
Editor's Desk: Just the Beginning
By Michael F. Flach
Herald Editor
(From the issue of 6/20/02)
One of the most emotional moments during a 1993 conference in Omaha on the 25th
anniversary of Humanae Vitae occurred when then Denver Archbishop J. Francis
Stafford (now a cardinal serving at the Vatican) talked about the day after the encyclical
was released in 1968. The cardinal served as moderator of a panel discussion called
"From Dissent to Acceptance: Realizing the Full Riches of Humanae Vitae."
Catholic theologians in Washington, led by Catholic Universitys moral theologian
Father Charles Curran, signed a letter of public dissent from Pope Paul VIs
prophetic encyclical on human sexuality, which Paul VI would later call one of the two
greatest accomplishments of his pontificate.
That day in 1968, Cardinal Stafford said, was "the pivotal day in the life of the
Catholic Church" in the United States this century. At the time the encyclical was
released, Cardinal Stafford was a priest and director of Catholic Charities in the
Baltimore Archdiocese. He recalled how the wave of dissent swept from Washington to
Baltimore.
On Aug. 4 of that year, he said, a small but well-organized group of priests called a
meeting in the basement of a parish rectory in Baltimore to convince 54 of their fellow
priests to publicly dissent from Humanae Vitae. Their objective was to publish a
statement the next day in The Baltimore Sun.
Father Stafford was the last in line to sign the statement. All of his fellow priests
before him had signed the letter of dissent. He refused, saying that he had not read the
encyclical and that he agreed with the Churchs stand against artificial
contraception. He encouraged the other priests in attendance to at least read Humanae
Vitae before publicly dissenting.
Cardinal Stafford said his refusal to publicly dissent from Church teaching led to
increased isolation and abuse from other priests, not only in Baltimore, but in subsequent
episcopal assignments in Memphis and Denver.
In Dallas last week, R. Scott Appleby of Notre Dame was one of two laypersons who spoke
by invitation at the opening session of the bishops meeting. In his address,
Appleby, who is not known as a conservative, said the Churchs current sexual crisis
began with the 1968 papal encyclical Humanae Vitae. A large majority of American
Catholics, he said, rejected the ruling, and a large majority of American bishops (and
priests) declined to defend and promote the teaching. This event, Appleby said, marked the
beginning of the bishops and the laity living in bad faith.
Philip Lawler, editor of Catholic World Report magazine, agrees with
Applebys analysis. The bishops have "looked the other way," Lawler said.
"Over the years the habit has become ingrained. On one issue after another
contraception, homosexuality, abortion bishops have developed the practice of
looking the other way, papering over the gap between teaching and practice. Meanwhile, the
ordinary Catholic faithful became accustomed to this mode of behavior, so that they began
to view bishops as distant, abstracted figures. And so we come to today's scandal.
"Yes, the path leads back to Humanae Vitae," Lawler said. "If we
wish to address the fundamental causes of today's distress, we cannot avoid that
history."
"Anybody who thinks the Friday vote on the sex-abuse policy will be the end of the
matter is dreaming," said the National Reviews Rod Dreher. "The
battle for the Catholic Church in America has only just begun."
M.F.F.
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