Showing posts with label Catholic Catechism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholic Catechism. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

The I-Believe-Everything-Approach to Catholic Orthodoxy: Critical Reflections


Terry Weldon has a very good posting now at the Open Tabernacle site, looking at the place of the Catholic catechism as an answer book for those who need answers—all the answers—to the pop quiz we’re presumably going to be given at the end of our lives.   About our orthodoxy, don’t you know. 

About whether we’ve informed ourselves as to everything there is to know about what the Catholic church teaches.  And whether we’ve accepted everything the church teaches, and implemented all of that teaching in our actions.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

JPII Catholics, the Dumbing Down of the Church, and Gay-Bashing: Making the Connections

I wrote earlier today about the dumbing down that has been taking place following the imposition of the Catechism of the Catholic Church as a doctrinal playbook in the Catholic church, a Catholic answer book intended to quell questions (and suppress thought), to provide mind-numbing answers to every question one might ever possibly entertain.

If you’d like to see the effects of that process close up, I’d direct you once again to the thread that Fr. Jim Martin recently began on the America blog to discuss what gay Catholics are to do today, given Rome’s (and bishops’) unremittingly negative approach to the humanity and lives of gay believers. I’ve linked two previous postings to that discussion.

Since more replies poured into the thread up to the point at which it was removed to America’s archives, I want to encourage readers of Bilgrimage to check the thread again. I’m struck, in particular, by the dismal lack of theological education—let’s face it, by the plain lack of education in general—of many of those who logged in to remind us who are gay that we’re the foulest of sinners. But that they love us, of course. And intend to pray for us, as they admonish us since the Catechism's list of spiritual works of mercy tells them that they're doing a noble thing when they admonish sinners.

(Never mind that it also requires us to instruct the ignorant, which may have been among Fr. Martin’s intents in opening a conversation space in which these oh-so-certain but oh-so-woefully-ill-informed JPII Catholics might hear, for the first time, what it’s like to live inside gay skin. Little of that dialogic exchange, in which the ignorant are instructed, took place on the thread, unfortunately. It can’t take place when those intent on doing the instructing and admonishing already know the answers, and have not a scrap of respect for the humanity and experience of the “sinners” they’re admonishing.)

What might not be evident to some readers of this thread, but is obvious to me, is that the large majority of the zealots logging in to remind us who are gay that we are dire sinners, in case we’ve forgotten that, are young Catholics. They’re JPII Catholics. They have come of age in the papal reigns of John Paul II and Benedict. They are, in the flesh, what JPII and Benedict and their minions in episcopal palaces have wrought in the church. They are the church that JPII, Benedict, and their minions want for the future.

They have cut their teeth on the Catechism of the Catholic Church, these JPII Catholics. They have, many of them, been home-schooled (in many cases, because their parents see any other form of education, including parochial school, as corrupting and as less than orthodox). They have, many of them, attended the handful of Catholic colleges and universities in the United States that the Cardinal Newman Society declares to be the only authentically Catholic universities left in the country.

And they’re abysmally educated. In just about any area to which you can point. Their grasp of the tradition they claim to defend in exemplary ways, of church history and the process of doctrinal development, is so tenuous that they don’t know, for instance, that the Catholic church taught for centuries that usury is a mortal sin, and changed its mind about this issue only as important medieval theologians began to question this teaching when capitalist economies developed in that period.

I’m particularly interested in the responses of several zealous young JPII Catholics on the America thread who wanted to convince me that Jesus wasn’t about healing at all. He was about correcting sin. Sin’s what it’s all about—sin and souls. Not healing and bodies. Not this world. Jesus was all about the next world. He was all about correcting sinners so that they could save their souls, avoid hell and attain heaven.

