The Inquisition ceased burning and torturing heretics in the 18th century; a milder punishment awaits the dissidents today, principally excommunication or banishment from official teaching positions. Paul Collins has discovered--through his own experience and extensive research--that the impact of the Vatican's investigations, through the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, can be quite profound. Collins is the controversial Australian Catholic priest recently investigated by the Vatican for alleged heresy. He served the Church for 33 years and is generally esteemed for his dry wit and his ability to make his vocation accessible a trait many appreciated in an increasingly secular world. The Vatican, however, views Collins's less than reverential views as heretical and has been investigating him since 1997, when Collins' book Papal Power was singled out for supposed "doctrinal problems." The Modern Inquisition, compiled over the four years that the mysterious and secretive CDF deliberated on Collins' work, brings together the stories of others who have also been pursued, condemned, or vilified by the CDF. Here are seven fascinating accounts of how the modern Inquisition operates--what it is like to be accused by anonymous informers, investigated in secret, and tried at arms length with no recourse to appeal.
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Paul Collins is a writer specializing in history, memoir, and unusual antiquarian literature. His nine books have been translated into eleven languages, and include Sixpence House: Lost in a Town of Books (2003) and The Murder of the Century: The Gilded Age Crime That Scandalized a City & Sparked the Tabloid Wars (2011). Collins lives in Oregon, where he is chair and professor of English at Portland State University.
Copyright
Preface
This is a book about the inner workings of the Vatican, intellectual freedom, and passionate and deeply held convictions. It also contains the personal stories of seven Catholic sisters and priests who have experienced a unique inquisitorial process: examination of their opinions, writings and even their consciences by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). But this is not just about their personal stories. What happened to them typifies the tensions and contradictions within the contemporary Catholic Church and exposes the forces that have already alienated from the policies of the Vatican a sizeable majority of thinking Catholics in many parts of the world.
The seven protagonists in this book represent the kind of agenda embraced by most committed Catholics in the Western world, as well as many in Latin America, Asia and Africa. These Catholics are demanding a more decentralised, participative approach to the Church, with much of its decision-making authority being devolved to local communities and national conferences of bishops. The Vatican and the CDF are supported by a small but influential minority of Catholics who want to concentrate all power and authority in the papacy. One of the most potent weapons used to rein in their fellow Catholics is the secret reporting of bishops, priests, sisters and laity to Rome for supposed heresy, deviations or dissent from Catholic belief and practice.
The prominent English Catholic journalist, Clifford Longley, writing in the respected London weekly, the Tablet, has compared being turned into the Vatican for investigation by the CDF to what Judas did to Christ when he went to the chief priests to betray him. I certainly felt a sense of betrayal in late January 1998 when I discovered that I had been ‘delated’ (denounced) to Rome some time in 1997 for so-called ‘doctrinal problems’ with my book Papal Power. It was a rude reminder that the Inquisition’s Australian minions are still alive and well.
My personal experience of this process has prompted this book, which contains my own story and those of six other well-known Roman Catholic sisters and priests who have been similarly investigated. In November 1999 I visited Sri Lanka, Germany, the UK and the US to interview all the contributors and to get some understanding of their pastoral and theological approach as well as of the local context.
The first thing that struck me about the people featured in this book was how psychologically well adjusted they are. Articulate, calm and intelligent, all of them have a healthy sense of humour and can laugh at themselves, a key prerequisite in anyone called to a prophetic role. But at a deeper level you perceive in them an inner strength and determination, a passionate commitment to God, to their ministry and to the search for the truth and the inner meaning of Christian existence. You also find a deep love of the Catholic Church and a complete absence of paranoia or any feeling of persecution. Never once did any of them suggest that they had been badly done by, either by the Vatican or by their religious orders, despite a complete clarity about the injustice of the process imposed on them by the CDF and by others in the Church.
In fact, as their stories show, these men and women are among the genuine prophets of the Catholic Church at the present time. While what has happened to them is compelling as personal storytelling, it also points towards the agenda that will guide the Catholic Church into the future. This is because they articulate the issues that most concern the vast majority of faithful Catholics and give expression to their faith-experience.
For the first time in the 450-year history of the Roman Inquisition and its lineal descendant, the CDF, a group of Catholics who have recently undergone examination by the Vatican’s inquisitorial procedures talk openly about the experience and the effect the process had on their vocations and careers, and describe in detail how the CDF operates. The interviews clearly reveal a number of things about the CDF. First, it is obvious that ultimately the CDF does not play by any rules, even its own. By any modern standards of jurisprudence its processes are secretive, inquisitorial, often blatantly unfair to the accused and lack any application of the basic principles of human rights. Despite the Church’s good record in this area in the broader, secular world, the CDF completely ignores human rights and shows no respect for normally accepted due process in its interactions with the accused. It is willing to invade their inner conscience and demand that even the most intimate and deeply held conscientious views be revealed. Fundamentally, the CDF lives in a time warp: despite attempts to tart it up in modern dress, it is essentially a creature of the sixteenth century whose methods have survived to the present day. Sadly, the evidence also is that the CDF cannot always be trusted to tell the whole truth, or even always to act with integrity, at least from the perspective of modern notions of equity and justice.
Second, it is clear from all the cases reported here that the CDF is not interested in genuine dialogue or real reconciliation. Without the slightest equivocation or doubt, it identifies its own view completely with the ‘teaching of the Church’, totally oblivious to the fact that its narrow orthodoxy often constricts and sometimes distorts the genuine Catholic tradition. What is quite extraordinary is that at times CDF ‘consultors’ do not seem to have a sound knowledge of, or even recognise, the basic principles of Catholic theology and ethics. This arises from the narrowness and lack of breadth of their theological approaches and their attempts to constrict the creative possibilities inherent in the Catholic tradition. The CDF constantly demands total conformity to its own view. There is never any question that its view might itself be limited, partial, or even wrong. It is this total lack of theological self-awareness that is most frightening.
Third, the CDF is highly selective in its choice of targets, and the selection of the person to be investigated often arises out of conflicts, jealousies and ambitions in the Catholic community of the country where the dispute starts and in which the accused person lives. People are also pursued because they are seen as ‘symbolic’ of a movement which troubles the Vatican. For instance, the CDF was concerned by Latin American liberation theology in the 1980s, so Brazilian Franciscan friar Leonardo Boff was targeted. In the 1990s the Vatican trained its sights on Asian theology, and Sri Lankan Father Tissa Balasuriya became the quarry.
The CDF rarely gives up; it pursues people for years. In the process it largely ignores local bishops and leaders of religious orders, except to try to manipulate them to do its will. And, as the cases of Sister Jeannine Gramick and Father Robert Nugent show, even condemnation is not the end of the long process. The Vatican continues to try to muzzle them and to prevent them speaking about the process and its result, despite the fact that they live in a democracy where free speech is guaranteed.
With the exception of the prefect (at the time of writing, Cardinal Josef Ratzinger) and the secretary (at the time of writing, Archbishop Tarcisio Bertone), all officials of the CDF remain strictly anonymous. Consultors, judges, prosecutors and even the ‘defence counsel’, who are usually drawn from the same group of people, are unknown to the accused, who will probably never meet them. However, the diligent researcher can discover the names of the CDF staff and consultors in the Vatican yearbook, the Annuario Pontificio, but this gives no clue as to the officials involved...
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