic church in roughly the same way they do big business, lobbying and politics, even professional sports -- as potential zones of corruption that need to be held accountable, and that in no way should be “above the law.”

Ultimately that may do the church a world of good, cajoling it towards the vision John Paul articulated in 1984 -- that the church should be a “house of glass,” in which everyone on the outside can look in and see what’s going on. In the short run, however, it’s likely to mean that the flash points between church and state will grow in both frequency and intensity.

Fair warning: If the default setting vis-à-vis the church once was deference and caution, from here on in the tendency often probably will be to shoot first and ask questions later.

Internal divisions

The crackdown on the Creighton theologians is a reminder of the persistent divisions within the church, which tend to become especially visible, and especially vitriolic, around issues of sexual morality. The bishops are of course within their rights to say that the positions held by Lawler and Salzmann do not reflect official Catholic teaching, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t shared by a broad swath of the Catholic population.

That point was driven home most recently during Pope Benedict’s trip to the U.K., when a poll conducted by the Sunday Independent found that solid majorities of British Catholics disagree with the official line on all sorts of issues, including abortion in the case of rape and artificial birth control.

The inflammatory front-page headline was, “You’re Wrong, Catholics tell Pope.”

Faced with those divisions, one camp would advocate wholesale revision in church teaching to accommodate post-modern sensibilities, another driving out anyone who’s not prepared to sign on the dotted line, and yet another ignoring the problem altogether. (Respectively, those would be some liberals, some conservatives, and some bishops.)

Frankly, none of the above seems an especially satisfactory solution.

What’s needed is the reconstruction of a “Catholic commons,” a space in which members of the various tribes that dot the ecclesiastical landscape can come together and build friendships, so that a deeper “spirituality of communion” can take hold. On the other side of that effort, new ways of expressing eternal truths may emerge which can soften, if perhaps never completely eliminate, the fault lines in the church.

Anyone who can figure out the blueprint for a new Catholic commons may hold the key to the vitality of the church in the 21st century.

Rays of hope

The success of Benedict’s trip to the U.K. points to two rays of hope.

First, even in what appear to be thoroughly secularized societies, the religious instinct has hardly been extinguished. Benedict’s crowds exceeded expectations, buoyed by substantial Catholic turnout. What was most fascinating, however, was the appeal of the trip to other Christians, members of other religions, and ordinary secular folk who still somehow feel the tug of faith.

Aside from the activists who have a specific beef with the pope, most people seemed curious about what Benedict was saying and doing, and also genuinely impressed with the sincerity and good will of the throngs of pilgrims they saw over these four days. (As a footnote, one of the fruits of a papal visit is that ordinary believers have the chance to tell their stories to a national audience.)

Benedict did not magically refill the churches or win waves of converts, but the largely favorable interest in religion his presence stimulated offered a reminder that many people, even in the heart of the secular world, do still want to believe – even if, as sociologist Grace Davies has put it, they find it much tougher to belong.

Second, the trip was a reminder that when wielded wisely, the papacy is still a unique bully pulpit, the single greatest asset Catholicism has in shaping public debate. It’s difficult to imagine any other figure on the planet who could have come to Great Britain and led a four-day national examination of conscience about the role of religion in public life like Benedict XVI did.

In part, the reason Benedict was able to pull it off was because he gave those prepared to dismiss him no excuse to do so. He did not ride into town breathing fire about the equality laws, abortion, gay marriage, or any of the other fronts in the culture wars. Instead, he went to the foundations of the issue -- the right of citizenship of people of faith in a secular culture that prizes tolerance, and the positive contribution believers can make to common humanitarian and social concerns.

Put that way, it was virtually impossible to paint the pope as an extremist, and it made Dawkins’ claim that Benedict is an “enemy of humanity” seem faintly ridiculous. In effect, Benedict’s U.K. trip offered a model of how religious leaders can successfully engage secular conversation, through the template of “affirmative orthodoxy” -- no compromise on church teaching, but phrased in terms of what the church says “yes” to, rather than its well-known catalogue of “no’s.”

This was Benedict’s 17th foreign trip, and many of them have left behind the same kind of warm afterglow, only to be quickly swamped by some new crisis or PR meltdown in Rome. One can only hope that in this case, the past is not prologue.

[John L. Allen Jr. is NCR senior correspondent. His e-mail address is jallen@ncronline.org.]

Editor's Note: We can send you an e-mail alert every time a All Things Catholic column is posted to NCRonline.org. Go to this page and follow directions: E-mail alert sign-up. If you already receive e-mail alerts from us, click on the "update my profile" button to add All Things Catholic to your list.

John Allen traveled with Pope Benedict XVI during the Sept. 16-19 papal trip to Scotland and England. Other NCR contributors offered commentary and insight during the trip. Following is a complete list of NCR stories covering the trip.

