Friday, June 7, 2019

In the Spirit of Pentecost, join in this important effort to end clericalism in the Catholic Church.

A collaborative effort 
Voice of the Faithful I Association of U.S. Catholic Priests I FutureChurch
In the Spirit of Pentecost, join in this important effort to end clericalism in the Catholic Church. 

Read our press release, download the resource, and begin to do your part to bring awareness about the destructive dynamics of clericalism in our parishes and communities.

Pope Francis has repeatedly called out the clerical culture’s danger to the Catholic Church and its faithful, for example, calling clericalism “our ugliest perversion.” Now a nationwide Catholic priests’ organization and two international lay reform groups have developed the BridgeDialogues: Laity & Clergy re-Imagining Church Together to show Catholics what they can do to recognize and prevent this perversion that blocks the laity from achieving their full potential in the Church.
 
Clericalism has been defined in various ways. In a 2011 report criticizing the Church's “Study of the Causes and Context of the Sexual Abuse Crisis,” VOTF defined clericalism as “an overriding set of beliefs and behaviors in which the clergy view themselves as different, separate, and exempt from the norms, rules and consequences that apply to everyone else in society.” As the Pope has said, “Clerics feel they are superior, they are far from the people,” and clericalism “can be fostered by priests or by lay people” where the laity show clergy excessive deference because they assume the clergy are morally superior.
 
The BridgeDialogues is a collaborative effort of the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests, FutureChurch and Voice of the Faithful. They offer:
 
  • prompts for opening up discussions addressing clericalism, including topics such as the subtle ways that language and pastoral relationships can feed clericalism;
  • examples of how you experience clericalism barriers and what you can do about them;
  • tips for how you can guard against clericalism in your own behaviors, while removing the barriers others may use to hold you on “your side” of the lay/clergy divide.
 
The BridgeDialogues’ many resources are available online at bridgedialogues.org.
 
Deborah Rose-Milavec, FutureChurch executive director, said, “Although some form of clerical culture will always be with us as long as we make distinctions between priests and laity, we can all work together to reduce its deleterious effects. The BridgeDialogues provides the resources to begin a dialogue in your parish or community to look at the subtle ways that language and pastoral relationships can feed clericalism and how all Catholics experience those barriers.”
 
Donna B. Doucette, VOTF executive director, added, “We must make ourselves, priests and laity, aware of a clerical culture that has so many damaging consequences. Many Catholics are unaware of how embedded those effects are. Priests typically live aside and apart from the people they should serve—they are culturally and often physically far removed from the realities of the communities that surround them. Yet instead of trying to bridge the separation, too often lay people contribute to it. And some priests, of course, often don’t realize it should be bridged.”
 
Said AUSCP member Louis Arceneaux, a priest of the Congregation of the Mission living in New Orleans, “For our wounded Church to grow, we need organizations of women and men, of laity and clergy, to minister together. As an AUSCP member, I am delighted to be working with FutureChurch and Voice of the Faithful in promoting the BridgeDialogues, which affords me personally and our association a wonderful opportunity to be part of an important priests/laity collaboration.” 

This Pentecost, we invite you to join with us and rally around the Spirit's call to rebuild our Church by amplifying these and other important voices. With your help, we will rebuild -- heart by heart, mind by mind, empowered Catholic by empowered Catholic. 
Donate at the $125 level or higher and receive a copy of A Pope Francis Lexiconwith our thanks. This anthology of essays on key words and phrases from Pope Francis' ministry, edited by Cindy Wooden and Joshua McElwee, boasts an impressive array of global voices.

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