Seven Key Trends in the Church Today
by Jack Wintz,
O.F.M. |

This year (1998) Catholic Update is celebrating its 25th anniversary. It started in March 1973 as a small publication mailed to a few thousand readers. It now reaches well over a half million readers each month. |
This anniversary issue answers the question: Where are we as a Church at this point in history? What are the major trends in Catholic thinking and practice today? I lay no claim to being a learned theologian. Yet, my 25 years as the editor of this widely circulated monthly have given me a unique vantage point.
For the past two-and-a-half decades, my co-workers and I have kept a close eye on which Catholic Update topics have been in
greatest demand in Catholic parishes and schools around the
country. Studying our monthly distribution and listening to
feedback from readers and religious educators has been like
holding a finger on the Church's pulse.
The seven trends briefly explored here all flow from the Second
Vatican Council. From the outset, the aim of Catholic Update
has been to explain faithfully the teachings of Vatican II
(1963-1965) and of the post-Vatican II Church. We pledge to
continue this mission into the third millennium.
Pope John Paul II seems to approve: "The best preparation for
the new millennium," he writes in The Coming Third Millennium,
#20, "can only be expressed by a renewed commitment to apply,
as faithfully as possible, the teachings of Vatican II to the
life of every individual and of the whole Church." Taking a cue
from the Holy Father, we conclude each trend with an
"application for the new millennium."
1. Lay ministry explosion
A familiar scene today in Catholic parishes is that of lay
women and men gathered around the altar at Communion time as
eucharistic ministers. Also observable at Mass are other lay
ministersservers, lectors and music ministers.
These very visible liturgical ministers are but a reminder of
the even wider variety of lay men and women who minister and
serve the Church as catechists, youth ministers, hospital
chaplains, members of bereavement committees, lay
administrators of priestless parishes, outreach workers
distributing food to the poor.
Behind this multiplication of lay ministries within the Church
is the growing awareness that all Catholics are called by their
Baptism to engage in ministry or service to the Catholic
community and, indeed, to the world at large.
Though the distinct role of the ordained minister is not
diminished by the expansion of lay ministries, the Holy Spirit
is clearly leading us to a "more inclusive" model of Church.
Women are certainly among those becoming more and more engaged
in Church ministry today. Most women believe that their
potential has not yet been fully tapped. What full ministry for
women should mean in the future is a sensitive question seeking
further discernment under the light of the Spirit.
Other groups awaiting fuller participation in the Church are
ethnic minorities, Catholics with disabilities and many other
groups whose gifts have not been fully respected or utilized.
2. Enriched liturgies
The liturgical renewal that swept across most parts of the
Catholic world after Vatican II has brought new life and vigor
to the celebration of the Eucharist and other sacraments in the
majority of our parishes. With the new sacramental rites
initiated by Vatican II and the replacement of Latin with the
local languages, Catholics are generally participating more
fully, actively and joyfully in these rituals.
In the era before Vatican II, the priest celebrated the Mass in
Latin. For the most part, his back was to the people and the
altar seemed far away. Although the style of liturgy conveyed a
rich sense of awe then, it was easier for the faithful to fall
into the role of silent spectators.
Now it is much easier for the assembly to be more actively
engaged and to see that "all of us" are truly celebrating the
Eucharist along with the priest.
Vatican II's Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy supported this
development, urging "that all the faithful be led to...full,
conscious and active participation in liturgical celebrations"
(#14).
Following the lead of Vatican II, the Church has also been
stressing the communal dimension of the sacraments, seeing them
not as private rituals but as "community events."
The RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults) is one of
the most dramatic signs of this new approach to the sacraments
and to liturgical renewal in the contemporary Church. Before
the RCIA was reestablished in the Church in 1972 (appearing in
English in 1974), the typical approach to adult Baptism in the
Catholic Church left the candidates quite isolated from the
parish community.
Preparation often consisted of six or so weeks of priestly
instructions followed by a more or less private Baptism on a
Sunday afternoon in a dim corner of the church, attended only
by a tiny cluster of relatives or friends.
Today, candidates for the RCIA become part of a step-by-step
process that often extends beyond a year and involves sponsors,
catechists and, indeed, the whole parish. It culminates in a
public initiation ceremony at the Easter Vigil. This spirit of
communal involvement is reflected in the other sacraments as
well.
