After the Heart of God

Author: Most Rev. Julian Porteous

After the Heart of God

Most Rev. Julian Porteous, Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney

Bishop Julian Porteous on the life and ministry of priests at the beginning of the third millennium

To coincide with the start of the Year for Priests, Bishop Julian Porteous, one of the Auxiliary Bishopsof Sydney and Episcopal Vicar for the Renewal and Evangelisation within the Archdiocese of Sydney, Australia, has released his latest book which was launched by Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of Sydney, at Cathedral House on 24 June [2009]. Following is an excerpt from the book.

Bishop Julian Porteous, Afterthe Heart of God: The Life and Ministry of Priests at the Beginning of the Third Millennium. Ballan: Connor Court, 2009; pp. 170. AUS$ 29.95. ISBN 978-1-921421-22-3.

The world has changed much in the past forty years. There have been significant realignments in the political landscape of the world. The dominating issues in the 1960s now seem so distant as we look at what pre-occupies the world in the first decade of the third millennium. Society, particularly in Western First World countries, has changed quite dramatically. There has been unprecedented and accelerated change. We live in a world of change.

Australia has witnessed significant re-ordering of its social fabric. The cultural, moral and spiritual framework in which life in Australia is lived has evolved dramatically over the past four decades.

The context, "ad extra", in which the priesthood is now exercised, has, been influenced by many factors. Some that deserve particular mention will be briefly explored. They are just a few of many that could be considered.

Secularisation

The processes of secularisation and the decline in practical participation in the life of the Church by many baptised Catholics are clearly evident to all thinking members of the Church. Priests who have exercised their ministry over the past forty years are only too aware of changes in the religious outlook of Catholics. We do not need to rehearse the figures that tell of significant decline in religious life in our nation. There has been a significant drop-off in attendance at Sunday Mass. There is a portion of those who could be called "the post-Vatican II generation" — those now in their fifties — who are alienated from the Church, wanting an institution more aligned with contemporary culture and contemporary attitudes to key moral issues. Many young people are quite oblivious to the Catholic faith; to them the Faith is irrelevant to their lives. The Church faces a real challenge in winning back its members to a real participation in its spiritual and sacramental life.

Priests see this daily in their parish ministry. Couples coming for marriage, or presenting their children for Baptism, or families involved in the preparation of their children for First Holy Communion or Confirmation, want to receive the sacrament, but have no real intention of attending Mass regularly. The constant struggle with this issue can wear priests down so that they come to acquiesce to what is seen as the inevitable. This is not only demanding on the priest, but can be disheartening for his ministry. The priest can lose heart and come to his pastoral work with a simple human perspective, feeling at a loss to be able to communicate on the spiritual level. The people are simply not interested.

Individualism

Our age is an age of the individual. Personal rights, personal self-determination and individual freedom are regarded as absolutes by many. Along with this view has developed an attitude that each person is finally answerable only to himself. Acting according to one's "conscience" is considered the paramount right. It is commonly assumed that persons can form their own conscientious position on critical issues and are then free to follow what they have determined as right for them. In this world view, relativism has flourished and many people resent any moral or spiritual authority interfering in what they view as their own sacrosanct domain. Many hold as a matter of absolute conviction the "primacy of conscience".

Priests experience this particularly when people make it clear to them that they do not accept that the Church can, as they would see it, dictate what they should believe and do. In fact priests can encounter a great deal of antagonism, even from practising Catholics, concerning the positions that the Church has adopted on certain moral and disciplinary issues. The issue that initiated this attitude is undoubtedly that of the teaching on birth control, but it now encompasses Church teaching on homosexuality, the role of women and bio-ethical issues. Many Catholics adopt the attitude that they can pick and choose what to accept in Church teaching.

Relativism

Many forces have combined to foster the view held, by so many today that there are no longer any absolutes. The spirit of the age is that there is no absolute truth — there is "your truth" and "my truth". All things are seen to be in constant flux so that what we see today will be different tomorrow. There is the promotion of the subjective view of reality over the objective truth of things. People favour a plurality of opinion rather than the pursuit of what is right. Even religions are considered relative to one another: Christians have Christ, Muslims, have the Prophet Mohammed, Hindus have Krishna. "We are all going the same way" is often the view about the comparative worth of the different religious traditions. According to this way of thinking the great sin is to be convinced about one's faith or religion, and thus viewed as a fundamentalist.

Pope Benedict has been a vocal critic of this "dictatorship of relativism". The words of the then Cardinal Ratzinger rang out at a Mass on 18 April 2005 just prior to the Conclave to elect the successor to Pope John Paul II. His words are worth offering here:

How many winds of doctrine have we known in recent decades, how many ideological currents, how many ways of thinking. The small boat of the thought of many Christians has often been tossed about by these waves — flung from one extreme to another: from Marxism to liberalism, even to libertinism; from collectivism to radical individualism; from atheism to a vague religious mysticism; from agnosticism to syncretism and so forth. Every day new sects spring up, and what St Paul says about human deception and the trickery that strives to entice people into error (see Eph 4:14) comes true.

Today, having a clear faith based on the Creed of the Church is often labelled as fundamentalism. Whereas relativism, that is, letting oneself 'be "tossed .here and there, carried about by every wind of doctrine", seems the only attitude that can cope with modern times. We are building adictatorship of relativism that does not recognise anything as definitive and whose ultimate goal consists solely of one's own ego and desires (Mass "Pro eligendo romano pontifice").

This relativism has become all pervasive. The priest in the course of his pastoral work encounters this on a daily basis when people claim that there can he no definitive teachings, and the Church's position on any issue is seen as just one perspective, competing in the marketplace of ideas.

Taken from:
L'Osservatore Romano
Weekly Edition in English
22 July 2009, page 9

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