C
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No, I don’t want to go there. In the USA in the 1970s and 80s, there was a movement to define a de facto “American Catholic Church”, which would choose its own “Catholicism”, which just happened to be identical to the secular media. Fortunately, as more orthodox bishops replaced liberals, that threat is buried, but in a shallow grave.Decentralisation as a practical means of creating a more efficient administration should not be an issue. However decentralisation motivated by ideological reasons is more problematic.
We have already had the concept of allowing a ‘pastoral approach’ as a fudge that effectively runs counter to actual teachings. To allow bishops conferences to run semi-autonomous national Churches which the power to determine the ‘pastoral approach’ to doctrine in their nation effectively puts us into a position similar to the Anglican Communion. Do we really want to go there?
The liberals were not consistently in favor of decentralization. They wanted to shift power away from the local bishops, moving it to bureaucrats in Washington, etc. Traditionalist Catholics were not consistently against decentralization. For instance, they opposed moves from the Vatican in prior decades that restricted local dioceses from offering the TLM. Pope Francis’ move to allow laity confessions by SSPX clergy bypassed local bishops, and bishops conferences!
With Pope Francis, keep in mind that he talks “on record” far more than other popes. With 10 times as many words to pick from, one can “prove” him to be a centralizer, to be a decentralizer, or many other things, some mutually contradictory. The other thing is his style: he tends to present an idea - suppose we do A, B, C - in order to elicit his listeners’ response. Later he may suggest the opposite idea, to get other reactions.
Even if the media were totally fair and objective, people hear about only one hypothetical and draw conclusions about trends. Hundreds of trends.