3. Deeper love of Scripture
In recent decades, the Church has encouraged its members to
cherish the Scriptures and to make use of new methods of
Scripture study. These attitudes were reaffirmed by the Second
Vatican Council and subsequent Church documents.
More and more Catholics are learning to improve their
understanding of the Bible through the benefits of historical
research, literary analysis and the findings of archaeology.
Church documents have wisely steered Catholics away from
literal-minded approaches and from reading the Bible as if it
were a scientific textbook on the origins of the universe.
In short, more Catholics are reading the Bible todayand with a
more solid understandingthan at any other time in its 2000-year
history. More educated in general, the laity are getting a
deeper grounding in Scripture. Lay women and men in growing
numbers are attending theology schools, joining Scripture study
groups or reading an ever-expanding array of good articles or
books on the subject. No longer are priests and religious the
only scriptural experts.
It should also be noted that since Vatican II, Catholics have
been exposed to a much wider variety of Scripture readings at
Sunday Mass through the introduction of a three-year cycle of
readings. In other sacramental rites as well, the use of
scriptural readings has been enhanced.
As more and more Catholics are richly nourished by the
life-giving word of God, they become better instruments of
evangelization and of the world's transformation.
4. Growing hunger for God
Despite the pervasive secularism and materialism of our
timesand maybe because of themmany people today are hungering
and searching for something more profound, for something
spiritual or transcendent. There is a movement toward prayer
and contemplation.
At Catholic Update we have seen that during the seasons of Lent
and Advent there is an unmistakable appetite for aids to daily
prayer, for Updates that nurture spiritual growth. There is a
need to get away from the rat race and the media bombardment
and to withdraw to the quiet places of the heart where
contemplation is possible.
Many people today from all walks of life are seeking a closer
union with God, perhaps by learning the art of centering prayer
or other meditation skills. I know from experience that there
is a long waiting list for people who want to make a retreat at
Gethsemani Abbey in Kentucky. Students at St. Bonaventure
University in southwestern New York go regularly for
contemplative weekends to Mt. Irenaeus, a Franciscan
mountaintop retreat run by the friars of the university.
Many Catholics say they have as much a need to deepen their
relationship with God as to learn about a Church doctrine or
point of morality or liturgical innovation. More than
information about God, these Christians want an experience of
God through prayer.
5. Broader view of salvation
One of the most warmly received notions coming out of Vatican
II is that salvation is not solely concerned with the saving of
souls but with the saving of the whole human person, body and
soul, and all of creation as well.
Many find this holistic view of salvation appealing because we
naturally do not want any genuine part of our human experience
to be lost. The famous formula of St. Irenaeus, often quoted at
the time of the Second Vatican Council, captures this notion
well: "The glory of God is the human person fully alive!"
We began seeing more clearly in the Gospels that Jesus' mission
on this earth was not only to set the human heart free from
sin, as central as that might be, but also to set men and women
free from disease and oppression and everything that hinders
their development as human beings created by God and destined
for eternal life. When we profess our belief in
the resurrection of the body, this kind of integral salvation
is implied.
The bishops of Vatican II, in The Church in the Modern World,
tried to foster an intimate bond between the yearnings of the
Church and those of all humanity. This great document begins
with the words: "The joys and hopes, the grief and anguish of
the people of our time, especially those who are poor or
afflicted, are the joys and hopes, the grief and anguish of the
followers of Christ. Nothing that is genuinely human fails to
find an echo in their hearts."
Pope John Paul II expressed this attitude very powerfully
during his first visit as pope to the United States in October
of 1979. His very first words in Boston, his first stop, were:
"I want to greet all Americans without distinction. I want to
tell everyone that the pope is your friend and a servant of
your
humanity."
Every authentic dimension of human existence is meant to be
saved and brought to wholeness. As the pope's words suggest, we
are to help all brothers and sisters come to their full
humanity as men and women created in the image and likeness of
God and redeemed by Christ.
6. Rise of the social gospel
In 1983 the bishops of the United States issued a pastoral
letter on war and peace entitled The Challenge of Peace. In it
they discussed the morality of war and of nuclear weapons. In
1986 they issued another major pastoral letter on the U.S.
economy to help Catholics form their conscience on economic
matters.
The bishops have published many other statements touching on
political and social issues. Increasingly, these statements are
being read by conscientious Catholics. When Catholic Update
published condensed versions of the peace pastoral and the
economic pastoral, requests poured in for more than a million
extra copies in each instance. This is a clear sign that
Catholics today are attuned to Catholic social teaching and to
what is called the "social gospel."