I hardly know where to begin with this misrepresentation of Catholic teaching, which verges on heresy. So much good theological and biblical work has been done in recent decades on this topic, and the church has said so much about it in key documents in the period of Vatican II and afterwards, that I’m amazed at what a hold the pre-Vatican II understanding of the life and ministry of Jesus (and the mission of the church that follows Jesus) has on the minds of young Catholics of this generation, despite Vatican II and despite the hope for more cogent and effective religious education that that council opened for many of us.

I'm amazed at the grip that this biblically and theologically inadequate understanding of the life and teaching of Jesus and the mission of the church that flows from that life and teaching now has on the minds of the self-professed guardians of orthodoxy in the church today. Of graduates of Catholic schools that tout themselves as more orthodox than any other Catholic schools.

It seems not to occur to several of those who instructed me in these matters on the America thread that, in denying that Jesus healed the sick, they’re actually combating what the gospels themselves say. In scorning the term “therapeutic” and denying that the church inherits from Jesus a therapeutic mission, these brightest and best young American Catholics seem to have not a clue that the term “therapeutic” harks back to a Greek root that means “to heal,” and that it’s impossible to follow in the footsteps of Jesus without intending to heal.

In reducing Jesus’s life and significance to a decidedly non-therapeutic paradigm of admonishing sinners and saving souls, these brightest and best young American Catholics make the gospels meaningless. They ignore something that is central to Jesus's teaching and ministry: namely, the insistence that we love people in their bodies, in their hunger, thirst, sickness, indigence, or we don't love at all.

It's deeply sad that many JPII Catholics cling to a false, spiritualized notion of Jesus's ministry and the church's mission primarily because it is so important to them to score points against their brothers and sisters who happen to be gay. All to retain the right, so essential to these young Catholics and their understanding of what it means to be Catholic, to keep informing their gay brothers and sisters that we’re defective, headed for hell.

When Jesus healed. And when Jesus never said a single word about homosexuality.

The church’s guardians of orthodoxy today have ended up in a strange place—a place akin to heresy—in their intent to reserve to themselves the right to demean their brothers and sisters who happen to be gay. The divorce of body from spirit, the claim that one can reject the God-given embodied existences of those who are gay, even to the point of denying fundamental rights like the right to a job or health care coverage, to those who are gay, while one claims that one is acting out of love, is profoundly false. And profoundly disingenuous.

The claim of those who are making the bodily existence of their gay brothers and sisters a living hell in order to save these brothers' and sisters's souls is downright wicked. This claim departs from what the gospels say and would have us do every bit as much as did the claim of the Inquisitors of the Middle Ages that, in burning the bodies of heretics and witches, the church was saving these sinners’ souls. And acting out of love for those they tortured and then burned.

We haven't come very far down the road in some religious groups in recent years, have we? Unfortunately, I look for us to keep heading backwards rather than forwards in the foreseeable future, in the Catholic church, at least—and in the political process, insofar as the Catholic church continues its alliance with the religious right around key issues, and bolsters the religious right's ugly influence in our political process. More on that later.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Wandering in the Wilderness: American Catholic Leadership and the Presidential Election

I talked Saturday about the decision of the Church of the Two Kevins to shove from its table many Catholics whose consciences impel them to judgments different from those the Two Kevins define as the only thinkable Catholic political positions. Today, I’d like to explore the theme of pastoral leadership in the Catholic church in the moment of significant cultural transition through which we’re living.

In particular, I want to explain why I told the U.S. bishops in my open letter last week, “If you will permit my saying so, your pastoral strategies in recent decades seem to me to have failed.” And I’d like to talk about what I meant when I said, re: the overtly political joint pastoral letter the bishops of Dallas-Ft. Worth released last week, “Ultimately, I am repulsed most of all because they are willingly informing a large number of good, conscientious Catholic voters that we are not welcome in the Church of the Two Kevins.”

I don’t know how to put my fundamental point more plainly than this: for several decades now, the pastoral leaders of the American Catholic church have been leading their flock down a path of no return. In doing so, they have failed miserably as pastoral leaders.

