TERRE HAUTE — The Catholic Church lost the regular service of a couple of great priests this past week. One died. The other was forced from his longtime pastorship into retirement.
When I say “the Catholic Church,” I mean, of course my Catholic Church, the religious entity that called to me more than 20 years ago and said, “Surprise! This is where you belong.”
As letters to the editor in previous months have sternly admonished, my Catholic Church is not the church of many of the men who currently lead it. It is not the church of people who see its millennia of rules and regulations (hundreds of which have changed over the centuries) as a kind of razor-wire fence to keep out the undesirables.
It is not the church of The One And Only Litmus Test For Disciples Of Christ: a person’s stance on legalized abortion.
Catholics who are inclined toward the razor-wire and single-issue witnessing of the Gospel had little good to say at the passing Sunday of the Rev. Robert Drinan, the first priest to serve as a voting member of Congress.
As for the news that auxiliary bishop Thomas Gumbleton had been ordered to leave his pastorship at St. Leo parish in Detroit, one could almost hear the champagne corks popping among certain segments of the faithful.
Drinan was 86, a Jesuit priest from young manhood to the grave. Gumbleton is 77, another lifer for Jesus who entered seminary as a high school boy. While neither man ever marched in a pro-abortion rights parade or argued that the Vatican is irrelevant, both got on the wrong side of church authority fairly early and stayed there by openly and enthusiastically ministering to the undesirables.
Drinan actually celebrated Mass at Trinity University on Jan. 3 in honor of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He didn’t even stop her from taking Communion.
Pelosi was born and raised Catholic, she is the mother of five children, has been married to the same man for 43 years and, throughout her political career, has been an advocate for social and economic justice for the poor and marginalized.
But Pelosi cannot pass The One And Only Litmus Test For Disciples Of Christ. As a lawmaker for people of all and no faiths, she sees nuance and private decision making in birth control and abortion. She does not believe in abortion, but she does believe that women who choose to end unwanted pregnancies, and the physicians who help them do that, should not be classified by their government as criminals.
Drinan, who served five terms in Congress until Pope John Paul II put an end to clergy in elected office, shared many of Pelosi’s priorities. He was a tireless foe of racism, social and economic discrimination and the mindless assembly line of death that is war.
As a representative from Massachusetts, Drinan was the first person in Congress to call for the impeachment of Richard Nixon. It wasn’t about the third-rate burglary at Watergate or even the coverup. It was Nixon’s unilateral decision to bomb Cambodia that inspired the priest to outrage.
“Can we be silent about this flagrant violation of the Constitution? Can we impeach a president for concealing a burglary but not for concealing a massive bombing?” he asked on the floor of the House in 1973.
A year later, in a speech to the American Academy of Religion, Father/Congressman Drinan turned his criticism toward his fellow Christians. Appalled at the lack of public protest over myriad threats to humankind— from mass starvation to the nuclear arms race — Drinan demanded: “Where are the voices of the churches on the principles and policies that the United States is following and not following?”
As for Gumbleton, he has compounded his error of including pro-choice Catholics among his diverse flock by also ministering to gay and lesbian Catholics. A committed pacifist, he helped found the international peace movement, Pax Christi, and has put his body where his principles are in anti-war and anti-nuke demonstrations around the globe.
Gumbleton has further riled the hierarchy by refusing to obey a John Paul II dictum that prohibited even the discussion of the ordination of women. In the past few years, he also has become a vocal supporter for adults who allege they were sexually abused as children or adolescents by Catholic priests. In testimony before Ohio legislators last year, the bishop confided that he, too, had been sexually abused as a seminarian by a priest.
Since 1983, Gumbleton has served the racially mixed, inner-Detroit parish of St. Leo’s. Earlier this month, he was presented with the Martin Luther King Spirit of Detroit Award for his public service.
Church officials say Gumbleton’s ouster was merely a personnel move: Every bishop must submit a letter of resignation to the pope when he turns 75; Gumbleton was overdue. He still will be allowed to return to St. Leo’s to visit and say Mass, a spokesman for Detroit’s Cardinal Adam Maida said.
Gumbleton believes he was removed from pastoral duties because of his public criticism of the sex abuse scandal and his support for alleged victims who are suing the church or seeking prosecution of decades-old crimes. In his last homily to his parishioners, however, he implored them to remember “that you are the body of Christ and that you are carrying out his work and that you will commit yourselves to continue this.”
Several years ago, I interviewed Bishop Gumbleton at a liberal Catholic convention in Los Angeles. We talked about a wide range of subjects, including the changes he had seen over the years at the U.S. Bishops Conferences.
The co-author more than 20 years before of a powerful pastoral letter on peace and non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, Gumbleton said priorities had changed since the 1980s. Only a handful of men at bishops conferences bothered to attend sessions devoted to the discussion of peace anymore.
“There aren’t too many of us in the room these days,” he said with a soft smile. “It can get pretty lonely.”
Opinion
Stephanie Salter: Remembering the greats of my Catholic Church
- Opinion
-
-
MARK BENNETT: Path to friendship
Terre Haute and the Wabash River were like strangers living next door to each other.
