The word of the Lord is faithful
and all his works to be trusted.
The Lord loves justice and right
and fills the earth with his love.
Psalm 32:4 - 5
Do you look into the cloudless
nights with your children to count the stars? Do you speak to them of the
wondrous stories that have been told since the dawn of time, of how the stars
came to be, of the mystery of the universe and indeed of life itself?
The greatest story ever told is
a story that unfolds from the beginning of creation to the present day. It is
the story of the fall of humanity from grace and the gift of hope, of
expectation that one day all will be made right. And this story is peopled by
those names with which we are so familiar: Adam, Eve, Cain and Abel, Noah,
Abraham, Sarah, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses and Aaron, kings, prophets, John
Baptist.
Planning your family may often
be more like luck than planning. If you have already waited some years there is
the anxiety about what might go wrong, about fertility, about age, about the
kind of world you would be bringing a child into. There are a variety of
assistive reproductive technologies.
Abram/Abraham is often called
our father in faith. A wealthy farmer, he and his wife, now elderly, are
childless. Living somewhere in the land of Ur, an ancient Sumerian city-state,
Abraham receives a message from the Lord: Leave
your country, your people and your father's household and go to the land I will
show you. I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make
your name great, and you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you,
and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed
through you (Genesis 12:1 – 3). In a leap of faith and obedience
to this nameless and yet-unknown God, Abraham packs up his household and
animals with the promise of future generations. In the land of Canaan (Gen 18:1
– 10), Abraham and his wife are visited by strangers who promise to return in a
year when Sarai/Sarah would by then have a child. Thus begins the journey of
salvation. For us Christians the focus and epicentre of this epic saga is the
person of Jesus, the mystery of Jesus. And like Abraham, this is an act of
faith.
If you are a mystery novel
reader, the author’s intention is that you must link together the many clues to
solve the crime. In reading back into the scriptures, the Christian finds the
clues to God’s intentions for humankind. St Paul (Col 1:24 – 28) believed that
this mystery had been hidden for hundreds of years, but that now, The mystery is Christ among you, your hope
of glory: this is the Christ we proclaim. It is now revealed to believers,
the saints.
When those children arrive that
you have longed for, like Abraham and Sarah, it is time to ponder such
beautiful gifts. It is time to thank ‘our lucky stars’ that through us, as
parents, we continue this incredible epic as we seek to live out lives with our
children that model Christ, that celebrate the new creation, that our hopes and
dreams for them will be everlasting life at the centre of life itself – in the
mystery and heart of Jesus, for we are among the blessed.
Peter Douglas
by Michael J. O'Loughlin
January 12, 2017
Taking a few steps is something
most people take for granted. It is a fairly easy process at first thought,
just one leg in front of the other. But the physical mechanics of beginning a
journey are far more complex. Dozens of muscles must expand as others
simultaneously contract, creating various tensions in the body that propel us
forward. Though often viewed as something to be massaged away, tension is in
fact a sign that we are alive.
If the church functions like a
human body, as St. Paul claims, then it follows that within it there must be
tensions.
Since the first days of his
pontificate in 2013, Pope Francis has dealt with more than his fair share of
tension in the church he was elected to govern. Those tensions have become more
pronounced in recent months, as Francis tries to extend the center of global
Catholicism away from Rome to the peripheries and implement reforms that his
supporters say are long overdue.
Whereas popes of the distant past
wielded temporal power as effectively as any king, Pope Francis’ most potent
tool is his example. The men he has appointed to be cardinals and bishops serve
as models of the kinds of pastors he thinks the church needs. His many
interviews and press conferences demonstrate his insistence that church leaders
must connect with everyday Catholics. And his decision to bring out into the
open once taboo topics shows that he wants the church to confront its
challenges rather than continue to ignore them out of a mistaken, simplistic
notion of unity.
