Two days of encounters, conversations
and reflections have left me perplexed, inspired, challenged,
and with a keen sense of ‘being there’.
When Vatican II was happening, I was a Presbyterian schoolgirl
living in Lusaka, Zambia, attending the Dominican Convent School. I think I
registered that something significant was happening when the nuns shed their
wimples, one of them auditioned for The Sound of the
Music at Lusaka Playhouse, two of them came to my Presbyterian confirmation service, and one left to get
married. Dear Sister Ceslaus, the mighty maths
teacher who was later murdered in an attack on a mission in Zimbabwe (then
Rhodesia) during UDI, told her Protestant charges: ‘Now girls, don’t go home
and tell your parents I told you this, but just remember the words of Martin
Luther on his deathbed: “It is easier to live as a Protestant, but it is easier
to die as a Catholic.”’ I don’t think Luther actually said that, but obviously
her strategy worked.
Since coming to live in Britain in the late 1980s as a new
convert to Catholicism, I have become a little bored by the nostalgia for the
Council which constitutes a pervasive melancholic aura among liberal Catholics
of a certain age. Today, there’s a new generation of Catholics who were
born into the postconciliar Church, and many of them simply don’t care about
the politics of the Vatican. They practise birth control, cohabit, ‘come out’,
do whatever they need to do to survive as Catholics who are both faithful and
intelligent. At the other end of the spectrum is a narrow group of ideologues
(some of them also young), who believe themselves to be the custodians and
progenitors of the One True Church over and against liberals, relativists,
feminists, homosexuals, and all the rest of the wicked forces of modernity that
are destroying God’s Church. Ho hum.
This week, however, I am so glad to be in Rome, because I
suspect that, for the first time since 1968, the spirit of Vatican II is dancing
in the streets of this city. The politics, the gossip and the intrigue are
compelling.
The point Kaspar was making
is in my view one of the two central issues of this Synod: how to reconcile the
vast cultural differences within the Church, in a Synod that brings together
bishops from across the world’s cultures and contexts. It is a reminder that
the unity of the Catholic Church is a liturgical and sacramental unity, not a
moral and cultural unity. Bishops and cardinals from some African and Muslim
countries have apparently been shocked by the open discussion of ‘taboo’ issues
such as homosexuality, and there are diverse responses to the question of the
readmission of divorced and remarried Catholics to the sacraments, as I
mentioned on a previous blog. Polygamy, forced marriages and similar issues
have been on the agenda, but they have not attracted the same media attention as
homosexuality.
In a café I sat near a bishop from the Congo. I
wondered what stories he might tell about ‘families’, from that context of rape
and war and poverty and despair. I remember a few years ago meeting a devout Catholic woman from
the Congo, who had spent three years living in the forest with her five
children, foraging for food, to escape the raping armies of whatever men were
fighting for power at the time. What about her family? What about those from
West Africa, where families are being shredded by the Ebola epidemic? And what
of the bishops and cardinals from Muslim countries, where Christian and Muslim mothers alike are
raped and children are murdered? I hear that some of those church leaders from
such societies say that they forbid marriage between Christians and Muslims.
Catholics who marry Muslims excommunicate themselves, they say. That is heresy,
and surely the seeds of violence are fed the poison they need to flourish in
the face of such bigotry. Others have pointed out that in a world of so many mixed marriages, so much cohabitation, so many forms of marriage and family life, the number of marriages that would be truly sacramentally valid in the eyes of the Church might be infinitesimally small.
Yet one would think, reading
about this Synod, that the greatest challenge, opportunity or threat to the
modern family (depending on how you see these things) is homosexuality. Having initially been irritated by what I thought was a distorted emphasis in this respect, I have in the last couple of days come to realize that this is indeed a core doctrinal issue, because more than poverty and violence, more than divorce and remarriage, it is a question that goes to the very heart of the Church's sexual anthropology. Is sexuality an intrinsically personal dimension of our need for and capacity to express love in a bodily way that engages our whole being in a relationship of intimacy, trust and vulnerability? Or is sexuality more about genital difference and procreation? Put it like that, and the answer should be obvious. However, Pope John Paul II's 'theology of the body', promoted around the world primarily by way of well-funded American campaigns, holds that sexual difference goes to the very core of our being, and to fail to recognise that is to distort our understanding of what it means to be human. Having spent years researching and writing about 'theology of the body', I think it functions more as a vehicle of resistance to feminism and homosexuality than as a genuinely viable account of human sexuality - notwithstanding the fact that couples who can afford large families, who are psychologically, sexually and spiritually on the same wave length, and/or who are obedient and dutiful servants of the Church, promote it as if encountering the sexual other were second only to the beatific vision. Fine when you're falling in love at the age of twenty, but a bit hard to sustain through forty years and more of married life.
