A Question of Rights
Due Process, the Vatican, & ARCC
By James E. Biechler
I've been a Catholic long
enough to know that not everyone in a position of authority in the Church
is perfect and I do know that not everyone in the Church is always treated
with fairness. But why do we need an "association" like yours dedicated
to "rights of Catholics"? If anyone has a complaint it should be made directly
to the authority concerned. After all, canon law makes it clear that Catholics
can "vindicate and defend the rights they enjoy in the Church before a
competent ecclesiastical court" (Canon 221). Doesn't that make ARCC superfluous?
--H.H., Riverside, CA
Is there anyone left who
still does not know that the bishops of the world recommended that the
revised Code of Canon Law provide for administrative tribunals which would
resolve the disputes which arise in the ordinary course of ecclesiastical
life? Is there anyone who does not know that the Vatican authorities, at
the very last moment, scratched that section of canon law? Is there anyone
who does not know that most Catholics are now left twisting in the wind
if ever they seek redress of grievances in the church? Perhaps even more
important, is there anyone who does not know that the Vatican refusal to
permit administrative tribunals, and therefore due process, was met by
hardly a word of complaint by the world's hierarchy? The Canon Law Society
of America produced a set of voluntary norms for due process but these
have proven mostly ineffectual. The most the Code of Canon Law permits
is that conferences of bishops or individual bishops might establish "a
kind of permanent office or council" [officium quoddam vel consilium] to
mediate grievances. The United States Catholic Conference has not done
this and only a few dioceses have established any such permanent office.
Even with such an office however, if such mediation fails, the aggrieved
party has nowhere to turn but to the hierarchical superior of the person
accused of the violation. It does not take much experience in human affairs
to see the defect in this procedure.
The present law assumes that
hierarchical superiors are both just and wise, that they are objective
and impartial. Having participated, as a canonist, in several cases involving
recourse to hierarchical superiors, it has been my experience that superiors
are invariably biased in favor of their clerical appointees, that the hierarchical
system lacks sensitivity to the rights of non-clerics in the church, and
that the present system is inherently subjective in its essence. In one
case in which I participated, the pastor of a parish fired a group of teachers
because they wished to form an association for collective bargaining, a
right, incidentally, which has been recognized by popes since Leo XIII's
encyclical Rerum novarum. When they took their case to diocesan authorities
they were denied any standing because they were no longer teachers and
hence had no complaint! When they appealed to Rome they were reprimanded
because they had the audacity to seek legal redress in the civil courts.
With that Roman decision the case was ended. While one cannot generalize
from one case, it does expose the vitiating defects in the present system.
A hierarchical system is a graduated system of sacred power, absolute because
of its "sacred" essence. Such absolute power is no match for the rights
of mere underlings unless those rights are buttressed by an independent
judicial system.
Papal absolutism and Roman
centralism have fluctuated through the years of Christian history. Papal
pretensions were more pronounced and absolutistic at some times than at
others. At present we are witnessing another peak in papal absolutism.
Perhaps this is a response to perceived problems associated with Vatican
II. The 15-year retreat from Vatican II seems to have reached its high
point. It is difficult for thinking Catholics to imagine just how much
more suffocating things could become. Clearly, there is no hope whatever
that due process within a system of administrative tribunals could ever
become a reality under the present papacy.
In his dissertation on due
process entitled Vindication and Defense of the Rights of the Christian
Faithful through Administrative Recourse in the Local Church (Rome: Pontifical
Gregorian University, 1991), Reverend Thomas J. Paprocki agrees that money
and personnel problems all but preclude the establishment of a system of
administrative tribunals in the church. He believes hierarchic recourse
could be structured to provide vindication and defense of the faithful's
rights. The major obstacle to this view, I believe, is what Professor Lawrence
Barmann [The Catholic Historical Review, 80:4 (October, 1994), 827] calls
"Roman clerical culture," very much a reality in today's church. The seminary
system established by the Council of Trent, Barmann writes,
"...fostered a clerical
culture which was self-consciously separate from lay Catholic culture and
which was directed and controlled from Rome, not from diocesan centers.
This system isolated seminarians from their secular counterparts; limited
and censored what they could read and do; subtly and not so subtly insinuated
a sense of self-righteous superiority; educated on a diet of ersatz scholasticism
which was militantly anti-Protestant and rejected most contemporary ideas;
used Scripture in snippets as an armory for apologetics; inculcated a rigid
sense of hierarchical authoritarianism; created an exaggerated patriarchal
and misogynist mind-set; and eliminated any real theological pluralism
by making the reigning pope's opinions and those of the theological faculties
he favored the final arbiter of orthodoxy."
A system of hierarchic recourse
is a system within this clerical culture. Within such a system authority
is a higher value than justice. That's the long and the short of it.
Dr. Biechler, an emeritus
professor of religion, is a member of ARCC's board of directors. He also
holds a licentiate in canon law and is a longtime member of the Canon Law
Society of America.
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