Archive for the ‘Dominican’ Category

How Can Religious Women Relate to the Hierarchy?

Friday, March 20th, 2009

I believe the religious woman needs to keep two important realities in mind in relating to the hierarchy. First, as the member of a religious community canonically approved by the Church, the woman, by her pubic vows,  assumes a prophetic role in the midst of the Church. The religious woman, by word and ministry, calls the Church to be its best self-in-the-world. The prophet is a truth-teller. The prophet speaks truth to power, when the exercise of power is not building up the Body. This is why religious communities are somewhat of a threat to a bishop or priest if they lead by unilateral rather than relational power. Religious communities are meant to be, by their charisms, prophetic communities within the Church, calling it to constant authenticity.

Second, the above being said, in practical situations, I believe a religious woman needs to be intentionally “centrist” in her relationships with bishops and priests. This means they should be at a loss in labeling the religious as conservative or progressive. She is a truth-teller, not a partisan believer, and they always know they will get a strait story from her. She will admit the truth of what the conservative thinker is trying to safeguard, and critique the easy dismissal of the tradition by the progressive if it compromises the truth of a situation. She will point out the narrowness of the conservative viewpoint and defend the vision of the progressive. She will search for the truth no matter where it is to be found. She is a bridge-builder between factions. She is about unifying, not about dividing.

This posture is possible only if grounded in deep contemplative prayer. Without this grounding, one is pressured to sway to the left or the right in the wind of a storm, and the prophetic edge is compromised. Living in this awareness, however, is no easy task. The Dominican religious woman is especially called to it because of the Order’s focus on truth. The position cannot be held without study, because study probes the truth. And so, the Dominican religious woman needs to be grounded in contemplative union with the One who is “the Way,” deeply engaged in study, especially of sacred truth as it sheds light on empirical areas of truth (science, economics, medicine, etc.), and from this firm base she relates.

  • Share/Bookmark

Challenges to Preaching Today…

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Why not more justice preaching?
I believe this area is neglected because it is the Church’s best kept secret. Many priests have not been trained in the the Church’s social justice tradition. In good seminaries this is being corrected, but it may take a while before those who preach liturgically get a handle on it. This may also be true of others who preach in various settings. The secret is awareness. To come to know the Church’s rich social justice tradition is to discover a treasure. We need to find this pearl…!

What are the best strategies for effecting justice change?
I believe the first strategy is some form of contemplative prayer, because it divests the activist. To sit vulnerable before the Mystery of the Holy and allow God to strip away all pretense, all egoism, all self-interest, is a safeguard to keep the justice mission clear. Without it, I fear there will be too much of the zealotry and not enough compassion.

From this cauterizing experience one can then go to the next step, which I believe is intense listening to a situation. This will mean intense study also. Care in this step will prevent the bull in a china shop syndrome. Good intention is not enough. Good facts are essential.

As a third step, I would suggest collaborative bonding with others, primarily those involved in the injustice. Planning with them will keep the effort and inside job, likely to continue if you need to leave it.

Finally, I suggest putting all in the hands of the people involved as soon as possible, as soon as they thoroughly own it.

Who speaks for the community?
First, I suggest the community identify itself. Then it needs to educate itself on an issue. When this is done well, then the question might be asked, “Do we want to say this together?” If a majority agrees, it can be done. If not, the individuals who are ready might speak for themselves.

Dominic, Preacher of Grace
The Dominican emphasis has always been that grace is more powerful than sinfulness. Key here is what is understood by grace. Some would say it is some mysterious divine gas that is pumped into us… I believe we will understand grace when we recover the Triune Mystery that is at the center of the human heart. In conception the divine creative energy which we identify as the Holy Spirit synergizes with the human erotic energy of our parents. From this marvelous synergy our DNA emerges bonded to the existence given us by the One who is. So favored (graced), this Guest holds us in existence. At the same time we are mortally wounded by the sin of our species, passed on to us through our human DNA. When we are brought into a faith community by others (Baptism) or when our consciousness awakes and we turn toward this Mystery, our sin is removed, we are “raised from the dead,” and we are “favored” (graced) with a relationship to the Divine Guest who has been in our house all along. Thus, grace is a relationship with the Divine that comes from the love that is friendship.

This is what captivated Dominic. He was filled with the amazement of this wonder. So, preaching from this wonder will mean understanding the condition we are in without it, the source of it, and the growth in it through constant conversion. It will also mean understranding how Mary was filled with this relationship, lived in it constantly, and how violating it would have made her break into a sweat! It also helps us understand Jesus relationship with his Abba, due to the uncreated grace of his divinity.


  • Share/Bookmark