The People of God, at Long Last

Drew Christiansen, SJ

OF THE IMAGES of the church that emerged from the Second Vatican Council, the People of God was the most important and the most popular. For almost twenty years, it was a constant in the Catholic vocabulary, even entering into liturgy. But from the beginning, it was regarded as suspect. The late Cardinal Avery Dulles, SJ, in Models of the Church worried about its democratizing subtext. Others probably feared it as subversive of hierarchical authority. John Paul II neglected it, preferring the magisterial (institutional) model of the church, and sometimes even the teaching church seemed to be reduced to the pope alone.

For me the real news, potentially the most church-renewing news, in Pope Francis’s interview is his revival of the understanding of the church as the People of God. “The image of the church I like,” Pope Francis told Father Spadaro, “is that of the holy, faithful people of God. . . . There is no full identity without belonging to a people. No one is saved alone, as an isolated individual, but God attracts us looking at the complex web of relationships that take place in the human community. God enters into this dynamic, this participation in the web of human relationships.” This is “big tent” Catholicism, a church that welcomes all. No longer an institution or, worse, an office, the church is “a community,” “a web of relationships.” Francis embraces the model of the church that the late Cardinal Dulles called his own favorite, “a community of disciples.”

Astoundingly, Francis identifies infallibility as inhering in the whole church: “a supernatural sense of the faith of all the people walking together. . . . When the dialogue among the people and the bishops and the pope goes down this road and is genuine, then it is assisted by the Holy Spirit.” This is an entirely orthodox understanding of infallibility, but one sidelined in practice for too long in favor of a monarchical view. It is what Blessed John Henry Newman called “a conspiracy of bishops and faithful.”

For me the other headline in the Francis interview is the refocusing of the church on the gospel. God’s love is the center once more of the church’s preaching. Morality has a place, but it is secondary to the gospel of God’s love and mercy. To be sure, what Pope John Paul II called “the Gospel of Life” has a place in the church’s proclamation, as it has had from the beginning. But it is not the central message, and what Pope Francis calls the “obsession” with sexual morality has distorted Catholic pastoral practice and social ministry, especially in the United States. “[T]he proclamation of the saving love of God comes before moral and religious imperatives,” he told his interviewer. Popular response has already made obvious how people now hear the good news in the gospel once again. “New evangelization”? Pope Francis is the “new evangelization” personified.

Like the gospel of Jesus itself, the gospel Francis preaches also shows up the Pharisaism of the moral righteousness that seeks to establish public morality according to abstract norms without making pastoral allowance for context and persons. Can there be any convincing answer to his question, “Tell me, when God looks at a gay person, does he endorse the existence of this person with love, or reject and condemn this person?”

 

Drew Christiansen, SJ, is former editor in chief of America and an expert in international affairs.