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For an immigrant worker in Ireland suffering racial bullying,
discrimination and isolation - who has more immediate power to
improve the quality of his life and to proclaim the presence of
Christ: his Irish Catholic workmates, or the Pope?
For the bullied child in an Irish classroom, whose compassion is
more likely to make a difference - that of her Catholic classmates,
or that of the Roman curia, twelve hundred miles away?
For those 300,000 Irish people who are clinically depressed because
they have been deprived by modern society of all sense of their own
beauty and dignity, who has more power to restore it: the pope in
Rome, or their Catholic neighbours - prayerfully conscious of their
obligation to build a warm, affirming and friendly community?
****
The nub of all these questions is this: in exalting the papacy and
central government of the Church, do we Catholics tend to undervalue
our own potential - and evade our own obligation - to hasten the
coming of the kingdom of God by exercising Christian leadership and
initiative in our own space?
"I have the impression that the figure of the pope is praised too
much. There is the danger of falling into the cult of the
personality, which I absolutely do not want...." It might surprise many Catholics that the source of these
reservations about the papacy was none other than Pope John Paul I -
and that they reflect very well indeed the attitude of the greatest
pope of my lifetime, John XXIII. Had it not been for his calling of
the second Vatican council in 1962, it is extremely doubtful that I
would be a Catholic today.
It was Vatican II that proclaimed that truth itself 'conveys itself
by virtue of its own truth' - not by virtue of the degree of
pressure or coercion behind it. In accepting this principle of
religious freedom - which had been ridiculed by Pope Pius IX - the
church had set out decisively on a new relationship with modern
society. The Church's long toleration of religious coercion -
justified by Augustine and many other great Catholic saints - had
come to an end. Own up to past mistakes
This process of owning up to the Church's past mistakes continued
under Pope John Paul II, and this for me was the most important
creative aspect of his papacy. As a teacher of global history to
schoolchildren I had often to deal with their dismay on hearing of
the Inquisition, the long Catholic toleration of slavery, the forced
baptism of the new subjects of Imperial Spain and Portugal, the
persecution of the Jews. I could remain a Catholic only because my
church had embarked on a road that would take it eventually - I felt
sure - to an acknowledgement of its original mistake: the union of
church and state under Constantine and his successors in the fourth
century.
My ideal pope will acknowledge that mistake too, and fully endorse
the principle of separating church and state, detaching the church
finally from any association with coercive power.
It was Pope John XXIII also who insisted, in Pacem in Terris
that the peace of the world depended upon the principle of the equal
dignity of all. The Pope that I would like to see will insist that
this principle applies to the papacy also. The process of removing
all the pomp of a medieval monarchy must continue, demystifying the
papacy. The tendency of the papal court to be self-regarding, and to
exalt the pope as the only source of wisdom in the church, is a
spiritual blemish that will become steadily more obvious in the
television age.
Point to the Hollowness of Celebrity
And because my ideal pope will believe passionately in the principle
of the equal dignity of all, he will also see through the hollowness
of celebrity - perhaps the most dangerous feature of modern culture.
Throughout the world, surveys of teenagers report that fame has
become the great goal of most. Their 'icons' are pop singers, super
models, film stars, sporting heroes. It is the advertised lifestyle
of such people that fuels consumerism and endangers the global
environment.
The desire for status, fame and singularity is what the Gospels call
worldliness. In seeking to identify with those who are obscure,
Jesus condemned it utterly. In accepting a shameful death he
overcame it completely. His resurrection signifies especially his
father's exaltation of the virtue of humility.
A complete papal understanding of worldliness will therefore be
expressed in uncompromising terms: it is not the pope, but the poor
who stand highest in God's hierarchy - so the media should give far
more attention to the latter.
My ideal pope will therefore be self-deprecating, dismissive of pomp
and inclined to send up media awe of himself. He will encourage
every Catholic adult and child to 'love God and do what you will' to
bring the reign of God in his and her own environment - because he,
the pope, has less power to do so.
Restoring the freedom of the local church
Towards the end of the last papacy there was a celebrated debate
between German Cardinals Ratzinger and Kasper over the relative
importance of the universal and local church. Cardinal Ratzinger, a
centralist, stressed the priority of the uniformity of the whole
church, as determined by Rome. Cardinal Kasper stressed that the
freedom of the local church is essential to its vibrancy - and
therefore to the health of the whole. For him, unless the church is
allowed to be primarily local, it will have no vital existence.
