(Photo courtesy of Fr. Lawrence Lew, O.P.)
“How can you join a church that tells you how to think?”
The question, uttered with equal parts puzzlement and anger,
surprised me. In hindsight, it should have been about as surprising as
an afternoon drizzle here in Eugene, Oregon, in early spring. The
questionalmost an accusation, reallywas made one early spring day over
fifteen years ago. It was said in the middle of an intense discussion
about the reasons why my wife and I had, both graduates of Evangelical
Bible colleges, had decided to become Catholic.
I’m happy to note, all these years later, that I have a good and
healthy relationship with the man who made the remark. We both uttered
strong words that day, but time and some further conversationsmore calm
and measured in naturehave brought peace, if not perfect
understanding.
I’ve sometimes joked, in recounting the full story to close friends,
that I came up with the perfect retort several hours later: “At least
I’m entering a Church that knows what the word ‘think’ means!” It would
have been a low blow, but it touches on two issues that continue to
resonate with me, now fifteen years a Catholic, nearly every day in some
way or another.
The Mindless Scandal
The first is the intellectual life. The Fundamentalism of my youth
was, in sum, anti-intellectual; it looked with caution, even fearful
disdain, on certain aspects of modern science, technology, and academic
study. But it wasn’t because we were Luddites or held a principled
position against electricity, computers, or space exploration. The
concern was essentially spiritual in nature; the guiding concern was
that televisions, radios, “boom boxes” (remember?), and movies were
potential tools for conveying messagesoften subliminal in
naturecontrary to a godly, Christian life. The general instinct was, in
fact, actually sound. Only the creators of “Jersey Shore” can deny the
power and influence of popular culture, and then only with a smirk. But
the permeating fear was rarely controlled, critiqued, and concentrated
through rigorous thought and study. It was reactionary and highly
subjective, and so it became a sort of rogue agent, undermining the most
innocent activities: reading the Chronicles of Narnia,
listening to any “non-Christian” music, or studying art or literature
not including any overt references to “Jesus” and “the Gospel”.
My time in Bible college proved helpful in many ways, as several of
my professors were certainly not fearful of going outside the box,
evengasp!assigning books by Flannery O’Connor and Gerard Manley
Hopkins (there was also some reading of Augustine, but in an extremely
abridged form). But for every question answered, others sprung up like
dandelions, multiplying with maddening surety. When I read Mark Noll’s
controversial bestseller, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind
(Eerdmans, 1994), I was confirmed in many of the intuitions and thoughts
I had mulled and culled over the years. Noll opened his book with this
withering shot of lightning: “The scandal of the evangelical mind is
that there is not much of an evangelical mind.” Readers can disagree on
the level of hyperbole used; Noll, a dedicated Evangelical scholar,
seemed dead serious in his assertion. “For a Christian”, he wrote, “the
most important consideration is not pragmatic results, or even the
weight of history, but the truth.” These and other statements rang true.
I had become convinced, at a relatively early age, that if something is
true and good, it must be of God.
The Need for Authority
Of course, how did I know what was “true and good”? Enter the second
issue: authority. I won’t regale readers about the details of my
struggle with sola scriptura. (Readers can catch a few of them in my 1998 account our journey into the Church.)
Instead, I’ll skip to something I wrote in February 1996, from a list
of “several points of consideration” I put down regarding the claims of
the Catholic Church. “I have become increasingly convinced”, I wrote,
“that the idea of sola scriptura is in the end untenable …
Again, this does not render judgment on the inspiration or infallibility
of Scripture, it just moves the question to a different arenathat of
authority.”
Nearly every non-Catholic adult who chooses to become Catholic will admit, or least should
admit, the centrality of the matter of authority. As a Fundamentalist, I
had been fed the standard, Jack Chick-ean version of Catholic
authority: bloody, despotic, dishonest, power-driven, and so forth. The
hike from there to looking squarely and honestly at authority in the
Catholic Church was lengthy, but one key mile post was studying St.
Paul’s description in his first letter to Timothy of “the household of
God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of
truth” (1 Tim 3:15). A passage by Abp. Fulton Sheen, written in the
1940s, sums up the matter quite well:
There is
nothing more misunderstood by the modern mind than the authority of the
Church. Just as soon as one mentions the authority of the Vicar of
Christ there are visions of slavery, intellectual servitude, mental
chains, tyrannical obedience, and blind service on the part of those
who, it is said, are forbidden to think for themselves. That is
positively untrue. Why has the world been so reluctant to accept the
authority of the Father’s house? Why has it so often identified the
Catholic Church with intellectual slavery? The answer is, because the
world has forgotten the meaning of liberty.
