Preach the Gospel - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 14 Jul 2022 09:09:45 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Preach the Gospel - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Vatican-inspired theological revolution https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/07/07/vatican-inspired-theological-revolution/ Thu, 07 Jul 2022 08:10:33 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=148880

I'm not telling you anything new when I say that one of the most toxic problems facing Catholicism is clericalism. By 'clericalism' I mean the tendency to place priests on a pedestal, to accept their pronouncements as gospel, encouraging them to feel, as Pope Francis says, 'superior to lay people.' It begins in seminary training Read more

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I'm not telling you anything new when I say that one of the most toxic problems facing Catholicism is clericalism.

By 'clericalism' I mean the tendency to place priests on a pedestal, to accept their pronouncements as gospel, encouraging them to feel, as Pope Francis says, 'superior to lay people.'

It begins in seminary training when candidates start to see themselves as joining a unique male, celibate, secretive caste enjoying privilege and power, set apart from ordinary humanity by ordination.

Clericalism is at the root of sexual abuse when inadequate, immature men feel they can use children to satisfy their warped sexual impulses.

It is a way of life far removed from Jesus, 'the man who had nowhere to lay his head' (Matthew 8:20). It's also very different to Pope Francis' call to priests to experience 'the smell of the sheep.'

But in his recent (March 19, 2022) Apostolic Constitution entitled Praedicate Evangelium, 'Preach the Gospel', Pope Francis dealt clericalism a major blow.

This is the final document in a long-planned reform of the Roman Curia, the Vatican bureaucracy.

The cardinals who elected him in 2013 asked Francis to restructure the curia following several scandals under Benedict XVI and John Paul II.

Praedicate Evangelium is the result. The practical detail is not important; my personal view is that no matter what the structure, the curia is a creature of the 16th century and is irreformable.

But there was a basic principle laid down in Praedicate Evangelium that is profoundly important with far-reaching consequences for the whole church. This principle states that any baptised Catholic 'can preside over a dicastery,' that is run a Vatican department.

Previously only ordained clerics could do this because ordination was the absolute precondition for exercising 'ordinary jurisdiction' or church governance.

Explaining the change canon lawyer, Father (now Cardinal) Gianfranco Ghirlando, SJ said unequivocally 'that the power of governance in the church does not come from ordination, but from one's mission' (my emphasis).

The absolute centrality of baptism

Yes, but so what? Well, as sometimes happens, profound, long-term change follows a seemingly minor shift of emphasis.

Essentially, Ghirlando is saying, reflecting Francis, that you don't have to be ordained a priest to exercise the power of governance in the church.

And by 'governance' Ghirlando means the administrative authority that comes with a call from the church to carry out a specific 'mission'.

Now that's a profound transposition for a church that has been fixated on clerical power for centuries. What PE does is shift the focus away from ordination to restore the absolute centrality of baptism.

All Catholics can now share in church governance by the very fact of their baptism.

The people of God already share in the common priesthood of those baptized into Christ's death and resurrection. The distinction between the ordained and the baptised is one of function, not of the essence.

The 20th-century theologian who restored the role of laypeople was Yves Congar, OP (1904-1995). His theology broke down the separation between the spiritual and secular world, a separation that long bedevilled Catholicism.

Reflecting Congar, the Vatican II Decree on the Laity is clear that the church lives in the world to bring it to Christ, not into some separate spiritual sphere. Congar wrote that the church is challenged 'by the world to re-join it, in order to speak validly of Jesus Christ.'

This is literally the Catholic 'mission statement', the reason for the church's existence.

Historian Edmund Campion says that Catholics were persuaded by Congar that 'all of us were responsible for what the church did … that waiting to be told what to do was foolish …that there was work for us … as servants of the world which had its own destiny in God's plan' (Then and Now, 2021).

However, Praedicate Evangelium takes a step beyond the mission of all the baptised. While still using the word, Praedicate Evangelium is actually talking about a specific kind of mission.

It's saying that any baptised person can be called to governance in the church. This is a call to a more focused mission, that of leadership

Distinguished Australian theologian, John N. Collins, is helpful here.

He has conclusively shown that in the New Testament the Greek word Diakonia, which we translate as 'ministry', refers explicitly to a public role of leadership in the church's mission, which is recognised by the community (Diakonia. Re-interpreting the Ancient Sources, 1990).

So, leaders in Catholic schools, hospitals, aged care, social services or, in the terms of Praedicate Evangelium, a Vatican dicastery, are called to ministerial leadership.

Other staff are invited to share in the mission of proclaiming Christ in the world, or participating in and supporting the ethos of the organisation.

While Praedicate Evangelium is right when it re-situates mission in baptism, it would have been much clearer if it had picked up John Collins' re-interpretation of Diakonia, ministry, because that is what it is really referring to when it talks about 'presiding over a dicastery.'

In the Australian context, I would argue that the women and men exercising leadership in a specific work of the church are truly ministers.

In a Catholic school, for example, the principal and the RE co-ordinator are the ministerial leaders of the school community, modelling and engendering the mission of proclaiming Christ and the Catholic tradition.