-
EDITORIAL: Drug-testing bill lacks fairness and decency
The current session of the Indiana Legislature has produced plenty of initiatives that play well to the majority party’s base.
-
BRIAN HOWEY: Why is Obama opening an Indiana office? Autos
On Thursday, the Obama for America campaign opened up a campaign office in Indiana, a state with a century-old love affair with the internal combustion engine.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 12, 2012
• White’s opponent entitled to office
• Positive moves for healthy foods
• Thanks from the Super Bowl XLVI Host Committee
• Doctor’s diet plan helps her arthritis
• Great support for fundraiser
• A few thoughts moving forward
-
FLASHPOINT: Graduation rates are up; great news for Indiana
As Hoosiers celebrate the conclusion of a truly remarkable Super Bowl experience, there is even more good news that should fill us with pride.
-
READER'S FORUM: Feb. 11, 2012
• Controlling crows everyone’s job
• Strong plan needed to fight Alzheimer’s
-
EDITORIAL: Keep religion out of science class
An uncertain fate remains for an Indiana Senate bill that would, if it were to become law, allow public schools to teach creationism and other origin-of-life theories in their classes. But this fight may have already been grounded.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 10, 2012
• How about a parade for war veterans?
• Rubber reptiles will chase off crows
-
EDITORIAL: Delivering on infrastructure
With national, state and local economies showing distinct signs of recovery from the Great Recession of 2008, it is good to hear Mayor Duke Bennett sounding optimistic about Terre Haute and its immediate future.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 9, 2012
• Award proves art teacher’s special
• Technicality hits cancer patient
-
EDITORIAL: The shame of voter fraud
For a state that has supposedly spent so much time and effort passing and implementing strict laws concerning voter fraud, it certainly deserves the embarrassment being heaped on it for the Charlie White affair.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 8, 2012
• City engineer sets high standard
• More than paper to protect rights
-
LIZ CIANCONE: Give pets the gift of a better, longer life
It’s amazing how many of us at the Family Sports Center are involved with pets. But I recently became aware of how involved some of us have become.
-
Readers' Forum: Feb. 7, 2012
• Kodak moment for America?
• Let’s not bring back serfdom
• IU-Purdue game a nice diversion
-
EDITORIAL: Volunteer ‘army’ serving the needs of children
You know, of course, that casa means house. But do you also know that its all-capitals cousin, CASA, means home?
-
MARK BENNETT: Toxic victories
When the Super Bowl ends tonight in Indianapolis, most of the Giants and Patriots will shake hands, despite their competitive fire, win or lose.
-
EDITORIAL: Big dreams do come true
Consider this Super Bowl Sunday to be proof that anything is possible.
-
READERS FORUM: Feb. 5, 2012
• Why does Howey keep attacking Mourdock?
• Thanks for the commitment
• Accurate view of pipeline issue
• Oil pipeline is a pipe dream
• Not all workers belong to unions
• Unions protect working people
• Terre Haute Zoning issue unites neighbors
-
BRIAN HOWEY: Keeping Peyton in the Hoosier pantheon
When it comes to the pantheon of Hoosier sports heroes — Johnny Wooden, Knute Rockne, Bob Knight, Larry Bird, Reggie Miller, Rick Mount, Bobby Plump, George Gipp — the newest name will certainly be Peyton Manning.
-
FLASHPOINT: Tech trail leading us into a dense, digital forest
It seems the Southwest Parke schools are the latest to play the laptop lottery game.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 4, 2012
• Defending Bain, attacking Harrop, praising Romney
• Break a CFL? No reason to panic
• GOP’s timing not so super
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 3, 2012
• Keep pressure on the Pentagon
• Supportive words for Jim Mann
-
EDITORIAL: Big ‘kick’ from a native son
Every player in Sunday’s Super Bowl is from somewhere. But not every player remembers where he’s from and reaches out to consistently help those back home. Not like Steve Weatherford. Make that not like Terre Haute’s Steve Weatherford.
-
EDITORIAL: Smoking ban good enough
When it comes to getting things done in the Indiana General Assembly, progress is often measured in baby steps. Indeed, it can take years to achieve even meager accomplishments.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 2, 2012
• There are reasons unions are needed
• Why so hard to get a tow here?
-
EDITORIAL: United Way’s strong reputation helps sustain community trust
It would be foolish in any community to take “positives” for granted, but it’s easy to understand how a casual observer would assume that United Way of the Wabash Valley will always come through with flying colors.
-
READERS' FORUM: Feb. 1, 2012
• Better options for Deming Park area
• Tuskegee Airmen had local member
-
LIZ CIANCONE: Super Bowl festivities mostly for super rich
I hate being in a minority, but I guess I am. I am considerably less than thrilled over having the Super Bowl altogether too close to my back yard.
-
READERS' FORUM: Jan. 31, 2012
• Science from the heavens
• Unions exist to aid the worker
-
READERS' FORUM: Jan. 30, 2012
• Right-to-work bill hurts state’s workers
- More Opinion Headlines
-








