Monday, December 30, 2013

HAPPY NEW YEAR

    As a new year begins, we thank God for Pope Francis and for the hope he brings as he calls the church to respond more lovingly and effectively to Jesus' deep concern for the poor and outcast.  And may we also hope for a church that will become a more vibrantly effective People of God, a church in which all the baptized are listened to and respected, and which extends its loving care to the whole of our societies and cultures.

    When we say that God gave us Pope Francis and God leads the church, we speak the truth.  More precisely, we say that the church has effectively responded to God, who is ever present within all of us, prompting us to respond to him/her in a lovingly creative, healing and world-transforming way.  

   The history of the church clearly shows that we have not always responded to God as God intended.  Given the challenges the church faces, e.g., the still not fully resolved sex abuse tragedy, the questions of gay marriage, marriage after divorce, the rights of women, religious freedom in our American democracy, etc., our harmful responses can still occur.  

   Throughout the world, people are suffering.  Waiting is not an option.  In the coming year, in whatever way we can, may we be ever more sensitive to the Spirit's presence and intentions, and may we respond to the Spirit ever more positively and effectively. 

All blessings of peace and love,

Anthony  


Monday, December 23, 2013

MERRY CHRISTMAS

   This Christmas, Pope Francis has brought Catholics--and indeed, the whole world--closer to the truth of the real Jesus who came into the world to bring us the Good News that we could live more luminously human lives with him and one another, now and forever.  As Jesus did, Francis is stressing that the heart of the Good News is our caring for the poor, the hungry, the sick and outcast.

   May all that we do at Christmas and throughout the year be a true and effective expression of Jesus' deep, caring love for all the world, but especially for his needy loved ones.

   Personally, I want to thank all of you for being part of our blog community. May what I write and what you read and share with others bring us closer to Christ, and in Christ, closer together in caring love for one another and for the world.

Anthony

Thursday, December 19, 2013

SHARING AN HONOR

   On December 5th, the Fox Leadership Program at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, PA  honored me at a "Leadership Event," for my 50 years' effort to keep Vatican II alive and bring the Catholic church into the 21st century.

   The audience included Penn students and faculty, along with the Penn Newman Center ministry, where I ministered from 1965 to 1970; three deacons from St. Charles Seminary, where I was a faculty member; and a three-person panel:  a Rabbi, the Protestant University President, and a Jesuit priest who had been President of Catholic University in Washington, DC.

   Dr. John DiIulio, Fox Professor, was the host.  After introducing me, he showed 17 minutes of an 80 minute video that Fox produced of me.  You can get a look at me by going to
www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QvwxECUias.  In the upper left hand corner of the page that comes up, click on History and look for the video titled: Lessons in Leadership--and Life  -- Anthony T. Massimini.

   The evening ended with a wonderful dinner.

   I share this honor with you because, during the evening, I quipped that the best definition of a leader I ever heard is that a leader is "someone who has followers."  So I share the leadership honor with you who read this blog.  

   

Monday, December 9, 2013

EVANGELII GAUDIUM: THE JOY OF THE GOOD NEWS OF JESUS CHRIST

   Pope Francis' recent Exhortation has certainly caught the attention of many people, both in and out of the Catholic church, and both positive and negative.  Here is my view of the document.

   The document is about evangelization, i.e., about spreading the good news of Jesus Christ to the whole world.  In the past, impelled by the Reformation, evangelization focused on converting non-Catholics to our faith.  We did this mostly by telling non-Catholics that they were wrong and should convert or "come back" to Catholicism.  Vatican II tried to change this approach by stressing ecumenism.  But the ecumenical movement, after starting out very well, has faded.

   Francis now introduces his way of evangelization:

1.  His key word is, "Joy!"  First and foremost, let us Catholics rejoice that Jesus was born, that he rose from the dead and that his Spirit is now with us and within us and the entire world--making us and the entire world sacred and dignified in a new, resurrected way.  In Christ's Spirit, Francis says, we meet people--all people--on the sacred ground of our common, luminous human dignity.

