Vatican II: 40
years later Crafting a vision of a bishops conference, then unmaking
it
By JOE FEUERHERD
Forty years ago, alive with what
hed brought back from the Second Vatican Council, Detroit Cardinal John
Dearden had a vision: A national pastoral council of laypeople, clergy and
bishops that would share responsibility for developing church public policy
positions.
In November 1966, he was elected the first president of the new
National Conference of Catholic Bishops, NCCB, and the U.S. Catholic
Conference, USCC. The NCCB would deal with internal church issues; the latter
would promote peace and justice in the secular world.
Iron John -- as Dearden was known -- looked forward to
the time when the USCC would evolve into the collaborative body of shared
responsibility he saw as a true outgrowth of Vatican II. Until that day
arrived, laypeople would serve on USCC committees -- social action,
communications, and education among them -- participate in those deliberations
as equals and vote at that level.
Most decisions, in fact, were reached by consensus, and all were
subject to the approval of the bishops-only administrative committee or the
full assembly of bishops.
The approach was in keeping with the prevailing interpretation of
the October 1965 council decree Christus Dominus, which defined
bishops conferences as an assembly in which the prelates of a
nation or of a territory jointly exercise their pastoral office in order to
enhance the churchs beneficial influence to all men.
Those words were widely received as a signal for a decentralized
decision-making process, in harmony with Rome and the universal church, but
providing avenues of participation previously closed to the nonordained. It was
an approach eagerly embraced by the U.S. bishops of that era.
Fast forward 34 years to November 2000: After nearly a decade of
deliberation and discussion, the bishops voted to abolish their dual structure
and replace it with a single body -- the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops,
USCCB. Committee structures were realigned and roles in the organization
redefined.
Significantly, laypeople could no longer serve as full members of
a USCCB committee. They could serve as consultants -- have a voice, however
muted -- but no vote. Unlike its predecessors, dating back more than 80 years
to the founding of the National Catholic Welfare Council, the USCCB was to be
unmistakably a bishops conference.
To some, Deardens vision was blurred beyond recognition --
the restructuring just the latest move in a series designed to curtail the
worlds most influential bishops conference. To others, including
some of the deceased archbishops closest allies in establishing the
modern conference, the developments are not a repudiation of the founding
presidents vision, but a recognition of changed times.
The conference is alive and well and faithful to the vision
of the council and of Cardinal Dearden, said Louisville Archbishop Thomas
Kelly, who as an associate general secretary to the bishops conference in
the early 1970s, and later as general secretary, worked with Dearden and
then-general secretary Joseph Bernardin to implement the councils vision
of a bishops conference.
Dearden and Bernardin were absolutely determined to
implement the council, recalled Kelly, and set an irreversible
course for the conference of bishops.
Irreversible, perhaps. But not immovable.
Retired Anchorage Archbishop Francis Hurley, like Kelly a former
associate general secretary under Bernardin, sees a swing to
centralization of all authority. It is a constant tension, said
Hurley. Do we gravitate to the center [Rome] because we need unity, or do
we decentralize to acknowledge diversity? Observers -- both those who
promote an activist conference agenda and those who would prefer a body
deferential to Rome -- point to three instances over the past decade that have
shaped the current conference:
Apostolos Suos. Under this 1998 papal apostolic
letter, bishops conference statements that seek to bind the faithful must
be approved unanimously, or, with a two-thirds vote, submitted to Rome for
approval. There is dispute on precisely what is covered under the letter. Some
say, for example, that the U.S. bishops 1983 Pastoral Letter on War and
Peace could not have been issued without Romes approval under conditions
laid out by the letter; others say such statements fall outside the
letters intent. Its almost humanly impossible to get 100
percent agreement, said Hurley.
The womens pastoral fiasco. Rejected in 1992 after
nearly a decade of work, the proposed pastoral letter is remembered less for
its content than for the ferocity of the debate it engendered. It became a
litmus test of solidarity with Rome, as Vatican officials objected to
successive versions of the proposed letter.
Since the failure of the womens pastoral the U.S.
bishops have simply not been involved in writing major pastoral letters,
said Jesuit Fr. Thomas J. Reese, editor of America and author of A
Flock of Shepherds: The National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Theres a big fear that theyll come into conflict with
Rome if they undertake controversial projects, said Reese. Said Mercy Sr.
Sharon Euart, also a former associate general secretary at the conference:
I dont know if there is the interest, energy or the willingness to
take the big risks on the issue of public policy and social justice as there
was in the 1980s.
Romes agenda. Theres been a more active
involvement on the part of the Holy See in determining some of the agenda
items, said Euart. Vatican-generated initiatives -- ranging from norms on
lay preaching to implementation of Pope John Paul IIs 1990 apostolic
letter Ex Corde Ecclesiae -- have increasingly dominated the conference
agenda. Ex Corde, a 1990 document whose title is translated From
the Heart of the Church, calls for stronger Catholic identity -- and
church laws to ensure it -- at Catholic colleges and universities.
The future? More focus on collaborative pastoral efforts is
likely, said Euart, with continued emphasis on ecclesial issues. Altered
priorities among individual bishops is likely, said Reese. In the past a
lot more people committed to spending time on bishops conference
business. The presidents of the conference and people who worked on major
committees spent up to one-third of their time on the business of the
conference. Now, many would rather spend their time in their own diocese where
theyre already overworked.
Kelly meanwhile sees the glass more than half full. The
issues have changed over the years and require a different response. But
the bishops conference, he said, is just as concerned about
domestic justice as we have ever been. And, as representatives of the
church in the worlds sole superpower, the conference is the most
significant in the world.
Whether that significance translates into influence at home and in
Rome is one of the challenges of the next 40 years.
Joe Feuerherd is NCR Washington correspondent. His
e-mail address is jfeuerherd@nat cath.org
National Catholic Reporter, October 4,
2002
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