Yet at the other end of the spectrum, there is also something ethically and existentially repellent about those advocates of gendered performativity who would reduce sexual difference to cultural conditioning and nothing more. Our bodies matter, and sex is a very large part of that mattering. We do not yet begin to comprehend that complex interface between culture and nature, where our sexed humanity is both given and constructed, fundamental to who we are in some ways, incidental to who we are in many other ways. However, one thing we can be sure of. Sexual difference functions as a powerful mechanism of exclusion when it comes to women, and nowhere more so than in this most clerical of cities.
Today, we eagerly await publication of the final document from this Synod, though rumours are that it might not be released until Monday or Tuesday. That is when the important business will really begin, and it is in the interests of every woman, child and man in the Church that we women insist upon having a voice and being heard in the process of deliberation that will occupy the life of the Church between now and the next Synod in October 2015, when the discussions and dialogues opened up this
week are finalised and translated into doctrine and practice. That is not long,
particularly when one is dealing with two thousand years of history. But do not
believe anybody who tells you that those two thousand years have been an
unchanging history of ‘the family’ - the semper idemists, as one person called them this week. There is no such thing as The Family. There
are only human beings, vulnerable and muddled, woven together of starlight and
dust, of memories and dreams, of flesh and fantasy, all of us hungry for only
one thing that can truly sustain us and feed us and express what it means to be
human – love.
Somebody only half-jokingly said to me that the
Church in Rome is ‘the vortex of dysfunctionality’. I found myself smiling
about that phrase through the rest of the day, and I began to think that surely,
that could be a good way of describing ‘the family’? This is where each and
every one of us learns to love and be loved – for better for worse, for richer
or poorer. This is where all our dysfunctionalities are forced out into the
open and we go through the painful, unending process of learning who we are and hopefully how to become better at that task of being. To stay committed to love, come what
may, in such a context, is perhaps the most challenging task any of us faces,
and the fragility of our successes always stands under threat by the woundings
of our failures. That's what families are about, but what matters is not
‘the family’ but the love that makes and breaks each person within that communal group that is sometimes about love and cherishing, but that is sometimes
also about hatred and violence.
Cardinal Dolan gave us the benefit of his own private
fantasy world when he wrote a piece on ‘The Noble Nature of
Marriage and Family’, floating away on the ethereal mists of his own
eloquence:
Ours is the task of recovering the truth, beauty, and goodness of marriage and family. In a world that wonders if anyone can really say “forever;” if fidelity is possible; if children are a gift and never a burden; we say, yes! We echo what God the Father, His Son, and His Spirit alive in the Church have revealed: that the bond between a man and woman in marriage, faithful and forever, leads to a healthy, sound civilization, with happiness here and in eternity.
We dare to be poets and romantics, reclaiming the foundation of the “civilization of love” and “culture of life” that can transform the world, resisting the temptation to conform to a world that wonders if any love—God’s love, or the love of a man and woman in marriage—can ever be forever. In a world that often answers “no,” we thunder a yes!
That’s my sentiment as I prepare to return home to you, my people, with a renewed admiration for our wonderful married couples and families! I love you! I thank you! I need you!
Walking home late on Thursday night from St. Peter’s to Trastevere
along the river, I noticed flowers and a child’s mementoes attached to the
railings of Ponte Mazzini. I stopped to read the notices which explained what
had happened. I read the short, unbearable story of Claudio Franceschelli, ‘the
angel of Ponte Mazzini’.
Maybe cardinals who want to write poetically about the family
should go and do so on Ponte Mazzini, and pray for inspiration from The Angel
of Ponte Mazzini.
Children have a right to be loved. Humans have a right to be
loved. From that right flows every other right, and if that right is denied, no
other right will ever make us truly human.