It’s troubling (but not really surprising) to read that
there is opposition in the old Curia to Pope Francis’ efforts to reform it.
The
National Catholic Reporter’s
ncronline.org reports Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez’s remarks that despite
the pope’s popularity, his way of thinking and governing the Church has
awakened “deaf opposition not only in the Curia, but in some who are sorry to
lose privileges in treatment and in comforts.”
The cardinal was in Florida on April 8, 2014, to
lead a day of reflection for the Franciscan provincials of the English speaking
conference of the Order of Friars Minor who had gathered in St. Joseph Church
in St. Petersburg.
Cardinal Rodriguez, archbishop of Tegucigalpa in
Honduras, is recognized as an adviser to Pope Francis and one of the “group of
eight” cardinals that the Holy Father called together to initiate Vatican
reforms.
NCR
explained that Pope
Francis is trying to respond to the same commission that St. Francis of Assisi
heard in 1206: “Go, repair my Church.”
Cardinal Rodriguez reminded the friars that St. Francis’ efforts "caused great scandal" from church leaders who wanted “to maintain their privileges.”
The cardinal went on to point out Pope Francis’
assessment of how the Church should be: 1) at the service of the world by being
faithful to Christ and the Gospel; 2) to be free of mundane spirituality; 3) to
avoid closing in on itself and being a clerical church; 4) to be open to dialog
and diversity; and 5) to pay attention to and give importance to women in
society and in the church.
In 2012 the Capuchin Franciscan Michael H. Crosby
published a book titled Repair My House (Orbis Books) in which he explains that there is an imbalance in church governance (hierarchical
over communal) because Church leaders have focused on Matthew 16:17-19 and
neglected Matthew 18:17-20.
In Matthew 16 Jesus tells Simon, “You are Peter, and
on this rock I will build my church…I will give you the keys of the kingdom of
heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever
you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.”
In Matthew 18 Jesus advises, “If another member of
the community sins against you, go and point out the fault when the two of you
are alone…but if you are not listened to, take one or two others along…if the
member refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if the offender
refuses to listen even to the church, let such a one be to you as a gentile and
a tax collector.”
And then Jesus adds, “Again, truly, I tell you, whatever
you bind on earth will be bound in heaven and whatever you loose on earth will
be loosed in heaven.”
Crosby insists, “Both texts must be considered as
equal in their power to bind and loose.”
In other words, there is a Petrine way of exercising
the power to bind and loose, and there is a communal way. Crosby notes Scripture scholar Donald Senior’s
observation that Peter has “the discretion of ‘binding’ and ‘loosing,’ Jewish
legal terms that referred either to the power of interpreting the obligations
of the Law or to the power of excommunicating from the synagogue. It is not
clear which of these is being conferred on Peter (note that similar powers are
given to the community in 18:18).”
Crosby reiterates that “the two entities of
receiving power to bind and loose must be balanced,” recognizing both the
unique role of the keys in Peter’s office and the power given to the local
church. “Rather than either/or,” Crosby concludes, “power and governance in the
church should be a matter of both/and.”
The consequences of Crosby’s contention are serious.
If we have been determining power and governance in the Church based solely on
one passage of Scripture to the neglect of the other, then we do indeed have an
imbalance.
Crosby quotes a theologian who served as peritus (expert) at the Second Vatican
Council: “Criticism of papal declarations will be possible and necessary to the
degree that they do not correspond with Scripture and the Creed, that is, with
the belief of the church. Where there is neither unanimity in the church nor
clear testimony of the sources, then no binding decision is possible; if one is
formally made, then its preconditions are lacking, and therefore the question of
its legitimacy must be raised” (Joseph Ratzinger, 1969).
Later, in 2009, Pope Benedict XVI wrote in the June
3 issue of L’Osservatore Romano about
the role of lay people in the Church, recognizing the need to move from
collaboration to co-responsibility. Pointing to our communion with one another
in the Church, Pope Benedict said that lay people “must no longer be viewed as ‘collaborators’
of the clergy but truly recognized as ‘co-responsible’ for the Church’s being
and action.”
Pope Francis’ decision to call upon lay as well as
clerical input for the upcoming Synod on the Family suggests that the current
holder of the Petrine Office is seeking to right the imbalance.
Several tough issues were addressed in the laity’s
response to Pope Francis’ appeal, especially the disconnect between the Church’s
stand on birth control and the widespread use of contraceptives by Catholic lay
men and women.
Crosby raises an important question when he asks why
there is such polarization surrounding the theological difference regarding full
equality of women in the church and birth control. This, he says, becomes especially
troublesome when there is much debate concerning the question of ‘reception” of
papal declarations about these two issues.
“Only when the churches of Matthew 16 and 18 agree
on such matters of faith,” Crosby insists, “can they be considered binding.”
President John Kennedy once observed that “May you
live in interesting times” was a Chinese curse. Like it or not, we do live in
interesting times, as the Church continues to struggle to be faithful to Christ and the Gospel, to be free of mundane spirituality, to avoid closing in on itself and being clerical, to be open to dialog and diversity, and to give importance to women in the Church.
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