2.  We base our relationships with all people on our personal experience of God and on our personal relationship with God.  We first discern God within ourselves and all others.  Our first view of others therefore is not physical, political, economic, academic, scientific, artistic, etc., but spiritual.  In every relationship, we are meeting with and relating to a person or persons who are children of God and images of God.

3.  The God whom we worship is not an abstract God, or a God distant from us, e.g., "up in heaven."  Our God became one of us and shared our humanity with us here on earth (while remaining God).  In living with us on earth, in the flesh, our God shared and shares in our politics, economics, academics, science, arts, etc., calling and empowering us to get involved in them in order to move them forward toward fulfillment and wholeness in love.  In the process, we use our best prudential judgment as we espouse the various views and use the various methods available to move them forward toward wholeness in love.

4.  True to the mind and heart of Jesus, Francis focused his exhortation on alleviating the distress of the poor.  Particularly, he focused on the economic policy called, "trickle-down economics," and pointed out the obvious fact that, as we know in the United States, it has not worked.  I say, "obvious fact," because in the last three decades or so, the gap between the rich and the poor in the United States has grown to a very destructive degree.  To deny this fact is to deny reality.  This situation is clearly spiritual; in fact, it is a spiritual emergency.  If Francis did not pay attention to it, he would be derelict in his responsibility.

5.  For our part, therefore, the joyful message of Christ that we have to give to the world heavily presses us to get actively engaged in making our political-economic structure better so that it does not foster the sinful inequality that it now does.

    The response to Francis' exhortation has been met with joyful approval from some Catholics, anemic approval from many American bishops and some other Catholics, and viciously insulting attacks from the far right wing of American politics.  How do we account for this?

1.  The Catholics who approve of the document are those, in my view, who see that Francis is expressing the mind and heart of Jesus himself.  Jesus disapproved of the rich in his society, not because they were rich, but because they were using their wealth to oppress the poor.  His society suffered from the "structures of inequality" just as our society does today.

2.  Some American bishops are somewhat embarrassed by Francis' instruction not to spend so much time and energy pressing the doctrines of abortion, gay marriage and contraception.  He didn't say they should change these doctrines, but that they should expand their approach and embrace the entire Gospel message of Christ, with special emphasis on the excluded poor.  But our bishops are appointees of Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI, both of whom, while clearly expressing the same insight as Francis' into political-economic structures,  stressed doctrinal rigidity preached within the church's centralized power structure.  Jesus was opposed to both rigidity and the power structure of his theocratic society.  So today's bishops need to do some prayerful discerning.

3.  Some Catholics are angry because Francis did not include the things they are interested in, e.g., clearing up the sex abuse tragedy, and giving true spiritual power to the laity.  True, these are essential challenges.  As a first step, Francis just created a commission to study anew how to handle the sex abuse tragedy.  And he is working on the basic problem of reforming the Curia--which is the closest thing I know to a truly immovable object.  So let's be fair; Francis' burden is extremely heavy.  For now, let's let Francis operate on his own time-line and not on ours.

4.  Reasonable disagreement with Francis is certainly acceptable.  But the vicious, insulting personal attacks on Francis coming from the far right of American politics deserve the harshest rebuttal.  This is a disgraceful outburst coming from people who are wedded to a destructive, self-serving ideology that favors the rich against the poor, and who are therefore stung by Francis' true discernment of Christ and the Gospel.  
     Also, some of these people are maliciously lying about what Francis said.  For example they are saying that Francis attacked capitalism and is a communist, when the truth is that he is rightly criticizing the misuse of capitalism that results in creating hopeless poor people.  Even worse, these critics are frightening and angering uninformed people to the point where such people agree with them, to their own serious harm, both economic and spiritual.  What is truly frightening is that these attackers are flourishing in some parts of our society.  It is our responsibility to counter these attacks with the truth of what Francis is saying, and with the truth of our faith.