Stories in this series on the papal visit to Scotland and England:

All this week in his Distinctly Catholic blog, Michael Sean Winters is interviewing a variety of Newman scholars:

Related items in Distinctly Catholic:

"Ultimately [scrutiny] may do

"Ultimately [scrutiny] may do the church a world of good, cajoling it towards the vision John Paul articulated in 1984 -- that the church should be a “house of glass,” in which everyone on the outside can look in and see what’s going on."

John Paul II talked the talk, but he did not walk the walk. He favored ultra-secretive groups like Opus Dei and the Legionaries of Christ. At the Vatican and around the world he appointed bishops who opperated in a secretive manner and who repeatedly acted in a criminal manner of hiding and enabling pedophilia. John Paul II was no Jeffersonian.

House of glass? Not until

House of glass? Not until each diocese in the world is required to set up a panel of clergy/laity that has expertise in psychology and criminal investigation and which does not answer directly to the local bishop to investigate accusations of sexual abuse within the diocese. As long as we have the current midieval, feudal model where the bishop is jury, judge, and the decider of punishment, we will continue to have coverups and serial pediphiles in order to protect the reputation of the clergy and abate the clear evidence that we desparately need a larger pool of individuals from which to invite into our seminaries (read married men and women, celibate or married).

What's Jefferson have to do

What's Jefferson have to do with it? Jefferson was against slavery, yet he kept slaves to his dying day and had several children by his house slave, who, incidentally, was his wife's half sister. And that's just for starters.

Let's face it. When it comes

Let's face it. When it comes to Catholicism, the ecclesiastical power structure is a "divider, not a uniter."

Christianity started out in diversity and Catholic Christianity will survive and prosper once it admits that uniformity is not the same as unity.

What divides us is not the

What divides us is not the hierarchy. It is the dissenters and CINO's. Groups like Call to Action are divisive. Unity is found by being in full communion with the Successor of St. Peter. Diversity all to often simply means heresy and disunity.

Unity is in being in full

Unity is in being in full communion with JESUS CHRIST! He warned us about wolves in sheep's clothing. In this case, miters and robes. Go here and come back and tell me these are the folks I should be in communion with in lieu of Jesus the Christ!

http://www.bishopaccountability.org/

As to the current Successor of Peter, go to the Boston Archdiocese and Springfield-Cape Girardeau Diocese pages, and come back and explain to me why faithful Catholics should be in full communion with a pontiff that refuses to publicly condemn and punish Cardinal law for his egregiously sinful acts as a bishop in Missouri and Massachesetts!

Anonymous on Sep. 25,

Anonymous on Sep. 25, 2010.

You stated:

"What divides us is not the hierarchy. It is the dissenters and CINO's. Groups like Call to Action are divisive. Unity is found by being in full communion with the Successor of St. Peter. Diversity all to often simply means heresy and disunity."
--------------------------------------------
Please define what you mean by heresy!

"Call to Action", by the way, began in Detroit at the initiative of Cardinal John Francis Deardon. It did much good in its genesis and continues to do so today. Because CTA has pointed out, since 2001---many of the cover-ups of the hierarchy across the country---it is treated as a 'pariah' in so many dioceses. That is not the fault of the CTA----but it says little of the Bishops in the Dioceses that 'taboo' them.

Unity is not the same as uniformity. When the Pope(s) are afraid of diversity---and they try to impose uniformity, they harvest disunity---and the people are scattered.

I am sure that back in Jesus' times---many Jews could not abide with the petty laws and heavy burdens placed upon them by their Jewish leaders. Jesus did not take them to task. Rather, he blamed the leadership, as seen in his well-known "Woe to you...." statements in the Gospel of Matthew.

It is our hierarchy that refuses to get out and mingle (even if they would do so in ordinary casual clothing) with the people---to talk---to see---to learn---what 'bugs' people about the Church. And if the Church has disunity----it is the hierarchy's fault.

Just like the Apostles were commissioned by Christ---the hierarchy are to be out among the people---to serve the people. Too many of the bishops sit in their chanceries (and in their mansions), like feudal barons. And the Vatican Cura----are even worse---acting like princes----when they should be servant-leaders.

Very well-thought out, well

Very well-thought out, well organized, informative article. It is obvious that the pope made an impression on the author. I am glad the pope's visit was successful and peaceful. Like most survivors of sexual abuse by a religious person in authority, though, I wish that the pope had issued more than just words of apology - the same apology he has been using now from country to country. I wish he had been strong enough to actually meld his faith together with action. Action taken against sexually predatory priests and religious. Action taken against bishops, cardinals and yes, even popes, who have covered up for these predators. But, alas, although he did head it off at the pass - score one for the Vatican's PR - he didn't really say anything different, and he certainly didn't make any promises about any action. Just more of the same. His apologies which constitute an empty gong.

