Thank-you.
And I can truly appreciate this attitude. Indeed, the Reformers should have stayed with “reforming” the problems they saw from within the Catholic church rather than going off to create a new ecclesiastical community of their own. And though they probably felt forced out (Please don’t argue whether they in fact were or not, I’m merely assuming how they felt. None of us alive today can actually know how they felt at that time, save from reading what they wrote, and this is my interpretation of those writings)… And though they probably felt forced out, they certainly were going to be in a weaker position to effect the changes they felt were needed from outside than if they had remained inside. Establishing congregations apart from the existing institutions of the Catholic church means that they had given up on the Catholic church. Alas, though I haven’t actually given up on the Catholic church, I have never been a part of it. I find myself called by God to be in ministry and found my place in ministry that just happened to not be part of the institutions of the Catholic church. There is now so much water gone under the bridge that there is no going back. Rather there is only going forward.
I experience some of these same issues in my own denomination. Perhaps you have heard of the Good News movement, perhaps not? Within the United Methodist Church, there are those that thing that we have lost our direction. Many feel very strongly about certain matters with regard to the moral authority of the church and the teaching leadership it has given (or not given) with regard to moral issues. More than a few have left the church to join other denominations that are more in line with their personal beliefs on these issues. Some in the church have suggested that if change cannot be effected that schism is the best course to assure the fidelatiy of a faithful remnant. But thus far, we have resolved to stay the course and seek to effect change from within. This is the history we are writing today. But it is present day history and we can effect it. We cannot go back an change the course of the past, we can only chart our course for the future.
Can our going forward into the future bring about a reuniting between Catholics and non-Catholics? I suppose it could. I would even welcome it. But it must involve going forward, not backward.
It could even be like a stream of water that flows around an island to merge again on the other side. Now when this happens there are two channels, but only one is the true channel. I sense the Pope focusing on this aspect of our experience. My focus is elsewhere, my focus is not on the riverbed, but on the molecules of water themselves. Though they flow on different sides of the island, there is no real difference between them. They are still all of one stream, have one source and bound for one destination. The Pope sees two channels and says that only one is true. I see one river and say that it I was born on this side of the island. I am not going to get out and cross the island to reach his channel. I have found this side of the island to be navigable as well and trust it to carry me to where we are all going.