Mar 18, 2017
It's a commonplace to say that America, along with other Western countries, is currently experiencing a cultural-which is to say: moral-crisis. And, in some quarters at least, it's hardly less common to say this presents the Church with both a challenge and an opportunity.
The opportunity is to save America by presenting the faith as a credible option, thereby helping to make America-as our president would say-truly "great again." The challenge is that unless the Church really can do that or something like it, it is likely to suffer continuing assimilation into a secular culture deeply hostile to Catholicism, together with rapidly falling numbers and growing cultural (moral) irrelevance.
What isn't so often said, however, is that in facing up to these alternative scenarios American Catholicism suffers from a serious, internal handicap. Huge numbers of its adherents-one hesitates to say the Church itself, although in practice it amounts to that-share the values and behaviors of the crisis-ridden culture which they should be striving to bring to its senses.
To look upon these assimilated Catholics as potential "missionary disciples"-a term borrowed from Pope Francis-is like asking patients in a field hospital (the Pope's preferred metaphor for the Church) to rise from their sick beds and busy themselves healing other wounded victims of the culture war outside.