A Question of Rights
Is “Dissent” Catholic Or Even Christian?
By James E. Biechler
"I’m an older Catholic and in
all my years I don’t remember so much as even hearing the word “dissent”
in connection with the church. The closest we came to it was in talking
about the Reformation. But now, in the past few years, it seems I
can’t read a Catholic paper without seeing the word. Just what’s
going on, anyway."
--T.A.D., Fort Walton Beach,
FL
I thought older Catholics
in Florida spent their time worrying about their golf game! But I
do agree with you. The word “dissent” is hard to avoid in hearing
or reading about the church today. You certainly can’t go to any
kind of conference on church matters without meeting that word.
Most of the discussion on
the idea of dissent deals with historical examples of pious “dissenters”
or with ideas which in the past were regarded as wrong, heretical, or immoral,
and then came to be understood in a different light. We are told
that many of the church’s saints and holy doctors actually taught truths
which were at variance with the official doctrine and were vindicated only
after struggle and suffering.
Of course it’s good for today’s
Catholics to know these historical facts. They are very instructive
and even necessary if we are to mature in the faith. Nothing is as
pathetic as an adult Catholic who has no sense of the development of Catholic
teaching.
Your question, I believe,
has to do with something a bit different than the simple fact of dissent
in the church. It seems you have a problem with the rather sudden
explosion of dissent. You went through half your life without hearing
the word and now you can’t get away from it. Your question seems
to be “Why now?” And I agree. That precise question mostly
goes unasked and therefore unanswered. Not enough of the current
reference to dissent in the church deals with the origin of the current
preoccupation. Fortunately, you came to the right place for an answer!
I’ll have to confess that
I never cared much for the term “dissent” in speaking of ideas which differed
from other ideas. But for the present it seems we must live with
the term and its negative associations.
Dissent began in the modern
Catholic church when officials of the Vatican curia objected to Pope John
XXIII’s intention to call a general council. These dissenters were
not mere functionaries but cardinals and prelates who occupied the highest
positions in the church. By their opposition and high-level example
they inaugurated an era of dissent which is still with us.
With his characteristic charity
John XXIII referred to these dissenters as “prophets of doom.” They
were that, of course, but because of their high offices in the Vatican
curia their opposition carried enormous influence. Pope Paul VI was
strong enough to resist some of this negative influence but in his later
years he yielded to much of it. His encyclical Humanae vitae stands
in witness to the victory of the curial dissenters.
These opponents of John XXIII’s
aggiornamento appointed their own curial successors. Events since
Vatican II have illustrated not only their continued dissent from conciliar
teaching but show a string of victories reversing the council’s reforms.
Among these are the open rejection of the collegiality of bishops—witness
the curial cooptation of the general synods and the recent emasculation
of national conferences of bishops. Another example is the reintroduction
of the Latin mass which one archbishop suggested opened the door to the
rejection of all the council had accomplished.
So, the answer to your perplexity
about dissent is quite simple. Dissent is a thoroughly Catholic enterprise
unless we’re prepared to suggest that the Vatican establishment is not
Catholic! We have had 40 years of clear and public dissent right
in the halls of Vatican City. Every week or so a new example shows
us that the very thing John XXIII hoped to accomplish by the council, namely,
an open church, is still being rejected by the “prophets of doom.”
The major problem with this
dissent at the highest levels in the church is that many Catholics confuse
it with orthodoxy, with authentic Catholic teaching. Because it comes
from persons in positions of authority the ordinary Catholic believes it
to be essentially related to the gospel of Christ. This suggests
scandal, in the gospel sense of the term. Good and God-fearing people
are being led astray, the unity among his followers for which Jesus prayed
is being lost or postponed, and the church is clouded with suspicion, animosity
and fear. When every week or so another competent theologian or scholar
is put under “investigation” the church which John XXIII longed for becomes
more remote. Sad to say, even the pope shamelessly dissents from
the solemn teachings of the Second Vatican Council when his own ideology
is at stake.
Dr. Biechler, an emeritus
professor of religion, is a member of ARCC's board of directors. He also
holds a licentiate in canon law and is a longtime member of the Canon Law
Society of America.
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