George Weigel's, The Courage to Be Catholic: Crisis, Reform, and the Future of the Church (Basic Books, 2002)
Editorial
Reviews
From
Publishers Weekly
American Catholics divided over
the future direction of their church have managed to agree on one thing in
recent months: much reform is needed in the wake of the clergy sexual-abuse
scandal. Weigel, a theologian and papal biographer (Witness to Hope: The
Biography of John Paul II), outlines the shape he thinks it should take in this
incisive analysis. More than a problem of clerical misbehavior, he writes, the
present crisis is rooted in the church's failure to be faithful to its own
teachings. He traces the current woes to a "culture of dissent" that
he says was allowed to flourish after the reforming Second Vatican Council
(1962-1965), creating an internal schism in the church. After the "truce of
1968," which allowed church leaders to publicly oppose Humanae Vitae, the
papal encyclical on artificial contraception, without fear of reprisal, he says
it became clear that the Vatican would not support bishops who wanted to
maintain discipline among priests and theologians. Weigel lays much of the blame
for the sexual-abuse scandal at the feet of the American bishops, whom he chides
for acting more like corporate managers than apostles. But his criticism also
extends to Rome, where he points to deficiencies in canon law and the Vatican's
communications strategy. As expected, Weigel dismisses such reforms as
abolishing priestly celibacy and ordaining women priests, but he counters with
practical solutions, including changes in the way bishops are selected. This
book should stimulate discussion among both progressive and conservative
Catholics.
(Copyright
2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.)