London, England, Nov 17, 2017 / 15:00 pm
For years now, I have bemoaned the growing number of so-called progressive Catholic figures, in academia, the media and the outer curial orbit, who fancy themselves to be the Pope's ideological vanguard, amidst what they have taken to calling their "intra-ecclesial battle."
The agenda they push is an obvious rehash of seventies liberalism: a "progressive" approach to sexual ethics, acceptance of divorce and remarriage, recognition of same-sex relationships, "creating a space" for those who disagree with the Church on life issues. This rather tired agenda has been dressed up in the language of woke university students and twitter social justice warriors, but its core premise remains the same as it ever was - to push the fallacy that Vatican II was part of the cultural revolution of the sixties, rather than the Church's answer to it. Their efforts are easy to spot, just look for the people endlessly invoking the council but never actually quoting a document from it.
Their main objective is to fracture the continuity and authority of the Church's essential teaching on the dignity and nature of the human person, relationships with God and other people, and society. In this fight, they have identified the key battleground, their greatest enemy, and their biggest opportunity: Pope Francis.
Pope Francis, from the moment of his election, has been a gigantic figure on the global stage. Through a combination of his personal charisma and the age of viral social media, his every soundbite gets attention and circulation that his predecessors couldn't have imagined. Being seen to be "with" the pope is more powerful than ever before.
Conversely, being painted as "anti-Francis" is now the fastest way to find yourself beyond the pale of acceptable Church discourse - a far cry from the days when the progressive 'cool kids' seemed to take a juvenile kind of pride in forcing St. John Paul II or Benedict XVI to discipline them. Many of those who previously wore dissent as a badge of distinction have become the first and fiercest to label those they dislike, whether journalists, academics, or even cardinals, as "disloyal" to the pope, and opposed to his teaching authority.
Yet those who cry the loudest against the pope's supposed opponents are themselves at the sharp end of a campaign of double deception. They insist that they are with the pope, or rather he is with them, and so to oppose them, on anything, is to oppose the pope. This is a falsehood.
The list of subjects on which Pope Francis is at odds with his self-appointed enforcers has grown to a comical length. In the last few months alone, Pope Francis has sided with the parents of Charlie Gard in defense of life, contrary to statements from the remade Pontifical Academy of Life, headed by Archbishop Paglia, and he has publicly echoed Cardinal Sarah's call for a rediscovery of reverential silence in the liturgy, even as the Pope's supposed-supporters demanded that Sarah be sacked.
Just days ago, the election of Archbishop Joseph Naumann as chairman of the US Bishops' Conference pro-life committee was railed against by prominent liberal Catholics, who shouted themselves hoarse arguing that this election was an explicit rejection of the pope, and of his entire vision for the Church.
Pope Francis has, of course, called abortion a "horrendous crime," a "very grave sin," and, just last month, part of a "eugenic tendency" against the disabled. None of this made it into liberal coverage of the vote, nor was it held to be a factor in the election of an archbishop with sterling pro-life credentials over another who once discouraged his priests from participating in the 40 Days for Life campaign.
This is a group doing everything they can to take the pope's public image and message hostage, and replace it with their own. The extent to which these voices are trying to define a "Francis agenda" contrary to the clear teaching of the Pope himself would be laughable, if their spurious arguments didn't seem to gain so much traction.
Their biggest success thus far has been the confected row over communion for the divorced and remarried, an idea the pope has repeatedly refused to endorse, even categorically refuting the claim that his call for "full integration into parish life" meant receiving communion. The motivating force behind this campaign has nothing to do with pastoral concern for the tiny minority of catholics in this situation, in fact many of them have been hurt by the confusion and speculation of this effort. Rather, the goal is to force a crack, in practice if not yet in theory, in the Church's absolute adherence to the indissolubility of marriage. It has also served to successfully suppress any discussion of the actual content of Amoris Latitiae, a document which not only reaffirms the permanence of marriage, but actually endorses the teaching of Humanae Vitae, the great liberal bête noire of the last sixty years. It also rejects, in stark terms, the great progressive causes of the moment: a softened stance on abortion and euthanasia, same-sex unions, and gender theory.
Successfully convincing huge swathes of the Church that the pope is in favor of the very things he has condemned, while the evidence to the contrary is there for all to see, is the result of an incredibly brazen slight of hand, unwittingly abetted by the pope's indifference to television and the internet. It has sown division and discord across the Church. There needs to be an urgent and unflinching response, one which takes true filial pride in the real papal magisterium and uses it to confront those who knowingly abuse the name and authority of Pope Francis and Vatican Council II for their own ends.
Ed Condon is a canon lawyer working for tribunals in a number of dioceses. On Twitter he is @canonlawyered. His opinions do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Catholic News Agency.