Following is
the full text of Bishop Pat Power's letter to the organisers of the Petition
to the Australian Catholic Bishops which Bishop Power released for publication
on 21 August 2007…
Open Letter to Petition Organisers...
Paul Collins and Frank Purcell
PO Box 4053
MANUKA ACT 2603
Dear Paul and Frank,
I write in response to your letter of 18 June which I presume was sent
to the other Australian Bishops as well. Both of you and the other signatories
to the letter are people who have made significant contributions to the
Church in Australia and I believe that the issues you raise are of concern
to the majority of practising Catholics around Australia. Daily, I hear
people express such concerns along with the frustration that their voices
are being ignored.
At the heart of the issue is the relationship of the local church to
the universal church. I nominated this as a possible subject for the last
Synod held in Rome, but there was little support for my proposal. However,
for a number of years (some people would say since the beginning of Pope
John Paul II's pontificate in 1978) there has been a greater encroachment
on the life of the local church which has given the diocesan bishop and
his collaborators little scope for effective leadership. I clearly recognise
the need for the local church to be in communion with the See of Peter
but there needs to be much more reciprocity in the relationship. Circumstances
vary enormously around the world and many of the issues your letter raises
will have differing consequences in other countries and cultures. That
was apparent to me at the 1998 Oceania Synod of Bishops when so many bishops
of our region highlighted the particular problems they were facing. Unless
diocesan bishops are allowed to exercise the powers intrinsic to their
office, many urgent questions will be neglected. The ecumenical movement
suggests that we should be seeking unity in diversity. Surely such wisdom
needs applying to the Church as a whole. The New Testament shows the first
disciples' readiness to embrace such an approach.
Where there is the conviction that the Eucharist is at the heart of Catholic
belief and practice, there must be questions asked about disciplinary
laws in the Church which have the net effect of denying many Catholics
regular access to the Eucharist. This was the precise argument advanced
by the National Council of Priests in Australia in the lead-up to the
last Synod of Bishops which discussed the Eucharist. They argued that
there is little sense in pointing to the centrality of the Eucharist when
an increasing number of Catholics in many parts of the world are being
deprived of the Eucharist because of the scarcity of priests.
On many occasions since my ordination as bishop in 1986, I have pleaded
for consideration of the ordination of married men and the possibility
of those who have married to be able to return to the active ministry.
I wrote a letter to that effect to Pope John Paul when he visited Australia
at the end of that year. In the ensuing twenty years, I have publicly
canvassed such views on a number of occasions and I gave voice to them
at the 1998 Oceania Synod. But consistent with many papal and other Vatican
pronouncements, there has been no acceptance of those views at that level.
Yet invariably when I have made such statements the overwhelming response
I have received from ordinary Catholics has been one of support and a
sense of urgency that the official Church needs to act decisively to bring
about reform.
In our own Archdiocese in line with the experience of other parts of
Australia, parishes generally and priests personally are under added pressure
with an increasing load being borne by a diminishing and ageing clergy.
The irony is that in this Archdiocese there are between thirty and forty
priests who have married and thereby been debarred from active priestly
ministry. Many of them and their families are active in parishes and other
areas of Church life, but they are unable to celebrate the Eucharist.
There was a recent instance where a priest failed to arrive for Mass and
a married priest and his wife sat rather helplessly in the congregation
while an acolyte and other members of the parish attempted to lead a liturgy
of the word with Holy Communion.
Of course, dioceses need to continue in their efforts to recruit men
for the celibate priesthood but the limited response must say something
in terms of a long-term solution. Many dioceses have recruited priests
from overseas with mixed success. Some such priests have fitted very well
into the life of the diocese while others have struggled with issues of
culture, language and vision of Church. In any case such solutions can
only be partial and short-term.
Your fourth point relating to the participation of women in the life
of the Church is crucial for a healthy, life-giving and nurturing Church.
While women's roles in the family, Catholic education and health-care
are obvious, the opportunities for leadership in terms of the universal,
diocesan and even parish Church are extremely limited. The 1997 inquiry
into the participation of women in the Church in Australia brought out
many of the gaps for which the whole Church, not just women, is the poorer.
While I recognise the sensitivity to the question at the level of the
Vatican, I am also aware that many loyal and committed Catholics want
a more open and thorough examination of the issues around the ordination
of women and the whole structure of the priesthood. A less clerical model
of the priesthood is more in tune with 21st century societal values and
arguably more faithful to the practice of the early Christian communities.
The opportunity which your letter gives for the whole people of God to
claim a greater share of ownership in the life of the Church in Australia
is most welcome. I hope that the spirit of dialogue promoted by Pope Paul
VI in his encyclical Ecclesiam suam and the spirit and teaching of the
Second Vatican Council will be brought to bear on the discussions you
seek to engender.
Yours sincerely,
(Bishop) Pat Power
DISCLAIMER:
Catholica Australia is providing pro bono promotional support to the organisers
of the Petition to the Australian Catholic Bishops.
|
Bishop
Patrick Power is Auxiliary Bishop in the Archdiocese of Canberra-Goulburn.
His webpage
on the Archdiocesan website contains further biographical information
and contact details..
|
What are your thoughts on Bishop Power's letter?
You can contribute to the discussion in our forum.
©2007
Bishop Pat Power
[Index of Articles and Letters
by Bishop Pat Power]
|