Over the past 30 years there have been a number of guys
who have set up shop here in this area claiming that
they were priests who belonged to the
"something-something Catholic Church." Well no, they
were not priests in THE Catholic Church, they belonged
to another kind of Catholic Church which differed from
THE Catholic Church because they allowed this, and this
and this. They were never, ever more strict than THE
Catholic Church, always less. They would say things
like, "We accept people who are divorced and remarried.
We allow everyone to receive Communion. You don't have
to be human to belong to our church." (There was one guy
who actually had a monkey. No kidding. I don't know if
his monkey served at Mass, but I hope no one here thinks
they are not replaceable.) But these Brand X priests
always claimed they were really Catholic, just not
"Catholic" Catholic. Just another kind of Catholic
MEANING NOT CATHOLIC.
I remember talking to more than a couple of people who
attended their services over the years. One woman was
surprised when I told her that it was not a Catholic
Church. "But they had Communion and an organ and
everything," she told me. The idea was that if it
looked Catholic, it must
be Catholic. But what
distinguished the Catholic Church from all other forms
of Christianity is not what the services look like.
On the other hand, even though we, our parish, has been
here for over 30 years, even though we're listed in the
Catholic Directory of the Archdiocese of Portland which
contains all the Catholic churches in Oregon, there are
still many Catholics in the area who do not think we are
Catholic. Why? Because our church doesn't look
"Catholic," and our Liturgy doesn't sound "Catholic,"
and we don't have an organ (which makes me think, "Maybe
if I got a monkey. . ."). It doesn't help when sometimes
even my fellow priests in the area don't know how to
explain us to their parishioners, as in the comment one
pastor made to a woman sometime ago that we were 80%
Catholic. I have no idea what he meant by that. Neither
did the woman. But of course many Catholics are so tied
into the idea that the Catholic Church is only the Latin
rite, if you are not using the Latin rite, you can't be
Catholic. What distinguishes the Catholic Church from
all other Churches is not the rite by which it lives,
prays and worships.
Now if you go to Ukraine and you enter a church, you
might not be able to tell whether it is a Catholic
Church or an Orthodox church. And especially with one
type of Ukrainian Orthodoxy, you might even have to
attend a service to discover whether or not it was an
Orthodox or a Catholic Church. The services would be so
similar to each other that maybe only one clue would tip
you off as to which Church this particular parish
belonged to. It would not be by the doctrine that was
being preached because I feel it is safe to say that
Orthodoxy teaches 99% the same as the Catholic Church.
It would be whether or not at that service they prayed
for the Pope. Because basically the only thing that
separates us from Orthodoxy and the other ancient
Christian Churches, is what we believe about the office
of the Bishop of Rome. That is what separates us from
the other ancient Churches.
Many Catholics hold today views of the office of the
papacy that are understandable, but incorrect. They see
their pastor as the local boss, the bishop as the
pastor's boss, and the pope as the bishop's boss, in a
kind of hierarchy that resembles a Fortune 500 company
more than the Body of Christ. Surprisingly, but maybe
understandably, there are many Catholics who think the
pope can make up doctrines of belief, or change the
teaching of the Church because, after all, he is the top
guy. This is the attitude you find in the media many
times, where they speculate whether or not a pope will
change the Church's teachings. The pope cannot change
the teachings of Christ. His job is to teach, preach and
proclaim Christ's truth, not
to change or alter it, God forbid, and thank God who
promised us protection from that ever happening.
Every bishop has the fullness of the priesthood. The
pope is no more a bishop than any other bishop. He's not
more of a bishop than our own Bishop Richard. But is in
his function as pope, in his duties as pope to be a
bishop not only for the people of the Archdiocese of
Rome, or the Patriarchate of Rome, but also to serve as
bishop for all the Catholic bishops of the world; to
help them, to support them, and, if it is necessary, to
step in and take action if there is a need to, so that
the faith and unity of the Church is protected.
The pope is not at the head of the Church in order to
tell everybody what to do and to make up all the rules.
His job is to teach, support, guide and pray for not
only the people of his own diocese, but all the members
of the Church around the world. He represents the unity
of the Church because he represents Christ as head of
the Church. When you ask a Catholic who is head of the
Church they will usually answer—what? But remember
Christ is the head of the Catholic Church, and the
pope's job is to be a visible sign of Christ's headship
of the Church in the way he carries out his mission to
teach, govern and sanctify the faithful.
It is our belief in the special role given to Peter by
Christ our Lord that distinguishes us from all other
Christian Churches and sects. It is our belief in this
special divinely appointed ministry, given also to all
the successors of Peter that mark us apart from the rest
of the Christian world. Popes have been saints, and some
popes have been terrible sinners, but when people reject
the office, not the man, the office of Peter, then they
tear the unity of the Church and divide up the Christian
faith. We don't have to look far to see how terribly
divided the followers of Christ are today. Just as an
example there are today, in Ukraine, three different
Orthodox groups that all claim to be the true Ukrainian
Orthodox Church. Which one is the true Church? Which
group has the real jurisdiction in Ukraine? There is no
mechanism to decide, there are no means in place to make
a decision or help them come to an agreement, there is
no one voice with special authority to help work it out.
So the problem goes on and on with no unity in the
Orthodox in Ukraine and no one can absolutely claim that
this or that group has genuine authority. This shows why
Christ gave us this special office founded on the
ministry of St. Peter.
In this age of relativity and indifferentism where
people often have a hard time distinguishing truth from
error and right from wrong, and have trouble seeing
human life the way it really is, created by God and
meant for God, let us be glad that we stand together on
the rock of Peter as one flock, with one shepherd who is
Christ our Lord. And as we pray for the Holy Father here
at Liturgy today, he who represents that one true
Shepherd, let us ask Saints Peter and Paul to pray for
an increase in our faith. May our end be as righteous as
Peter and Paul's.