Pope Benedict XVI is flanked by Cardinal Edward M. Egan, retired archbishop of New York, and Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan of New York during a Nov. 26 meeting with US bishops from the state of New York on their ad limina visits to the Vatican. (CNS)
“Young people
have a right to hear clearly the Church’s teaching and, more importantly, to be
inspired by the coherence and beauty of the Christian message, so that they in
turn can instill in their peers a deep love of Christ and his Church.”
Benedict XVI to
Bishops of the State of New York, November 26, 2011.[1]
I.
Every five years,
the bishops of a given country are to make a formal visit of account to the
Holy Father. They are not simply free agents or executives who run their dioceses
as if these were their private property. In November, Benedict began his
reception of American bishops. As there are quite a few US bishops (283), they
go in groups according to the region of the country from which they originate.
Archbishop Dolan of New York was the spokesman for the New York State bishops,
who made their visit in late November. L’Osservatore
Romano carried a brief interview with the archbishop.
As might be
expected, the Pope began his meeting with the American bishops with a reference
to his 2008 visit to the United States. He mentioned the “conscientious
efforts” to deal with clerical scandals. But, he addedshowing how alert he is“Just as the Church is rightly held to exacting standards in this
regard, all other institutions, without exception, should be held to the same
standards.” The key phrase is “the same standards.” It has long been obvious
that abuse cases which have been pursued with such relish against Catholic
culprits have not been pursued in the same way in the case of public schools or
of government, military, business, athletic, and other institutions.
Bishops talk to
the Pope. He listens. “Many of you have shared with me your concern about the
grave challenges to a consistent Christian witness presented by an increasingly
secularized society.” The Pope, with his experience of talking to many world
figures, adds that this unsettlement is shared by others. Indeed, many wonder
about the “future of democratic societies.” Such societies need firm and
constant principles and virtuous practices to survive. Such things must arise
from within the souls of free citizens. But they can choose, as often seems to
be the case, not to live reasonably.
Thus, we find “a
troubling breakdown in the intellectual, cultural, and moral foundations of
social life, and a growing sense of dislocation and insecurity, especially
among the young, in the face of wide-ranging societal changes.” This situation
is not simply an issue in New York State. The Pope does not hesitate to link
what we think with how we live. Behind every moral disorder is usually an
intellectual aberration, and vice versa. Even if we are legally allowed to
“think as we like,” we are not, in practice, allowed to escape the consequences
of our acts. This reminder touches on something fundamental to human nature
about which Benedict has often spoken, beginning with Spe Salvi.
In his brief
Advent Angelus on November 27, for instance, Benedict said that during Advent
we are asked to “Watch!” He adds: “It is a salutary reminder to us that life
does not only have an earthly dimension, but reaches toward a ‘beyond,’ like a
plantlet that sprouts from the ground and soars towards the sky. A thinking
plantlet, man, is endowed with freedom and responsibility, which is why each one of us will be called to account
for how he/she has lived, how each one has used the talents with which each is
endowed.”[2] In
other words, even if we set up our own standards and norms, in the end we will
be judged by an objective order which we have rejected, refused to learn, or
acted contrary to. I want to
relate this brief passage to what Benedict said to the New York bishops.
II.
Benedicts tells
the bishops that we can look on this situation in a positive, prophetic
fashion. We have too few bishops with voices. In modern society, it may well be
more courageous to speak the truth about life, family, responsibility, sin, and
punishment than it is to die with the lions. Benedict speaks of a “quiet
attrition” from the Church. Many bishops comment on how many Catholics have
joined evangelical congregations or how many have substituted secular causesnot,
on examination, half so coherentfor religion. Moreover, the constant
business of modern life that never allows a moment away from media in all its
forms or the activities promoted or recommended by it seems designed to keep us
from contemplating what it is all about.
“Immersed in the
culture, believers are daily beset by the objections, the troubling questions,
and the cynicism of a society which seems to have lost its roots, by a world in
which the love of God has grown cold in so many hearts.” Is there any answer to
such a situation? We can be sure that this Pope will go to the heart of the
matter. We are not dealing here with mechanical or deterministic things, except
in the sense that a false idea will not cease being false just because we claim
it is true. If we act on it, it will carry out its disorder in the world. It
cannot be stopped unless we recognize and acknowledge and, yes, confess its
falsity. This is really what the judgment that the Pope spoke of in the Angelus
is about.
“As with all
spiritual crises, whether of individuals or communities, we know that the
ultimate answer can only be born of a searching, critical, and ongoing
self-assessment and conversion in the light of Christ’s truth. Only through
such interior renewal will we be able to discern and meet the spiritual needs
of our age with the ageless truth of the Gospel.” What is the Pope saying here?
The English title given by L’Osservatore
Romano to this episcopal visit was “Evangelization and Conversion:
Priorities of the Church.” However much the world may not like to hear it, it
is the function of a bishop to make sure that the essential teachings of Christ
are heard, not watered down. We still must teach that ultimately conversion is
the only answer. But we must also say that conversion is a matter of seeing, in
grace, the truth; nothing forced about it. Anything less will not do. And we
must be allowed to say these things as a matter of political freedom and speak
them as a matter of truth. Our legal and political trends have deliberately
sought more and more to make any public expression of Catholicism impossible.
Not to know this is not to have been living in America.
III.
Bishops from the state of New York on their ad limina visits to the Vatican concelebrate Mass at the tomb of Blessed John Paul II in St. Peter's Basilica Nov. 29. (CNS)
Finally, the Pope
has a few words on the Liturgy and the new translation of the Sacramentary. “A
weakened sense of the meaning and importance of Christian worship can only lead
to a weakness of the specific and essential vocation of the laity to imbue the temporary
order with the spirit of the Gospel.” The Pope notes that historically the
Sabbath has been respected in America. Any renewal of the “social fabric” can
only be “in accordance with unchangeable truth.” In one sense, we might say
that a society that insists on looking elsewhere for the solutions but where they
can alone be found is a lost society. In effect, this is what Benedict told the
US bishops.
“The renewal of
the Church’s witness to the Gospel in your country is essentially linked to the
recovery of a shared vision and sense of mission by the entire Catholic
community.” He includes here the Catholic universities, which need a “renewed
sense of their ecclesial mission.” The Pope again mentions Ex Corde Ecclesiae, John Paul II’s comment on what a Catholic university
ought to be. Basically, it ought to be Catholic, to manifest and teach the
Catholic mind in its full coherence, in the relation of reason and revelation.
The bottom line,
really, is that “Catholic” is not simply the “academic” opinion of the individual
theology professor. It must include the sense of a continuation of tradition
from the Apostles about what is held to be Catholic. This charge, for some
strange reason, was not given to professors, but to bishops. It helps of course
if bishops are themselves, like the Holy Father, very scholarly and wise. But
neither the Pope nor a bishop intends to state or guarantee that what is said
comes from him alone, but rather is in conformity with what is handed down.
This is where Benedict says, to remind us of
what a university is, something we often forget: “Young people have a right to
hear clearly the Church’s teaching and, more importantly, to be inspired by the
coherence and beauty of the Christian message, so that they in turn can instill
in their peers a deep love of Christ and his Church.” It is not really an issue
of “academic freedom” but of “academic duty” to assure students and parents and,
yes, professors, that what is taught is indeed what the Church teaches. This is
what is freeing, not the private opinions of professors based on their own
ponderings and not clearly in line with that which was handed on to the
Apostles.