[faithandlife] Dialogue? among the RCs

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2006 14:23:14 -0700 (PDT)
Published: Friday, September 15, 2006
Dialogue in the Church
By Father Richard P. McBrien

The promotion of dialogue within and beyond the
Catholic Church was
one of the highest priorities of the Second Vatican
Council. In recent
years, a few commentators have been bemoaning the
absence of dialogue
in the Church, insisting that it is the only antidote
to what they see
as a growing polarization within the Church.

It should go without saying that dialogue is a good
thing. Its
opposite is monologue. No one likes to be subjected to
a one-way
conversation or to be a student in a course that does
not permit
questions, much less one where the raising of
questions is considered
a punishable offense.

That said, some recent calls for more dialogue in the
Church have a
troubling side. Oddly enough, these calls have come
mainly from the
more conservative side of the Catholic community.

These advocates of dialogue make two assumptions:
first, that there
are two roughly co-equal groups in conflict with one
another in the
Catholic Church --- liberals and ultra-conservatives
--- while the
broad center (in which they implicitly place
themselves) is blessedly
free of polarizing tendencies; and, second, that both
sides are
equally at fault because they are more interested in
stereotyping the
other than in entering into constructive conversation.

Both assumptions are subject to challenge. There are
not two co-equal
groups at logger-heads in the Catholic Church today,
the one liberal
and the other ultra-conservative. Liberal Catholics
(by whatever name)
constitute the great majority of today's most active
Catholics. Many
were formed by Vatican II and others have grown up in
a Church shaped
by it.

Like the council itself, they hold that the Church is
the People of
God and that they --- women and men alike --- have an
integral role to
play in its mission and ministries. They are generally
happy with the
liturgy as renewed and reformed by the council, except
perhaps for
some of the homilies and music. But they would not
want to return to
the Latin Mass or to a style of worship focused on the
priest rather
than the whole congregation.

Significantly, ultra-conservative Catholics, who have
never been
comfortable with the changes brought about by Vatican
II, are a small,
if often vocal, minority in the Church. This group has
no numerical
equivalency with the broad cross-section of Catholics
who have been
generally supportive of the council and its reforms.

While it is unfortunately the case that
ultra-conservative Catholics
sometimes create a hostile atmosphere in parishes and
dioceses,
directing their fire at pastors who do not observe the
rubrics of the
Mass in every detail or who support religious
education programs that
reflect modern theological, biblical and pedagogical
scholarship, the
same is generally not true of the broad cross-section
of Catholics
formed by Vatican II.

They may become exasperated and even angered by the
various forms of
harassment they receive from fellow Catholics on the
far right, but
they have no wish to drive them out of the Church ---
nor to fight
with them, for that matter.

The second assumption of today's pro-dialogue
commentators is that
dialogue between these two groups would be possible if
both would just
lay down their arms and agree to talk with one another
in a mutually
respectful way.

But if polarization occurs, as they say, in the
absence of dialogue,
dialogue, in turn, presupposes some measure of
equality. Dialogue
cannot happen if one side controls the agenda, the
invitation list and
the microphones, and also has the power to reward or
punish
participants. Dialogue requires a level playing field.

The unequal distribution of power in the Church today
makes dialogue
difficult, if not impossible. It came about because of
the pattern of
episcopal appointments and promotions that was
operative during the
previous pontificate.

The laity, who once had a say even in the election of
popes, have long
since been consigned to the lowest level of the
ecclesiastical pyramid
--- passive recipients of spiritual benefits and moral
direction from
on high.

This pyramidal system was reformed in principle by the
Second Vatican
Council, particularly with its doctrine of
collegiality, but
collegiality gave way in the previous pontificate to a
restoration of
centralized papal authority.

Today's internal conflicts are the result, in large
part, of a
deliberate pattern of episcopal appointments that has
not only shifted
the balance of power disproportionately in favor of
one small faction
in the Church, but has at the same time deliberately
withheld pastoral
authority from those in the Church's broad center ---
pastorally adept
moderates, of left and right alike, who could promote
real dialogue in
the Church.

Many look to Pope Benedict XVI in hope.

Father Richard P. McBrien is the Crowley-O'Brien
Professor of Theology
at the University of Notre Dame.