The pope has invited his flock to
walk alongside him as he seeks to reinvigorate the church. Taking the initial
steps of what promises to be a long trek means tensions in the church are sure
not to let up anytime soon. But Francis is unafraid, those close to him say,
trusting that God is guiding him and all the faithful on this journey.
I. ON A CHILLY November
morning, 17 men draped in brilliant red robes stood before the imposing altar
inside St. Peter’s Basilica. Together, they pledged to be “constantly obedient
to the Holy Apostolic Roman Church, to Blessed Peter in the person of the
Supreme Pontiff.”
Each man approached Pope Francis
to receive a red hat, a ring and a blessing. They exchanged a ritual kiss with
the pope and returned to their seats, now part of the most exclusive and
powerful body in the Catholic Church. The new cardinals then took time to greet
scores of other cardinals who had witnessed the ceremony from nearby. The
ritual is designed to send an unmistakable message: Under Peter we are all one.
But days before the ceremony,
four cardinals made clear that church unity was, under Francis, elusive. These
men, two of whom are in their 80s and no longer in active ministry or eligible
to vote for the next pope, had written a letter to Pope Francis in September
that read like a Gospel passage.
Teacher, they seemed to ask, if a
man divorces his wife and the woman marries again, raises a family and
continues to practice her faith, should she be welcomed to Communion, as you
seem to suggest in your pastoral letter “Amoris Laetitia,” or should we follow
the rules set forward by your predecessor, St. John Paul II, which would
prevent her from participating in the sacrament?
The letter, called a dubia,
contains five yes-or-no questions. It was written to call into question ideas
Pope Francis promulgated following a two-year consultative process with bishops
from around the world that ended in October 2015. The pope did not respond
directly to the cardinals, which has bothered some church traditionalists, but
he has not exactly ignored their concerns either. In a homily a few weeks
before the consistory—the ceremony in which new cardinals are created—the pope
lamented the rigidity of some churchmen, which many have interpreted as a
not-so-subtle jab at those criticizing his reforms.
“Let’s pray for our brothers and
sisters who think that by becoming rigid they are following the path of the
Lord,” Francis
preached. “May the Lord make them feel that he is our Father and
that he loves mercy, tenderness, goodness, meekness, humility. And may he teach
us all to walk in the path of the Lord with these attitudes.”
The prayer was Vatican-speak for,
“Bless your heart,” a phrase uttered with a smile by many Southerners when
confronted during a tense encounter.
Then, speaking
three days before Christmas to the Roman curia, Francis again made
his case for reform, calling it “first and foremost a sign of life, of a church
that advances on her pilgrim way.” And he brushed off the criticism, noting
that the “absence of reaction is a sign of death!”
Nearly four years into his
pontificate and just after his 80th birthday in December, Francis continues to
use a blend of consultative deliberations, confident decision-making and
appeals directly to the Catholic faithful to drive his agenda. There are hints
today that he may yet fail at reforming the church—insiders and traditionalists
are emboldened because of efforts like the dubia—but Francis
appears as determined as ever to move the church forward.
II. SYNODALITY,
widespread consultation with the greatest number of people from the far reaches
of the church, is key to understanding how Francis governs.
Pope Paul VI established the
synod of bishops in 1965, an institution designed to continue the collaborative
ethos among church leaders that emerged during the Second Vatican Council, one
that harkened back to the earliest days of the church. But by the 1980s synods
had become stultifying and routine, with little real work or dialogue breaking
through the Vatican’s infamously rigid bureaucracy.
The mood inside the synod hall
began to loosen up a bit in the mid-2000s, thanks in part to Pope Benedict XVI,
who introduced happy hours after the dry plenary sessions had wrapped up.
Bishops began to open up with one another over a drink.
Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the newly
named archbishop of Newark who worked in the Vatican for several years under
Pope Benedict XVI, said that previous synods often failed to live up to their
stated goal of fostering dialogue. Cardinal Tobin, who was recently given a red
hat by Francis, participated in three synods under St. John Paul II and two
under his successor.