Some sectors of the Christian community, however, are not
always comfortable with the Church's involvement in public
issues of this kind. They sometimes criticize the Church for
"meddling in politics." Perhaps, as Catholics, we need a better
understanding of the true nature of Jesus' saving mission (as
conveyed in trend five above). On the whole, however, today's
Catholics are coming to see that the mission of the Church is
to heal unjust political structures and laws as well as unjust
hearts.
Martin Luther King, Jr., once shed light on this point during a
civil-rights speech in 1964. He said: "The law cannot make a
man love me, but it can keep him from lynching me!" King helped
his generation to see that Christian evangelization seeks to
transform not only sinful hearts but also the sinful laws and
customs of society that oppress and dehumanize our sisters and
brothers.
This way of thinking was officially adopted by the World Synod
of Bishops meeting in Rome in 1971 . In their statement Justice
in the World, the bishops declared: "Action on behalf of
justice and participation in the transformation of the world
fully appear to us as an essential dimension of preaching the
gospel."
Catholic social teaching reminds us that it is not sufficient
to passively await the arrival of God's final Kingdom in the
next life where all tears and oppression will be wiped away.
Awaiting the final Kingdom is very important, but we are also
called to help make that Kingdom present now, by working as
God's instruments to remove injustice, discrimination, poverty,
disease from our midst.
7. Integration and new growth
What is happening today in our Church as we start entering a
new millennium? We seem like passengers in an airplane circling
the airport in a holding pattern waiting for the weather to
clear so we can see where we will ultimately land. What
happened to the fast rate of change we experienced in those
first years after the Council?
The pace has certainly slowed down a bit. The Vatican and the
world's bishops seem to have decided that the Church needs to
take a break after so much turbulence and change. However one
explains it, we seem to find ourselves in a process of
consolidation and integration, as if taking stock of where we
are.
Perhaps the Church can be compared to an individual going
through an identity crisis or a time of confusing personal
change. Such individuals need time to reflect and get their act
together before moving on. Maybe the Church leaders sensed that
it was time for the whole Church to catch up with itselfto step
back a bit and to put all the pieces of our fragmented vision
into a new whole. To some degree, this need was satisfied when
the bishops put together the Catechism of the Catholic Church,
published in 1992 (appearing in English in 1994).
For many Catholics around the world who were asking "What is
happening to us and to our identity?" the publication of the
new catechism was like holding up a mirror for us and showing
us a safe, orderly reflection of who we are. It helped us as a
Church to understand where we were at this point in our
journey, shoring up our sense of self and giving us strength
for our next stage of growth and a new flowering of the gospel.
At the same time, a number of Catholics, including theologians,
are not convinced that the full brunt and scope of Vatican II
teachings have been adequately reflected in the catechism.
According to Pope John Paul II, the new catechism has given us
a "new synthesis" of the "richness of the teaching of the
Church following the Second Vatican Council" (Crossing the
Threshold of Hope, p. 164). Catholics agree by and large that
the catechism is a valuable resource for the Church and for
religious educators today. Surely, it has helped the Church
integrate insights from Vatican II with traditional Catholic
teaching.
Other theologians and religious educators are also helping the
Church put the teachings of Catholicism (those before, during
and after the Council) into a comprehensive system. In its own
way, I believe, the Catholic Update series has been helping
Catholics understand how the teachings of the Church have been
enriched by insights of Vatican II.
But no matter how carefully we try to put all the truths of the
Church into an orderly arrangement, we know that we must remain
open to new questions needing new answers and to new challenges
of growth from the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit, we have been taught, is like the wind. It
cannot be boxed in or held in place. We have no idea when the Holy
Spirit might tap some new follower of Christ on the shoulder, as
happened to Pope John XXIII, and say, "Brother John or Sister Joan, it's
time to open more windows; get ready for another Pentecost!" |
Jack Wintz, O.F.M., is editor of Catholic Update and editor of
St. Anthony Messenger magazine. He is also the author of the
inspirational book Lights: Revelations of God's Goodness (St.
Anthony Messenger Press).
Extracted from
http://www.americancatholic.org/Newsletters/CU/ac0198.asp
AmericanCatholic.org
Copyright 1996-2002 St. Anthony Messenger Press.
All rights reserved.
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