One Surprise: The Bad
We entered the Catholic Church on March 29, 1997, Easter Vigil at
Saint Paul Catholic Church in Eugene, Oregon. It was a joyful night and I
can say with complete honesty I have never regretted becoming Catholic.
But I have been surprised a few times as a Catholic. Two surprises
stand out; they also, in a way related to the two points above, stand
together.
As an Evangelical, I was very familiar with “church splits”. I
endured my first as a four-year old (our family and several others left
the local Christian and Missionary Alliance assembly) and my wife and I
stopped attending our last Evangelical church while it was in the middle
of a dramatic split. I soon learned, as a new Catholic, that “splits”
aren’t really part of being Catholic. I also learned that disgruntled
Catholics, especially those upset about Church teaching on sexuality,
authority, and the priesthood, don’t always leave the Church; on the
contrary, they often simply try to take over the Church. And by
“Church”, I mean both the local parish and the Church as a whole. My
first big surprise, then, was finding out that while I (and many other
former Protestants) had spent months and years working through Church
doctrine and moral teaching, we were entering a Church apparently
dominated and largely run, at least in practical terms, by Catholics
complaining incessantly and obnoxiously about Church doctrine and moral
teaching.
Moving toward and then into the Church, I wasn’t unaware of such
problems. But the sheer scope of the situation was confounding. It
helped that I had a relatively low view of the human state; I didn’t
expect pews full of Catechism-quoting saints. But I had hopes that most of them knew about the Catechism and had some desire to live holy lives. And so the farmer boy arrived in the city.
It’s not surprising that Catholics sin. It is surprising how some
Catholic insist certain sins are not only sins in name only but are
actually virtues in disguise! It’s not shocking that many Catholics
misunderstand the nature and mission of the Church. It is shocking how
some Catholics deliberately distort and misrepresent the nature and
mission of the mystical Body of Christ. It is not scandalous, per se,
that many Catholics don’t have a close relationship with Jesus Christ.
But it is scandalous when Catholics insist they don’t need Christ or his
Church in order to be Catholic.
A case in point is the recent statement
released by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) about
the status of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR). The
CDF noted its serious concerns with long established patterns of
“corporate dissent” indicating LCWR leaders often “take a position not
in agreement with the Church’s teaching on human sexuality.” In fact,
from its founding in the early 1970s, the Conference has thumbed its
corporate nose at a host of Church teachings, including papal authority,
the male priesthood, sexuality and contraception, the uniqueness of
Christ, and so forth. It is the height (or depth) of irony that the LCWR site has this quote from
Margaret Brennan, IHM, President from 1972 to 1973: “One danger for us
is that we may become legitimators of society's commonly held values.”
It ceased being a danger long ago, perhaps even before the quote was
uttered. The CDF also highlighted the deep influence of radical feminist
theology within the LCWR, and the undermining of the fundamental and
“revealed doctrines of the Holy Trinity, the divinity of Christ, and the
inspiration of Sacred Scripture.” Details!
To judge by the mainstream news, the Vatican has been forcibly
removing old nuns from convents and shuttling them to live beneath
bridges and overpasses in southern Utah. One headline declared, “Vatican
targets US nuns' reps”; another darkly stated, “Vatican condemns
American nuns for liberal stances”. None of this surprising, of course,
as the secular media is fixated on sensationalism, conflict, and
opposition to traditional Christian teachings. You won’t see a headline
stating, “Vatican offered LCWR a chance to save itself from
self-inflicted death.” It would not fit the narrative, even if it fits
the facts: the average age of LCWR women religious is at least twice
that of those women religious in the CMSWR (Council of Major Superiors
of Women Religious). Instead there are delicious sound bites, such as
when Sister Simone Campbell, head of the lefty Network (named directly by the CDF), tells NPR it’s all about out-of-touch men in the Vatican who “are not used to strong women” and then blithelyarrogantly, reallysays:
Women
get it first and then try to explain it to the guys who - I mean, as the
women did to the Apostles. So, we will try to explain it to the guys.
We'll keep up our roles from the Scriptures.
Because every good Scripture scholar know that what Mary Magdalene
and the other women did, to their eternal credit, was publicly thumb
their noses at the Apostles' teachings and actions!
What the media also won’t say (again, understandably) is the
situation with the LCWR is about a crisis of faith that has been
festering and spreading for decades as an affront to genuine Church
authority. One result of this crisis of faith is, I think, a laity
weary, numb, angry, or simply confused. How to make sense of it?
