Posted on 03/02/2010 10:15:38 AM PST by NYer
Editors note: One year ago this month, Catholics in Connecticut mobilized against a proposed law that would severely restrict a pastors authority in his own parish and the bishops as well.
In a four-part series beginning today, Deacon Thomas Davis, associate director of the Pope John Paul II Bioethics Center at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Cromwell, Conn., (www.holyapostles.edu) and a practicing attorney, demonstrates how such a law fits in with parish restructuring proposals of Voice of the Faithful, the national organization that sprang up in the wake of the clerical sexual-abuse revelations of 2002.
Deacon Davis also explores Voice of the Faithfuls connections to dissident theologians and its plans to spread doctrinal error among Catholics.
PART I
The Failed Connecticut Putsch of 2009
On March 5, 2009, the co-chairmen of the Connecticut General Assembly Judiciary Committee introduced Raised Bill 1098 mandating reorganization of Catholic religious corporations.
Under the bills terms, all Catholic parishes in Connecticut would come under the control of lay boards with bishops and pastors holding only nonvoting membership. Although the parishes would remain free to abandon organization under the states religious corporation statutes and restructure as nonstock entities, the attempt to muscle the Church was plainly aimed at eliminating clerical control of parishes.
The genesis of Raised Bill 1098 was the work of Tom Gallagher, a local lawyer who approached legislators with a plan that would have left the bishop and pastors with voting rights, but only in lay-controlled boards. The actual text of the bill eliminated any voting rights for the bishop and pastors, but that was a small side story.
The real story was and remains the active participation of members of Voice of the Faithful in the Diocese of Bridgeport (VOTF-Bpt) in promoting restructuring plans at the parish and diocesan level, as well as other VOTF groups in Connecticut and nationally.
Raised Bill 1098 was supported by VOTF-Bpt, with the qualification that the bishop and pastors should have voting rights, albeit on lay-controlled boards.
Both the Hartford affiliate (VOTF-Hfd) and the national VOTF released press statements asserting that they did not support the bill, but those statements came only after the bill was withdrawn in the face of public, political and legal reactions that consigned it to the legislative dust bin.
Moreover, neither organization expressed outright opposition to legislatively mandated lay majority boards, and neither publicly repudiated the unconstitutional and doctrinally offensive bill while it was still pending.
Deeper investigation suggests more was happening than the press releases revealed: something very much about power and control over doctrine, protests to the contrary notwithstanding.
Clues abound. One officer of VOTF-Bpt is also a board member of the Womans Ordination Conference. VOTF-Hfd, while carefully parroting the party line regarding faithfulness to the Church and nonsupport of R.B. 1098, has repeatedly promoted amendments to the state religious corporation law by providing forums for Gallagher to press his case.
The Connecticut VOTF online e-letter Our Voices, a project closely associated with VOTF-Hfd, included an article by Gallagher advocating change in the religious corporations act (March 2007), a favorable report of a VOTF-Bpt officers statement that Gallaghers approach may be fruitful (May 2007), and a prominent announcement of Gallaghers planned keynote address at a VOTF-Hfd meeting along with an article outlining his proposal calling it long overdue (July/August 2007).
The September/October 2007 issue reported on Gallaghers call for the state attorney general to get involved in financial oversight of Catholic parishes and separately reported at greater length the keynote address he delivered at VOTF-Hfds September 2007 meeting.
In March 2008 it reprinted a letter Gallagher sent to The (Stamford) Advocate crudely suggesting that Catholic pastors are compromised by their ordination promises of obedience and therefore suffer from a conflict of interests in managing the financial affairs of parishes.
VOTFs affinity to Paul Lakeland, a professor at Fairfield University, is also telling. In the face of the justified fury generated by the bills proposed violation of religious liberty, Lakeland joined Gallagher at a March 10, 2009, press conference to request withdrawal of the bill, notwithstanding their support for lay control of parish corporations.
