Getting Past Clericalism

February 4th, 2009 by Mark Shea Print This Article Print This Article ·

At the altar the priest presides. In the world, the laity presides. This is the basic principle that ought to govern all our thinking about the roles of the ordained and the laity in the mission of the Church.

Unfortunately, a huge number of Catholics do not think this way, because clericalism continues to poison and distort the way we think. Paul tells us that Christ has given the Church different offices: “And his gifts were that some should be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ” (Ephesians 4:11-12). Paul makes constant recourse to the analogy of the body and of different members performing their respective roles so as to strengthen the whole.

When we forget that wisdom, we get clericalism, the notion that the only real Catholic is an ordained Catholic and the concomitant idea that the only way a layperson can find a vocation is to hurl the pews at the ambo and seize the Church “for his own”. Hence, organizations like “We Are Church” with the sotto voce suggestion that “They” are not Church.

priest.jpgWith that comes all sorts of mischief: a confusion between the sanctity of the priestly office and the sanctity of the person who holds it; a conviction that it’s all about power, not love and service; a notion that the only true forum for our gifts as laity is to somehow lug them into the liturgy; a demand for “equal access” to a sacrament which is a gift, not a civil right; and many other evils.

Many people have the mistaken notion that clericalism is a peculiarly “conservative” phenomenon and that, if you are what is known as a “liberal” Catholic you are immune from the problem because you are “democratic”. Yes, there have been conservative Catholics I’ve known whose first rule in life is never to think ill of a priest even when trouble is staring them in the face. But the notion that clericalism is strictly a defect of the Right Wing Authoritarian Personality so beloved as a bogeyman by Call to Action types is rubbish.

In my experience, it’s hasn’t been “blind obedience to Catholic authority” but blind obedience to a particular charismatic personality (who is often at odds with the authoritative teaching of the Church) that is the trouble. Typically, what I’ve seen have been Catholics who just like Fr. Personality so much that they just can’t stand those killjoys who insist on pointing out that Fr. Personality is preaching rank heresy or living gross immorality (or both). I wish more Catholics were docile to genuine Catholic Authority. They might find the stones to appeal to it against the force of some charming pervert or heretic that they really like. Indeed, some of the toughest and most dedicated real reformers in the Church that I’ve known—fearless moms who aren’t afraid to march into the bishop’s office and respectfully but firmly give him hell when he’s a doofus—have been conservative Catholics who are docile to true authority and therefore not craven before mere personalities. For “authority” is not, as most suppose, “raw power to dictate”. It is related rather to “authorship”: the right of the writer to say what his work means. The Author of the Catholic faith is Jesus Christ and the teaching and tradition of the Church is the way we know what the Author has to say. Oddly, most lay Catholics aren’t interested in that. They’re interested in what Their Local Personality has to say.

Very often, that local personality is a clericalist. It may not be the priest. It may be the DRE who is embittered because he or she will never be ordained and so is determined to create a personal fiefdom right there in the parish. (Some of the most draconian, micromanaging tyrants I have ever known were DRE’s who simultaneously held the Pope in utter contempt, claimed to champion “freedom of conscience” and yet ruled their own serfs and slaves in the parish with an iron fist of Control more monarchical than anything Innocent III or Hildebrand ever dreamed of.)

Dittos, of course, with the experience of countless advocates of liturgical experimentation, women’s ordination, Voice of the Fuddled political enthusiasms and so forth. They have deeply bought into the notion that the Church is all about power, that they must be the ones to control that power, and that power happens exclusively in the sanctuary. The notion that 99.999999% of the Church is lay so that the work of the Church could be conducted in the world has not entered their heads. They want to preside at the altar because the altar is, they believe, the only legitimate place a Catholic can preside.

The way to heal this, I think, is for the Church to really take up the task of teaching an authentic Catholic understanding of the lay office as a real vocation. Sherry Weddell of the St. Catherine of Siena Institute points out that our present conception of vocation is pretty much limited to the ordained and religious life. That is, after all, what we mean by “prayer for vocations”. She remarks that this is “bonsai gardening” approach to vocation. We focus all our attention on the handful of guys out of each diocese who might be called to the priesthood and we pay virtually no attention to the overwhelming number of Catholics who are called to be laypeople.

