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RELIGION

Ordinary Catholics must help with reform

  • 31 July 2017

 

There are many reform movements active in the Catholic Church. Most seem to focus on changing the structures and systems of the church, on reshaping doctrinal positions and updating teachings. Organisational reform is necessary and long overdue but there is also need for a complementary movement among ordinary Catholics.

In recent decades, the sense of ownership that people have over their own lives has undergone a significant shift. Personal authenticity and autonomy are the order of the day. More people feel they each have unique ways of being themselves and seek forms of expression that frequently do not fit traditional moulds.

There is a historically unique process of individuation going on. Finding one’s identity and understanding one’s personal experience are core concerns. More often now we understand we have a role in and responsibility for what we are to be. The structures of communities are quite different and more varied and complex.

The relevance of community has not disappeared but it has taken a different shape. In modern Australia, community is often taken for granted and accepted as background, evidenced for instance in social media.

Parishes are important local realisations of the church but there are many Catholics who do not feel comfortable or at home with present structures and ways of operating. I regard myself as a faithful Catholic, steeped in the tradition, theologically and spiritually literate, seeking a relevant, supportive community of like-minded people. However, I do not find the weekend liturgies in our parish churches to be reflective or expressive of my understanding of Christianity; they just do not speak to my world.

In Para.14 of 'The Joy of the Gospel' Pope Francis refers to three settings for evangelisation: ordinary pastoral ministry; the baptised whose lives do not reflect the demands of the Gospel; and those who do not know Jesus Christ or who have always rejected him

In the first setting, he distinguishes two groups, both of which are regarded as faithful Catholics. Those who 'take part in community worship and gather on the Lord's Day' and those 'who preserve a deep and sincere faith, expressing it in different ways, but seldom taking part in worship'.

I find myself identifying with the second group. This reality of many Catholics of good faith who do not attend weekly liturgies needs to be addressed in any serious church renewal or reform.

 

"There are many Catholics who do not feel comfortable or at home with present structures