The
Communion Controversy, or, Almost Beside the Point
—Fr. Joseph F. Wilson
Long after his death, Father Leo Trese proved to be quite
a conversation-stopper.
I'm sure I haven't thought of this story for over twenty
years, but recently it popped, unavoidably, into my head.
I was in a discussion group with some of my fellow seminarians,
in one of those progressive postconciliar seminaries which
specialized in updating the Faith. Precisely what was the
discussion topic, I can't recall. But I remember referring
to a point made by Father Trese, in one of his pre-conciliar
books for priests, where he said, "Of course, we all
realize that the Priest who ascends the altar in a state of
mortal sin does not offer a sacrifice. He commits a murder."
The effect on the group sitting there was electrifying.
They clearly thought that this was a thoroughly morbid, "old-church"
hyper-supernaturalist perspective. It had nothing to say to
them. In their seminary formation, they had been repeatedly
taught to contrast the perspective of the "old church"
with the enlightened, renewed approach of the postconciliar
age, so dismissing a bit of uncomfortable old school spirituality
was really just a reflex.
Interesting reflex, though; especially after you've read
Saint Paul on the subject: "Whoever, therefore, eats
the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner
will be guilty of profaning the body and blood of the Lord"
(I Cor 11:27 RSV). In dismissing Father Trese, they were putting
aside Saint Paul.
Catholicism, as I have said elsewhere, is more than simply
a list of rules to be followed, or a list of things to be
mastered and memorized. Catholicism is a deep, and wide, and
fruitful way of looking at all reality in light of the Incarnation
of Him Who became flesh, and dwelt among us, and lived, and
suffered, and died for us, and rose again. In light of that
Mystery, and following in the footsteps of the saints, all
of life is transformed, everything is charged with meaning.
And everything is seen in that light.
And, ideally, one absorbs this through the life of the Church:
a vision, a peculiar way of looking at things. This is the
birthright of every Catholic; that through his participation
in the Church's life, the catechesis he experiences, the liturgies
at which he assists, he experiences the very life of the Church,
he is formed by that life as it is authentically expressed.
This, I repeat is our birthright.
And I believe that this birthright needs a full discussion
in our Church today.
I recall another time in the seminary, a Moral Theology class.
The professor had arranged for us to view a series of ninety-minute
Public Broadcasting presentations on medical/ethical issues.
The series wasn't produced under Catholic auspices, but it
was well worth viewing.
One installment was on amniocentesis, and the moral implications
of seeking to determine whether an unborn child was 'normal'
or 'healthy.' In one disturbing segment, we saw a group of
profoundly retarded children. They were institutionalized,
and we saw them sitting listlessly around a playground. The
contrast between the brightly colored playground furniture
and the non-responsive children was jarring.
Afterwards, as we had coffee in the refectory, one of my
classmates said to me, "And you wouldn't even let people
practice birth control?"
This is the sort of moment that demands discussion in our
Church. My classmate was not a bad, or ill-disposed person.
He took his theological studies seriously. But because he
was serious in his studies, he had thoroughly absorbed what
he had been taught through the very atmosphere of that seminary:
that we were living in a privileged, new age, in which the
"old answers" of the "preconciliar church"
were at best suspect, and virtually everything was up for
grabs.
Again, he had presented himself to the Church for formation
in all good faith: and this was how he was being formed.
To his pointed question, I replied, "Um, now, wait a
minute. Are you suggesting that you are able to draw a line
and judge who should have been created, and who should not
have?" And, to his credit, he immediately saw the problem
to which I was pointing. What I had said to him was, quite
simply, the Catholic perspective. It was true, and he recognized
that.
But isn't it troubling that, knowing what the Church teaches
on such issues as contraception, he naturally assumed that
it was a good thing to question it? He was a seminarian in
the Major Seminary, preparing for parish ministry; but, rather
than being able to come to drink of the stream of perennial
wisdom of the Church and be formed by it, he had absorbed
a mentality which sees the Church's teaching as a starting
discussion point. And this is not simply a situation in one
seminary. It is a Church-wide problem in our country.
It is with this context in mind that I read the pastoral
letter of the Bishop of Colorado Springs regarding pro-abortion
politicians, the Catholics who vote for them, and the reception
of Holy Communion.
The money quote, as far as the media seems to be concerned,
is this: "There must be no confusion in these matters.
Any Catholic politicians who advocate for abortion, for illicit
stem cell research or for any form of euthanasia ipso facto
place themselves outside full communion with the Church and
so jeopardize their salvation. Any Catholics who vote for
candidates who stand for abortion, illicit stem cell research
or euthanasia suffer the same fateful consequences. It is
for this reason that these Catholics, whether candidates for
office or those who would vote for them, may not receive Holy
Communion until they have recanted their positions and been
reconciled with God and the Church in the Sacrament of Penance."