In saying this, I do not want to pass blanket judgment on all bishops. There have been some conspicuous exceptions among the bishops, though these good shepherds have stood out precisely because they have cried out in a wilderness created by the failed leadership of the majority of their brothers. And they have often incurred severe penalties for doing so.

When I say that the pastoral strategy of the American Catholic bishops over several decades has been a miserable failure, I am speaking of the bishops as a collective body, as a group of leaders to whom Catholics and the public at large look for guidance about moral issues and political judgments. As a collective group, as a national bishops’ conference to which people turn to hear the official voice of Catholicism, the U.S. bishops have failed to provide good pastoral leadership to Catholics. And not only Catholics, but the nation as a whole, is paying a high price for that failure.

Ultimately, the bishops’ failure to be good shepherds is most evident in their heartless willingness, as a body, to drive from their midst so many good, faithful Catholics whose conscience leads them in directions the bishops have declared anathema. Good shepherds guard the flock. They do not drive sheep into the wilderness.

For a number of decades now, the U.S. bishops have willingly—and, one cannot fail to conclude, callously—forced many of their flock into the desert and left them there to fend for themselves. This is a failure of pastoral leadership at the most fundamental level possible.

Shepherds exist to safeguard sheep. Good shepherds tend to the needs of the flock. A good shepherd laments the loss of even one member of the flock. Faithful shepherds find the loss of multitudes of sheep unthinkable. Shepherds who are committed to their charge would do anything possible to retrieve those sheep, to bind up their wounds, to enclose them in the protection of the sheepfold.

The glaring, fundamental failure of the American Catholic bishops—as a body of bishops—to be faithful shepherds at this point in history has been made more critically apparent than ever in the political campaign now underway in the U.S. The current U.S. elections are a watershed moment for the Catholic church, as well as for the pastoral leaders of the church. Even if Barack Obama does not win the presidency, what has happened in this election cycle—in particular, the response of the bishops to the political choices now facing the nation—points to systemic problems in the leadership of the Catholic church so deep, and unmet needs for pastoral leadership so glaring, that the church has no choice except to face the questions this election season has raised, if it hopes to have a viable future in this new millennium.

Here is the unenviable position in which the failed leadership of the U.S. bishops has placed the American Catholic church: we are known now as a people who stand against. We are not known as a people with a compelling vision of the common good, with a commitment to collaborating in building a pluralistic society undergirded by a vision of the common good shared by people of good will from many philosophical and religious backgrounds.

To the American public as well as to most Catholics, the Catholic vision of American culture and American political life is increasingly defined by what we oppose, rather than what we value. Catholics are against: Catholics stand against abortion, stem-cell research, and same-sex marriage. And “good” Catholics vote on the basis of these stand-against issues—the “non-negotiable” issues that trump all others in which Catholic values are at stake.

We have not arrived at this point by accident. It has taken time to get us here. As pastoral leaders, as a collective body articulating the core values of American Catholics, the American bishops have had everything to do with getting us here. The U.S. bishops have worked hard to define us as a stand-against people, as a people whose core values run counter to those of mainstream culture.

We no longer even speak of our non-Catholic fellow citizens as people of good will. That Vatican II phrase now appears so quaint, in light of the intransigent countercultural stance of contemporary American Catholicism centered on a handful of “non-negotiable” issues, that it seems to have fallen from another world. We have retreated, closed ranks, shut down dialogue—and with a vengeance, all under the deliberate leadership of our bishops. In the process, we have come to view many our fellow citizens not as fellow collaborators in building a society energized by a shared vision of the common good, but as people living in darkness who do not have the light we ourselves have.

In becoming what we now like to call countercultural (but we surely are not countercultural in key respects, are we—economically, for instance?), we have deliberately placed ourselves on the stand-against margins, on the sidelines looking on. We have flirted (and more than flirted) with the idea of becoming a cult, a small body of purists bound together by adamant doctrine, hidebound moral positions, and the draconian discipline any cult needs to hold itself together in the face of a mainstream society it wants to send to hell. And, as this movement towards self-chosen cultish status has taken place, the bishops—as a collective body—not only appear unperturbed, but have actually worked to move the U.S. church to this unenviable position with its anti-catholic theological implication that God saves only the few.