“It was a very clear process that
didn’t allow for real reflection or questioning,” he told America during
an interview at the motherhouse of the Redemptorist order in Rome. “Instead,
and this is probably exaggerated language, people were frog-marched to a
conclusion.”
Pope Francis announced less than
a year after his election that he would convene a special synod of bishops.
Bishops would discuss family life, and nothing was off the table. The following
October, in 2014, close to 200 bishops from around the world descended on Rome
for the first part of the synod. They were tasked with crafting ideas to
strengthen families, and that is what they spent most of their time
considering.
But they also talked about the
pain experienced by divorced and remarried Catholics who feel cut off from
parish life. They considered how gay and lesbian Catholics and their families
sometimes feel judged and ashamed. And they reflected on the complexities young
couples face when discerning when to marry and how many children to have—all
with the pope’s encouragement.
It was not business as usual.
Though most cardinals put on a
face of unity when talking to the media circus, they could not conceal the
tensions developing inside the synod hall. A draft document of the synod’s
deliberations, which contained some of the most astoundingly positive language
about gay people ever to come from inside the walls of the Vatican, was leaked
to the press in order to
undermine the deliberations, and the notion that divorced and
remarried Catholics could receive Communion became a dividing line between
reformers and traditionalists.
The synod concluded without clear
consensus on the most sensitive topics and the pope asked the participants to
return home and thoughtfully consider what had transpired. Another round of
deliberations would take place in one year. To avoid shutting down the
dialogue, Francis refrained from tipping his hand.
When the delegates returned,
tensions remained high. At the start of the meeting, 13 cardinals
signed a letter addressed to the pope suggesting that his synod
was designed to lead to a predetermined conclusion rather than foster open
dialogue. Some bishops felt that the proceedings had gone off track.
“About halfway through, I thought
the synod was a complete and utter mess,” Archbishop Mark Coleridge of the
Archdiocese of Brisbane, Australia, and a synod delegate, told America in
a recent interview. “I couldn’t see where it was going or how it would get
there.”
Archbishop Coleridge, who had
worked in the Vatican’s secretary of state’s office under St. John Paul II,
said that though he found parts of the synod “unnerving,” he never doubted that
Francis had a plan.
Six months later, in April 2016,
the pope released “Amoris Laetitia,” which summarized the findings of the synod
process. In addition to describing the beauty of family life and the need for
the church to support families more effectively, the pope also offered a
suggestion on how to move forward on the Communion question.
He appeared to suggest that
through a process of discernment and penance, in consultation with a priest,
divorced and remarried Catholics who wished to receive Communion might be
readmitted to the sacrament. The pope sought to move forward on the issue in a
footnote, a signal that the teaching was not the main thrust of the letter.
That a single footnote in a 325-paragraph document on family life is receiving
the most attention is distressing to some Catholics.
Helen Alvaré, a lawyer and
advisor to the U.S. bishops’ conference who often writes on marriage and the
family, told America that the outsized attention paid to the
divorce question, and the lack of attention paid to other important family
issues, is “heartbreaking.” Further, she said, “the
‘who’s-up-who’s-down-who’s-out’ coverage of the varying responses of bishops to
A.L. is a missed opportunity to take A.L. and make it the Magna Carta of a new
marriage focus for the church.”
Still, the divorce question is
one that has shaken up the church and offers a clue to where the pope intends
to lead the faithful. So last September when bishops in Argentina released a
more concrete framework for the process of opening up Communion, which was
subsequently met with a papal nod of approval, it was the clearest indication
to date that through the process of synodality, Francis is intent on
refashioning church structures.
“The notion is, in this
worldwide, global church, to put greater provision for governance in a less
centralized manner, with a creative tension with the center,” Cardinal Tobin
said.
Ask difficult questions,
deliberate with as many minds as possible and then make a decision. Take one
more step along the journey. Pope Francis may not know where the process will
take him or the church, but he is confident that staying in one place is not an
option.