My ideal Pope will keep these two things in harmonious balance, so
that Irish Catholicism can be free to be itself, without losing its
Catholicity. There always has been a specifically Irish way of being
Catholic - and we need to rediscover this with confidence.
Affirm the Mind of the Laity
Even in the era of Pope Pius XII Catholic children were taught to
see themselves as temples of the Holy Spirit. Since wisdom is one of
the gifts of the Holy Spirit, it is a restriction of the freedom of
the Holy Spirit to deprive lay Catholics, young people especially,
of a thinking and speaking role in their Church, a role especially
in interpreting their own responsibility, given them by Vatican II -
to consecrate the world to God.
This denial lies at the root of the alienation of a generation of
young educated Irish Catholics from their own church in my lifetime.
Although Irish bishops now often bemoan the rise of anticlericalism
in Ireland, they still apparently cannot see that its most important
source lies in their failure to create what Vatican II clearly
envisaged - church structures that would allow all of the faithful
to participate in a learning dialogue with their clergy and with one
another.
As a consequence, all Irish Catholic life and education has
suffered. Children who are subjected to an endless monologue from
above soon lose interest - because they have effectively been told
that their own questions, and their own intellects, are unimportant.
Their role is merely to absorb the wisdom of someone else - like
recording machines.
This was especially true in an era when virtually everyone became
used to a learning environment in which students and teachers
collaborate in asking, and answering, important questions.
Unquestionable authorities, fearful of any divergence from the rigid
verbal formulae of the catechism, and working out of an outdated
understanding of education, have had a soporific, deadening effect
on Catholic religious education generally.
Nothing else can explain the evaporation of baptised and confirmed
Irish Catholic young people from our churches in recent times,
almost as soon as they leave school.
This lack of respect for the mind of the laity, resulting in the
continued denial of structures for internal dialogue and mutual
enrichment, was the single greatest weakness of the last papacy.
John Paul II virtually acknowledged this himself when, in September
2004 he told the US bishops that to hasten the healing of
relationships in their own country they should create 'better
structures of participation, consultation and shared responsibility'.
As Vatican II had envisaged these by 1965, there never has been any
good reason for four decades of delay in building them. Their
absence as a means of hastening an earlier resolution of the problem
of clerical child abuse, and avoiding the appalling scandals of the
past decade, has had almost catastrophic consequences for the
universal church.
End Clericalism
So my ideal pope will have no sympathy with the following: "This church is in essence an unequal society, that is to say a
society comprising two categories of persons, the shepherd and the
flock....these categories are so distinct that the right and
authority necessary for promoting and guiding all the members toward
the goal of society reside only in the pastoral body; as to the
multitude, its sole duty is that of allowing itself to be led and of
following its pastors as a docile flock." This was a pronouncement of Pope Pius X - for whom lay people could
never aspire to a leadership role. Instead, my ideal pope will say
something like this: "Having given all of his children the natural gift of
intelligence, and having assured them also that the Holy Spirit
would be with the whole church, the Trinity clearly intends that all
of the faithful should participate in forming the mind of the church
- especially in an era of universal education. Living as they do at
the interface between the world and the church, the experience of
lay people is a vital source of insight on the question of how we
Christians are to help transform modern secular culture and reverse
its steady disintegration. Bishops should therefore not only listen
to their laity, but provide regular opportunities for doing so."
Build a Global Family
Finally, my ideal pope will grasp fully the enormous potential of
the church in a globally networked world to help build among all
peoples, in cooperation with the other Christian and monotheistic
traditions, a sense of global society as an extended family network
- with the compassion to care for everyone.
Caring, like all popes, for the stability of family life he will
call on all of us to make the world a safer place for children, less
concerned with individual ambition than with the sufferings of those
who can't compete.
He might also at some point say: "Every Christian adult or child, in reaching out spontaneously
and lovingly towards another person in need, becomes a vicar of
Christ - doing what we in Rome cannot. Popes should recognise that
God often wishes to move his children directly. We must not get in
the way by trying to control everything. We too need to trust in
God, and to 'chill out' - for God has everything in hand."
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