We are now paying the price of those who choose cultish status. When a group defines itself by what it stands against rather than for, it forfeits its claim to be an agent of effective social change in a society that values pluralism. In a society marked by rapid change of all sorts, the viability of any social group depends to a great extent on the ability of that group to negotiate change—to formulate a sense of mission that addresses change forthrightly, in a way that communicates the core values of the group to other groups also coping with change. Mission holds a group together, allows it to clarify its key values both for itself and others, and enables it to deal effectively with change in an interactive process that keeps the group alive and cohesive under conditions of change, while permitting the group to participate in shaping the process of change through recourse to its core values.

To a great extent, the stand-against mentality the U.S. bishops have inculcated in the American Catholic church abrogates the mission of the church. It foreshortens the church’s mission, turns it into something childishly simple. Rather than communicating the authentically catholic vision of church and culture, in which church and culture interact in a complex dialogic process, we now communicate that the Catholic way is simply to say no. And to keep saying no. To draw a line in the sand and shout no as long and as loudly as possible, in the hope that someone from the mainstream will eventually take notice of the fuss we’ve been making and will do something about what concerns us.

This is not an effective way of being in the world, in a pluralistic society. It is not a catholic way of doing business. It is a way of being in the world that represents a monumental failure of imagination about what it means to live one’s faith in mainstream culture. For decades now, our bishops would have been better advised to stop listening to those shrill apocalyptic visionaries who have played a shockingly decisive role in shaping the contemporary American Catholic religious imagination, and to read instead that brilliant 19th-century theologian John Henry Newman.

Newman knew that responding to cultural change thoughtfully, proactively, with confidence in the ability of one’s core values to carry the day, is far wiser (and more productive) than drawing a line in the stand and shouting no. If our bishops had been listening to Newman when he notes that “to live is to change, and to be perfect is to have changed often,” they would not have worked long and hard to transform us into a petulant, cultish, apocalypse-fevered people who are increasingly known among our fellow citizens for what we stand against, and not for what we believe, value, and endorse.

And therein lies the tremendous irony of the place in which we now find ourselves, the path of no return down which the bishops have led us: they brought us here while proclaiming that they were doing so on the basis of a key Catholic value that needs to be apparent to American society at large. They have told us to stand against because we stand for life.

In American Catholic thought today, and in how the American public has come to view us, “pro-life” is a mantra, an increasingly meaningless one, as well as an increasingly dangerous one. It is a rhetorical battle cry rather than a values-centered perspective by which we evaluate moral and political positions. It merely defines our over-against position. It does not energize our standing-for position, the position that enables us to offer something productive and transformative to our fellow citizens.

This is the case because, hand in hand with the movement to turn us into a people who stand against, the bishops—as a collective group—have done everything in their power to dumb us down, to thwart the kind of careful, thoughtful catechesis that is imperative if we are to live our faith effectively in the postmodern context. While we have needed moral theology that helps us grapple with applying our core values in the complex cultural context in which we now live (and helps us identify those core values), we have been given “answers.” Platitudes. Formulas.

We have been told to be pro-life. We have not been encouraged to think about what being pro-life means. We have been told to vote pro-life. We have not been instructed to think carefully about the gamut of life issues that confront us, which are much wider than the handful of “non-negotiable” issues on which the bishops (as a collective body) are fixated.

Catechesis is food, for the Christian people. Without it, we starve. Good shepherds make the provision of food essential to their pastoral charge. Good pastoral leaders do all in their power to assure that good catechesis is available throughout the church for which they have pastoral responsibility, catechesis fitted to the cultural and age-specific needs of each group within the Christian community.

