Death In The Church: Is New Life Ahead?

The recent disclosure of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church and the extent of depravity reported in the news is symptomatic of a Church in crisis.  It is no longer acceptable for the Pope simply to issue a public apology nor is it sufficient for any group merely to reflect on what has happened by issuing position statements. The Church has a deep structural problem which is entirely bound to ancient metaphysical and philosophical principles, not to mention imperial politics, that at this point require either a radical decision towards a new ecclesial structure or accept the possibility of a major schism. The rock-solid Church has crushed human souls and twisted authority into deceit. The male-dominated Christ center no longer holds and there is simply no solution or comforting words that can placate the extensive damage to fragile human lives that has taken place over the past decades. The evidence of abuse brought to light in the Catholic Church is simply unfathomable.

There is something profoundly intransigent about the structure of the Church. It is not that Church structures have caused the abuse but they have masked predators hiding as priests in a closed caste system of clerical elitism. The resurgence of abuse points to something deeply amiss if not embedded in Church culture. “Culture” is a complex term that encompasses the set of operative meanings and values.  Church culture is based on operative principles of hierarchy, patriarchy, careerism, and the notorious notion of priestly consecration as becoming “ontologically changed.” The hierarchical pecking order from priest to Pope has entailed obeisance in the quest for a higher position on the ladder of ecclesiastical success. Clericalism is a type of corporate ladder-climbing and no different from the quest for power in the world of major corporations. Corporate power, like ecclesial power, is marked by the dominant male, akin to the evolutionary hunter who is “red in tooth and claw”; the priest-hunter can be cunningly deceptive at achieving his desired goal.

How did we get here?  If the Church is founded on the Good News of Jesus Christ, how did it become so radically disconnected from the itinerant preacher from Nazareth?

Structure concerns relationships and the types of relationships that comprise Church structure are based on outdated philosophical notions of nature, gender, and personhood. Structures do not themselves cause abuse but they can abet and, or, cloak mental illness, predators, and criminals disguised as priests.  The disguise is actually embedded in the dysfunction of the structure itself. Walled in a fortress of ontological superiority bestowed upon by priestly consecration, one could effectively live a dual life insofar as one’s brain can cognitively dissociate between abusive behavior and priestly function.  The dissociative brain is not quite schizophrenic or a split brain but is actually more deceptive because it can capture certain ideas and repeat them (such as abusive behavior is normal) while operating on another level of priestly ministry.

Dissociative behavior can be reinforced by certain philosophical principles and the Church has clung to a number of outdated philosophical principles. Two principles in particular that can create a porous structure of abuse are:

1) The Ontology of Being, that is, the notion that the priest is on a higher level of being and thus closer to God. This misguided notion stems from the way hierarchy developed in the Church. The hierarchical structure that presently defines the Church can be dated back to the fifth century when the mystical writer, Pseudo-Dionysius composed his treatise on the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy.   Dionysius introduced the term “hierarchy” to connote sacred order among the many different classes of people that comprise the church. The Dionysian notion of hierarchy was meant to reflect the many ways God shines through creation but the term was corrupted in the Middle Ages by William of Saint Amour who used the Dionysian hierarchy to reject Franciscan Friars as teachers at the University of Paris, a role William claimed that duly belonged to clerical priests and not those of religious orders. Hence the notion of hierarchy as a ladder of ontological distinctions (for example, priests are of higher being than laity) was a medieval construct that became entrenched in the mind of the laity.

2) A second philosophical flaw is the platonic notion of the body as inferior to the life of the spirit giving rise to several different outrageously flawed ideas, including the notion that women are intellectually inferior to men and the source of sin; that sex and sexuality are inferior qualities of human personhood and need to be closely monitored, as these can easily lead to sin; that the corruptible body needs to be disciplined and subjugated to the spirit.  David Noble The Religion of Technology and A World Without Women) provides convincing historical evidence to support his thesis that the principal aim of Christianity, like science, is to restore the fallen male Adam to divine likeness.  His thesis is based on the myth that Adam was created before Eve and thus received the breadth of life directly from God; hence Adam is the true image of God and Eve is a weak imitation. Eve is the reason Adam lost his divine likeness along with his immortality, his share in divine knowledge, and his divinely ordained dominion over nature (the “fall”).  Because Eve was the problem, she cannot be part of the solution. John Scotus Erigena in the 9th century claimed that at the resurrection sex will be abolished and nature will be made one–only man–as if he had never sinned.

