J
JReducation
Guest
It’s funny that you mention this. One of the horrible things that Catholics did between the time of Vatican I and today was to clericalize people.An odd sort of clericalism is the focus on women priests, as if the priesthood is all that important in the life of the Church. We need priests to give us the sacraments…to fuel us so that we can take on the heavy lifting of sanctifying the whole world.
Church issues…in other words is small ball.
First thing was that every eligible male who had a brain was more than just encouraged to enter the seminary. Nagged into it, was probably a better word. We ended up with thousands of priests and thousands of brothers by say 1960. The Christian Brothers became the world’s largest religious order of men. There were dioceses building diocesan seminaries to house 300 and so forth. By 2001, we had lost 40% of these men. They had left bitter. They were involved in child sexual abuse. They were involved in affairs with women. Some were involved with drugs or alcohol or both. Others just never fit in.
If you’re in a community or in a secular seminary, watching the door revolve like that, it can be very depressing.
Second thing that we did wrong was to clericalize the laity. We got into our heads that the laity, priests, deacons, brothers, sisters and nuns were all equal.
Well, yes and no. Equally children of God and the Church, yes. Absolutely. Equal as in the same with the same roles and the same rights, absolutely not. So when we clericalized all of these people whom God never called to either the clergy or the religious life, we decimated the ordained life and the consecrated life. There was no need to enter a seminary or a novitiate, because you could do the same thing without doing all that formation and without all that structure and discipline.
I have always believed that there is a place for lay volunteers in parishes and other ministries in the Church. But I have also believed that a layman and a religious doing the same work, do not do it the same. Or a layman and a priest doing the same work do not do it the same. The layman has a different charism. Think of it as a flavor.
Laymen, priests, brothers, sisters and nuns are all people of God in different flavors. They may all be popsicles, but not the same color. Clericalization has deceived us into believing that all the popsicles are the same.
Now, we have to undo a number of things.
- Religious orders have to take control away from the priests and put it back into the hands of the community.
- Dioceses and religious orders have got to filter who they admit and stop trying to fill every slot with a warm body. The Church is not going anywhere, because there is a shortage of priests, brothers and sisters. It’s not the first time that there has been a shortage. Look at Europe after Napoleon was done with it.
- Parishes and other church institutions must admit that the popsicles have different flavors. No, Brother and Mrs. Smith do not bring the same flavor to Confirmation class, even though they both teach out of the same book. This one I know personally. I teach CCD on Weds. I love it. It’s the highlight of my week. I teach one of four grade 6 classes. This is kind of cute. When my kids enter and leave the building they walk in a straight line and are quiet. When they’re at their desks, they sit with their back the Franciscan regulation 3" from the back of the chair with your back perfectly parallel to the chair and both feet on the floor. Their notebooks are headed. Their responses to doctrine and scriptures must be in English Latin and Greek.
Why? The other grade six teachers are very good and very knowledgeable. They try very hard. The reason is that the kids look at Brother and they have a sense of being in a different space. They look at the lay teacher and it feels like public school. They can do this in public school, why should this be different. It’s not the teachers who are bad. It’s the training of the kids that is horrific. The problem with the program is that the people who run it are not convinced that the presence of the brothers makes a difference. The people who run it truly believe that the lay teachers can do it exactly as the brothers do it. I don’t think so. That kind of mindset is another form of clericalism.
I think that you have to give the layperson tools that are appropriate for him or her, not the same that the brothers use. They work for the brothers, because they’re brothers. I can go in and say to a kid, you must sit with your back 3" from the seat, because that’s how we sit in Franciscan classrooms and Franciscan chapels. But I’m wearing a Franciscan habit. The lay teacher needs other tools to achieve the same degree of control and to be able to deliver the same program. The lay teacher knows the theology. It’s the delivery that’s different. But people don’t want to acknowledge this, because God forbid that we be different from each other.
I’m not sure if I’m making sense.