Can I calmly tell you what their doctrinal errors are? Did I give the impression that I wasn’t calm? Don’t get the impression that I was jumping up and down here, foaming at the mouth while I was typing, cuz I wudden.
But I do believe that breaking away from a legitimate monastery and legitimate authority, and forming your own, is itself a huge error, no matter how “Catholic” it is made to look, no matter how beautiful the buildings and landscape, no matter how lovely the liturgy. And this was the whole point of my post. The refusal to acknowledge legitimate authority, even when, especially when, you don’t like what that authority says, is rebellion.
And that, in itself, is–is it not?–what happened in the Reformation. Instead of working for much needed reform (work that was already in progress, I might add), some rather notorious figures entered into rebellion and finally into schism. Breaking away. Turning one’s back. Deciding that one knows better than the Church. Deciding that one’s own thinking is a higher authority than the authority that Christ gave His Church.
I’m still calm, by the way. These may be my first posts here, but they are not my first conversations on these topics, and not my first writings either. Just so’s you don’t get the idea that I’m frothing at the mouth yet. Cuz I ain’t.
But this is something to which I have given a great deal of thought over the years, this notion of authority, legitimate and otherwise, and what it means to submit. What helped me in my understanding of it most were the writings of St. Faustina in her Diary. Revolutionized my thinking on the subject.
Please note that I am not saying that we should bow to illegitimate authority or obey illicit laws or anything of that sort. I am speaking of what it is to be a member of the Church as a disciple of Christ. How easy it would be if we could all run away and form our own churches. And how vain.
I don’t need to get my own way all the time. What I do need is to follow Christ as a faithful member of His Church because He is the Way. I am not a conservative Catholic or a liberal Catholic or a traditional Catholic or a non-traditional Catholic or a modernist Catholic. I am a Catholic. Things happen that I don’t like, and I certainly recognize that there is a serious problem in Catholic education and in religious orders. All the more reason to stay and pray and work for better conditions.
Our whole society is infected with the notion that commitment means nothing; that if things don’t suit us, we can just walk away. This is individualism gone mad. So where does this lead us if we do this as Catholics? Will we end up with 45,000 “Catholic” denominations? Can we be “independent” Catholics? Then, what, pray tell, will that Catholicism mean?
This is apparently (and I do say, apparently) what the abbey in question has done, become “independent” Benedictines. All Benedictine monasteries have certain amount of independence, but it sounds like this claim is a bit more than that. Quite a bit more than that.
As for my closeness to the abbey…if you mean that in the sense of geographical closeness, well, I suppose you could call it that. It’s probably a couple of hours or so up the road. I’m not sure where it is, I’ve never been there. I’ve been to St. Bernard’s (an abbey that is in union with the Bishop and Rome, as far as I know) and to the Shrine of the Blessed Sacrament, which is also in union, as far as I know. Once my Bishop has made a public pronouncement telling the faithful to stay away from a certain place or group, I adhere to his words. I don’t tremble or panic, I just stay away. Being a faithful Catholic is a full-time job and a lifelong journey, and I constantly find that I have further to go along that road than I realized.
So I hope you see that all I’m saying is that the separation itself
is the error. And a very grave one, at that.