C
chicago
Guest
Considering some of the discussion surrounding Fr. Pfleger, I thought that this essay on notable Chicago priest, the late Msgr. Jack Egan, which I happenned across today was insightful.
archives.nd.edu/findaids/html/etext/alley004.htm
A brief exceprt follows
archives.nd.edu/findaids/html/etext/alley004.htm
A brief exceprt follows
Jack Egan would say that he was only carrying the implications of the doctrine of the Mystical Body to their logical conclusion. Ordained to be a “foot-washer of the world,” that’s what he’d be. For Jack in 1943 the hierarchical model of the Church was already outmoded and irrelevant. “At our very best we are to be servants of the servants of God. That means we have to put ourselves at the disposal of lay people.”
That service should be enhanced by kindness, the “big, rough and tumble, lovable Jesuit who taught Moral Theology” had preached to Jack’s classmates. “The day you are unkind in the confessional will be a day you will always regret,” Father Jim Mahoney told the young men preparing for Saturdays in the box. Once the penitent vanishes, the priest/professor warned, “you can do nothing about it. You do not know the person to whom you were unkind and you cannot apologize or do anything to rectify the unkindness.” That advice Jack never forgot.
Not all the young men ordained in the United States in that decade would ease smoothly onto the fast track leading the Roman Catholic Church world-wide to the second Vatican Council. But the lessons Monsignor Hillenbrand taught of devotion to the liturgy, commitment to social justice based on the encyclicals, and faith in the laity as the Mystical Body of Christ did prepare his seminarians. Once they were ordained to minister to the laity under the astutely permissive Samuel Cardinal Stritch, Archbishop of Chicago, they began to strike out in new directions, pulling along segments of the Chicago Church, people who had been sensitized by Hillenbrand himself or Father Carrabine, CISCA, the Queen’s Work, Father Daniel Lord, Father Edward Dowling, Father John Ryan, Dorothy Day, and the Baroness de Hueck.
Like a shift in tectonic plates that opens up the earth and lets its molten innards erupt in a volcano, Monsignor Hillenbrand had opened the vein in the church that allowed the pent strength of visionaries, contemporary and historical, to affect his students, “Rynie’s young men.” A powerful force flowed through them into the lay persons they affected, and from those lay people into the national Church. Together, they all shared something of the invigorating exhilaration of the first Pentecost and all those times in the Church’s history when Jesus’ message is rediscovered, reformulated.
When Rynie’s group implemented the theory of the laity as equal members of the Body of Christ, they threatened the Church’s authoritarianism. They were forging new pathways, destination unknown. The idea of the Mystical Body seemed fresh as a morning in May in 1943. Few people remembered that Archbishop John England had grounded his teaching in the Pauline image of the Body of Christ, a response to his American experience of Church, a hundred years before. To these young priests, far closer to the mind of their immigrant forebears than they were to the insights of an Archbishop England, it was a giant step to embrace this image without losing touch with the Church they were raised in, the Church of their pious first or second-generation immigrant families.
For the Church they were ordained to serve in Chicago was still suffering the friction of an immigrant Church into the 1930s and 1940s in spite of Cardinal Mundelein’s vigorous efforts to introduce discipline, uniformity and centralization. The archdiocese was not nearly so unruly and stormy as Chicago’s fourth archbishop found it when he arrived on his special train from New York in 19l6. Cardinal Mundelein had been effective. Building a seminary to train young priests from different cultures together was an impressive advance. But, more than that, the dean of American Catholic church historians, Monsignor John Tracy Ellis, credits the Archdiocese of Chicago for a half century of leadership in the American Catholic community before 1965. “It was there that national progressive movements relating to youth, family life, social justice, etc., took their rise during the administrations of Cardinals Mundelein, Stritch, and Meyer.”
In a review in Catholic New York, Tracy Ellis traced this national leadership “to an impetus given by the bishops of the Middle West that dated from the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore, a gathering that the Middle Western prelates were mainly responsible for bringing into being in 1884, and which has influenced American Catholic life down to our own day.”