Fr
Kevin Murphy has been catching up on Bishop Geoffrey Robinson's
book and shares these reflections of his own as to why people are disenchanted
and dropping away from the Church. On the positive side he argues that
small faith communities offer hope in addressing the decline
Why do people stop coming to church? There are reasons that are based
on what happens within the church and there are reasons that come from
the nature of society as it is at the present time. As well as that there
are always personal reasons.
Not the major cause of decline...
As far as the situation in the church is concerned, some people quickly
identify the changes in the way religion has been taught in school or
the changes in the way Liturgy and devotional practices have been organised
as factors in church decline. Robinson does not see these factors as being
major causes of decline; they are changes that are associated with decline
because they have happened at the same time.
Deeper reasons can be found in the conflicts that have developed in recent
history between loyalty to the church and the many developments coming
from science or modern philosophy: an unrestricted liberalism, the consequences
of the industrial revolution, the affluence of the western world, changed
patterns of social behaviour.
Robinson mentions three inventions that are indicative of the modern
world which are making traditional religious practice more difficult or
less attractive. These inventions are the car, television and telephones.
It is not only individuals but also communities and
institutions that have been affected by forces in the world around us.
In my childhood people went to church for religious reasons, but they
also went because it was a chance to meet people and socialise. In other
words, the parish served both a religious and a social need. Indeed, for
two thousand years the parish was greatly helped in its spiritual role
by the fact that it was also the most powerful social centre in the town
or village. As a social centre it brought together people of all ages
and this made it far easier to exercise a spiritual role towards them.
In a few brief years the parish, at least in the developed
world, has ceased to be the social centre it once was and this has made
it far more difficult to exercise a spiritual role. Parishes throughout
the developed world are struggling to adapt to being a spiritual centre
without the assistance of being a social centre. What caused this seismic
change? I don't believe it was the Second Vatican Council, but the far
more pragmatic forces of the car, the television set and the telephone,
for the car freed people to move beyond their local area for their social
life, television entertained them at home and the telephone became a prime
means of making and maintaining connections between people, that is, of
building one's own community. [Confronting
Power and Sex in the Catholic Church - Reclaiming the Spirit of Jesus.
Page 301]
The abuse of power...
The
main theme of Bishop Geoffrey Robinson's book is concerned with abuse
of power in the church, specifically as it is manifested in sexual abuse.
There are opportunities for an inappropriate use of power in any organisation
and many individuals and groups have succumbed to the temptation, whether
it be in large organisations or small. Power has often been abused within
families.
The abuse of power at a national or international level can be very dangerous,
especially when there are inadequate checks and balances to prevent or
limit destructive behaviours.
Within the church, people, instinctively, no longer accept a system of
belief that supports the abuse of power. Robinson is suggesting that this
is the main reason, internal to the church, why people are distancing
themselves from involvement in the church. Efforts to get people to return
will be generally fruitless until the internal church-problem is addressed.
An initiative that is not mentioned by Geoffrey Robinson, though it is
by other Catholic writers, is to put more emphasis on the value of small
faith-sharing and faith-supporting groups in the church. Such small groups
are normally at some distance from the power structures of the church
and are relatively free to devote their energy and enthusiasm to the application
of the gospel of Jesus Christ to their own lives and to make it available
to others. In these groups, people can often experience the joyful, life-giving
presence of Jesus Christ and his Spirit. Such small groupings could well
be an outstanding characteristic of the church of the future.
The National Church Life Survey
From the perspective of its research, the National
Church Life Survey supports the opinion of Bishop Geoffrey
Robinson in that it found there is a direct correlation between the quality
of leadership and the trend in the proportion of Catholics coming to Sunday
Mass.
According to "Pat" in the Catholica
Forum, a major reason why younger people don't come to Sunday Mass is
that they find it utterly boring, because the leadership provides them
with no opportunity to make any personal, intellectual or artistic contribution
to what is being said and done at Sunday Mass. And even if, miraculously,
they were offered an opportunity to really contribute in a way authentic
to their experience and opinions they feel they would not be respected
or accepted, even at the level of their basic humanity.
Again, this situation points to the need for relatively small Sunday
church gatherings where there can be opportunities for all people to creatively
participate. Such a development depends to a great extent on the approval
and support of the leadership.
In this regard, the church in many rural areas has an advantage. Because
of the small number of those attending, and of the shortage of priests,
the Sunday gatherings, often led by non-clerics, can provide opportunities
for good participation, open to everybody who is present.
DISCLAIMER:
Catholica Australia is providing pro bono promotional support to the organisers
of the Petition to the Australian Catholic Bishops.
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Kevin
Murphy is a priest working in the Diocese of Ballarat. Readers
of Catholica might be interested in a web-based service he provides
which produces weekly liturgies for small lay-led communities which
are without a priest. His website can be accessed at: www.giant.net.au/users/murphy/.
You can also contact Kevin via email through the address he gives
on that website.
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©2007
Fr Kevin Murphy
[Index of Commentaries by Fr Kevin
Murphy]
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