In hospitals and aged care facilities, the leadership ministry is more complex with their disparate medical, nursing and domestic staff, visiting doctors and specialists, and volunteers.

Most Catholic hospitals are now part of larger organisations such as Mercy Health, St Vincent's Health Australia, or Calvary Health Care, with an overall coordinating body, Canberra-based Catholic Health Australia (CHA).

CHA focuses its ministerial emphasis on the 'wholistic healing ministry' of Jesus, meaning that he cured and integrated the whole person, not just the physical illness or disease.

In conclusion, there's no doubt that Praedicate Evangelium is a revolutionary if understated document. It would have been clearer if it had picked up Collins' re-interpretation of ministry as leadership because that's what it's talking about.

But it is a decisive, even revolutionary theological shift because it re-roots ministry in the mission to which all are called by baptism.

  • Paul Collins is the author of 15 books, several of which focus on church governance and Australian Catholicism.
  • First published in La-Croix International. Republished with permission.
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Once Francis has gone the next pope will forget everything https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/03/31/next-pope-will-forget-everything/ Thu, 31 Mar 2022 07:12:08 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=145462 next pope will forget everything

People in the Vatican often use biblical allusions to express their expectations. Such was the case of a top Roman Curia official on March 19, just a few hours after Pope Francis had published his new apostolic constitution to fully reorganize the Church's central bureaucracy. He was more than willing to give his views on Read more

Once Francis has gone the next pope will forget everything... Read more]]>
People in the Vatican often use biblical allusions to express their expectations.

Such was the case of a top Roman Curia official on March 19, just a few hours after Pope Francis had published his new apostolic constitution to fully reorganize the Church's central bureaucracy.

He was more than willing to give his views on the reforms the Argentine pope is putting into places - but, naturally, only on the condition of anonymity.

"I've heard a lot of people here lately who have been quoting a passage from the Book of Exodus: 'There came to power in Egypt a king who knew not Joseph'," the official said.

That phrase in the Old Testament marked a turning point for the chosen people. The new pharaoh forgot about Joseph, once the most powerful man in Egypt, and decided to subject the Israelites to slavery.

But what does this biblical story have to do with the pope and the Curia?

"It's simple," our source said.

"These people are eager for an about-face. They hope that once Pope Francis is gone, the next pope will forget everything he put in place and all the people he relied on."

That's a revealing interpretation of how some people in the Roman Curia are resistant to any sort of change and are hoping the end of the current pontificate comes quickly.

No doubt, the pope decided to publish his new constitution without giving any prior notice as a way to counter this resistance.

Even inside the Vatican itself, only a few officials knew beforehand of the document's release.

As one Vatican source mused: "It was a way to prevent it from being blocked."

Source

  • Loup Besmond de Senneville has been a journalist with La Croix since 2011 and permanent correspondent at the Vatican since 2020.
  • First published in La-Croix International. Republished with permission.
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Preach the Gospel: The Vatican's conversion https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/03/24/preach-the-gospel-the-vaticans-conversion/ Thu, 24 Mar 2022 07:11:39 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=145167 Preach the Gospel

Pope Francis offered his initial diagnosis of the Roman Curia a long time ago - on December 22, 2014 to be precise - and it was severe. He was still riding the momentum of his recent election to the papacy at the time, and before a gathering of stunned cardinals and top Vatican officials he Read more

Preach the Gospel: The Vatican's conversion... Read more]]>
Pope Francis offered his initial diagnosis of the Roman Curia a long time ago - on December 22, 2014 to be precise - and it was severe.

He was still riding the momentum of his recent election to the papacy at the time, and before a gathering of stunned cardinals and top Vatican officials he read out a list of fifteen "curial diseases" that he said were eating away at the Church's central structure from within.

Among them, the pope cited rivalries, vanity and "spiritual Alzheimer's".

This brutal realization sounded the charge against the court-like logic that withers the government of the Church and distracts it from its essential mission: the proclamation of the Gospel.

The new apostolic constitution that was released this past Saturday (March 19) is the culmination of this process of reforming the Curia. It is significant that the Gospel occupies the first place, even in the title: Praedicate evangelium (Preach the Gospel).

The text bears the seeds of several revolutions.

We find there the imprint of Pope Francis, who has always insisted on the primacy of the encounter with Christ and on the fight against clericalism.

Doctrinal issues are no longer at the top of the organizational chart.

As for the clerics, they lose their quasi-monopoly on the governing bodies. All the faithful - lay or consecrated, men or women - will be able to preside over a dicastery (the pope's "ministries"), whereas today these are mostly in the hands of cardinals.

It would be unwise to place too much hope in seemingly organizational changes.

But this powerful reform, if fully implemented, is likely to change not only the way the Church functions, but also the way it proclaims its message to the world.

This is especially true if the spirit underlying the reform spreads in a capillary way to dioceses, parishes and even the hearts of the Catholic people.

In Christian parlance, there is another word for "revolution". It's called "conversion".

  • Jérôme Chapuis is the editor-in-chief of La Croix.
  • First published in La-Croix International. Republished with permission.
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