Now, I'd like to reflect a bit on where we find ourselves
as Catholics in America today.
The presumptive Democratic candidate for President, Senator
John Kerry, professes himself a devout and committed Roman
Catholic. It is important to bear this profession of faith
in mind - especially as one sees photos of him kneeling at
the communion rail of an African Methodist Episcopal Church,
or ponders his support not just for abortion rights, but for
the loathsome partial birth abortion procedure. John Kerry
is a committed, devout Roman Catholic, by his own profession
of faith.
The Bishop of Colorado Springs, Michael Sheridan, seems quite
clear in saying that not only is Mr. Kerry barred from Holy
Communion, those voting for him, and for politicians supporting
abortion, should also understand that they are outside the
communion of the Church, and that they are jeopardizing their
salvation. Several other bishops have publicly stated that
Catholics making public pro-abortion stances should not approach
Holy Communion. Meanwhile, the Archbishop of Washington, Cardinal
McCarrick, says that he is not comfortable with barring such
a person from Holy Communion, and Roger Cardinal Mahony, Archbishop
of Los Angeles, says that Mr. Kerry is "welcome"
to receive Communion.
And there has raged in the Church, both pro and con, discussion
about when a priest or Eucharistic Minister should refuse
the Eucharist to a communicant.
Eucharistic discipline, it would seem, is now a matter of
diocesan boundaries. I wouldn't have thought, a month ago,
that the bishops could have further messed up our situation
as a Church. It just goes to show that I do not give them
nearly enough credit.
Watching this public discussion, it has occurred to me that
a few things need stating which many people of good will seem
not to realize.
The first is that hesitation about refusing Holy Communion
to someone, even to someone who is publicly known to be in
a situation contrary to the Church's teaching, is not necessarily
the sign of a bad priest. It might be the sign of a charitable,
realistic, prudent priest who does not want to hurt someone
who is not malicious, but confused, perhaps even innocently.
I'm speaking as a parish priest who once had a couple - a
faithful, Mass-every-Sunday couple, kids-in-CCD couple - suggest
to me that my Trinity Sunday homily might have confused the
children because "it almost sounded as though you were
saying that Jesus is God." I understood immediately where
they were coming from, as we were exactly the same age. We
made out first Communions in May of 1967. We were the first
class never to have seen the Catechism; we got large, outsized
books with bright colored pictures and almost no text instead.
These folks had never been taught the Faith; it was a minor
miracle that they were at Mass at all. But they hadn't the
vaguest idea what the Creed meant, or the Incarnation, or
the Trinity. And that was at least partly because of what
the Church had failed to teach them.
Or there was the couple who came up to me after Mass on my
first Sunday in my current parish, seeking a blessing. They
were beginning treatments in a fertility clinic to produce
a child, using a procedure which was clearly immoral.
Or the couple who had been counseled into a 'selective termination'
by a priest; the wife had conceived twins, the doctor said
that one twin was in trouble and, if he were aborted, the
other would be healthier. They came seeking the priest's advice;
he told them that whatever they did, God would be with them…
Oh, I could multiply such stories almost infinitely, but
to what purpose? It is obvious that something is wrong, seriously
wrong. It is the birthright of a Catholic to be born into
the Family of God, to be raised in the Faith, to be formed
by the Gospel and the Catholic Tradition. A Catholic should
be able, throughout his life, to assist at the sacred Liturgy
celebrated according to the mind of the Church, the feasts
and fasts and sounds and scents of which shape and form the
very soul. He should have learned the stories of the Lord
Jesus and the teachings of the Church.
It is a shameful situation that so many have been robbed
of this birthright; but it is true. Gallup established that
even with regard to a central doctrine such as the Eucharist,
only a third of MASS-ATTENDING Catholics could identify the
Catholic teaching when it was set before them. And Mass-attending
Catholics are harder to come by nowadays; after a drop of
more than sixty percent over thirty years, Mass attendance
stands at some 18%.
Ignorance of Christian doctrine is extraordinarily pervasive
in the Church today. A book like "The DaVinci Code"
easily draws a following among Catholics, who read its ludicrous
assertions, such as that Constantine the Great invented the
doctrine of Christ's divinity in the 300s, without ever realizing
that the first chapter of St John's Gospel would debunk that
lie… if they but knew where to look for John's Gospel.
There are many Catholics today who were simply never taught
the fundamental doctrines of the Catholic Faith. When it came
to moral issues, if they got any moral "instruction"
at all, it was a group discussion on a story showing some
sort of moral situation, and through the discussion each group
member was encouraged to find "your own answers."
It is not that these folks do not want to be good people -
if by some miracle they are still active Catholics, that argues
for their good will. But they have no idea of Catholicism.