Called. We laity have a vocation. In fact, we have as many vocations as there are laypeople. We have a mission in the world and we must be equipped to carry out that mission just as much as the priest or religious must be equipped to carry out his or her mission. Weddell suggests we treat the parish as a “house of lay formation”, not so that we laypeople can storm the altar and do the work of the priest for him, but so that we can do our proper work of assisting as he presides in the sanctuary and presiding as we take up our proper work in the world as lay apostles of Christ. Do that and we end the bonsai gardening approach and instead will take up the much more fruitful wildflower gardening approach, where all vocations are nurtured—including priestly and religious vocations.

For the body does not consist of one member but of many. If the foot should say, “Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body,” that would not make it any less a part of the body. And if the ear should say, “Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body,” that would not make it any less a part of the body. If the whole body were an eye, where would be the hearing? If the whole body were an ear, where would be the sense of smell? But as it is, God arranged the organs in the body, each one of them, as he chose” (1 Corinthians 12:14-18).

Time to get back to the biblical (and Catholic) approach.

Mark Shea is Senior Content Editor for Catholic Exchange and a weekly columnist for the National Catholic Register. You may visit his website at www.mark-shea.com check out his blog, Catholic and Enjoying It!, or purchase his books and tapes here.

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  • momof11

    Excellent!

  • jpichardo

    Very well said!

  • Claire

    You hit the nail on the head, as usual.

  • c-kingsley

    Well, he TOTALLY lost me when he said “99.999999% of the Church is lay.” That means that there are 100 Million laypeople per ordained person. Perhaps he meant something more like “99.9% of the Church is lay.” 99.97, tops.

    Just to be Excruciatingly correct. ;-)

  • Mary Kochan

    Well, this explains why Mark is writing for us as opposed to say, planning the trajectory of space shuttle flights.

  • HCSKnight

    Mr. Shea,

    I think you’ve made an error in choice of title. Your article seems less about clericalism and more about cults of personality. I’d like to comment on both in context of the points you raise.

    Clericalism, the term, the concept, grew out of the Protestant Revolt. Bellow follows some definitions of “clericalism” from online dictionaries. It’s interesting to note that Googling “etymology of clericalism” turned up no etymology of the word but rather many anti-clericalism finds. Such is the nature of the word. Regardless, here are some common definitions:

    * A policy of supporting the power and influence of the clergy in political or secular matters.
    * Political influence or power of the clergy, or a policy or principles favoring this: generally a derogatory term
    * An undue influence of the hierarchy and clergy in public affairs and government.
    * The principles and interests of the clergy.
    * And from CatholicReference.net: The advocacy of exaggerated claims on the part of the clergy, especially in matters that belong to the jurisdiction of the state. More commonly it is used as a term of reproach by secularists and unfriendly critics of the Catholic Church who aim to banish all religious influence from public life.

    I assert that clericalism is not the error or the source of the problem you see. What you see, but attribute to clericalism, is the cult of personality that has crept into the priesthood, and the laity.

    True and proper “clericalism” is I think a part of God’s plan. Not man’s version of clericalism, God’s version. If it were otherwise He never would have made His Church an Evangelical Church. Nor would He have laid the seeds for what is now commonly called the Theology of the Body. Nor of course would He have created the priesthood.

    In fact it is through proper and true clericalism that the leadership of Caesar now uses arguments such as “the dignity of man” in their discourse against evils. As much as I’m tempted to talk more about the errors and needs regarding clericalism. But, your article was really filled with points and examples about the cult of personality problems that exist in the Church, and I’ll add laity.

    Regarding the issues surrounding the cult of personality influences you, rightly, point out. I’m of the firm conviction these errors are rooted in the Marxist style errors of interpretation regarding Vatican II. Errors that are simply optimisms toward human nature that are really blind to human nature. When the priest serving Mass turned away from Our Lord Crucified and toward the sheep, it set the priest and the people on a new path. A path filled with human faces, but one that human nature renders terribly slippery. Life is such when one’s eye turns from looking toward Christ in all things.