The bishops have not wanted good catechesis, frankly—not as a collective group. Because they have chosen to regard those gifted with the charism of teaching within the church as competitors in power struggles of the bishops’ fabrication, they have silenced, marginalized, and driven away outstanding theologians. They have allowed Catholics to assume that if we can memorize the catechism and repeat a few of its “answers”—above all, if we can repeat the pro-life mantra—we are well-catechized.

As a result, many Catholics today equate blind obedience with living the life of faith, just as many Catholics today speak of “the Truth” as the end-all and be-all of Christian life, as if truth rather than love is the hallmark of authentic faith. The childish, simplistic, religiously impoverished obediential notion of faith with which far too many of us are now comfortable not only provides us no solid foundation as we make political decisions: it also betrays core gospel values.

Where the scriptures view faith as a giving of ourselves into the hands of One who leads us on a journey full of uncertainty, in which we learn always to trust and to give ourselves more and more fully, many American Catholics today have the illusion that all that is expected of us in the life of faith is receiving “the Truth” handed down from above, from the pastors of the church, and obeying what we have heard. This understanding of religious truth reduces the salvific Truth Who is God interacting with human beings to an object, something controllable (and dismissible)—ian idol.

The reduction of the life of faith to obedience to the magisterium (and the magisterium is construed in the narrowest possible terms in this way of thinking), along with the impoverishment of catechesis in American Catholicism, has withered the hearts and souls of American Catholics. We are now content to draw lines that make some of us insiders, and others outsiders. In fact, we positively relish those lines.

We have come to a shameful point in our history as a Catholic people (a people whose very name speaks of inclusivity) at which we hunger, many of us, to exclude others from the Bread of Life. We have done all we can to turn the Eucharist—the body and blood of the Savior—into a weapon to be used in defining those we target as outsiders. In some sectors of American Catholicism today, not only has the outmoded practice of formal excommunication been rehabilitated, but it has been retrieved with a vengeance. And there is a hue and cry for the bishops to wield the whip even wider.

A church defined by its desire to punish, to discipline, to close ranks and deprive enemies of nourishment, is hardly attractive. It is hardly catholic in the best sense of that word. To a world hungry for spiritual nourishment, to a political process eager to discuss the values that underlie political issues, to a culture seeking moorings in times of rapid cultural change, a church that can only say no, can only crack the whip, can only shout hateful slogans, has little to offer.

In the final analysis, a church that can only stand against and can only shout meaningless slogans that long ago took flight from careful reflection, is in danger of losing its soul. A church that goes down this path is a church that too easily finds common cause with the basest and most hate-filled movements of the society in which it lives. Churches that persistently stand against often end up in bed with movements energized by hate, because the energies feeding both those churches and the hate-filled movements are the same: the impulse to stand against, to condemn, to override, control, and even destroy those who disagree with the only option one has defined as thinkable.

To see the process I’m describing here in concrete detail, one only has to look at what is happening at some recent political rallies in the U.S. I wrote about these rallies in my open letter to the U.S. bishops. Unfortunately, even today, there are reports that further shouts calling for Mr. Obama to be killed have rung out at rallies of his opponents—with no word of censure from the pro-life politicians holding these rallies.

As reports have also noted, cries to kill or behead one of the presidential candidates are not, unfortunately, the only hate slurs being bandied about at these rallies. At a number of rallies, news reports state that supporters of the candidates many bishops identify as “the” pro-life candidates in the coming election have shouted “Baby killers!” at those carrying signs for Mr. Obama. The same reports indicate that those shouting “baby killers!” are also shouting “faggots!” at their opponents.

Baby killers: faggots: kill him: off with his head.

Catholics are the people who stand against: against abortion; against stem-cell research; against gay marriage. Clearly, the perception of what Catholics stand against helps to energize those who shout “baby killers” and “faggots.”

But Catholics are also pro-life. It is the pro-life position that leads them to stand against abortion and gay marriage, isn’t it?