III. MORE THAN 6,000 MILES away from the
Vatican, in sunny San Diego, Calif., about 125 Catholics spent the late summer
months last year studying “Amoris Laetitia” and asking how the document could
be best applied to the diocese’s nearly one million Catholics.
Their task was set by Bishop
Robert McElroy, who has earned a reputation as something of a policy wonk in
the U.S. hierarchy. He spent most of his priestly career in his native San
Francisco before being appointed to lead the Diocese of San Diego by Pope
Francis in 2015.
Bishop McElroy is the type of
leader Pope Francis said he wants as a bishop: A pastor who does not give in to
the temptation to be a culture warrior but instead focuses on preaching the
breadth of Catholic social teaching in the public square. Recognizing that
something new was happening in Rome during the two synods of bishops, Bishop
McElroy decided to follow the pope’s lead and hold a similar meeting at home.
“When the pope talks so much
about synodality, I thought, this could be a way of doing diocesan deliberation
and pastoral planning in a way that’s focused and that brings laypeople
substantially and robustly into the process,” Bishop McElroy told America during
an interview at the November meeting of the U.S. bishops in Baltimore.
Having promised the delegates
that their time would not be wasted and, barring any doctrinal errors, that
their ideas would be implemented, Bishop McElroy was a bit nervous about where
the synod would venture. The delegates read “Amoris” and considered how its
lessons applied to local Catholics. The results surprised the bishop.
Take families experiencing
separation. The military has a large presence in San Diego, and as a result,
many families in that diocese endure long deployments that keep spouses and
parents apart for long periods. “Amoris” talks about fragmented families, of
course, but not necessarily in this way. Localizing the pope’s universal
message, San Diego Catholics said the church has to be better at offering
resources to families separated by deployment.
Then there were L.G.B.T. issues,
also considered at the Rome synods but reinterpreted through a local lens in
gay-friendly California.
Gay people were not categorized
as threats to marriage by most San Diego synod delegates. Instead, they said
that gay and lesbian concerns should be considered in a wider framework of
family spirituality, a surprising departure from the tone of much of the
Catholic conversation about L.G.B.T. issues in recent years.
And when delegates were
struggling to wrap their heads around the divorce and remarriage question—some
of them were not comfortable with the idea of opening up Communion—one of the
theologians on hand pointed to the model created by Argentine bishops and
endorsed by the pope. The delegates said they wanted something similar in San
Diego. But they also said the diocese should educate local Catholics about the
Catholic tradition of conscience more broadly, going well beyond the divorce
question.
Bishop McElroy accepted their
recommendations, and in the coming months the diocese’s administrative
structures will be reorganized and priests will be trained to accompany those
currently barred from the sacrament of Communion toward reconciliation.
“We’re going to do what the
pope’s asked us to do, and I’m certainly going to do it because the people
asked us to,” Bishop McElroy said.
He acknowledged there is some
tension in the church created by the pope’s leadership style, but he said that
at heart is a bigger issue that is not new in the church.
“It’s an ecclesial question that
goes to the heart of everything Francis tries to do: Does everything have to be
centralized decision making?” he explained. “This is where there’s a huge
dispute.”
“The fundamental question is,
does everything have to be centralized so that everything will be uniform?” he
said. “My answer is no.”
IV. STANDING ON THE ROOF above the offices
of the Italian Jesuit journal La Civiltà Cattolica, Antonio Spadaro, S.J.,
looks out at the dome of St. Peter’s Basilica, the late afternoon sun low in
the sky. For the past several months, Father Spadaro has kept a frenetic
schedule, using every means of communication available to defend the pope from
attacks from within and outside the church.
Both Pope Francis and Father
Spadaro are Jesuits, and the order’s emphasis on discernment guides the pope’s
style of governance. This can be disorienting to people who are used to a more
top-down model of leadership or who still abide by Augustine’s famous “Rome has
spoken; the cause is finished” ethos.