Just for the record, the

Just for the record, the figure the police gave for the anti-Pope protest march in London on Saturday 18th September was five thousand people, not ten. The organizers originally claimed it was twenty thousand, but later changed their claim to ten, perhaps because the twenty thousand figure was so ludicrous.

The Tablet this week - I

The Tablet this week - I don't think by luck or accident - does have some decent reporting in which Robert Mickens [thank you, sir] doesn't just go with the B16 PR-flow/spin. Key is his remark on the Saturday 18 homily in Westminster Cathedral: "His comments on sex abuse certainly over-shadowed the main point of his homily at Westminster Cathedral. The mainstream media ignored his pre-Vatican II emphasis on the Mass as sacrifice (no mention of meal) and on the Crucifixion (just a passing mention of the Resurrection) as the core of Christian faith". Pre-Vatican II and the 'resurrection' not of Christ but of satisfaction theology, including the 'offer it up', indeed. Very telling in this homily is the sentence "I am especially happy that our meeting takes place in this cathedral dedicated to the most precious blood, which is the sign of God's redemptive mercy poured out upon the world through the passion, death and resurrection of his son, our Lord Jesus Christ. ...(please look up what I left out: just a gloss) The visitor to this cathedral cannot fail to be struck by the great crucifix dominating the nave, which portrays Christ's body, crushed by suffering, overwhelmed by sorrow, the innocent victim whose death has reconciled us with the Father and given us a share in the very life of God". Not a word about the actual LIFE of this Jesus, this means how his dealing with his sisters and brothers was recognised as the presence of Gods love and thereby breaking the devils' circle of 'reconciliation by suffering and death'. Beneath this kind of satisfaction theology is the childish fantasy that if something 'precious' is given up, there will be an award; or, at least: no punishment. This fantasy turns the actual murder of Jesus into reconciliation - but: who wants to be reconciled with such a bloodthirsty 'father'? However, this dark side of christian theology and the way it translates into 'worship' also gives rise to fantasies of power in some who see themselves as the guardians and preachers of the 'most precious blood'. Who and what will stop them from abusing this unchecked power? Sadly, the answer is not blowing in the wind.

IDENTICAL GOP HOT BUTTON

IDENTICAL GOP HOT BUTTON ISSUES:
"A strong statement from the Committee on Doctrine of the U.S. bishops’ conference accusing two Creighton theologians of distorting the Catholic moral tradition on issues such as homosexuality, contraception, and artificial reproduction."

And just in the nick of time for the right wing GOP members of the USCCB to "shepherd" in even more DIVISION across the country before the November elections. Coincidence? I don't think so....

I, too, am of the opinion the

I, too, am of the opinion the article did a great summarizing job. A couple of thoughts regarding analyses that appeared along the line: 1)About the Vatican Bank, its deposits in Italian banks and the comment about treating "the Church with kid gloves, even in ultra-Catholic Italy." Is this a fact that Italy is "ultra-Catholic"? Are we talking Catholic identity here in what appears to be the American sense? Or are we talking Catholic identity because Italy is historically a "Catholic" country? The country of Mussolini, communism, secularism, Mafiosa, Berlosconi: ultra-Catholic? 2)The IORW bank and the spotlight put upon it again. I think you put your finger on the situation when you articulated the worry of independent banking and the EU. Is the Vatican State a part of the EU? and therefore subject to its banking laws or not? It sounds to me much like the problems faced by countries in the Global South regarding independence in their banking/economic/social/etc policies? How does a small/powerless country relate to helpers and still keep its independence? 3)Your idea of "Catholic commons" is very close to Cardinal Bernadin's idea. Regretfully his was not taken up by many of his fellow Bishops and so really never "got off the ground." It's good to see that someone with your reputation for balance proposes it once again, especially in the sensitive contexts of "sexual morality" and biblical theology. In the USA at least, GO "CATHOLIC COMMONS"!!!!

OKAY, WE TAKE Mr. Allen’s

OKAY, WE TAKE Mr. Allen’s assumption that Pope Benedict had a successful trip to the United Kingdom in that he didn’t screw up anything, was seen in better light, and set an agenda that got the respectful attention it deserved. However, what the trip will translate to in the aftermath? That is much harder to discern, which Allen admits.

Years of observing papal trips or trips of any famous religious figure and seeing the aftermath, makes me conclude that there is really little impact on the lives and thinking of people. The late Billy Graham goes to U.K. and comes back feeling he wowed them with huge turnouts at his rallies, but his brand of religion goes nowhere in the U.K. John Paul II has thousands of youth gather in different places around the world and he feels he’s won them over, but no survey shows that youths followed any of his advice (rather the contrary if you took at lifestyles). The Dali Lama draws nice crowds wherever he goes but the world does not convert to non-violence and Tibetan Buddhism may not survive him.

