Well, since you know that he didn’t have what I have in mind, praytell what he did have in mind.
I think that he was merely making an honest observation that this appears to be the way that the Church (and I might add many things in society, for that matter) seems to be heading, in reality. You have smaller, dedicated groups of people who are leading particular efforts within societies that may lead to a certain spark of renewal invigorating a path with which it’s members (and those who are attracted to their common interest) can move forward to transform society. And he was acknowleging the value in that. What I don’t think he was saying was the kind of simplistic “let’s cut off all the dead wood” that so many would prefer.
Ah, yes, I see. A bishop can only tend his flock in a diocese that is populated by a bunch of beer swilling hayseeds, not in an enlightened, educated, and forward looking metropolis.
It’s always sad to see this sort of anti-big city sentiment that too many “country bumpkins”

harbor. Certainly, I am not promoting the kind of prejduce which you seem to think concerning “hayseeds”. Heck, in a city like Chicago, we’d pretty much celebrate the kind of person you describe. It’s just that we’d consider them blue collar Bears fans, rather than “hayseeds”.
Maybe that is what y’all city folk need, someone to put their foot down instead of trying to appease everybody.
Rather, the reality is that when you are dealing with a large, diverse populous management becomes much more difficult and requires a certain skillfullness in order to be effective. And when you have a lot of people who may simply not want to follow someone’s lead and will do what they want, anyway, it makes things all the more challenging.
A bishop, then, can’t merely come in and demand “my way or the highway”, expecting all to get in line. For the community of the faithful, itself, is much more of an expansive variety of individual smaller communities, each with it’s own particular concerns and manner of approaching Christ. That needs to be understood, respected, and responded to in more particular contexts in order for a bishop to be effective.
So, it’s isn’t about “liberal, enlighhtened, elitists”, but mammoth size and extensive variety.