Posts Tagged LCWR
Vatican Declares “Year of Assault”
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Dissent, Voice of the Faithful on May 31, 2012
By John C. Sivalon, M.M.
Under the guise of a “Year of Faith,” the Vatican has launched an all-out assault on any theology or interpretation of Vatican II based on what it calls a “Hermeneutic (Interpretation) of Rupture.” This theological assault is articulated in the document known as “Porta Fidei” written by Benedict XVI and further specified in a document titled “Note on Recommendations for the Implementation of the Year of Faith” which was developed by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Both of these documents are cited by Cardinal Levada in his statement on the doctrinal assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). The rationale for that assessment and other punitive moves that have been made in recent months (Caritas International, educational institutes, and the Girl Scouts) must be understood in the broader context of this special “year of assault.”
The real crux of the issue according to the “Note” is a “correct understanding” of Vatican II over against “erroneous interpretations.” Benedict likes to refer to these interpretations as being based on a “hermeneutic of discontinuity” while referring to his own interpretation as being based on a “hermeneutic of renewal.” In truth, better labels for these respectively, are a “hermeneutic of mission” over against Benedict’s “hermeneutic of retrenchment.”
The hermeneutic of mission sees in the documents of Vatican II an attempt by the Church to rediscover in its past the kernels of fresh understandings and ecclesial structures that respond more authentically and relevantly to what the Council called the modern world. This hermeneutic sees the Council Fathers confirming tradition as a foundation upon which faith can continually build and grow as its context changes. It also sees God as continually present in history and culture, graciously offering new perceptions for understanding and interpreting the fullness of revelation.
The hermeneutic of retrenchment, on the other hand, sees in the documents of Vatican II the restatement of ossified doctrines in language that can be understood by the modern world. The hermeneutic of retrenchment regards tradition as a wall which functions to deter erroneous understandings. It also tends to see the modern context of the world negatively, often assigning to it labels such as secularism, relativism or pluralism. As Benedict says, “whereas in the past it was possible to recognize a unitary cultural matrix, broadly accepted in its appeal to the content of the faith and the values inspired by it, today this no longer seems to be the case in large swathes of society, . .” The hermeneutic of retrenchment, hence, longs for the past; for an idealized age of Christendom.
Thus, the action against LCWR and the other actions against loyal voices of faithful Christians open to discerning God’s wisdom in modern culture, should be seen as initial forays of shock and awe to soften the strongest areas of resistance, before the actual onslaught begins. That major assault is scheduled for October of 2012, with the opening of the Synod of Bishops on the “New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith.” The first working paper (Lineamenta) for this synod clearly sets forth the target of “New Evangelization.”
The target is plainly modern culture. According to the document the modern world is epitomized by a culture of relativism, which it says has even seeped into Christian life and ecclesial communities. The authors claim that its serious “anthropological implications are a questioning of basic human experiences for example the relation between a man and a woman as well as the meaning of reproduction and death itself.” Associated with this phenomenon, the document states, is the tremendous mixing of cultures resulting in “forms of corruption, the erosion of the fundamental references to life, the undermining of the values for which we exert ourselves and the deterioration of the very human ties we use to identify ourselves and give meaning to our lives.” Benedict in other places has labeled this pluralism; thus completing his trilogy of the demonic: secularism, relativism and pluralism, as he dreams of a reestablished, romanticized culture of Medieval Europe.
In stark contrast, the institutes of women religious dramatically exemplify the hermeneutic of mission: they moved out of “habits” that set them apart from the world; face the challenges of embracing the presence of God in modern culture; and faithfully struggle with being an authentic and clear sign of God’s love for the world. The assessment against them is outrageous for its patronizing arrogance and its patriarchy. But it is also clear that it is about much more: the dramatic fissure within the Roman Catholic church concerning the interpretation of Vatican II and the embracing (or failure to embrace) God’s presence in modern culture.
In this assault what is so pernicious, besides the effects on the lives of those immediately and dramatically targeted, is the appropriation of concepts developed by those operating out of a hermeneutic of mission by those who uphold a hermeneutic of retrenchment, who then redefine and use those concepts to defend and support their assault. Three quick examples of this are found in the Statement of Cardinal Levada on the doctrinal assessment of the LCWR and in the doctrinal assessment itself.
