Wednesday, November 5, 2014

A splintering church?

The piece below is from the National Catholic Reporter.

Divisions within the Irish Catholic Church can seem at times enormous. Members of religious congregations might well share nothing in common with one another. Is there really a common 'theology' that is shared and lived by religious congregations? Or is it just an amlgam of people who happen to find themselves where they are?

"Many conservative Catholics have long viewed Pope Francis with suspicion thanks to his effort to shift the church's focus away from a culture war agenda and toward a more welcoming approach and a greater emphasis on serving the poor.
But last month's controversial Vatican summit on the modern family, with the push by Francis and his allies to translate that inclusive view into concrete policies on gays and divorced and remarried Catholics, for example, seems to have marked a tipping point, with some on the right raising the specter of a schism -- a formal split that is viewed as the "nuclear option" for dissenters.
New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, a Catholic and a conservative, crystallized the peril in an Oct. 25 column warning the pope not to "break the church" to promote his goals, saying that if Francis continues to alienate conservative Catholics, it could lead to "a real schism."

Douthat had raised the possibility of "an outright schism" earlier this year, as well, and his warnings have been echoed by a number of other church leaders and commentators. The anxiety on the righthas also drawn increasing media speculation about the possibility of conservatives splintering off."

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