It is no secret that even the best theologians, such as Thomas Aquinas and Bonaventure, held that women do not have fully formed intellects, an idea that can be traced back to the philosophy of Aristotle.  It is unfortunate that Pope Leo XIII in his 1879 encyclical Aeterni Patris wedded the Church to the theology of Thomas Aquinas thus making Thomas’s theology the official theology of the Catholic Church. By doing so, the Church adopted the Thomistic-Aristotelian metaphysical framework based on matter and form, substance and essence.  Thomas Aquinas was a brilliant 13th century theologian who contributed to the Church a vast corpus of theological insights; however, by making his doctrine official teaching, the Church turned a deaf ear to modern science and to other theological ideas, such as the Scotistic notion of primacy of Christ.

Although the Catholic Church has supported modern science reflected by the Vatican’s  Pontifical Academy of Sciences, it has not adopted the principle scientific shifts of modern biology, evolution, or quantum physics, despite the fact that these areas are pillars of modern science.  As a result, the official theology of the Church is based on the ancient cosmology of Ptolemy and the medieval Thomistic-Aristotelian metaphysical synthesis.  Even the most recent report of the International Theological Commission omits science entirely from the task of theology today. As a result, the foundations of theology remain out of sync with nature; the understanding of the human person is outmoded in many respects; and the core doctrines of creation, salvation, and redemption are based on outdated cosmological principles.

Despite the turn to the historical subject in Vatican II, the cosmological framework for official Catholic theology is the pre-Copernican, geocentric Ptolemaic universe. It is not surprising that the Ptolemaic cosmos blended nicely with Newton’s universe, allowing the Church to maintain a static inert framework of substance and form. Barbara Brown Taylor, an Episcopalian priest, compares the institutional Church to Newton’s world, a vast machine made of parts and obeying fundamental laws, a world, she indicates, that can be easily controlled and manipulated. In her book The Luminous Web, she writes:

“Human beings were so charmed by the illusion of control Newton’s metaphor offered that we began to see ourselves as machines too. Believing that Newton told us the truth about how the world works, we modeled our institutions on atomistic principles. You are you and I am I. If each of us will do our parts, then the big machine should keep on humming. If a part breaks down, it can always be removed, cleaned, fixed, and replaced. There is no mystery to a machine, after all. According to Newton’s instruction manual, it is perfectly predictable. If something stops working, any reasonably competent mechanic should be able to locate the defective part and set things right again. . . . Our “God view” came to resemble our worldview. In this century, even much of our practical theology has also become mechanical and atomistic. Walk into many churches and you will hear God described as a being who behaves almost as predictably as Newton’s universe. Say you believe in God and you will be saved.  Sin against God and you will be condemned. Say you are sorry and you will be forgiven.  Obey the law and you will be blessed.”

Newton’s world was a closed system.  A closed system views organizations as relatively independent of environmental influences; problems are resolved internally with little consideration of the external environment.  Without any new input of energy, a closed system will eventually wear down and dissipate.  Open systems on the other hand can migrate into new patterns of behavior because the system interacts with the environment; closed systems are rigid and largely impenetrable while open systems are chaotic and far from equilibrium.  The Church is a closed system. Rules, fixed order, dogmatic formulas, unyielding laws, patriarchy, authority, and obedience under pain of judgment and death, all have rendered the Church impervious to evolution and to the radical interconnectivity that marks all levels of nature.  A closed institutional system in an evolutionary world is bound to die out unless new energy can be put into the system, or the system itself undergoes radical transformation to an open system.

The turning point for the Church’s retrenchment from science can be marked by the Galileo affair in 1633 when Cardinal Bellarmine rejected Galileo’s confirmation of the Copernican heliocentric system, stating that acceptance of heliocentrism was contrary to Scripture.  Although Pope John Paul II apologized on behalf of Galileo in 1984, by mid 20th century the Church had not accepted Big Bang cosmology or evolution as fundamental to doing theology.

