Thursday, August 9, 2012

Cafeteria Cardinals


For years now we’ve heard the title “cafeteria Catholics” disgustedly hurled by the hierarchy as an epithet at thinking people of faith who discern the Spirit’s movement in the “signs of the times.” It seems the Vatican “administrators” might be guilty of a similar “picking and choosing” of tenets of belief regarding dialogue.
Of course, some may blatantly deny the major of Kevin Aschenbrenner’s NCR article about the Vatican and LCWR
by questioning whether Vatican policy really ever seeks dialogue at all with anyone who disagrees with its point of view.

That being said, the question arises about the “cafeteria cardinals” picking and choosing from among the documents of “Tradition” they tell Catholics to reverence in balance with Scripture. In seeking dialogue, the administrators have chosen to consider dialogue as a pathway for the LCWR to ‘remedy serious doctrinal concerns.’” ignoring the content of Paul VI’s timely first encyclical Ecclesiam Suam, a document whose 50th anniversary we commemorate next year?

At the time of that writing, Paul VI—cognizant of the final deliberation of Vatican II—wanted to clarify some principles helpful in the process of implementation of the council. He chooses to make the third section of the encyclical an exposition of the principles of dialogue.

And before a hew and cry rises within the blogosphere, yes, JS knows this document proceeds from the same Paul VI who chose to ignore the 1966 majority report of the Pontifical Commission on Birth Control set up by John XXIII in 1963, writing in Humanae Vitae
that the sexual act must "retain its intrinsic relationship to the procreation of human life" [§11], and the "direct interruption of the generative process already begun" [§14] is unlawful.
And while JS recognize it can be accused of being a “cafeteria blog” for picking and choosing from among this pope’s documents, please do not judge with disgust this effort to add some light to the Vatican-LCWR mess.
   
Paul VI’s point is to delineate these principles as guidelines for dialogue sought with other faith communities. But his description might well serve as principles for any dialogue. Have the administrators forgotten them? Or are they, in their seeking “dialogue” with the LCWR being Cafeteria Cardinals forgetting this encyclical? Or are they ignoring that these principles of dialogue from Paul VI of happy memory exist simply because they really want Vatican II forgotten?

Since a lengthy blog is tedious at best, rather than summarizing the encyclical, out of respect for anyone reading,  I refer you to the document itself available at http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/paul_vi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-vi_enc_06081964_ecclesiam_en.html
The paragraphs on dialogue are numbered:
§§ 71 - 80        The Characteristics of the Dialogue of Salvation
§§ 81 - 82        Using the Dialogue of Salvation as a Model for the “New Dialogue”

He concludes summarizing the qualities of a dialogical foresight our “cafeteria church administrators” are ignoring in approaching the work of the religious communities represented by LCWR:

Would this not be the dialogue Jesus seeks with us and between us all?