So how does it happen that shouts about baby killers and faggots come from the very same mouths that are shouting, "Kill him!" and "Off with his head!"? Something is wrong here, isn't it? And radically so. Something has failed, at a very fundamental level, when the core values pastoral leaders of a church claim to be defending are so easily wrapped up in slogans that are outright contradictions of those values.

Something has not worked in the catechesis of a religious people, when many of those catechized cannot see the painful contradiction between the political goals they are endorsing, and the core values they claim to be pursuing in endorsing those goals. To my mind, this conclusion is inescapable, in light of what is now happening in the political life of our nation.

And it’s an utterly damning indictment of the failure of pastoral leadership on the part of the U.S. Catholic bishops for several decades now, an indictment underscored by the bishops’ silence about what their “pro-life” politics has actually come to mean in the minds of many Americans—the bishops' silence about the transvaluation of the pro-life slogan so that it actually comes to mean, in practice (and thus, where it counts in real life) hatred and calls for murder.

History inevitably moves in cycles, with ebb and flow. Wise pastoral leaders teach their flocks to deal judiciously with the ebb and flow, to remember that no political option or no political party perfectly embodies the vision of the reign of God that is the ultimate guide for Christian political action. Wise pastoral leaders never permit their theological imaginations—and certainly not their voice—to be captured by any given political party. If nothing else, they refuse to allow this to happen because they know that the cyclic nature of history will one day result in the dominance of some other party.

In recent decades, as a body, the U.S. Catholic bishops have been decidedly unwise, in appearing to endorse a single political party, and in allowing the adherents of that party—even those whose passions seem most engaged by values far from core Catholic values—to present themselves as the party of good Catholics. Wise pastoral leaders prepare their flocks to live within history without being overtaken by the inevitable cycles of history.

In the current election, we find ourselves in a decisive move towards a cycle radically different from that for which the U.S. Catholic bishops have been preparing their flocks. As a result, many Catholics are singularly ill-equipped to understand or respond productively to the significant cyclic swing now underway in our political and cultural life.

And as a result, Catholics also find themselves with little to offer the culture, at a moment when our contributions are most needed. More’s the pity, especially when we do not find ourselves in this place by accident, and when those we've trusted to lead us have decisively brought us to this place.

Getting out will take all of our skill and creativity. And in that process, we would be fools to depend on the bishops. It is we who must help them out of the wilderness they have chosen for us. That is, if they are willing to imagine that God might speak within the flock as well as among the shepherds.

Friday, August 15, 2008

On Catechisms: Vs. Fundamentalist Attempts to Capture "the" Truth

A regular contributor to the National Catholic Reporter café blog has recently asked me to respond to questions about the Catholic catechism (see http://ncrcafe.org/node/2016 and http://ncrcafe.org/node/2040). I’ve been talking to this contributor for some time. After I published my posting entitled “Love. Period.” on this blog, and then uploaded it to the NCR café, this conversational partner mounted an attack on my reading of Catholic sexual ethics, and began to post pieces of his own defending what he regards as the only defensible Catholic approach to sexual ethics (see http://ncrcafe.org/node/1816 and http://bilgrimage.blogspot.com/2008/05/love-period.html).

Essentially, my dialogue partner continues to cite the catechism as if it is the final answer for things Catholic, the source for the Catholic truth. Thomas (the username of the person with whom I’ve been talking at the NCR blog) maintains that some acts are and will always be intrinsically evil.

He includes in that list homosexual acts, masturbation, and the use of artificial contraception—that is, any genital sexual act that is not open to the possibility of procreation. I have asked Thomas to reconsider his strong emphasis on intrinsically evil acts as the key to the moral life. In my reading of moral theology, an emphasis on acts alone cannot ever yield a complete picture of moral behavior. One must place an act within the context in which it occurs, and one must take into account the intention of the person(s) doing the act.