While Vatican II is lauded for its progress, this Council is no exception to the Church’s outdated stance with regard to modern science.  Although John XXIII opened the Church doors to the modern world and human history, he did not acknowledge Big History insofar as all history begins with the Big Bang. Alfred North Whitehead wrote in 1925: “When we consider what religion is for mankind, and what science is, it is no exaggeration to say that the future course of history depends upon the decision of this generation as to the relations between them” (Whitehead 1925). Ralph Burhoe, the visionary behind the journal Zygon: Journal of Science and Religion, said that the discoveries of twentieth-century science, born from the creative human spirit in search of understanding, have far out-paced the ancient myths of world religions causing “people everywhere to lose credence or faith in the models or myths as formulated in their traditional religions” (Burhoe and Tapp, Zygon 1966: 4-5). He wrote that if religions are to be regenerated, they would have to be credible in terms of this age of science, a point highly consonant with the vision of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.

Can We Rebuild?

While the reconciliation of science and religion may seem pedantic and marginal to the abuse crisis, it is perhaps the most fundamental work that lies before the Church and world today.  Without bringing science and religion into a new integrative relationship, there is no real basis on which to construct a new philosophical understanding of theological truths or of human personhood.  All the apologies in the world and all the position papers carefully written will not make an iota of a difference to the “substance abuse” that marks the Church.  Unless fundamental levels of consciousness change, we cannot attract a new reality.

In this respect, academic theology is as much to blame for the abuse crisis as the hierarchy itself, insofar as the academy of Catholic theology perpetuates a substance ontology and remains essentially entrenched in ancient philosophies and cosmologies.  In theology departments, one can teach a course on Science and Religion as a particular area of interest but “yoking” Science and Religion is not necessary to doing theology in the 21st century, nor has the academic field of Science and Religion impacted the pedagogies of either science or religion. Teilhard de Chardin was adamant that the philosophical shifts brought about by modern physics and biology demand conceptual and pedagogical shifts in science and religion. “Evolution is a general condition,” he wrote, “to which all theories, all hypotheses, all systems must submit and satisfy from now on in order to be conceivable and true” The Human Phenomenon, Teilhard de Chardin 1999, 152, emphasis added).

Science has greatly shifted our understanding of nature including human nature, biological nature, and physical nature so that every aspect of theological doctrine must be reevaluated in light of evolution and modern physics. Every seminary curriculum should include Big Bang cosmology, evolution, quantum physics, neuroscience, depth psychology, and systems thinking.  Incorporating science into seminary education will not preclude abusers but over time the formation of new structural systems that are more consonant with nature as cooperative interdependent systems might allow for greater transparency, interdependency, and accountability.

To accept modern science as part of theological education and development of church doctrine is to recognize the full inclusion of women in the community of biological life.  The inability to accept women as fully capable intellectual beings has been a real stumbling block for the Church and, in our postmodern age, the exclusion of women from all forms of leadership and service is no longer acceptable.  Systemic reorganization as well as scientifically-literate theological education must include women at all levels of formation.  There is no adequate theological argument for excluding women from Holy Orders except the well-worn “image of God” argument which, in light of modern science, is incredible.  Ordaining women priests might help save the Church from implosion.

Towards a New Future?

The Church needs a new direction, one pointing not upwards but forward, not towards “heaven above” but a new future of healthy relationships.  Beatrice Bruteau describes a shift in consciousness from a domination paradigm to what she calls a “Holy Thursday” paradigm, marked by mutuality, service, and Christian love.  To be “in Christ,” she writes, “is to enter into Holy Thursday by experiencing some death and resurrection, letting an old modality of consciousness die, and seeing a new one rise to life.  It is to abandon thinking of oneself only terms of categories and abstractions and seeing oneself as a transcendent center of energy that lives in God and in one’s neighbors–because this is where Christ lives, in God and in us.” We need to come to terms with the fact that Christianity is less an historical religion than a religion of the future.  In Jesus God’s self-communication to creation explodes into history.  God evolves the universe and brings it to its completion through the instrumentality of human beings.  Jesus is the climax of that long development whereby the world becomes aware of itself and comes into the direct presence of God.  What we see in Jesus is that the future of the material universe is linked to the future of the human community insofar as human agency affects biocentric life in its relation to ultimate fulfillment in God.