Stepping back as much as possible, one can situate it somewhere in the
stream of parasitical, self-loathing, and self-righteous
pseudo-religiosity that may be best defined as “modern,
pantheistic-secularist liberalism”. Its heaven is earth; its authority
is self (wrongly identified as “conscience”); its goals are horizontal
(“social justice”); its rhetoric is both morally charged and completely
bankrupt. “When you set out to reform a people, a group, who have done
nothing wrong,” opined the endlessly opining Joan Chittister about the
CDF statement, “you have to have an intention, a motivation that is not
only not morally based, but actually immoral.” This is the same woman who praised and eulogized
the radical, lesbian, Church-hating Mary Daly, saying Daly’s work “was
an icon to women”. She fails completely, by any decent standard, to
comprehend the meaning of “immoral”.
But this, I’ve learned, is the way of heresy within the Church, going
back to the very beginning (think, for example, of Paul’s fight for the
Galatians): to abuse trust and power, to misuse language, to undermine
genuine authority, to dismiss essential truths, to claim the morally
superior ground, to be a victim but never a martyr, and to distract and
deflect at all costs.
The Second Surprise: The Good
This past Thursday marked the election of Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
to the Chair of Peter, despite the assurances of the usual suspects with
unusually suspect intuition. This was a moment of great joy for me;
Cardinal Ratzinger had long been a favorite theologian and author. His
books helped me in becoming Catholic and they’ve helped me in becoming a
better thinking and, hopefully, better living Catholic.
But, of course, just as the narrative about the LCWR presents
disobedience as goodness, the narrative about Benedict XVI has often
been as follows: an angry, narrow-minded, Nazi-sympathizing reactionary
is now Pope, and he is intent on dragging the Church back to the dreaded
Dark Ages. Perhaps some of this utterly banal silliness could be
forgiven in the first week following the election. But since then it has
reflected unlearned arrogance (a media specialty), or petulant and
personal smearing (a media delight), or slovenly regurgitation of
falsehoods (a media habit). Or all three (a media trinity).
I won’t bother with an apologetic. Simply read the man’s writings. And if you haven’t read the recently published collection, Fundamental Speeches From Five Decades (Ignatius
Press, 2012), which contains a fabulous talk given in 1970, when then
Fr. (and Professor) Joseph Ratzinger was just about my own age now,
forty three or so. The talk was titled, “Why I am still in the Church”.
It begins with a nuanced and thoughtful reflection on the confusion
faced by many Catholics in the years after the Council, which Ratzinger
described as “this remarkable Tower of Babel situation”. He noted some
Catholics wish to make the Church into their own image, reflecting their
desires and goals, not those of the Church herself. Behind all of the
struggles over what the Church “should be”, Ratzinger said, is a
“crucial” point: “the crisis of faith, which is the actual nucleus of
the process”.
Then, answering the question implicit in his talk’s title, he said:
I am in
the Church because, despite everything, I believe that she is at the
deepest level not our but precisely “his” Church. To put it concretely:
It is the Church that, despite all the human foibles of the people in
her, gives us Jesus Christ, and only through her can we receive him as a
living, authoritative reality that summons and endows me here and now. …
This elementary acknowledgement has to be made at the start: Whatever
infidelity there is or may be in the Church, however true it is that she
constantly needs to be measured anew by Jesus Christ, still there is
ultimately no opposition between Christ and Church. It is through the
Church that he remains alive despite the distance of history, that he
speaks to us today, is with us today as master and Lord, as our brother
who unites us all as brethren. And because the Church, and she alone,
gives us Jesus Christ, causes him to be alive and present in the world,
gives birth to him again in every age in the faith and prayer of the
people, she gives mankind a light, a support, and a standard without
which mankind would be unimaginable. Anyone who wants to find the
presence of Jesus Christ in mankind cannot find it contrary to the
Church but only in her.
And therein lies the answer to the question that opened this essay,
the question presented to me not long before I became Catholic. How could I join a Church that tells me how to think? How could I not
join the Church founded by Jesus Christ, the household of his Father,
infused with life by her soul, the Holy Spirit? How could I thinkor
desire, or choose, or willto do otherwise? And how can I, given the
grace to be a Catholic, not stand up for my mother, the Church? “Because
she is our mother, she is also our teacher in the faith” (CCC 169). She
teaches us how to think because, alone, we know not how. Or why. Or
Who.