Msgr.
Ronald Knox, one of the greatest Catholic writers of the 20th century, observed
that “the Church involves a hierarchy, not merely in the sense that one
functionary is superior to another in dignity, but in the sense that each
functionary derives from a superior, his commission to act in the Church’s
name…. When Catholics obey the Church, they obey the voice of God.”
Throughout
the history of the Catholic Church, most Catholics would have agreed with Msgr.
Knox. The hierarchical view of the Church was taken for granted by faithful
Catholics as bishops’ letters were read at Mass and taken to heart by parishioners.
But as the concept of egalitarianism has grown, the acceptance of the concept
of an ecclesiastical hierarchy imbued with the authority to issue proclamations
and rules to followers has become unacceptable to some Catholics. As a result,
calls continue to grow for a democratic Church in which the laity gets to choose
their own leaders and determine their own doctrines.
Leading
the call for what they call an “inclusive” and “adult” Church is a cadre of
dissident scholarsmost of them teaching on Catholic college campuses. For some
contemporary theologians and historians like Fairfield University theology
professor Paul Lakeland, and David O’Brien of the University of Dayton, the
hierarchical view of authoritywith authority vested in the papacy and the
clergyis just one more sign of what Lakeland calls the “infantilization of the
laity.” Refusing to be part of what they view as the subordination of the
laity, they have called for a leveling of that authority. In their published
works, O’Brien calls for a “more horizontal” relationship with the Magisterium,
and Lakeland demands that the laity “grow up” to “create an adult Church” or an
“open Church” in which the laity “reclaims its baptismal priesthood.”
In
his book, From the Heart of the American
Church, David O’Brien writes, “Vatican II reintroduced an understanding of
the divine human relationship that was more horizontal than vertical. God is
less above the people, sending down messages through delegates, than abiding
with them.” O’Brien denigrates the traditional “vertical” position of the
hierarchy, advocating instead that “the more communitarian view leads to an
ethical method that is anchored in the scriptures and in the experience of
Christians, who necessarily must be consulted in moral formulations.” For
O’Brien, the more horizontal understanding “fastens the vision of the church
beyond itself, in the historic liberation of the human family.”
Likewise,
in his book, Liberation of the Laity,
Paul Lakeland argues for an “accountable church” with a “liberated laity.” By
this, Lakeland means liberated from the authority of the hierarchy. In fact,
Lakeland, a theologian who is chair of the Religious Studies Department at
Fairfield University, writes, “Helping the laity to name their oppression is probably
the most important thing the theologian can currently do for the church.”
Now
O’Brien and Lakeland are joined in their criticisms of clerical authority by
several Catholic historians who are attempting to convince Catholics that the
current claims to authority by the bishops are not in keeping with the true
intentions of the Church itself. A recent book from Oxford University Press
extends the criticism of the hierarchical structure of the Church by enlisting
historians as well as theologians in the battle against the current hierarchical
structure of the Church. With an enthusiastic endorsement on the back cover
from Paul Lakeland, The Crisis of
Authority in Catholic Modernity is a collection of essays by theologians
and historians that “focus on the tensions between authority asserted and
authority observed.”
Edited
by historian Michael Lacey, director emeritus of the American Program at the
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC, and Francis
Oakley, president emeritus of Williams College, several of the essays contained
in The Crisis of Authority in Catholic
Modernity question the legitimacy of the authority within the Catholic
Church. In the prologue, Lacey asks the question: “Has the ultramontane papacy
run its course?” With this question, Lacey sets out the argument that since
Vatican II those who disagree with papal pronouncements “feel their claims to
belonging, reservations and all, are rightful and cannot be trumped simply by
appealing to formal authority or citing those passages in scripture that
buttress the idea of divinely instituted apostolic succession and its claim to
exclusive spiritual powers of discernment.”
For Lacey, “the children of the church have come haphazardly to feel
like grown-ups and don’t believe they have to abandon the family estate over
differences in the family.”
An
underlying theme in many of the chapters of Lacey and Oakley’s new book is the
call for a democratic Church in which the laity is given a voice in all matters,
from the choice of bishops and pastors to doctrinal matters, including
homosexuality, abortion, birth control, and women’s ordination. Lacey asks:
“what is the point of the church’s aloofness from the ideals and practices of
democratic self government…what is this feeling of lofty pride in its ecclesial
structure all about?”
In
the first chapter, Oakley pronounces: “The past is not what it used to be.” Decrying
what he called the “triumph of ultramontanism at the first Vatican Council with
its twin definitions of papal infallibility and papal jurisdictional primacy
throughout the universal Church,” Oakley calls for the Church to “limit or
balance papal authority.”
