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![]() In this provocative commentary written a few weeks ago in Oxford which takes on new relevance in the wake of Bishop Geoffrey Robinson's book* examining the recent problems of Power and Sex in the Catholic Church Dr Andrew Thomas Kania, exposes the historical problem of corruption in the institutional Church; the constant problem of the authorities wanting to turn a blind eye to it; and the challenge all of us face in constant vigilance. Perhaps ironically he also quotes some ancient wisdom from St John Chrysostom about the qualities needed by those who are elected as leaders in the Church. The irony being that were the Church to have been more open and democratic perhaps the people might have had some say and that just may have provided some protection against the recent scandals as Professor Leonard Swidler argues with eloquence and at length in his recent book: "Making the Church our Own How We Can Reform the Catholic Church from the Ground Up". Dr Kania's original title for this essay was: "The Two Faces of Eve (cf. 2 Corinthians 11: 2-3)" and those passages of Scripture are well worth bearing in mind as you read this commentary. *POST PUBLICATION NOTE: Dr Kania has contacted me to say that this essay was actually written some weeks ago before Bishop Robinson's book was published. In his note to me he writes: "I was inspired to write as I did due to the revelations that had been made public over the last few years about the former Archbishop of Millwaukee, Weakland, the former Archbishop of Poznan, Paetz, Cardinal Hermann Groer of Vienna, and the former Archbishop of Warsaw, Wieglus. I thought that it was time that an article be written discussing corruption in an open and frank manner. I feel that we lose more adherents to the Catholic Church by trying to ignore these very serious matters." Editor
Jehannot is filled with private trepidation: "I have wasted my energies, which I felt I had used to good effect, thinking I had converted the man; for if he goes to the court of Rome and sees what foul and wicked lives the clergy lead, not only will he not become a Christian, but, if he had already turned Christian, he would become a Jew again without fail". (Boccaccio, 1995, p. 39) So off to Rome goes Abraham. When Abraham returns a little while later, the dejected Jehannot quizzes his friend as to whether things in Rome were as bad as everyone had said they were. Abraham replies: "nobody there who was connected with the Church seemed to me to display the slightest sign of holiness, piety, charity, moral rectitude or any other virtue". (Boccaccio, 1995, p. 40) In even greater despair now, Jehannot asks Abraham as to whether he will ever convert to Catholicism, and to his surprise Abraham answers fervently in the affirmative he will become a Catholic and as soon as possible. Dumfounded, Abraham provides Jehannot with his intriguing rationale: that despite all the evil that exists within the hearts of some members of the Church the Church is resilient, and continues to grow in beauty, splendour and lustre; only an Institution that has the hand of God resting over it, and empowered by the Holy Spirit, could withstand such depravity. Yves Congar: seeking a Church "more accountable and more transparent"
A firm and rightly held belief in the Sacred Magisterium's infallibility in Church teaching should in no way be confused with the personal fallibility of each of the ordained members of the Church. The Church does have a plentitude of Saintly hierarchs and clerics; heroic leaders such as: Blessed Nicholas Charnetsky (1884-1959), St. Thomas Becket (1118-1170), Metropolitan Andrii Sheptytsky (1865-1944), Archbishop Oscar Romero (1917-1980), and Blessed Theodore Romza (1911-1947); whose lives affirm the words of the prophet Daniel: "Those who instruct many others in righteousness will be like the stars for ever and ever". (Dan. 12: 3) The darker side corruption in the clergy Regretfully, the Church also has had its hierarchs and clerics whose lives and lifestyles have tarnished Her reputation. As early as the fourth century St. Jerome (347-420) declared that Bishops and clerics can regrettably sometimes be persons of poor character, hence he warned: "Do not let your deeds thwart your words. Otherwise, when you are speaking in church, your hearers will tacitly retort, 'Why do you not put your own words into practice?'" (Early Dominicans, 1982, p. 216)