I think it is more productive to talk about moral norms that have to be applied in various situations, taking the intention of the one applying them into account, than to talk about acts in isolation from their situation and intention. I think it is very difficult to identify acts that are always, everywhere intrinsically evil—particularly in the realm of sexual morality.

I also find Thomas’s method of argumentation circular, and thus not convincing. When challenged to support his claim that some acts are always intrinsically evil, he states that the Catholic church defines some acts in this way, and so these acts must be intrinsically evil. When I ask him to explain how the church arrives at this position, to explain it to me in a way that shows me why rational people who apply their conscience to difficult moral situations should stop using reason and conscience and simply do as they are told by the church, Thomas points me to the catechism itself as “proof” that the church has spoken and the case is closed. In other words, he justifies the universal, unquestionable validity of what the church teaches by pointing to a summary of Catholic teaching produced by . . . well, the same institution whose word we’re supposed to accept without question in the first place.

Thomas is now asking me and other contributors to NCR discussions to respond to questions he’s raised about the Catholic catechism. I’ve been mulling over Thomas’s challenge to answer his questions about whether the rest of us read, know, use—and, implicitly, accept (no questions raised, no interpretation needed)—the catechism.

It’s impossible to answer Thomas’s questions in the limited space allotted on a public blog such as the NCR café site. There are many ramifications of Thomas’s questions that go beyond their seemingly benign surface, and a full response requires a comprehensive look at those ramifications, as well as a frank recognition that Thomas is asking these questions to entrap Catholics who do not toe his line, the line he identifies with “the” Catholic position on issues.

It’s important to provide a full answer to Thomas’s questions because, as with many Catholic political activists allied with the religious right today, Thomas wants to marginalize voices such as mine, which read the Catholic tradition differently than he does—or than he believes the catechism does. Thomas’s last response to a posting of mine implies, in fact, that I am not a Catholic.

It interests me that right-wing Catholics are choosing to use the catechism as a political weapon—as an answer book that contains all Catholic truth, which can then be used as a sword to divide the flock into true and false Catholics, for political reasons. I’m not surprised that this is going on. Right-wing political groups have laid the foundation for this use of the catechism in recent years by funding absurd Catholic answers websites and Catholic answers journals, as well as Catholic voter guides, all of which hammer the rich tradition of Catholic theology, belief, and thought into tiny, rigid “answers” that support the political outlook of neo-conservative activists.

The more this method of corralling the Catholic vote and assuring that it is predictably Republican falters—and there are some strong indicators that it is not working so well in this election cycle as it has done in recent ones—the more adamant and angry those promoting the Catholic answers approach become. The fascist tendency that runs always just beneath the surface of Catholicism is very evident in their use of the catechism today. As they sense that they cannot any longer command all Catholics to toe their political line, they step up the insistence on the catechism as the ultimate arbiter of Catholic truth (indeed, of all truth everywhere). These right-wing Catholic activists demand that those who do not accept catechetical teachings in the most literal and fundamentalist way possible should absent themselves from the church and renounce the name Catholic.

Unfortunately, this attempt to divide the sheep from the goats prior to the eschatological judgment is not receiving the strongest possible reception in Rome itself. The last election was a kind of dark kairotic moment for the American Catholic church, in which some bishops (notably in Charlotte, South Carolina, Atlanta, St. Louis, and Omaha) used the Eucharist as a political weapon to try to bully their flocks into voting Republican.

These bishops called for turning away from the Eucharistic table any politician who supports abortion (see http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1141/is_36_40/ai_n9778533). In one case in South Carolina, a lay member of a parish who approached the communion rail wearing a Kerry button was denied communion.

This repugnant political use of the central Catholic sacrament rightly outraged many Catholics, including some bishops. Recently, when he met with a group of priests during his vacation, Pope Benedict told his brother priests that he had been more severe in the past, but that he now sees that the pastoral way of approaching the Eucharist is to invite anyone to partake of it in whom there is even the tiniest spark of faith (www.cathnews.com/article.aspx?aeid=8442). Prior to being made pope, Benedict (as Cardinal Ratzinger) gave communion even to non-Catholics, including the head of the Taizé movement (http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1141/is_41_41/ai_n16100686).