First, Levada claims that the overarching aim of the Assessment is to assist in implementing an “ecclesiology of communion.” The theologians who developed this ecclesiology based their reflections on the Vatican II emphasis on Church as the People of God, Body of Christ or A Pilgrim People. All of these images were employed by Vatican II to broaden the understanding of Church as being more than the hierarchy. None of these paradigms envision unity as fabricated through force or obedience to doctrine. Rather, unity is seen as flowing out of dialogue and common discernment as the People of God struggle together to be faithful and authentic witnesses of self-emptying Love. Who more than these institutes of religious women epitomize communion founded on faith and lived as self-emptying love?
Second, the doctrinal assessment of LCWR defines the sacramental character of the Church almost exclusively as patriarchal hierarchy. Again, the assessment document usurps a Vatican II understanding of Church as sacrament and recasts it. Vatican II on the other hand posits the Church in its entirety as the sacrament of the Reign of God.
Finally, in the post-Vatican II period, many theologians from various parts of the world have developed the image of Church as Prophet. They established this vision on a preferential option for the poor, a belief in salvation as liberation and the need to be critical not just of structures of the world but of the Church itself and its role in support of situations of oppression and human denigration. However the assessment document denies any possibility of prophecy aimed at the Church hierarchy itself or separate from that hierarchy. This abhorrent disregard for the Biblical prophets and their strong stance against the priest, kings and empty rituals of faith somehow is not perceived as a rupture with the past or tradition by those operating out of this hermeneutic of retrenchment.
As modern Catholics celebrate the 50th anniversary of the opening of Vatican II, we have entered into a new chapter of church history. The Council that was declared to open the windows is now being reinterpreted as closed shutters, protecting the Church from the gale force winds of a world searching for spiritual authenticity. While said to be a time of renewal, the “Year of Faith” is really dedicated to the idolatry of doctrine, power and hierarchy. The sisters in their communal service to the Church and world, who not only take a vow of poverty but actually live that vow without privilege, status or accumulation of wealth are a vivid and prophetic contrast to the inauthenticity of the call to retrenchment masquerading as renewal.
The column appeared originally on the blog “I Stand with the Sisters for Justice in the Church” and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.
Thanks to all who came to New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral to stand with our sisters in faith
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Dissent, Voice of the Faithful on May 31, 2012
The third of three vigils outside St. Patrick’s attracted well over 100 on Tuesday, May 29th as we showed our public support for the Leadership Conference of Religious Women and for all the religious women the LCWR represents. Thanks to all for showing your support.
Here are the pictures from the May 29th NYC vigil: 3rd NYC Pro Sisters Vigil (Facebook)
Thanks to Matt Rosenwasser for taking the photos and posting them for us all to enjoy. Please forward to your personal contact lists.
The LCWR is meeting this week to decide on a response to the ‘doctrinal assessment’ from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. May our prayers be with the sisters as they seek to discern the movement of the Holy Spirit during this difficult time.
A special thanks to all the members of Voice of the Faithful® and Call to Action New York who banded together for this important witness. We can take justifiable pride in the public statement we made on three successive Tuesdays in May, joining with vigilers in many cities across the US. May this action be an inspiration for more public actions in the future as we work to inspire Catholics across the US and around the world to stand in defense against those who reject the wisdom of the People of God.
Francis X. Piderit
VOTF NY Leadership Team
Voice of the Faithful New York
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…Another voice blogging in support of the sisters: Vatican Declares “Year of Assault”
Will Ireland’s Catholic faithful finally say no longer in one united voice?
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Dissent, Ireland, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on May 15, 2012
By Mark Mullaney, Voice of the Faithful President
Is it just me, or is there is a growing feeling out there that we are about to witness history in the making? Could the power of God’s people finally overcome the defiance of the conservative Church hierarchy?
For those of you who are following what has been happening in Ireland, I believe you would agree that major changes are coming. More than 1,000 lay people turned out for the Irish Association of Catholic Priests conference, Towards an Assembly of the Irish Church, on May 7 in Dublin. This was an historic show of support for these priests who believe that if the Catholic church is to remain relevant, it must change. The ACP now counts about 850 priests as members, about 20% or Ireland’s Catholic priests.
Like the sisters’ Leadership Conference of Women Religious group in the United States, the Irish priest association is “being reviewed” by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Specifically under review is the ACP’s founder, Father Tony Flannery, and newsletter, Reality. The Vatican ordered Father Flannery to “stop writing articles” in the newsletter which questioned Church teachings.
