Archive for The Church

Hans Küng on Pope Francis and Saint Francis

Posted in Pope Francis, The Papal Watcher, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , on May 21, 2013 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Hans KüngIt is exciting to see Hans Küng, the great Catholic theologian and well-known papal cynic (for lack of a better description, seem so enthused by the decisions and actions of Pope Francis so far. In a National Catholic Reporter piece, titled “The Paradox of Pope Francis,” which shares a similar thesis to my earlier America essay, “What’s in a Name? The Significance and Challenge of St. Francis for Pope Francis,” Küng offers a personal reflection on how he sees the promise and challenge of the intention Pope Francis has seemingly laid out in his decision to take the name after the famous Saint of Assisi: “It is above all about the three basic concerns of the Franciscan ideal that have to be taken seriously today: It is about poverty, humility and simplicity.” He goes on to suggest why it hasn’t happened before: “This probably explains why no previous pope has dared to take the name of Francis: The expectations seem to be too high.”

Aside from the fact that I have pointed out that the some of the discussions about Francis of Assisi in light of the new Bishop of Rome have, as Küng does and admits to some degree, simplified and idealized the thirteenth-century saint and neglected the deeper and most significant dimensions of his life and legacy, Küng offers a unique contribution to the discussion at hand.

His essay centers on four questions about what lies ahead, structured around the basic premise that the institutional structures of the Roman Curia form an oppositional force to legitimate change and progress in the church’s constant need to return to the fundamentals, or what Küng calls “the early Christian concerns.”

He places Francis in opposition to his contemporary, Pope Innocent III in a way that is not entirely accurate. For example, Innocent III not only was a brilliant canon lawyer (something Küng notes) and theologian, but was an organizational genius. Nevertheless, his vision for the church was one of structure and order according to his time, while Francis, according to Küng, was not at all interested in these things because of his desire simply to attend to his so-called “early Christian concerns.” What is somewhat complicated about this, which gets overlooked, is that Innocent III provided the very condition of the possibility of the Franciscan Movement by granting the oral probation for its licit establishment in 1209 and, perhaps more importantly, Francis of Assisi sought this institutional approval that eventually culminated in the Regula Bullata of 1223.

Nevertheless, as I point out in my America essay, Francis was not a blind follower of Innocent or any other ecclesiastical leader. At various points in his life and ministry, Francis exercised what I anachronistically call “ecclesiastical disobedience” (akin to “civil disobedience”). Francis’s relationship to exercises of ecclesiastical power and structures of power, such as the curial interventions in his evangelical movement, are more complex than a narrative such as the one Küng tells — in genuine good will, I presuppose — can express.

The greatest take away from Küng’s piece is the final sections of the essay in which the German theologian gets to the main point: there will be resistance from those who exercise power to maintain the status quo. How that is overcome remains to be seen. I agree that as the whole church, that is the Body of Christ, we need to reform ourselves and our institutions of power. However, his last paragraph is one that comes across as a bit confrontational in a way that I’m not sure will be helpful. Küng writes:

We should then in no way fall into resignation; instead, faced with a lack of impulse toward reform from the top down, from the hierarchy, we must take the offensive, pushing for reform from the bottom up. If Pope Francis tackles reforms, he will find he has the wide approval of people far beyond the Catholic church. However, if he just lets things continue as they are, without clearing the logjam of reforms as now in the case of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, then the call of “Time for outrage! Indignez-vous!” will ring out more and more in the Catholic church, provoking reforms from the bottom up that will be implemented without the approval of the hierarchy and frequently even in spite of the hierarchy’s attempts at circumvention. In the worst case — as I already wrote before this papal election — the Catholic church will experience a new ice age instead of a spring and run the risk of dwindling into a barely relevant large sect.

Ironically, this confrontational approach “from the bottom up,” at least as Küng seems to present it, actually contradicts his desire to point to Francis of Assisi as a model for reform. Francis did not provoke “reforms from the bottom up that will be implemented without the approval of the hierarchy.” On the contrary, he sought approval from the pope and his curia from the beginning (in fact, his entire lifestyle shift began with the approval of his local bishop, Guido of Assisi around 1206).

I agree that change is needed. Big change!  I agree that Francis of Assisi is a powerful model for what that could look like and mean.  However, I’m not sure that Küng’s well-meaning proverbial call to arms is the answer. It appears to be just a reiteration of his earlier calls for similar action. I think that a serious look at Francis of Assisi’s negotiation of these relational structures of power between his movement and the church’s leadership, between his desire to follow in the footprints of Christ and his solidarity with the marginalized, between his expressed loyalty to the church and his willingness to act out of conscience — this is more nuanced, subtle, and effective than rallying something of a quasi-democratic grass-roots movement.

Perhaps it is time we all really take Francis of Assisi seriously.