This is the authentic catholic tradition. This is catholicism at its best. At its best, when it is true to what the word “catholic” actually means, catholicism invites everyone to the table, excludes no one, recognizing that the Lord who sets the table is the sole judge of the hearts of those who come, and honoring the Lord’s invitation of all sinners. This authentic way of being Catholic is, unfortunately, a way of being Catholic that infuriates those who want the church to use its sacraments and its teachings—above all, the catechism—as political weapons to whip dissenters into shape and to assure that voters choose the one political option they believe is justifiably Catholic.

As I’ve thought about what I’d like to say to Thomas in response to his questions about the catechism, I’ve been thinking about why I so radically depart from his reading of the tradition and of the catechism. I’ve been thinking about why I simply cannot buy into the Catholic-answers approach to the catechism, the use of the catechism as a tool to bludgeon dissenters over the head with, or as a sword to divide the flock into a tiny cadre of true believers and all the rest of us, the vast majority, sinful slobs who just can’t cut muster.

To be specific, I’ve been thinking about wisdom—or, perhaps better, Wisdom. There’s a venerable tradition in Judaism and Christianity that sees the entire spiritual life as a journey towards Sophia, Wisdom. There’s a whole genre of literature within the Jewish scriptures (and strands of it run through the Christians scriptures as well) describing how one sets out on the path to Sophia (and yes, Sophia is a female name, and there are longstanding currents in scripture and Christian tradition equating Her with the Holy Spirit).

Ultimately, I reject the way Thomas and other right-wing Catholics are trying to use the catechism for political reasons today, because it is not wise (in my view). This use of the catechism does not place us on the path to Wisdom. It does not do so for the following reasons:

• It is never wise to limit truth to a single source.

• It is never wise to assume truth can be locked into a book, any book.

• Truth is never like a set of answers—a set of things—to be pulled out of a bag we alone own, and produced as if on cue when it’s demanded.

• It is never wise to assume that one’s own understanding of truth is The Truth.

• It is never wise to believe that we can control and manipulate truth.

• Truth is not like that: it has the upper hand, if it’s truth.

• We know when we have met truth, because it overwhelms us: it moves us; it shatters us; it points us to revision of how we see things, and to transformation of our lives.

• Truth speaks from many different mouths, in many different voices.

• Because truth speaks with many mouths and in many voices, what it has to say can never be packaged into a single, univocal package.

• Those who hear truth hear contradiction, tension, yin and yang, yes and no.

• Because truth points to mystery beyond our control, when we meet it, it invites us on a journey—on the path to Sophia/Wisdom.

• We lose our sense of balance, control, assured place, when we set out with truth on the path to Sophia.

• Truth controls us, not vice versa. This is why truth can never be shut up in a book that we own and use to our own ends.

• Truth is never complete in this life. No one possesses it utterly and completely.

• Truth is eschatological. It is a horizon. It is ahead of us, not behind us.

• Wisdom demands that we listen especially to the voices we (personally, in our social institutions, in our churches) exclude because we don’t want to hear the complacency-shattering truth they tell.

• Truth comes far more often from those at the bottom of the social order than those at the top; those at the top have a vested (and self-serving) interest in limiting what can be seen and in controlling “truth,” while those at the bottom see the wider picture, including inconvenient realities those at the top try to hide.

• Truth demands willingness to foster community, respect for complementarity, and respect for many different perspectives.

• Truth demands justice, the attempt to create a social order in which those whose voices are extinguished, silenced, muffled, distorted, finally have the chance to speak.

• Truth and justice point to a table at which every voice has a place. No one can have a voice without bread, work, the social place and social respect that having a job, access to healthcare, etc., provide.

Thomas, if you happen to read this posting, please let me know if I have answered your questions about the catechism to your satisfaction.