At the heart of these actions is the Vatican’s intolerance for the open discussion of Church beliefs and practices. The ACP believes that “modern people” feel it is their right to question and discuss issues. And if the church continues to suppress these rights, it will soon become “obsolete.”
The Irish faithful are not alone in taking a stand. In Austria last month during a First-Communion mass, an entire congregation, told by their priest that they should not participate in the Eucharist unless they were in a ‘state of grace,’ sat in the pews rather than receive the Eucharist that day. In solidarity, they chose the example of Jesus — to welcome all — rather than the restrictive and narrow vision of their priest as to whom might be worthy of sharing in the Eucharistic meal.
We at VOTF find these inspiring stories to be a hopeful sign that Catholics everywhere are finally saying “No longer!” to the Vatican’s insistence that we obey without question, without the God-given right to discuss our beliefs.
Why the Good Sisters?
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on April 26, 2012
By Steve Dzida, Chair
Voice of the Faithful Orange County, California
(Originally written for distribution to VOTF Orange County, California, Affiliate members)
You may have heard in the press that the Vatican has criticized harshly the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) for what the Vatican terms “serious doctrinal problems.” The LCWR says it represents 80 percent of America’s 57,000 Catholic nuns. It is influential both in the United States and globally.
Apparently the Vatican believes the LCWR focuses too much attention on poverty and social justice concerns and not enough on abortion and gay marriage. Published reports say the Vatican (i) said the LCWR had been “silent on the right to life” and had failed to make the “Biblical view of family life and human sexuality” a central plank in its agenda, (ii) accused the group of promoting “certain radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith,” and (iii) criticized American nuns for expressing, from time to time, positions on political issues that differed from views held by American bishops because such disagreement with the bishops, “the church’s authentic teachers of faith and morals,” is unacceptable.
To address these urgent problems, the Vatican named Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain, Bishop Leonard Blair of Toledo, Ohio, and Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, to undertake reforms of the LCWR’s statutes, programs, and its application of liturgical texts, a process it said could take up to five years.
Huh?
Aren’t these the same nuns who have been the heart, soul and backbone of our Church for centuries? Aren’t these the same nuns who have ministered to us all, both in the Church and outside the Church, so faithfully in their selfless service in schools, hospitals and other institutions throughout the country with particular attention to the most vulnerable among us? Aren’t these the same nuns who walked side by side with Martin Luther King and Cesar Chavez, exhorting us all to justice and peace? Aren’t these the “good sisters”? The Vatican says these giants of our Church are a “serious source of scandal?”
Let’s review the bidding–
- There is a leadership group within our Church who has for decades tolerated and enabled criminal sexual abuse of children by ordained ministers in our Church. That group is not the LCWR.
- There is a leadership group within our Church whose members have for decades knowingly transferred criminal sexual abusers from parish to parish without notice to parishioners and without effective controls to prevent further injury and crimes upon innocents. That group is not the LCWR.
- There is a leadership group within our Church who, ten years ago, adopted new norms for handling allegations of sexual abuse by clerics and has thereafter turned a blind eye when its members criticize, ignore, and even violate those norms. That group is not the LCWR.
- There is a leadership group within our Church whose gross and reckless disregard for the welfare of children in its care and its arrogant refusal to accept personal responsibility for its conduct and the conduct of its members has driven thousands of Catholics out of the Church. That group is not the LCWR.
- There is a leadership group within our Church whose negligence and intentional disregard for the welfare of innocent children in its care has cost the People of God billions of dollars and may well continue to cost the People of God even more billions in years to come. That group is not the LCWR.
You guessed it. That group is NOT the LCWR, it is the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). Has the Vatican announced a “doctrinal assessment” of the USCCB? Has the Vatican declared the necessity to reform the USCCB and its statutes? Has the Vatican publicly proclaimed the USCCB a “serious source of scandal?” Has the Vatican even once offered the kind of public criticism of the USCCB or any of its members as it has just made against the LCWR? We haven’t heard any of that. Have you? (Of course, one could question the Vatican’s own handling of the sexual abuse scandal in so many countries around the world, but that’s a separate story.)