It is a dismal fact that the only reason most Catholics know
the teaching of the Church on the moral questions of our day
- birth control, abortion, stem cell research, euthanasia,
homosexuality, fornication, remarriage after divorce, etc
- is because they hear about it from the secular media. They
certainly do not hear of it from the pulpit. But from the
media they hear, not the reasoning, but the "bottom line,"
the Thou Shalt Not. And because they never hear the reasoning,
they never have the chance to be formed in the Catholic Faith.
The teachings of the Church are bits of unconnected data -
mediaeval-sounding data - to be accepted or, more likely,
rejected at will.
This is the dirty little secret of the Catholic Church in
America. Most of the talk about "Renewal" over the
last forty years has been nonsense; nothing that has lost
sixty percent of its active membership can claim to be 'renewed.'
The Sacred Liturgy was debased into an exercise in group
self-expression; the whole sense of the Catholic Tradition,
to be gratefully received, lived, and passed on, was junked
in favor of a massive group-process exercise which assumes
that Christian history started in the reign of John XXIII.
In light of all of this, perhaps we should go slow, very
slow, before we start to talk about the priest on Sunday morning,
administering the Blessed Sacrament, and his obligation to
refuse Communion to reprobates.
Most priests have no desire to do more harm than good. Day
in, and day out, a parish priest today will run across people
woefully un-grounded in the Faith. Yet the frustrating truth
is that, even if he preaches solidly and consistently from
his pulpit at all Masses and offers the best possible catechesis
and adult education, in this highly mobile society a certain
percentage of his people will have moved during each year,
to go off to places of uncertain teaching and be replaced
by others from places with faulty teaching. Because catechesis
in this country is so woefully inconsistent, a parish priest
can feel as though he's trying to scoop out the ocean with
a soup spoon.
I have watched with interest over these past few weeks,
as discussion has raged in the Church over whether or not
pro-abortion politicians, and now even those who vote for
them, should be admitted to Holy Communion. If you follow
the discussion with care, you'll note that this really isn't
an in-house, Catholic Church discussion. There are two different
Religions talking past each other here.
On the one hand, there are people who understand the teaching
on the Eucharist. They understand Father Trese's point; to
approach the Eucharist in a state of mortal sin is to commit
a sacrilege, for one has, by one's sin, shut the door of one's
heart to Jesus, committed idolatry, really, by preferring
to Him something that one cannot have and have Him also, and
thereby one has literally chosen a false god. I cannot commit
adultery and still walk with Jesus, murder and walk with Jesus,
slander and still possess Him; if I receive Communion with
such sin on my soul, I don't simply lie. I crucify Him again.
That's the Faith.
But then there are those on the other hand. What I just wrote
will make no sense to them. Catholicism is not the pursuit
of holiness to them. They are already okay, 'good people;'
the Eucharist is something like an inclusion ritual, like
birthday cake at a party, something to which everyone is invited.
It would be mean to refuse someone a piece of birthday cake.
Everyone should be welcome, and if you should happen to find
yourself in an African Methodist Episcopal Church at communion
time… well, dig in and help yourself!
Undoubtedly, there are many in this latter group who know
better, or should. But there are many, many more who honestly
don't. They were deprived of their birthright. Eucharistic
discipline is for them a hopelessly medieval concept (mediaeval
is everything before Pius the Twenty-Third, as John Kerry
will tell you). What they have absorbed from their experience
of the Church is that truth is subjective, your answers are
to be found within, and whatever Father X might preach from
his pulpit or teach in his confessional, there's always that
nice Father Y in the next parish with a different set of answers.
The madness of it all is that this has been going on for
so long, and yet we are still enmeshed in this weird denial,
still talking about the past forty years as 'Renewal.' People
are pointing the finger at John Kerry as though they have
no idea that the vast majority of communicants on Sunday are
totally neglecting Confession, and that most Catholics, having
no idea of the rationale for Catholic Moral teachings, pick
and choose among those teachings as they wish. If we truly
cared about our own people as we should, this situation would
be accorded the most urgent priority status. We would move
heaven and earth to develop and implement a clear, consistent,
coordinated, country-wide catechesis, supported by adult education.
And alarm bells would have been rung long ago about the liturgical
abuses which subvert our sense of the sacred.
What a peculiar sight we must present to our nation. Our
bishops publicly contradicting each other on points of discipline,
all the while everyone knows that masses of our people don't
even understand, let alone accept our teaching. And, as a
Church, it all means so little to us that apparently we cannot
bring ourselves to admit that we are in trouble. We've been
robbing our own of their birthright, of that deep, and rich,
and fruitful way of looking at all Reality in light of Him
Who became one of us, and died for us, and loves us.
What a great many things we can find to distract us. Anything,
apparently, anything to avoid having to fix our eyes on Jesus.
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