Lakeland, a self-described member of VOTF and member of the oppressed class of laypersons, declared in Liberation of the Laity: In Search of an Accountable Church (Continuum Books, 2007) that the laity must be liberated from the systemic oppression of the hierarchy: First, it will be necessary for the laity to take charge of their own liberation, he wrote. It cannot be the work of bishops or priests, though they can certainly assist. The primary way they can help is by standing aside. Those who have occupied that center stage can stand aside willingly or be pushed aside. That is up to them.
VOTF-Hfd, whose leadership includes a national VOTF board member, invited Lakeland to be its keynote speaker at its March 2008 meeting. He was also a featured speaker at VOTF-Bpts 2008 annual conference. A 2007 issue of Our Voices announced a VOTF-Bpt conference entitled Follow the Money: Financial Accountability in the Catholic Church that featured Lakeland as a speaker.
In 2005 VOTF-Bpt published a proposal for structural change in the Church bearing striking similarities to R.B. 1098, including parish boards with lay-majority control. It also called for term-limited election of bishops, term-limited appointment of pastors subject to a lay committee veto and establishment of lay-controlled parish and diocesan corporations that would own and be freely able to sell unneeded property while retaining to the entire parish membership the right to dissolve the parish and sell or donate its assets if insufficient numbers or other valid reason so warrant. The proposal is linked on the national VOTF website under the Structural Change index of documents.
VOTFs fingerprints are all over Raised Bill 1098. Subsequent articles will examine the flawed theology behind VOTFs agenda, one aimed at wresting authority from the hierarchy and remaking the ministerial priesthood in its own image.
Tomorrow: Flawed theology joined to a political agenda.
While no one takes this crowd seriously, it is important to keep up to date with their activities.
The sad thing is that there are enough people who do and that can end up causing real problems.
Father, forgive these people at VOTF, they know not what they do. Let’s pray for them.
John 8:32 And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.
Egad! What an awful collection of old women (I can say that, I ARE one). They look like men, except for the vestigial bustlines. And such unpleasant expressions . . . .
They don't have religion . . . they suffer from it. They need to get right with God and cheer up.
Lol ... ditto! Fortunately, we missed *that* generation. The good news is that they will soon pass into history, just one more insignificant group of dissenters that grumbled about their faith rather than embracing it.
Yes, well I continue to wonder why these people don’t just start their own church.
I suggest for them an infusion of soy and a trip to the salon.
Puhlease!!! They are Catholic and they feel it is their obligation to bring the church into modern times. They don't want to leave; they just want to shake things up so we can look like other churches.
There’s something terribly wrong there.
I'm no model of sartorial elegance and grooming myself . . . but at least I'm cheerful!
From their mission statement, they are attempting to "3. Shape structural change within Church." This is intended to make a "democratic" Church which clearly violates the hierarchical structure which has always existed and is reemphasized in Vatican II Lumen Gentium. The chairman James Muller states in a National Catholic Reporter article on April 26, 2002, ÏWe have donation without representation, and we have to change that.Ó Also on a CNN interview dated April 29, 2002, the chairman desires cafeteria Catholicism: "... our goal is to provide a democracy for the laity, so that the laity can decide what they want and then counterbalance the absolute power, which we have now of the hierarchy." See more details below. Description Author Comments When Wolves Dress Like Sheep: Close Look at Voice of the Faithful Deal Hudson But notice the bait-and-switch tactic used [by VOTF] in listing its three goals. Everyone can rally behind the cry of supporting faithful priests and the abused, but "change within the church" could encompass a variety of "changes" that are well outside the Church's teaching. (off-site) Danny DeBruin As the subject says. (off-site) Paul Likoudis VOTF is a clone of Call to Action. (off-site) Rev. Thomas A. Frechette Pastoral letter in response to parishioner queries regarding VOTF. (off-site)
Documents Revealing the Truth about Voice of the Faithful
And if they weren't hell bent (I speak advisedly) on making trouble, they could have saved a lot of bother by joining the Episcopalians. Then they could do anything they wanted and even be priestesses.
I take confort knowing that this VOTF is slowly is falling by the wayside of history. Plus what gives me hope is that the young people are coming more into faith in Christ.
Touche....they envy men.
no frills, no long hair, no makeup...
Looks like they need a consultation from the “gay men for the straight man hating ex nun”...
;-)
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