    If you doubt the importance of this assertion, ask yourself why so many churches have took Our Lord Crucified down from His Place above His Altar and put him “away”, have placed him beside the priest {processional crucifixes}, or have placed him in the back of the church {I’ve seen this with my own eyes}, or have shrunk Our Lord Crucified down to a small Crucifix less than a foot tall and placed him on the altar table. Though many errors were introduced through misinterpretations of Vatican II, I believe greatest of these, after doing away with patens and out stretching our hand to “take” Our Lord, was the turning of the priest toward His sheep during the Mass.

    There were many reasons why from the very beginning of the Church the presider and the people faced the way they did; East and in the same direction. Reasons founded on traditions, beliefs and hopes. I also happen to think His Grace played a big role in it too, to protect all of us from the frailties of our human nature.

    Granted there have always been cults of personality in the church. But never to this extent IN the Church. In the early Church such things were mostly situations of those claiming to be of the Church but were really outside the Church. Today it’s different than the past. The growth of the Church has made her an unmistakably clear and present part of man’s world. One would think with today’s communications capabilities that there would be less confusion, but like the cacophony of chatter in a crowded room it has made hearing Her true voice very difficult.

    These two things are the root of the cults of personality problem. The first being the effects upon the priesthood when men become the central focus of the eye in the Mass. The second the din of babble in the world through which Mother Church struggles to be heard.

    That is how a face searching in the crowd for the voice they hear within becomes so confused and ends up gazing through the eyes of hope upon a personality. And not upon the Crucifix.

    As for a finer point in your article. You say: “At the altar the priest presides. In the world, the laity presides. This is the basic principle that ought to govern all our thinking about the roles of the ordained and the laity in the mission of the Church.” To this I can only say, no. Yes we must render unto Caesar that which is Caesar. But the early Christians were marked by their living their Faith fully and correctly by NOT living their life unto the world. Yes the lived IN the world, but theirs was NOT a life of the world. Hence the large numbers of desert hermits, evangelists that traveled the world, and Christians by unfathomable numbers being persecuted in the most unspeakable ways for simply not by speech rendering unto Caesar that he was a God.

    Lastly your reference to Ephesians 4:11-12. In commenting you demonstrate one of the really serious errors pervading the Church, one of the Protestantization of Scripture. I am not pointing as much to your interpretation but rather of the translation that set in motion and lay underneath your comments.

    Here is the Ephesians 4:11-13 from a Douay-Rheims translation; translation that was used for centuries and widely considered most precise translation form the Vulgate Latin: “11 And he gave some apostles, and some prophets, and other some evangelists, and other some pastors and doctors, 12 For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: 13 Until we all meet into the unity of faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the age of the fullness of Christ; ”

    Ephesians 4:11-12, when taken in correct context, to verse 13 immediately following, it does not at all support “getting past clericalism”. In fact it supports true, proper and ordained Clericalism. Verse 13 shows that the purposes of what’s laid out in the prior verses are to reach unity of faith and of knowledge of Christ. NOT a divided world of “altar” and the “world”, but of one world. Not a world made up of church things run by priests and “world” things run by the laity. The laity I’ll remind you are simply non-ordained priests, limited priests if you will. But the laity are still called to the same goals as the ordained priesthood; to save souls, their own and all others.

    Many errors in the priesthood are very manifest and plain, some horrible to see. But they exist in the numbers they do now largely because of the incorrect interpretations of Vatican II. Interpretations never intended by the Church. As for the subject of clericalism, clericalism in the sense of “a policy of supporting the power and influence of the clergy in political or secular matters.” is needed today more than ever. It is the job of Benedict XVI to bring his Bishops and priests back from their foray into the world of interpreting man through man’s eyes and return them to their true job of teaching the Truths revealed to His Church.

    AMDG
    HCSKnight