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Schism in the Catholic Church? We’ve been here before.

by Joseph Nangle, OFM
Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

One Catholic journalist has called it “a functional schism” in the American Catholic Church. He is referring of course to the very public statement criticizing President Biden made by Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, President of the U.S. Catholic Bishops’ Conference and the challenging reactions by equally prominent church leaders like Cardinals Blaise Cupich, Joseph Tobin and Bishop Robert McElroy.

The issue centers on this second Catholic president and his policies which Archbishop Gomez criticized as “advancing moral evils and threatening human life and dignity most seriously in the areas of abortion, contraception, marriage and gender.” Cupich used the term “ill-considered” to describe Gomez’s statement. A senior Vatican official called it “most unfortunate” and said it could create even greater divisions within the church in the United States. Pope Francis made no mention of the criticism in his congratulatory message to President Biden.

So we do have a full-blown and very public breakdown (schism) brewing here. While it is very unfortunate, surely unsettling for many American Catholics and fodder for sensationalist and often incorrect media commentaries, it is not all that surprising. We’ve been here before.

For our own peace of mind and a means of responding to this latest ecclesial impasse it’s well to remember that our Church has had these sorts of divisions since the very beginning:

Through our 2000 year history we have numerous examples of such intra-family battles:

We have always been a fractious crowd and yet our Church nurtured ten of those first Apostles so that in the end they gave their lives for Christ. The Church has produced Clare of Assisi, Catherine of Siena, Oscar Romero, and Jorge Mario Bergoglio. The list of our heroes and heroines is long.

In my own life, providentially, I witnessed the Institutional Church of Latin America turn itself around after Vatican II and present us with the spirit-filled Medellin Documents. Among those gifts to the larger Church and indeed to the wider world were:

  1. A call to itself, laity, religious, clergy and hierarchy, to make a preferential option for the poor in all pastoral decisions.
  2. The analysis of global and national injustices as examples of “institutional sin
  3. Liberation Theology, interpreting God’s Word through the eyes of the oppressed.

Finally, to the point of Archbishop Gomez’s criticism of President Biden. I believe he has forgotten or never knew about Pope St. John Paul II’s statement regarding acts that are intrinsically evil – it goes way beyond “abortion, contraception, marriage and gender”. Making his own a statement from the Conciliar Document, “The Church in the Modern World”, the Pope declares that other evils fall into the category of “intrinsic”; for example “homicide, genocide, deportation, slavery and subhuman living conditions” (JP II, Veritatis Splendor #80).

What did George Santayana say: “Those who cannot remember their past are doomed to repeat it.”

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Joe Nangle OFM is a Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace. As a member of the Assisi Community in Washington, D.C., he is dedicated to simple living and social change. Joe also serves as the Pastoral Associate for the Latino community at Our Lady Queen of Peace, Arlington, Virginia.

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