We fragile, vulnerable humans are “cooperative co-creators” and it does make a difference how we live our lives. Our participation in the mystery of Divine Love, incarnate and hidden in the brokenness of our world, lies at the basis of a healing world.   The shocking news of the abuse crisis crushes our hearts, but know too that God’s heart is broken; that the body of Christ is crucified over and over again, for when one member is abused the whole Body is abused.  But our faith must remain unshaken.  Christ is risen from the dead; the final word is not death but Life.  We will rise from these ashes but we cannot stand still nor can we turn back.  Our hands are now put to the plow and we must forge a new path ahead. The Church will be born anew, for God is doing new things.

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67 Comments

  1. Karl on September 3, 2018 at 1:10 pm

    Two contexts may be helpful: 1) Pope John Paul II harbored Cardinal Law in Rome and supported sex abusing priest and founder of Legion of Christ, Marcial Maciel, So abuse and cover-up go to the Papal level. 2) Church crimes reach far beyond sex as documented by the apologies of the last 3 Popes. John Paul II issued some 100 apologies. Among them: abuse of women as a gender, collusion with Nazis, sack of Constantinople, African slave trade, violation of ethnic groups.
    The abuse of power goes back to at least Constantine when Church buildings and power came to the fore. Unlike the simple home church of the early church: “From that time on, this disciple took her into his HOME.” John 19:27.
    Edwina Gateley says “God, indeed, is doing something new.” Short of God’s love and power, I don’t think anything new will happen. But that is enough. Edwina Gateley is also correct that “Those who have been most oppressed and excluded – women- will feature prominently in the new structure which will emerge from the Spirit of God.”
    Thank you, Ilia for your superb article.



  2. Judith C on September 3, 2018 at 11:26 am

    The “institutionalized” church stood to loose a lot and so it did. What now? Ilia is on the mark saying that each of us must “ignite dynamic exchanges and conversations” . . . partnering, collaborating and networking with a diversity of persons to bring about new local churches and a global church in the model of “the itinerant one.” Teilhard de Chardin and other mystics called us to awaken and realize that we are co-creators of the world and the universe in an evolving reality. It is our time to be the evolutionary agents of love in the Great Work of “making all things new.” If not us, who?


    Judith Cauley, CSJ



  3. Ilia Delio on September 3, 2018 at 9:51 am

    There is so much I want to say to each of your responses. I completely agree with Dominic on the role of Spirit – divine energy permeating creative evolution. For me the best way to respond to each of you is to keep writing the blogs so I can pull a number of ideas together. Let us live in hope for hope reaches out to the incomprehensible One (the God who can never be grasped and manipulated by power), the dawning light, the ever newness of Love that is God.



  4. Michelle Murray on September 3, 2018 at 6:49 am

    Dear Ilia,

    Thomas Berry’s idea of church as “bioregional communities,” gives me such hope. Can we expand our understanding of church? And so the changes should begin with us since the institutional church is stuck in medieval structures and beliefs. Are we realizing the immersion in the larger life community that we live daily? Do we recognize the voices of the larger life community? Are most people on this planet able to give themselves their own identity in space and time? How can we do so without the voices of the larger life community?

