Voice of the Faithful 

married priesthood

ordination of women

inclusive pronouns in scripture

Joan Chittister

Opposition to authority

Sensus fidelium

 

Saturday, February 01, 200

Dissident Joan Chittister Endorses "Voice of the Faithful"

 

 Voice of the Faithful website's recommended reading list showed the group's affinity for Joan Chittister's dissident agenda. In the Jan. 31, 2003, issue of the National Catholic Reporter, she has a column endorsing Voice of the Faithful as the great hope for "declericalizing" what she calls an "imperial church."

 

She goes on to say that authority in the Church is "the biggest issue of all" because once clerical authority is dismantled then the entire "renewal" (read: dissident) agenda will follow.

 

In contrast, the early Church Fathers viewed the authority centered on the bishop as the bulwark against heresy and the dissolution of the living faith passed on by the apostles. So I agree with Chittister that "authority" is a big issue but for diametrically opposed reasons. Authority is the biggest issue because it guards the truth in a world beset with lies that result from malice but more frequently from self-deception and rationalization. Her column is another exhibit in the strong case that "Voice of the Faithful" is a grand charade similar to the other dissident groups that have long haunted American Catholics.

 

 

Voice of Faithful goes after biggest issue of all: authority

Before this is over, thanks to Voice of the Faithful, issues like a married priesthood, the ordination of women, the use of inclusive pronouns in scripture and the choice of postures during the canon of the Mass will seem to be exactly what they are -- very, very minor.

 

 

By JOAN CHITTISTER

 

I’m never sure about how to respond when people ask me what I think about Voice of the Faithful. The fact is that I admire this group. But they confuse me. They have shown courage, integrity and control in the midst of great upheaval, deep pain and an incredible amount of shock.

 

When people were shocked at the rising tide of adult survivors of clerical sex abuse in childhood, even inclined to be disbelieving of the survivors, Voice of the Faithful stayed faithful and insisted that the survivors be seen, heard and attended to.

 

When people were shocked at the legal maneuverings of a church whose record for social compassion and public ministry to the oppressed stands with the best of them, Voice of the Faithful continued to pledge support for those ministries even while withholding funds they feared would be used for hush money.

 

When people were shocked at Vatican statements about the whole hoary mess being nothing but a media attack on the Catholic church, Voice of the Faithful held firm, demanded accountability from church officials, claimed a place for the faithful in the process and determined not to mix particular issues with their overall political purposes. They will not, they say, espouse any particular change in church policy: not the ordination of married men, not the ordination of women, not the question of liturgical norms. Not anything particular.

 

They are neither conservative nor liberal, they say. They are simply looking for a way for both conservatives and liberals to take their proper places in the experience that is church. Which translated means, it seems, to be consulted, to be included, to be part of the decision-making process of a church in process in a world in flux. While I myself try to avoid terms like conservative and liberal because of their power to label, stereotype, divide and categorize, I nevertheless get the point: We should all be heard.

 

We should all count in the process of determining what the Holy Spirit is really doing in the church. We should all be part of the discernment of the “particular” spirits, which Voice of the Faithful as a group is not espousing one way or the other.

 

But, admire them as I do, that’s exactly where they confuse me. Do they really believe that they are agenda-free? Do they really think that they are independent of issues? Or is such a statement simply a kind of ecclesiastical guarantee of quality: We don’t stand for any particular issue -- like those other people do -- so you don’t need to be afraid that joining us will compromise your faith.

 

I can’t help asking myself if these people are this disingenuous or this holy? How can anyone possibly think that what Voice of the Faithful asserts they are about to do -- give a voice to the faithful in the machinations of the Roman Catholic Church -- is not the single major determining issue in the church today?

 

Bigger than Luther’s commitment to the use of the vernacular in the reading of scripture, greater than Bartolomé de las Casas’ commitment to the full humanity of Indians, bigger even on a daily basis than the implications of Galileo’s commitment to the notion that the sun, not the Earth, was the center of the universe, shocking as that was to the sensibilities of “man, God’s highest creature.”

 

The truth is that to aspire to give lay people a “voice” in the ongoing development and direction of the church stands for the biggest issue of them all: It stands for declericalization. And declericalization is the foundation for the renewal of the church. If the church is declericalized -- if the laity really begins to be included in the theological debates, the canonical processes, the synodal decisions of the Roman Catholic Church -- every issue on the planet will become grist for its mill. The gospel of Jesus’ walk from Galilee to Jerusalem, curing lepers, healing paralytics, raising women from the dead, will live again.

 

Do they not realize that by concentrating on lay participation rather than on specific theological issues, they are really striking at the core of church development and power? They are targeting the biggest issue of them all, authority.

 

Clearly, whether they know it or not, Voice of the Faithful is definitely not issue-free. And, whether they realize it or not, their audacity is shaking the foundations of an imperial church that, until this time, has seldom felt the need to explain anything, let alone ask questions of anyone other than those in their own inner circles. Sensus fidelium or no sensus fidelium.

 

Before this is over, thanks to Voice of the Faithful, issues like a married priesthood, the ordination of women, the use of inclusive pronouns in scripture and the choice of postures during the canon of the Mass will seem to be exactly what they are -- very, very minor. That’s why I admire them: They are into the biggest issue of them all.

 

Benedictine Sr. Joan Chittister, author and lecturer, lives in Erie, Pa.

 

National Catholic Reporter, January 31, 2003

 

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Date:     Thu Mar 27 17:23:00 2003 (PST)

Subject:             re Joan Chittister

In reading Joan's piece, I was struck by how even VOTF's natural allies must

wonder at the cowardice of this self-appointed group of "reformers".  In

these times when many of our young men and women are risking their lives for

what they believe in, and martyrs are being made around the world as

ordinary folks stand up for our faith under the shadow of death, these

lowlife clowns continue to be coy about what "Change the Church" really

means.  Have they no shame?

John Hearn