|
When attorney Robert Bennett asked me to testify before the
"causes and context" committee of the U.S. bishops' National
Review Board (NRB), I told him that, once the tape recorders
were turned on, the first thing I'd say was that I didn't
think the NRB made much ecclesiological sense --- but since
it had been commissioned by the bishops, I believed it my
duty to cooperate with their work.
I'm happy to say now that, in my judgment, the NRB report
released on February 27 is a genuine service to the church
and a potentially crucial step toward authentic Catholic reform.
Why?
1) Because the report is set within a genuinely Catholic
and thoroughly ecclesial framework. The report makes clear
that the church, by the will of Christ, is led by her bishops;
that the priest is far more than an ecclesiastical functionary;
that celibacy is a great gift to the church; that Catholic
doctrine didn't cause the problems the report addresses, but
rather the failure to teach and live the truths of Catholic
faith; and that what the church needs is authentically Catholic
reform.
2) Because the report squarely faces the two dimensions
of the crisis --- i.e., sexual misconduct and episcopal misgovernance
--- and suggests that both aspects of the crisis are reflections
of a deeper crisis of fidelity and spirituality.
3) Because the report, rather than calling for "power-sharing,"
calls for evangelically and pastorally assertive episcopal
leadership, including far more fraternal challenge and correction
within the body of bishops.
4) Because the report faces the overwhelmingly homosexual
nature of the clerical sexual abuse of minors over the past
50 years, without either euphemism or "scapegoating."
5) Because the report frankly describes the failures of
seminaries in the late Sixties and Seventies, stressing lapses
in spiritual and ascetic formation, and thus sets the stage
for accelerating the seminary reform already underway.
6) Because the report decries the many occasions on which
psychiatric and psychological categories and processes trumped
theological categories and available canonical remedies in
handling clerical malfeasants.
7) Because the report delicately suggests that "zero tolerance"
is too blunt an instrument to be an instrument of genuine
justice.
8) Because the report warns against encroachments by the
state into internal church governance, while also warning
that those encroachments can and will happen if bishops abrogate
their responsibilities.
9) Because the report demonstrates that lay people can take
on a task of great complexity and delicacy in the church and
do it in such a way that, for all its (legitimate) criticism
of the hierarchy, reasserts the divinely-ordered structure
of the church and calls the episcopate to exercise its legitimate
authority. In this way, the report implicitly challenges Voice
of the Faithful and similar organizations, by showing that
a diverse group of accomplished lay Catholics can agree on
an analysis of the crisis and an agenda of reform that is
authentically Catholic, not an exercise in Catholic Lite.
There
are particular recommendations in the report with which reasonable
people can disagree --- and I do. But at this point in time,
it's much more important to concentrate on the many, many
things the NRB got right than to focus immediately on this
or that recommendation which may or may not be imprudent or
inappropriate or in fact inapplicable.
And it wasn't just the report itself that was impressive;
so was the way the members of the board handled their press
conference on February 27. Illinois judge Anne Burke, the
interim chairman, began the proceedings with a tribute to
bishops and priests. Bob Bennett was thrown a raw-meat question
by a CBS reporter who asked why, if the board was so critical
of the stewardship of some bishops, it didn't call for their
ouster. Bennett replied that that wasn't the board's job or
the laity's job, that was a judgment for the bishops themselves
and for the Holy See.
The National Review Board, created in part to appease an
out-of-control media, declined to follow the media script.
Rather than proposing a dismantling of Catholic belief, structure
and practice, it produced a report which persuasively argues
that the answer to a crisis of Catholic fidelity is … Catholic
fidelity. We're in their debt.
George Weigel is a senior fellow of the Ethics and Public
Policy Center in Washington, D.C.
|