Playing God Gerry OShea
In her
recent erudite book, Playing God: American Catholic Bishops and the Far
Right, Mary Jo McConahay, describes in detail how the American Catholic
Church has veered away from acclaiming social justice policies designed to help
poor and struggling families while at the same time being sucked into hot-button
cultural issues.
She refers
to the influential Rerum Novarum (1891) of Pope Leo X111, an encyclical
that strongly endorsed worker rights including the need for strong trade unions
at a time when the powers-that-be condemned worker organizations as
socialist-driven or anarchic.
In 1931 Pius
X1 in Quadragesimo Anno affirmed and highlighted the central importance
of his predecessor Leo’s pro-worker teaching. Consider the following statement
from that official letter: “The right ordering of economic life cannot be left
to free competition. From this source, as from a poisoned spring, have originated
and spread all the errors of individualistic economic teaching.”
John XX111 In his masterly encyclical Mater
et Magistra moved the social justice needle to a new level by asserting the
rights of employees to profit sharing and co-ownership of the enterprises where
they work.
McConahay
bemoans the fact that the church leadership in the United States rarely
addresses the core moral issues of our time, poverty and wealth distribution
and the disgraceful treatment of refugees. Calls for a “preferential option for
the poor” are heard regularly from prelates in Central and South America but
such sermons rarely find a voice in St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
Neoliberalism,
which dominates right-wing economic thinking in America, professes that low-tax
policies which help the rich get richer somehow enable the poor to do better
also. Pope Francis has decried this doctrine of trickle-down economics,
correctly mocking it as a rich man’s fable. Most of the bishops seem to go
along with this damaging economic philosophy. They are comfortable with the
denizens of the far-right who court their approval and come with bulging cheque
books.
There are
about 73 million Catholics in the United States, approximately, 20% of the
population. Typically, over 70% vote in presidential elections and, according
to polling day statistics accumulated since 1952, whichever candidate gets a
majority of the Catholic vote nearly always wins the White House.
Two
Catholics have been elected to the presidency, both Democrats. John Kennedy won
in 1960 with the support of a big majority of his co-religionists. However, the
current leader in Washington, Joe Biden, a committed churchgoer, narrowly lost
the white Catholic vote in November 2020.
McConahay
claims that the U.S. bishops do not reflect the global Catholic church. She
calls them “a particularly American species, hierarchical to a fault and so
traditionalist and politically right wing” that they are out of step with
positive ecclesiastical developments elsewhere and with their leader in Rome.
Top members
of the United States conference of Bishops (USCCB) proposed to refuse communion
to political leaders who supported a woman’s right to choose in the area of
abortion. This would mean excluding President Biden and many other prominent elected
Catholic leaders from the altar rails.
Pope Francis
vehemently disagrees with this approach, pointing out that sinners need the
eucharist more than those who think of themselves as operating at a higher ethical
level and stressing that he would never refuse communion to anyone.
Francis
urged the bishops to emphasize all pro-life issues. In his estimation, it
conveys the wrong moral message to fight for life in the womb while showing
indifference to badly needed improvements in anti-poverty programs.
In the recent showdown in Washington about deficit
reduction, the main focus of Republicans was to support increases in the
defense budget and to rule out tax increases on the affluent while cutting the
meagre food stamp allowance and other important family-friendly programs. The
silence of the Catholic prelates conveyed that these political shenanigans,
contrary to every Christian instinct, did not merit their attention.
In the
summer of 2018, Archbishop Vigano called for Francis’ resignation after he was
earlier fired by the pope for incompetence and poor judgement. His main issue
seemed to revolve around Francis’ efforts to reach out to the homosexual
community. In his magnanimous response to a question on this topic the pope
refused to condemn the gay lifestyle. Instead, he wondered aloud, “Who am I to
judge?”
This reply
set off a firestorm among American bishops who claim that the Vatican’s job is
to always condemn the immorality of same sex intimate relationships. Vigano, who
has spoken positively about QAnon rantings, has the support of a significant coterie
of narrow-minded prelates.
The COVID-19
pandemic provided a platform for some of the most unhinged members of the
hierarchy to expatiate on their religious opinions. San Francisco Archbishop Salvadore
Cordileone condemned the government’s mandate to close churches temporarily as
an act of “willful discrimination” against Catholics. With no medical background
he declared that vaccines “don’t give any immunity.”
Cordileone
had plenty mitered company. Bishop Jerome Listecki of Milwaulkee announced that,
despite the deadly pandemic, ”fear of getting sick does not excuse anyone” from
fulfilling his Sunday obligation to attend mass.
Likewise, Bishop
Thomas Paprocki from Springfield Illinois, although vaccinated himself, advised
his members to show up on Sunday because “eternal life is the most important
consideration.”
Cardinal
Raymond Burke who leads every charge against Francis and any version of
ecclesial modernity strongly opposed mandatory vaccinations and refused it for
himself, but when he got infected, he headed for a ventilator in the Mayo Clinic.
The Eternal
Word Television Network (EWTN) was started in Alabama by a Poor Clare nun, Sr.
Angelica, in the 1980’s. Today it claims to have 240 million viewers in 140
countries. It attracted the attention of wealthy conservative American
Catholics who looked askance at the progressive pronouncements from the bishops
in those days who were greatly influenced by the thinking of the Second Vatican
Council, especially the focus on the preferential option for the poor.
It covers
the Vatican with a staff of over thirty, and their commentators would be at
home on the Fox network. Indeed, the host of EWTN’s flagship program, Raymond
Arroyo, sometimes fills in for Laura Ingraham. It provides a regular platform
for critics of the pope, both in its star performer, Arroyo, and among some
bishops who appear as guests.
They attack
Francis’ cautiously progressive leadership in a manner that seriously annoys
the pontiff who complained recently that “I deserve attacks and insults because
I am a sinner, but the Church does not deserve this treatment. They are the
work of the devil.”
Francis’
signature contribution to ecclesiology is unquestionably seen in his commitment
to synodality where he aspires to a listening church guided by the Spirit. This
commendable movement for a synodal institution respects and honors all its
members while in the poet’s words “hearing oftentimes the still sad music of
humanity.”
It is a disturbing
commentary on the priorities of the USCCB that in its June meeting in Orlando synodality
wasn’t even on the agenda. No wonder that the relationship between the majority
of the American bishops and Pope Francis remains distant and cool.
Gerry
OShea blogs at wemustbetalking.com
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