That the problem of corruption in the clergy seems to be historically entrenched is also evidenced from the writings of Blessed Jordan of Saxony (1190-1237) who recounted the following tale: "Once, when I was in a large city in Brabant called Brussels, a girl came to me, who was not very well off, but was good looking. She was crying and asked me to help her. I encouraged her to tell me what the matter was. With a lot of sobbing and sighing, she said, 'I'm in a dreadful state. A priest tried to take me by force and kissed me against my will, and I slapped him in the face and made his nose bleed. Now the clergy all tell me there is no alternative but for me to go to Rome about it.' I could hardly stop myself from bursting out laughing, but I spoke to her very seriously, putting the fear of God into her as if she had committed a grave offence. Eventually I made her swear that she would do exactly what I told her. Then I said, 'By the oath you have sworn, I command you: if he or any other priest tries to force his kisses on you or to pet you, clench your fist tight and knock his eye out if you can. Whatever his rank may be, do not let him get away with it. It is quite lawful to hit anyone to preserve your chastity, as it is to defend your bodily life.' Then I encouraged the girl herself and everybody else who was there to have a good laugh and cheer up". (Early Dominicans, 1982, p. 140) In addition we also read how in 1383, Gerard de Groote delivered a sermon to his chapter-house in Utrecht, in which he addressed the presence of moral corruption in the Church, specifically amongst the clergy; as de Groote saw the issue: "My lords, the more august the priesthood, the more scandalous the dissoluteness therein". (Wautier D'Aygalliers, 1925, p. 28) All these comments and anecdotes told by the honest voice of Saints and Mystics, helped feed the imagination of medieval Catholic humourists such as: Chaucer (1343-1400) and Rabelais (1494-1553), who alongside Boccaccio, honed their wit to deliver a series of stinging barbs at the divide that exists between the Apostolic goal of the Church being, "The Bride of Christ", and the actions by a number of Her clerics throughout history that has attempted to soil Her bridal garment. Do we stay, or do we go? In the light of a number of modern public scandals involving the Church it is only natural that many sections of the media, as well as even many of the Faithful should question the validity of the Church's mission and possibly even Her existence. But similarly we must acknowledge both as Catholic Christians and as realists that the hearts of men are not consistent in their obedience to God, and any institution comprised of men, will have its spiritual compilation spanning the spectrum from the 'wise to the depraved', as it has with the Church throughout Her history with her gamut of 'saints to sinners'. It is not for us to desert the Church that God Himself founded, and which the Holy Spirit continues to inspire, because of the depravity and concupiscence of a number of sinful men and women, but rather it is for us, both clergy and laity, to resolve that any iniquity found in our Church is rooted out, torn up and cast aside.
Of Christ's original twelve disciples, one was to sell Him for pieces of silver, another was to deny even knowing Him but this but serves to prove that the message is far greater and purer than the fallibility of the messenger. In an institutional sense, however, the Church must bear the legal responsibility for the indiscretions of those few clerics who pervert everything She stands for; and these actions although acted out by a minority of individuals, impact all Her members by affecting the standing of the Church in the broader world community (cf. Matthew 18: 6). One of the strongest findings from the Irish study, Time to Listen: Confronting Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic Clergy in Ireland (2003), quoted by Flynn, was the uniformly deep sense of sorrow felt by the laity for the great majority of good priests and bishops who have been tainted falsely and unjustly by the evil actions of a depraved few of their number. Who should we elect as our spiritual leaders? St. John Chrysostom (349-407) offers us some wise words as to who we should elect to lead our Church, a list of criterion equally applicable not only for clerics, but also for the lay-people who occupy positions of leadership within the Church:
As we enter the new millennium it is vital that both clergy and laity strive to live the message of the Church, at all levels from the smallest Parish Council to the Sistine Chapel. If each of us truly believes that Christ was God and that the Church is His Bride, then it is a solemn and 'fearful' duty to keep a watchful eye, like the watchman for daybreak so that nothing we do in our lives can defile the perception of the Gospel that others will read from the content of our actions. Every Catholic must therefore take ownership of their Church and demand no less of the Church, than what Christ demands of each one of us who comprise Her laity and clergy. Perhaps then, when the Faithful realize the importance of living out the Gospel, then, the Church as a pilgrim people will be universally known and acknowledged as being Holy on the basis of Her actions rather than, as Boccaccio wrote long ago, in spite of them (cf. John 13: 35). Perhaps then we will have a Church fully reformed, in the words of the mystic, Rulman Merswin, by men and women who, "witness to the conviction that only real saints, true Friends of God, might be able to save a church so mired in corruption and conflict". (McGinn, 2005, p. 431) ![]()
©2007 Dr Andrew Thomas Kania |
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Catholica Australia |