    Men and women are both part of the human community within the larger life community, yet we mainly hear about male images, male voices, male rituals, and male language. Is it possible to be fully human or fully whole without these voices? There is a need for new cultural coding which engages not only female images and voices but also the larger life community and this has implications for our collective ministries. Liturgy should give expression to what we currently understand about God and our relationship to the larger life community. When reflecting upon “The Universe Story” by Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry, can we give expression to liturgy in its cosmic dimension as each speak eloquently to the larger life relationships by connecting to all of creation? Can we create rituals in our homes that honors the water such as our rivers and oceans as sacraments which nourishes and sustains all of us, and we respond with thanks as praise. I can honor the honey bees as sacraments as bees pollinate, which create flowers and food which sustain and nourish all of us. I can help my children expand their understanding of sacraments and incorporate them in our lives where we are able. As families, we could create rituals like these for all ages and stages of life such as when people mature in age, we can celebrate their sacredness as wisdom leaders giving them thanks and praise and by doing so, this would help young people and our culture value the elderly as a vital part of creation. From time to time, we can add animals, or plants or other parts of creation, such as summer or winter solstice celebrations.

    Can we transform the language of the song “Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace to people of good will” to include the rest of creation in our formal liturgy using the song “Pied Beauty” by Gerard Manley Hopkins, as an example? It certainly makes a nice connection to the larger life community and how the universe is so diverse and inclusive.

    When we break bread in our homes, we can give thanks and praise for the earth which brought forth the food which we are about to receive. We can also give thanks for the elements of oxygen, hydrogen, tungsten, gold, etc. and remind our families that we are participating in the “Great Liturgy” along with the rest of creation.

    Accessing art, music and poetry and incorporating them into our daily lives can help to expand and make connections to the rest of creation, as one sacred community (artists like Mary Southard and Brother Micky McGrath, poets like, Annie Dillard and John O’Donohue, nature writers like John Muir, Leopold, and Thoreau). Since we are symbol making people, meaning making people, using artist Mary Southard’s “One Sacred Community,” we can make connections to the larger Body of Christ which includes all of creation pointing out the whole of the universe is holy ground. And then finish by giving thanks for all of creation.

    Since we are all in relationship with the divine, no more do we need to worry about being better that someone else, more or less sinful, but that all people, animals, plants, water, earth, galaxies, everything in creation participates in God’s goodness and we are to trust and allow this to happen.

    I find myself looking for ways to attend to my own relationship with the rest of the natural world. A friend gave me a copy of Prayers for a Planetary Pilgrim: A Personal Manual for Prayer and Ritual by Edward Hays. I find that and the Thanksgiving Address Greetings to the Natural World both so helpful in both prayers and practices which I have incorporated into my life. I find that honoring the Summer Solstice Celebration is a great way to set myself within the larger universe! I also created a new litany of life which incorporated the larger life community. We can take our time and understand the “Universe Story,” set up practices, rituals, prayers which set us within the larger life community.

    Since we are caught between stories, as Thomas Berry states, it is no surprise to me that we are struggling on an institutional level. Can we become full human persons in our churches today that are teaching and celebrating the old story? I find myself looking for an Intentional Eucharistic Community but none exists near me so I find more inclusive prayers, look for more inclusive songs, and spend more time outdoors celebrating with “all beings” not just humans.



  5. Dominic Deus on September 2, 2018 at 9:24 pm

    Dear Ilia Delio,

    Brilliant! I’ve never read you before but I am astonished. This is the single best brief discussion of the inter-relationship between mechanistic thought, Newton and the Church, quantum physics and ontological change ( I prefer the term “transformational”) I have ever read. That plus you include Aquinas whom I love but do not regard as infallible and Aristotle, to whom I would give more credit than you do because he was working with less material than you and I have available to us.

    Your response to the never ending denunciation of women is refreshingly different but similar enough to mine that, of course, I like it. (Just a little nerd humor there. If I didn’t already believe much the same as you do, I’m sure you would have moved my concordance needle in your direction!)

    Your concerns about patriarchy-centric reasoning across centuries seem to me well placed. I am confused about your reference to a Christ-centric faith going forward. Are you for it or against it, both or neither? Personally, I think if we are going to have a Trinity, making better use of the Holy Spirit is more cosmologically, ontologically, spiritually intriguing especially since the Christian creation story seems to have started with a very young woman making the choice to accept a transformational union of flesh and spirit in a way only a woman could.

    Finally, as metaphysicians go, you are remarkably understandable.

    Thank you,

    Dominic Deus



  6. John Siyumbu on September 2, 2018 at 8:11 pm

    “The Ontology of Being, that is, the notion that the priest is on a higher level of being and thus closer to God. This misguided notion stems from the way hierarchy developed in the Church.”

