Deacon Ed:
Ah, but again the issue, as I see it, is not whether or not the diocese does this, but that the indiviuals within the diocese do this. And, is that judgement based upon sound, objective criteria or is it based upon personal preference?
Therein lies the problem.
Let me give you two examples. Posters here seem to lump Milwaukee among the “liberal” dioceses. There are two parishes within a few miles of each other. One is, frankly, a disgrace to the name Catholic as it represents as Catholic teaching many things which are, in fact, condemned. The other is a very orthodox parish with good, sound teaching, good liturgical praxis, and orthodox priests.
Another poster here lumps my own diocese, Orange in California, among the liberal dioceses because the parish he attends is no longer permitted to offer the Tridentine Mass. Yet within this diocese the bishop is very clear on the need to have sound Catholic doctrine taught, for his clergy to be constantly getting education, for his liturgies to be in conformance with all liturgical laws (even though we currently ignore parts of RS because the directions conflict with particular law for the US).
Deacon Ed
Look, the poster asked.
People responded with their lists.
Naturally, from that list further research has to be done to determine the validity of the charge…
but, at the very least it gives the person a starting point from which to do his own research and determine for himself whether or not that community is one he’d want to be a part of.
Let’s not split hairs. We’re talking about
obvious abuses, not nuances.
If I were to ever move again, I’d add a Diocesan search to the top of my list…Church was always first, then schools, and then medical facilities. But I hadn’t considered researching the diocese, I was only looking at the parish level. Now that I know that priests get rotated out every 5 years, Diocesan research is more important. I would look to the website first, then visit various parishes at different times, and speak to the parishioners as well as laity.
As for whether or not it’s fair to judge the diocese by the people who
operate it, I’d say yes. The bishops are appointed and charged with the responsibility to manage the diocese properly. If that one bishop and/or his administrative staff issue correspondence which goes against the Vatican teachings (particularly with regard to obvious matters, such as those we’ve listed here - she/he, positions on life, ‘communal’ consecrations, etc.) then YES the diocese can be determined to be in ‘improper hands’.
No, we can determine the diocesan position based on a few of the parishioners under it’s jurisdiction, but when valid complaints are issued and not supported, then yes we can. And, no, we’re not talking about those issues you raised which are indeed within the priests/bishops discretion to allow or not.
Again, I refer to the Tibbar
thread. When you have a priest who directs his parish staff in the manner this one did, and
if letters to the bishop come back with his
support then, yeah, it’s safe to put that diocese on the list -
regardless of whether or not there happen to be good parishes left in the diocese, hanging on. The leadership of the diocese is flawed.