The USCCB and its members have been doing a good enough job on their own of convincing the country that the only “Catholic political issues” are abortion and gay marriage. By emphasizing social justice, poverty, health care, education, and peace the LCWR and its members remind us that the mission of Catholics is service of the Gospel in all its glory. The USCCB and its members have been doing a good enough job on their own of offering aid, comfort, and political cover to particular political parties. By daring to disagree with these positions, the LCWR and its members remind us that our Church officials owe us servant leadership, not institutional paralysis. The USCCB and its members have been doing a good enough job on their own of burying their heads in the sand in the face of the critical shortage of priests to serve the People of God. By challenging us to examine “radical feminist themes” (translation: ordination of women) the LCWR and its members remind us that it is the Eucharist that is the “source and summit” of our faith, not the male, celibate priesthood.
None of us is perfect. No group of us is perfect. Not the LCWR, not the USCCB, certainly not VOTFOC. But when the Church we love is facing life and death issues, is it really “servant leadership” to lead a witch hunt against our dedicated nuns? When there are giant logs in the eyes of the USCCB and its members, is it really in service of the Gospel to attempt surgery on any mote in the eye of the LCWR and its members?
Wouldn’t it have been wonderful if the USCCB’s response to the Vatican directive about LCWR was a simple “Nuts to that!”? Since we will likely wait a long time for such a response, we suggest that is it up to us, the People of God, to stand up and announce “Nuts to that!” We encourage you to discuss this with others who love our Church as you do. We urge you to forward this message to those you know who care what kind of Church we hand on to our children and grandchildren. We invite you to discuss this message with the priests of your parish and diocese.
Please write the Vatican at: Prefect Cardinal William Joseph Levada, Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Piazza del S. Uffizio 11, 00193 Rome, Vatican City. Send Cardinal Levada (formerly of San Francisco) an email at cdf@cfaith.va. Please write Bishop Brown at: Bishop Tod D. Brown, Bishop of Orange, P. O. Box 14195, Orange, CA 92863-1595. (Write to your local bishop.) Ask them for an explanation of just how the Vatican can justify this “visitation” (persecution?) of the LCWR and yet maintain their public silence regarding the USCCB’s scandal. Let’s make sure that the Vatican and Bishop Brown knows that we care about these important matters, that we have opinions about them, and that we want our voices to be heard. This is our duty and our right. We are the Church. We are the Body of Christ.
Commentary Supporting Nuns Getting Louder
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Voice of the Faithful on April 23, 2012
Since last Wednesday, Apr. 18, when the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith mandated reform of the Leadership Council for Women Religious, commentary supporting the sisters has been getting louder. An example is today’s Grace on the Margins column by Jamie Manson, who writes regularly in in National Catholic Reporter. Those following the story will recall that the Vatican is faulting the sisters for doctrinal impurity. Manson recalls Pope Benedict XVI’s Holy Thursday sermon on a false obedience of human “caprice” and points out how the sisters’ “devotion is founded on a radical obedience to the voice of God as it emerges from the voices of the poor, the sick, the abandoned and the broken.” You may read her entire column online, LCWR: A radical obedience to the voice of God in our time.
Jamie L. Manson received her Master of Divinity degree from Yale Divinity School, where she studied Catholic theology and sexual ethics. Her columns for NCR earned her a first prize Catholic Press Association award for Best Column/Regular Commentary in 2010. She will speak at Voice of the Faithful’s 10th Year Conference in Boston this September.
Voice of the Faithful Takes Nuns’ Side
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on April 20, 2012
As the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith comes down on women religious in the United States for doctrinal impurity, Roman Catholic Church reform movement Voice of the Faithful supports the sisters.
On Wednesday, the Vatican mandated reform of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the largest leadership body of women religious in the United States, which represents about 80 percent of the 57,000 nuns in the country. Because of LCWR’s purported doctrinal impurity, the Vatican has appointed an archbishop to oversee the nuns’ reform.
The record of women religious in this country taking care of the most vulnerable in our society, creating the American hospital system, for example, is a primer on Gospel values. Their long service on the front lines of poverty and disease is worthy of the respect and admiration of all, VOTF among them.
Canon Lawyers are not giving LCWR much of a chance against the Vatican, which started LCWR in 1956 and to which the sisters answer.
VOTF believes that, although the Vatican may have Canon Law on its side, the sisters have Jesus’ example on theirs and his Scriptural admonition (Luke 20:46-47) about teachers of the law: “Be on guard against the scribes, who like to go around in long robes and love greetings in the marketplaces, seats of honor in the synagogues, and places of honor at banquets. They devour the houses of widows and, as a pretext, recite lengthy prayers. They will receive a very severe condemnation.”
Comments supporting the sisters will be forwarded to the LCWR.