    I’m grateful to have received a link to this article from a friend. As a Catholic, the analysis herein is immensely helpful to me as I consider the abuse of innocents by priests and the associated sytematic aiding and abetting this is being uncovered. I consider how my faith in the Church structure, not in Jesus Christ of Nazareth, is challenged. This is why I wonder how a reinterpretation of the philosophical principle of the Ontology of Being vis-à-vis the sacrament of Holy Orders would be transformed while remaining faithful to the interpretation of another sacrament – Baptism. I’m probably betraying a mechanistic mindset that Sr. Ilia associates with the closed system of the Church. However, I fail to see how a wholesome dismissal of the philosophical principle of the Ontology of Being would contribute to a transformed understanding of how beings are related seeing that relationality is what is at the core of the approaching new life in the Church.



  7. Eben on September 2, 2018 at 5:17 pm

    Excellent diagnosis, treatment plan, and prognosis, Dr. Delio. Amen. We must realize that other Christian denominations share some of the same fundamental philosophical and theological flaws that you point to in the Roman Church, even if not all of the associated structural issues. If we share in the fundamental flaws, may we also share in their recognition, removal, and the rebuilding through the movement of the Spirit.



  8. Patricia Knutson on September 2, 2018 at 1:47 pm

    The demise of the institutional church is truly “catholic.” I watch the protestant denomination in which I was raised ending as we speak. And it must end. Founder John Wesley taught us to live by 3 simple rules: Do no harm. Do all the good you can. And stay in love with God (practice!) The denomination has fallen into the individualistic, moralistic, misogynistic, capitalistic (we could go on here) mindset.
    Thank you Sister Ilia for your beautiful prophetic call. May we all have the courage to love God and not fall into despair.



  9. noelle on September 1, 2018 at 3:44 pm

    De Chardin was a prophet before his time when he wrote, spoke and was banned. His words are still beyond the awareness of most people, certainly beyond many Catholics who continue to believe they embody to “truest” expression of Christ. Matthew Fox is only one other who grasped the presence of Christ and god in Creation – and was banned. Women who have felt called, have had to go elsewhere. Prophets speaking of natural structures, have had to go elsewhere. Perhaps open up to the protestant world where structures are already different, where women are ordained, where congregations seek and find their own leaders, etc, is also part of this opportunity. Being broken is an opportunity for change, an opportunity to do things differently, to accept the other truths are also true, to go beyond oneself. It is more than new theologies that are needed — but yes, new ways of doing things based on how christ and god can be observed in all of creation. This means more changes than have been yet stated: ecumenism to the extreme; women ordained; lgbtq accepted fully and theologically as unique being of creation; eucharistic awareness being of the people gathered and sharing, and not the host alone; hierarchy disbanded and communal equality embraced; and more. In difference to what someone said above, going nature-based (which includes the sciences) is EXTREMELY biblical. The Bible begins with the story of Creation. John’s prologue is a story of creation — wherein all things of god can be understood by looking to creation – that is the promise we can believe in. Without that view, the church is, in fact, a closed system. And NOTHING of creation is a closed system. If it remains a closed system, it will completely fail, having denied Creation as the ultimate model. De Chardin’s grasp of natural evolution as part of Creation, is needed, yes.



  10. Thomas Becker on September 1, 2018 at 2:59 am

    The Church is a closed system. Rules, fixed order, dogmatic formulas, unyielding laws, patriarchy, authority, and obedience under pain of judgment and death, all have rendered the Church impervious to evolution and to the radical interconnectivity that marks all levels of nature. A closed institutional system in an evolutionary world is bound to die out unless new energy can be put into the system, or the system itself undergoes radical transformation to an open system
    Thank you for this thought provoking piece. After several readings and sorting though the comments I am aware that in many ways I am a closed system as well. It is becoming more and more obvious that many of the beliefs about God and the church that I was raised with are crumbling away under the weight of their rigidity. Change is continuing, new growth comes forth and to cling to what was will only bring decay.



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