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Troubling News from Catholic Magazine
By Tom Deignan
In 1997, when I was a mere graduate student stuck in the barren flatlands
of Ohio, I read a wonderful novel about the joys of reading amidst a hard
life in Belfast.
The novel was called Reading in the Dark and was written by Seamus Deane,
who later went on to run the Irish studies program at Notre Dame. The novel was so interesting that I decided to write up a review and send it to a magazine that I had started to read, and to which I hoped one day to contribute. America magazine was unabashedly Catholic, was run by the Jesuits, and was an interesting mix of spirituality, politics and the arts.
Since then I am proud to say that I have regularly contributed reviews of
Irish books to America. One reason for my pride is that if you look at the
names of editors and contributors at America it reads like the roll call
for an AOH order.
In short, these people know their Irish stuff, so it was an honor to
be given the chance to write for the magazine.
And so, it was with some surprise this Saturday when I looked on the
front page of The New York Times and saw that America’s editor, Father Thomas
Reese, was leaving the magazine.
Why is this front page news? Well, it appears that the new pope more
or less forced him to.
As the Times article said, “The order to dismiss ... the Rev. Thomas
J. Reese was issued by the Vatican’s office of doctrinal enforcement — the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — in mid-March when that office
was still headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (said officials) who spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the
matter.”
Of course, Cardinal Ratzinger was later elected pope.
America is a weekly magazine and is viewed by most observers as moderate
to liberal-leaning. Even when the magazine does question Church doctrine,
it usually runs another article in defense of church doctrine. Father Reese
has appeared on TV dozens of times, and he comes across as wise and undeniably
faithful.
The Times continued, “In recent years America has featured articles representing
more than one side on sensitive issues like same-sex marriage, relations
with Islam and whether Catholic politicians who support abortion rights
should be given Communion.
“Church officials said it was the publication of some of these articles
that prompted Vatican scrutiny. Some Jesuits said that within the last two
years they had received spoken or written warnings from then-Cardinal Ratzinger’s
office about articles or books they had published.”
Stephen Pope, a moral theologian at Boston College, told the Times, “If
this is true, it’s going to make Catholic theologians who want to ask critical
questions not want to publish in Catholic journals. It can have a chilling
effect.”
This is not the only bit of bad press the new pope received in the U.S.
this week. The latest issue of The New Yorker suggests, in a profile, that
the pope is apparently willing to give up on many of the moderate to liberal
Catholics in the U.S., and focus on conservatives, here and around the world.
Now, let’s be honest. It is not exactly shocking to find a little bit
of papal bashing in publications such as The New York Times and The New
Yorker. They’ve been doing that stuff for decades.
That, however, does not make what happened at America magazine any less
disturbing.
I was raised a devout Catholic, then went through a seemingly inevitable
phase as (if you will) a doubting Thomas. But one of the things that eventually
brought me back to the church was an understanding that, even within the
church, there are always people asking vital questions about life, death,
love and God.
Of course, there is understanding that, in the end, church law is church
law. But it is also clear that church law does not become church law until,
well, some people ask some questions.
America was the kind of place that asked those questions. Not just to
mock Catholicism, as so many anti-Catholic bigots do. But because there
was a genuine interest in making sure the religion was always alive and
breathing and relevant to people’s lives. It made me proud to be Catholic.
The new editor of America, the Rev. Drew Christensen, is surely a bright
and wise man. He may, however, want to be careful about the kinds of questions
he asks.
(Contact Sidewalks at tomdeignan@earthlink.net.)
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