Before convening its second annual meeting last month, a fledgling
organization of U.S. priests that wants to reform the Catholic Church
was tweaked by critics as the last gasp of a dying liberal Catholicism.
But when the members the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests
gathered in Seattle on June 24, they wound up adopting fewer than half
of the proposals on their agenda and voted down the most controversial
item: a call for the church to examine opening the priesthood to women
and married men.
The Rev. Dave Cooper, a priest from Milwaukee who heads the
1,000-member AUSCP, said Tuesday (July 2) that the middle course charted
by the 140 delegates reflected a goal of promoting dialogue, not laying
down markers for a confrontation with the hierarchy.
“We realized that if we hope to dialogue with bishops we have to find
bridges to do that,” Cooper said. If the group had adopted the
resolution on ordaining women priests – a ban that the Vatican has said
is not open for discussion – “it would have become an obstacle, a
barrier, rather than a bridge.”
On the other hand, he said, now the group is being criticized by some “who accuse us of a lack of courage.”
“No, it’s not a lack of courage,” he said. “It’s wisdom. We need to know how to move forward.”
Among the six proposals passed by the priests at the three-day AUSCP
convention was a resolution urging the church to “exercise … authority
in a collegial manner through consensus decision-making processes.”
Another expressed support for Pope Francis in his own effort to reform
the church, and called for the participation of laity and clergy in the
selection of bishops.
Those
are hardly cries for revolution. In fact, the most controversial
resolutions the priests voted for were a call to ordain women as deacons
– an order that ranks below that of the priesthood – and for
reintroducing general absolution for forgiving sins rather than
restricting the rite of confession to a private one-on-one conversation
with a priest. Those proposals have also been supported by a number of
bishops.
Besides voting down the proposal to open a discussion about ordaining
women and married men as priests, the delegates rejected six other
resolutions. One would have asked the U.S. bishops “to work to resolve
the problem of (the) precipitous decline” in the number of active
priests.
Another sought permission to use the 1974 version of the Mass
that was recently supplanted by a new translation that has been widely
criticized for its stilted language.
The decision not to call for wider use of the 1974 Mass may have been the biggest surprise of the voting.
One of the featured speakers at the gathering was recently retired
Bishop Donald Trautman of Erie, Pa., who was a vocal opponent of the new
translation during the many years it took for Rome to convince the U.S.
hierarchy to adopt the new missal.
Trautman, who received the group’s Pope John XXIII Award, blasted the
new language of the rites as “flawed, awkward and clumsy,” according to
a report in National Catholic Reporter.
“Our Lord did not speak above the heads of his hearers. He used the
language of the people,” Trautman said. But he also said he was “a
pragmatist” and doubted that a call to reinstate the old Mass would have
much impact even if the AUSCP passed it.
In his remarks, Trautman reflected the hopes of many in the AUSCP
that Francis’ election might signal a return to the values of
collegiality and a pastoral approach to ministry that were raised by the
Second Vatican Council 50 years ago.
“We have witnessed and endured turning the clock back. We have
experienced a lessening of collaboration and dialogue,” Trautman said in
a homily at Mass with the delegates.
“Yes, Holy Father, your brothers and co-workers … stand with you and
pray that the clocks not be turned back, but ahead. We pray that the
church would read the signs of our times and implement the promptings of
the Holy Spirit.”