“If the process is real, you
don’t know the end,” Father Spadaro told America.
As he crisscrossed the rooftop,
eager to point out the various Roman landmarks off in the distance, Father
Spadaro compared the pope’s governing style to a stroll through windy, cobblestone
paths in an ancient city. Whereas people today rely on their G.P.S. devices to
guide them to their destinations, with no meandering turns or surprise
adventures, Francis is decidedly old school in his approach.
“You know the street, and how to
walk along the street, because it feels inspired and guided by God,” Father
Spadaro said. “But Pope Francis doesn’t know exactly where it’s going. He
learns and he understands things step by step.”
Each step can cause tension for
people who are anxious about the new route Francis is undertaking.
At the conclusion of the 2014
synod of bishops, Francis talked about
the disagreement inside the synod hall. Instead of expressing
disappointment, however, he said he was heartened that bishops felt free to
express themselves. Indeed, he would have been “very worried and saddened” had
the bishops chosen a “false and quietist peace” over robust dialogue.
Archbishop Coleridge pointed to
the pope’s 2015 remarks at a Vatican ceremony commemorating
50 years of synods in the postconciliar church. In that speech,
Francis repeated his desire that consultation and dialogue become the norm in
the church. He said those words helped him see how synodality can guide the
church today. The archbishop said that Francis is intent on removing the
mystique around the papacy that reached its apotheosis under St. John Paul II,
whom some regarded “as a kind of oracle who could pronounce the last word on
any given issue.”
“For Pope Francis, it’s more that
he is part of a great conversation that belongs to the whole of the church,” he
said.
“At times there’s a different
kind of authority at work when it allows the discussion to run to a new stage,”
he continued. “But I think it in no way diminishes the exercise of the Petrine
ministry. If anything, it shows the truth, the power and the beauty of it more
clearly.”
Turning to another interview to
promulgate his ideas, this time with the Belgian
Catholic newspaper Tertio in December, Francis described his
synodal vision for the church.
He said, “Either there is a
pyramidal church, in which what Peter says is done, or there is a synodal
church, in which Peter is Peter but he accompanies the church, he lets her
grow, he listens to her, he learns from this reality and goes about harmonising
it, discerning what comes from the church and restoring it to her.”
Francis said there would always
be movement and dialogue in a synodal church—but that the pope would always be
in charge.
“But there is a Latin phrase that
says the churches are always cum Petro et sub Petro,” he continued.
“Peter is the guarantor of the unity of the church. He is the guarantor.”
Moving forward is never easy. It
can unsettle those used to the ways things are and have been. So it is
unsurprising that Francis is facing some resistance. Still, Father Spadaro said
critiques of the pope receive too much attention. After all, nearly all
cardinals, save for a few, have voiced support for Francis. Most Catholics,
Father Spadaro contends, are not bothered by internal church debates.
“If we read ‘Amoris Laetitia,’
it’s pretty clear what the pope intended to do: to install discernment inside
the processes of the church,” he told America. “He’s trying to say
to the pastors, your work is not just to apply norms as something like
mathematics or theories. Your job is to look at the life of your people and to
help them to discover God and to help them to grow in the church without
excluding, without separating anyone from the Gospel and the life of the
church.”
Father Spadaro considers a
question about the pope’s overarching goals and concedes that there is no
master plan. “He decides what to do by looking at events and praying, which
means he doesn’t build big plans,” he said. “He goes step by step, step by
step.”
Each of those steps, of course,
is more complex than the pope might like, revealing tensions along the way. But
that does not worry the pope, Father Spadaro said. “He’s aware of the risks, of
course; but if the path is guided by God, you don’t have to feel troubled or
anxious.”
As for those unsure of the style Francis has chosen in leading the
church, Father Spadaro offers some advice: “You have to follow the direction
that Peter is giving the church.”
Michael J.
O’Loughlin is the national correspondent for America and author
of The Tweetable
Pope: Spiritual Revolution in 140 Characters.
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