A Question of Rights
How Can Catholics Have
“Rights”?
By James E. Biechler
“Most people think of
Catholics as people who follow authority in religion. In fact, if
I’m not mistaken, some are attracted to the church precisely because of
its strong sense of authority; Catholics know what to do. Obey.
How can ARCC come along and talk about Catholics having “rights” over against
church authority? You’re trying to create a new church.”
D.S.S., Freeland, MI
Perhaps your question arises
because of a notion of authority as independent of those over whom it is
exercised. Such “authority” is known to the New Testament.
Matthew has Jesus saying, “You know that the rulers of the gentiles lord
it over them, and their great men exercise authority over them.”
Down through the centuries bishops and popes have often exercised this
kind of authority, the kind that “lords it over” people. Bishops
were lords and even today cardinals call themselves “princes” of the church.
ARCC came into existence
after, and because of, the Second Vatican Council. That council developed
a series of interrelated doctrines which bear on the subject of authority.
First of all the council affirmed an inherent equality of all members of
the church, the People of God. The dynamic interrelationship of these
equal members is described as one involving participation, collegiality,
communio—different expressions for the essentially Trinitarian structure
of the Christian community.
It is not only the structure
of the church which is Trinitarian. Its activity and even its doctrine,
as Trinitarian, are dialogic and dynamic rather than fixed and static.
This led the theologian Bernard Lonergan to describe the dramatic shift
produced by the council as the transition from a classicist worldview to
one of historical mindedness. The classicist view sees human nature
as pre-defined and essentially static, and culture as fixed and normative.
In the historicist view, on the other hand, experience is meaningful, life
and society are developmental and knowledge is empirical. Modern
organizations emphasize individual initiative, subsidiarity and creativity.
Translated to the church these characteristics are related to Vatican II’s
teaching about the dignity of the human person, the rights of conscience,
and the role of the laity.
These interrelated doctrines
form a unified and multifaceted whole, so comprehensive in scope that it
has to be called a “paradigm shift.” The older complexus is shattered
beyond repair—utterly incapable any longer of producing cohesive meaning.
Vatican II saw the church as immersed in and part of the world, thereby
diverging sharply from the “over against” the world position of the classicist
position. The church’s presence in the world is as the sacrament
of salvation. Its objective is not to turn the world into a vast
ecclesiastical organization.
Paradigm shifts in science
or theology inevitably leave some behind. These may not “get it”
or they may have so much to lose in power or respect that they resist the
new vision. Today, for example, we note that on the lips of many
hierarchs “world” is a slightly dirty word much the same as the word “secular”
is. The current Vatican campaign against “secularism” suggests pre-Vatican
II attitudes toward anything not juridically connected to the church.
Nothing may be called “Catholic” which does not fall under canon law, like
the current attempt to control Catholic colleges and universities by bringing
them under Vatican legal control, much the way the Catholic University
of America is. This heavy hand of ecclesiatical control reveals the
same style as the Inquisition, the Index of Forbidden Books, and the papal
condemnation of democracy, modern thought, and religious liberty.
It is, quite simply, the rejection of the Second Vatican Council and its
clear development of the doctrine of collegiality and communio. The
paradigm shift is resisted.
When ARCC speaks of renewal
as based on the gospel it does not mean it wants to revert to antiquity.
It means that modern Catholics embrace the modern world, modern technology,
modern science, and democratic principles of governance. All of these
are part of modern life. Our task as Catholics is to inform them
with gospel values to the extent we can, and to accept that which is good
in them. Of course, in so doing, we, the church, will also be transformed.
The imperial papacy is one
of the world’s most glaring anachronisms. No starker antithesis to
aggiornamento can be imagined. It refuses recognition of the rights
of the baptized in that it denies effective avenue for the redress of rights
violations. Our quest for rights in the church is only asking that
the wishes of Jesus regarding authority be observed: “Whoever would
be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among
you must be your slave; even as the son of man came not to be served but
to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”
No, it’s not a “new” church
we’re straining toward. We seek a “renewed” church—a church which
looks to the gospel for its principles of organization and governance.
Vatican II’s new paradigm means that the top-down model of authority is
no longer Catholic. You, and a lot of other people, have to revise
your thinking
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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