Posted on 05/06/2011 5:58:37 PM PDT by Chi-townChief
I was going to start this column with a quote from St. Thomas Aquinas warning against obedience to church superiors in all things.
But I am neither a theologian nor a Catholic, so Id better leave debates about religious dogma to those who know it better than I.
What I do know something about are the problems facing Chicago neighborhoods.
Crime. Unemployment. Drugs.
I have been writing about those things, or more accurately their consequences, for more than three decades now.
And thats why I understand a little bit about the battles that have been fought by Michael Pfleger, the pastor of St. Sabina Parish on the South Side.
Pfleger is in a different kind of battle now. Hes in a fight with his church leader, Cardinal Francis George, who suspended Pfleger from his pastoral duties and temporarily replaced him as pastor.
The church congregation is in open rebellion and earlier this week took out a full-page ad in the Chicago Sun-Times to make its case for retaining Pfleger as pastor.
Pfleger has been a lightning rod for criticism. He also has been at odds with cardinals of the Chicago Archdiocese for nearly 30 years.
I have called Pfleger a good man in the past and stand by that description.
But he is not a perfect man. I have not met any of those in my lifetime. All of us are flawed.
He is different than most other men I have met in that he refuses to accept the human condition as it exists. He believes you dont have to wait for the afterlife for things to get better and that through faith in God, people can create miracles here on earth.
And he has built a congregation at St. Sabina that believes in social justice as much as it believes in religious doctrine. In fact, the two are inseparable at St. Sabina, as some might contend they are in the New Testament.
The parish has a school to educate neighborhood children, has launched a program to retrain people for jobs, has an economic development arm to attract merchants and has developed and cultivated leadership skills among members of its congregation.
Pfleger has organized campaigns against street gangs and drug dealers. He has cultivated friendships with key Chicago political leaders and even developed a few of them within his parish. He has also railed repeatedly against racism.
All of that has made him the target of hate mail and death threats.
Still, he has built a congregation that once numbered a few hundred into thousands. St. Sabina, once on the verge of economic collapse, is now financially self-sufficient.
But Cardinal George claims that Pfleger lied to him. He contends that during a private discussion, the priest indicated he was ready to step aside as pastor and take another position.
Pfleger was offered the presidency of Leo High School, a Catholic school that is financially failing.
A short time later, Pfleger appeared on a radio show and said he might consider leaving the Catholic Church if he could no longer be shepherd to his flock, implying that he was being forced to leave.
George felt this was a public betrayal and distortion of their private conversation.
Pfleger would later let it be known that George was the one who distorted their discussion and what he said during his radio interview.
In a letter to George, released by the lay leadership of St. Sabina, Pfleger had apparently offered to take control of Leo if it were placed under the authority of his church and called St. Sabinas Leo High School.
Pfleger, it turns out, has been planning to step aside as pastor of St. Sabina and even recruited a South African priest to take his place in a few years.
Feelings have been hurt. The St. Sabina congregation feels betrayed because Cardinal George never consulted them about any change in leadership. He has refused to meet with them.
Pfleger obviously feels he has been set up by the cardinal, who wanted to replace him.
A new priest has moved into the rectory, and St. Sabina parishioners tell me the event was treated as some sort of celebration by him.
The cardinal feels his authority has been publicly challenged and that he was double-crossed.
The church is not a democracy. Its leadership does not have to answer questions.
But the cardinal is also a shepherd. The flock of St. Sabina does not feel protected but deserted and left to fend for itself.
St. Sabina is an island of hope in a neighborhood where man-made tsunamis of trouble are a constant threat.
George needs to help his people. Being a dictator is easy. Being a leader, thats hard.
PING
You should see Pfather Pflakey's facebook page. I've posted there a couple of times since he got suspended to amuse myself (his page is public so you don't have to make him your "friend" to post). The religious denominations of his defenders on facebook, in order from most common to least common:
1) Nation of Islam members
2) Nondenominational "Christians" of black liberation theology (Rev. Wright types)
3) Atheists
4) Episocpilians (liberal ones who like gay marriage, etc.)
5) Lutherans (see above)
6) Nonpracticing Roman Catholics who say the church "left them" and is racist without Pflakey around
In rough estimates, I count about 10-12 NOI fans, 8 "nondenominational" black liberation Christan's, 6 atheists, 3 Episcoplians, 2 Lutherans, and 2 nonpracticing Roman Catholics. There are 3 practicing Catholics on his facebook page bashing Pflakey as a hate-mongering heretic CINO (me and two others), and 3 practicing Roman Catholics who profess to be neutral in the debate (all 3 are blacks who attend his church), but have admitted Pflakey overstepped the line that St. Sabina's is "disconnected" from the rest of the Catholic community in Chicago and that Pfleger "isn't teaching doctrine to his flock".
That alone speaks volumes of what type of "Catholicism" is being taught at St. Sabina's.
His particular pastoral skills are needed in central Antarctica. I have seen some recommend a deserted tropical island for his next parish, but I don’t think we should take the chance shipwreck survivors might be washed up there.
Freegards
Like managing a McDonald’s and making up your own menu.
You are right. Pfleger was left there way too long. He should have been defrocked years ago. He is a community organizer not a priest.
The newspapers that I’m aware of which include “Star” in their masthead (KC and Minnehaha) tend to lean decidedly toward the Left/Communistic. I suspect this fish wrapper is just the same.
I don't think he teaches his congregation religious doctrine anywhere as often as social justice. They can tell you lots about gun control efforts, but if you ask any of them what the doctrine of the immaculate conception is, you'll draw blank stares. I've been on his facebook page and tried to discuss Catholic theology with them. The best you're gonna get is they will quote random bible stories or parables about Jesus to try and twist Pfather Pfleger into a Christ-like figure (funny, I don't recall Jesus ever telling the apostles to "snuff" the Samaritans, or that is Israel is the greatest sin against God.)
I agree Pflakey is pretty selective about what kind of "social justice" he preaches about too. As his parishioners will even admit, you never see him give sermons about all the women in his community having babies out of wedlock, or women using abortion instead of practicing safe sex.
The author is correct about that. The cardinal's responsibility is to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, not the secularism of Pfleger or any other man.
Hmmm. Might be fun if they could install live video feed and watch him give his insane rants in -20o F temptatures, but I would feel bad for the Catholic research scientists forced to listen to Pflakey's "God hates Antarctica" sermons and "the U.S. science station is racist" speeches.
We should make some calls to the Vatican and suggest locations for Pflakey's transfer. Some other possible places crying out for Pflakey's talent:
The largest uninhabited island on Earth, in the northern arctic
The ghost town where the Chernobyl meltdown occuried
The world's most active volcano
The infamously abandoned Hawaiian leper colony
;-)
Now see, you have convinced me. I would never inflict the scientists and researchers with Father Flaky, they have it rough enough. I think you should send your list to the bishop, heck you never know...
It would cost a lot more, but I think the only solution might well be deep oceanic trenches or the dark side of the moon.
Freegards
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