Photo: File

The Future of Religious Life for Women

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , on September 28, 2011 by Daniel P. Horan, OFM

Over the weekend, renowned theologian and spiritual writer Sr. Sandra Schneiders spoke at St. Mary’s College in Notre Dame, Indiana, about the future of women’s religious life. The National Catholic Reporter covered Schneiders’s lecture, which addressed the shifting dynamics of the women’s religious communities in the later half of the twentieth century and first part of the twenty-first century. As nearly anybody can observe, the number of religious sisters has decreased over the years and this shift has concerned some who question whether or not the future of religious life for women might be heading toward extinction. Schneiders makes her perspective clear: this way of life will not disappear, but will necessarily change. The NCR reports:

“Women’s ministerial religious life has a future in this time and beyond,” said Schneiders, professor emerita at the Jesuit School of Theology in Berkeley, Calif. “We will not look today or in the future as we looked in the past — either in outer appearance, or in age, or in numbers, or in lifestyle, or in ministry. But we will be what we have been since the first century, disciples personally called by Christ to commit ourselves totally to him.”

Religious life will continue, Schneiders asserted, but communities of religious women will be smaller in number, renewed through reconfiguration and less institutional in their ministry. And, like the rest of the U.S. population, women religious will be older, but still active in their advanced years.

Schneiders has been vocal in public lectures and in her books about the need to appreciate the complexities surrounding the boom in women entering religious life in the post-war twentieth century, particularly in the United States. There were many concurrent factors, among them economic and socio-cultural reasons, that contributed to the quick rise in numbers. Schneiders believes that lower numbers, those figures more representative of the time before this mid-century boom, are not an inherently bad thing, but simply a reflection of how the Spirit is calling particular women — and, in the case of religious communities such as my own, men — to religious life and how they are responding.

Schneiders has written before on the need not to focus on how numbers of religious women and men today compare to the 1950s or 1960s when the numbers were unusually high. On a related note, Schneiders makes clear that the decline in numbers since then should not be viewed as a negative reaction to the Second Vatican Council (as some self-described conservative Catholics suggest), but viewed as a reflection of what consecrated religious life in the Church has always been — a strong and powerful witness in the Church and world, but not usually consisting of large numbers of people.

I’ve always appreciated Schneiders’s interpretation of this reality, at times I’ve been criticized for not embracing an interpretive approach that equates our current state with a “vocation crisis.” Likewise, one of the major reasons that I think her approach makes a lot of theological sense has to do with the ecclesiological implications of her observations. Power in the Church, which is of course the Body of Christ, has shifted in positive directions with conciliar texts like Lumen Gentium, Sacrosanctum Concilium, and Gaudium et Spes, more genuinely opening up the work and participation of ministry to all members of the Church, not just reserving authority for the small percentage of professed religious and clergy.

For this reason I believe it makes absolutely no sense to return to the understanding of Church found in 1950s America that placed the responsibilities of the Church only in the hands of religious and clergy, relegating the rest of the Body of Christ to a passive place in the pews. While it is never as simple as this, I think that is in large part the reason I don’t share the pessimistic indulgence of lamenting over smaller numbers of religious. It will, as Schneiders posits, ok. Going back through the millennia of Christian history, one recognizes that the numbers and responsibilities of religious life have shifted, but there has always been consecrated religious life and I believe there always will be.

Schneiders does offer a constructive interpretation of what she sees as the future of women’s religious life in the United States as these dynamics continue to shift.

Schneiders grouped them into four “clusters”:

  • Social justice ministers focused on systemic or structural change, whose “theological glue” tends to be Catholic social teaching. These include social scientists, activists, lawyers, political and community organizers, economists and sociologists, urban farmers and legislators.
  • Ministers who work directly with the victims of social injustice or natural disasters, whose theological glue is deep compassion for the suffering Body of Christ. These include chaplains, social workers, counselors, literacy tutors, providers of child care or elder care, managers of low-income housing, those who work in homeless shelters or with victims of torture or sex trafficking.
  • Intellectuals, scholars and artists, whose theological glue is faith seeking understanding in our time. These include composers, performers, journalists, writers, teachers and researchers in theology, philosophy and the sciences.
  • Ministers who address the thirst for meaning and transcendence, with the theological glue of spiritual nourishment and growth. They work in spirituality centers, campus ministry, spiritual direction, retreats, holistic healing, or as popular writers or speakers on the lecture and workshop circuit.

Whatever the discrete shape of religious life for women might look like in the future, I too am confident that it will always exist as a vocation in the Church. It is, of course, the Holy Spirit who guides and directs the Body of Christ and calls people to their respective vocations, none is better or worse than another. My prayer for vocations is that each person respond to the call of the Spirit in his or her life, and live that life to the fullest.

Photo: IHM Community
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