Subsequent
chapters continue the attack on magisterial authority. In his contribution to
the collection, theologian Charles Taylor writes that “authoritative
pronouncements on issues where contingent circumstances are crucial to our
judgment cannot be taken as definitive, let alone infallible.” Like Lakeland,
Taylor complains of the “infantilization of the laity” by the Catholic Church. For
Taylor, the hierarchy of the Church has not always respected and provided for
the inherent limits of its teachings. He believes that there has been a habit
of oversimplifying its moral prescriptions, of not trusting the laity to deal
with the complexities involved.
Taylor
carries his criticism of Church teachings on abortion to Church teachings on
women’s ordination and homosexuality. Labeling such teachings as “false sacralization,”
Taylor charges that the Church has held a “too simple and direct reading of
natural law, which accounts for the lapidary judgment that homosexual love is
an objective disorder.” And he questions whether we aren’t “sacralizing certain
historically based conceptions of gender identity when we conclude that women
should not be ordained priests.”
Boston
College theologian Lisa Sowle Cahill shares similar sentiments in her chapter
on “Moral Theology After Vatican II” when she calls for a “historically
developing interpretation of what nature and nature’s good demand, given that
humans are reasonable, free historical creatures.”
Fr.
John Beal’s chapter continues the criticism of paternalism and infantilization within
the Church when he writes that “in the absence of genuine reciprocity between the
governors and the governed, the latter are reduced in fact, if not in theory,
to dependence on the paternal benevolence of the former.”
Summarizing
the chapters, Oakley’s epilogue charges that the Church’s “authoritarian
willingness to impose all or nothing teachings on the faithful tends to be seen
as in some measure analogous to King Canute’s mythical attempt by royal fiat to
prevent the tide form coming in.” For Oakley, traditional Catholic thinking has
focused “too exclusively on its divine
dimensioneternal, stable, and unchangingand underestimating the degree of
confusion, variability, and sinfulness that goes along with its human
embodiment as it forges its way onward amid the rocks and shoals of time.”
St.
Paul cautioned Timothy of the need for “correcting, reproving, appealing, and
constantly teaching, and never losing patience.” He told Timothy, “The time
will come when people will not tolerate sound doctrine, but, following their
own desires, will surround themselves with teachers who tickle their ears. They
will stop listening to the truth and will wander off to fables” (2 Timothy
4:3-5).
In
an address entitled “Sacred Duties, Episcopal Ministry,” Bishop Robert Francis
Vasa (at the time bishop of Baker, Oregon) told listeners that “teachers who
advocate a popular, ear-tickling message are more likely to be admired and
warmly received and accepted by our secular age…such an approach may lull the
evildoer with an empty promise of safety.”
Bishop Vasa cautioned: “There is prudent silence, but there is also
imprudent silence. There is indiscreet speech, but there is also discreet and
bold speech.”
Recognizing
that people have lost a tolerance for sound teaching, Bishop Vasa said that too often pastoral
documents tend to make appeals without necessarily being too direct or
critical. As a result, the bishop is viewed as offering mere opinion on issues
rather than authoritative teachings. Last year, when Phoenix Bishop Thomas J.
Olmsted declared that St. Joseph’s Hospital could no longer call itself
Catholic because medical professionals at the hospital had performed a direct
abortion, hospital leaders claimed that the advice they had received from a
Marquette theologian contradicted the opinion of the bishop. They chose the
advice of the theologian.
Bishop Olmsted responded to the
administrators by saying that “you have not acknowledged my authority to settle
this question but have only provided opinions of ethicists that agree with your
own opinion and disagree with mine.… As the diocesan bishop it is my duty and
obligation to authoritatively teach and interpret the moral law for Catholics
in the Diocese of Phoenix.”
The
bishops are beginning to respond to such challenges to their teaching authority.
Most recently, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Doctrine
issued critical statements concerning The
Quest for the Living God, a book by Fordham University theologian Sr.
Elizabeth A. Johnson, and a book entitled The
Sexual Person: Toward a Renewed Catholic Anthropology by Creighton
University theology professors Todd A. Salzman and Michael G. Lawler. For the
Salzman and Lawler book, the bishops reminded the writers that “the Catechism
insists that the historicity of the natural law does not negate its
universality…the natural law remains as a rule that binds men among themselves
and imposes on them, beyond the inevitable differences, common
principles.”
When
the Catholic Theological Society of America wrote a scathing letter complaining
about the “lack of dialogue” from the bishops, Cardinal Donald Wuerl of
Washington, chairman of the bishops’ Committee on Doctrine, responded with a
letter entitled “Bishop as Teacher,” which spoke forcefully about the roles and
responsibilities of bishops and theologians in the Church.
Before he became pope, Joseph Ratzinger wrote that “it
must once again become clear that in each diocese there is only one shepherd
and teacher of the faith in communion with the other pastors and teachers and
with the Vicar of Christ.” A growing number of courageous bishops are finally
reminding us of that.