I am not sure these trips do any more than help form images of the “world” religious leaders. Maybe, in that sense, Pope Benedict came off a little better. We can be thankful for that. However, if one is looking for Christianity to fare better in the U.K. or Catholicism becoming any more appealing to anyone or Christian unity looming around the corner, one better forget it.

The social trends of our time get set not by top-down events, but bottom-up relevancy in the lives of ordinary people. For Pope Benedict, he hasn’t found yet and may never find the connection to the lives of ordinary Catholics, much less anyone else.

Perhaps in regards to part

Perhaps in regards to part three of this thusly jesuitical article, we might do well all to read once more with attention Julie Hanlon Rubio´s Feb 2009 NCR book review entitled Sex that contributes: human flourishing should be the standard, not openness to procreation.(The Sexual Person: Toward a Renewed Catholic Anthropology), before getting our panties all in a knot

"Anyone who can figure out

"Anyone who can figure out the blueprint for a new Catholic commons may hold the key to the vitality of the church in the 21st century."

Try Jesus
Love one another.
Peace be with you!

Gabrielle, I am sorry to hear

Gabrielle,

I am sorry to hear that you were a victim of sexual abuse. It is an issue that infuriates me as well. Since I figure you through circumstance know much more than me, I was wondering if you knew of any victims' websites that had concrete steps the Church can take to help resolve this issue? And by this I mean seriously considered concrete steps (not ones that would advocate the dismemberment of the ecclesiastical hierarchy).

Thank You,

Gary

Saved by the most precious

Saved by the most precious blood?

The Tablet of September 25 - I don't think by luck or accident - brings some decent reporting in which Robert Mickens [thank you, sir] doesn't just go with the B16 PR-flow/spin. Key is his remark on the Saturday 18 homily in Westminster Cathedral: "His comments on sex abuse certainly over-shadowed the main point of his homily at Westminster Cathedral. The mainstream media ignored his pre-Vatican II emphasis on the Mass as sacrifice (no mention of meal) and on the Crucifixion (just a passing mention of the Resurrection) as the core of Christian faith". Pre-Vatican II and the 'resurrection' not of Christ but of satisfaction theology, including the 'offer it up', indeed. Very telling in this homily is the sentence "I am especially happy that our meeting takes place in this cathedral dedicated to the most precious blood, which is the sign of God's redemptive mercy poured out upon the world through the passion, death and resurrection of his son, our Lord Jesus Christ. ...(please look up what I left out: just a gloss) The visitor to this cathedral cannot fail to be struck by the great crucifix dominating the nave, which portrays Christ's body, crushed by suffering, overwhelmed by sorrow, the innocent victim whose death has reconciled us with the Father and given us a share in the very life of God". Not a word about the actual LIFE of this Jesus, and how his dealing with his sisters and brothers was recognised as the presence of God’s love and thereby breaking the devils' circle of 'reconciliation by suffering and death'. Beneath this kind of satisfaction theology is the childish fantasy that if something 'precious' is given up, there will be an award; or, at least: no punishment. This fantasy turns the actual murder of Jesus into reconciliation - but: who wants to be reconciled with such a bloodthirsty 'father'? However, this dark side of christian theology and the way it translates into 'worship' also gives rise to fantasies of power in some who see themselves as the guardians and preachers of the 'most precious blood'. Who and what will stop them from abusing this unchecked power? Sadly, the answer is not blowing in the wind.

Jans, thank you for this

Jans, thank you for this comment.

The essence of Christian

The essence of Christian faith is the sacrifice Jesus made on our behalf. The ethical example Jesus gave us in his life is surely important; but it was also simple. A simplicity that is echoed by other great examples of ethical life given by other religious figures. But what makes Christianity distinctive is the sacrifice Jesus made. To downplay the crucifiction and resurrection of Jesus is to ignore the central meaning of Christian faith.

Great to see the Church

Great to see the Church finally giving a rightful voice to women. Even although 4 out of 5 victims of clergy sexual abuse happen to be male, 4 out of the 5 victims who were "randomly" chosen to meet the Pope in London were...... female.

I'm told that the chances of that happening randomly are 1000/1.

Isnt it great that our Church listens to women after all (especially when its suits the Vatican's agenda.)

More Vatican Office PR Spin!

More Vatican Office PR Spin! Rays of Hope?

Post new comment

NCR Comment code:

  1. Be respectful. Do not attack the writer. Take on the idea, not the messenger.
  2. Use appropriate language. Avoid vulgarities and slurs.
  3. Keep to the point. Deliberate digressions don't aid the discussion.

For more detailed guidelines, visit our User Guidelines page.

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
(if you have one; if not, leave this blank)
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <font> <swf> <swf list>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may use <swf file="song.mp3"> to display Flash files inline

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This is to prove you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.