J
JReducation
Guest
I think you have made an excellent point. The labels that people on CAF use to speak about the Church don’t fit the Church at all. A perfect example is the post to which you just responded.Perhaps this is an aside. But I wonder just how useful the political labels of liberal/conservative are to describe people within the Catholic Church? Fr. Richard Neuhaus recommends the terms noncontinuists and continuists–those who believe that Vatican II represents a break in the Sacred Tradition of the Church and run either left or right with it (for instance, Call to Action on the left and SSPX on the right) and those who believe that Vatican II was a continuation of that Sacred Tradition, who may of course lean either left or right.
However, when speaking of the Hierarchy in particular, such labels are as dangerous as they are inaccurate, because they are so very divisive. Perhaps I’m being redundant, but why would we want to drag the bickering world of politics into our view of our Catholic hierarchy? Besides the skillfully overlooked fact that the majority of the Hierarchy undoubtedly follow the dictates of their informed consciences without regard for the left/right paradigm, there is another point to be considered. Who are we to label one bishop conservative and another liberal? Permit me a step further. Who are we to label one bishop good and another bad? Isnt’ that judging another Man’s servant?
I like to think of the Church as a rather broad bridge, with plenty of room for barefoot Franciscans and high-profile convert seeking Opus Dei–or, if you prefer, room for Simon the Zealot and Matthew the Tax Collector–and nary a conflict in loving and supporting them both. You can fall off the right or you can fall off the left. But the guy on the right who has fallen off is no more on the bridge than the guy on the left who has fallen off.
An aside to the aside: I’m not even sure terms like “liberal” or “conservative” work for the political views of a great number of people in the Church. Suppose just for a moment that I agreed entirely with my greatly respected and rather outspoken Cardinal Metropolitan’s view of politics. I would be a cut-and-dry no-compromise abortion opponent, supporter of amnesty for illegal migrants, opponent of “homosexual rights,” supporter of safety-net programs for the poor, opponent of the death penalty and the Iraq War, and supporter of local governments over federal government. What do I call that?
Pardon my rambling asides.
The poster is allegedly a traditionalist, yet seems to be alleging that there are conspiracies among the hierarchy, clergy and religious to lead the laity astray. If I were to correctly use the term Traditionalist, tradition has it that the authority of the hierarchy is not called into question. Even in ordinary matters, the Holy Father, Bishops, pastors and major religiosu superiors are to be obeyed, becasue they are legitimate figures of authority. Until the legitimacy of their authority is disproven, there is no room for disobedience without commiting the sin of pride.
To allege that there has been conspiracy on the part of those with legitimate authority in the Church is in fact an act of rebellion, which is incosistent with Tradition.
On the other hand, those of us who say that the laity cannot assume roles that are proper to the clergy, such as trying to govern the clergy and that to do so is an act of clericalism are considered moderns. When in fact, this has been a tradition in the Church dating back to the Apostles.
All disputes regarding doctrine, liturgy, religious life, sacraments, canon law, property, even jurisdiction, were always resolved by clerics, not by lay men and women.
The Church has opened the door to allow the laity to express their concerns. But it has not opened Pandora’s Box and declared that evveryone is now an authority over every cleric or religious. Unless ordered by their legitimate superiors to act or cease an action, the clergy and religious do not owe any kind of obedience to the laity. They must respectfully listen and respond in charity.
So the terms that we’re using here are not consistent with the way that the Church functions.
JR
