Bring Back the Ethnic Parish

Codd, Kevin

BRING BACK THE ETHNIC PARISH A model that worked Kevin Codd ~ hy can't we all just get along?" Rodney King's plea during the Los Angeles riots was endearing, but naive. Sometimes there are...

...Given their own parishes and provided at least one pastoral agent reasonably fluent in their own language and culture, these new immigrant communities could flourish instead of languish...
...It is, in fact, what is happening in many parishes in the United States today...
...Second, parishes have suffered under the well-intentioned but ecclesially deficient view that the parish is the local church...
...those in control stay in control and the newcomers are welcomed, but on limited terms...
...Participants receive a stipend of $40,000 for a full-year Fellowship (or $20,000 for a one-semester Fellowship...
...After some years of relatively public brawling, people tire and a sort of d6tente sets in...
...Deadline date for receipt of applications is December 18, 1998...
...Our subtle but always present presumption that they need to do it our way, on our terms, according to our schedule is drilling holes in Peter's barque in the United States as it sails into the next century...
...Rather, the parish is a practical structure for meeting peoples' specific pastoral needs while the "catholicity" of the church pertains to the local church as diocese under the pastoral care of its bishop...
...Until this new turn of demographic events, their sense of ownership had been seen as an expression of commitment and fidelity to the church itself...
...It was believed that with time, patience, and a modicum of Christian charity, the pastoral needs of all could be met...
...But who can blame them for feeling threatened by people they do not understand, people with whom they have little in common, and indeed people who are quickly changing the character of the parish that has been their religious home for decades...
...And finally there is the money...
...Different styles of child-rearing place stress on the cultural sensibilities of each group...
...Even the Revised Code of Canon Law of 1983 incorporates this pastoral instinct in canon 518...
...In fact, the development of the parish structure over the centuries has been successful as an evangelical tool precisely because of its flexibility in the face of new social realities...
...There is a better way to meet the pastoral needs of both established parishioners and newly arriving Catholics with other languages, cultures, and ways of being Catholic...
...Too many of our pastors and pastoral ministers do not understand either the languages or the cultures they are asked to serve, making it impossible for them to preach, heal or sanctify effectively...
...participate in an interdisciplinary seminar involving senior scholars and practitioners...
...Above all, there would be no need for ethnic parishes and all the presumed ill effects they would bring...
...What is sad is the large number of American parishes now caught up in their own parochial versions of racial strife...
...It would be easy to pick on the old-timers as power-hungry racists...
...his unhappy state has come about for at least two reasons: First, our parishes have been victims of a naive belief on the part of church leaders that the sociological forces roiling inside a local community are of little concern, since the church's professed commitment to love and justice immunizes it to the kinds of social stresses that affect the larger society...
...The newly arrived have not felt welcomed or invited to take ownership of their church in their new land...
...o why can't we all just get along...
...No one ever trained them to be cross-cultural missionaries in their own land...
...And don't blame the pastors who presided, more or less, competently over the various stages of this rending of parochial peace...
...Each time the notion of ethnic parishes is broached in any sort of public forum of either clergy or laity, jaws drop, eyes widen, and looks of astonishment at such a retrograde idea cross the faces of many...
...The conventional wisdom developed that such parishes ghettoize immigrant groups, separate Catholics from one another, and are contrary to the communal nature of the church...
...dioceses, a consensus developed among diocesan leadership that ethnic parishes were almost always a bad thing...
...If there should be a social gathering afterwards, the room divides fairly cleanly down linguistic lines...
...Somewhere along the line, the war begins, not so much between the established parishioners and the newly arrived parishioners as between the old order and the pastor, along with those who defend the new direction he has taken the parish...
...There have been few new parishes for the new arrivals...
...How much has the bias toward integrating Hispanic Catholics into existing Anglo parishes been a factor in this demographic disaster...
...The social equilibrium is maintained for a number of years...
...I thought the church was in the business of bringing people together, not separating them...
...The folding of the new into the old for the good of all has resulted in many cases of fractured parishes...
...Sometimes the war is fought openly in full-blown, take-no-prisoners battle, but more often it is fought subtly, strategically, and with plenty of plausible deniability...
...The unity of the church neither demands nor expects that parishes be the place where we all just get along...
...The immigrants themselves are troubled and embarrassed at the fight going on around them...
...All pastors and most parishioners know that parish communities are subject to all the human failings, injustices, and even violence (though more subtle), of the society around them...
...As those who have ministered in bicultural parishes know, just under Commonweal 2 4 September 11, 1998 the surface the reality is far more unpleasant...
...That's the diocese's job...
...Probably no formal decision was made in most cases, but standard diocesan policy became one of integrating new immigrant communities into existing parishes...
...It would not be perfect...
...Immigrant parishioners would no longer feel like visitors trespassing on someone else's turf, but could live their faith, pass on their traditions, and even adapt to the new culture surrounding them on their own terms and at their own speed...
...It is not long before at some meeting someone will echo the sentiment so pointedly expressed in Ronald Reagan's line about the Panama Canal: "We built it, we paid for it, it's ours...
...They feel ownership...
...Fellows will pursue research projects that recognize religious beliefs and practices as important elements in the current debate about civil society and the renewal of public life...
...Who is to blame...
...They too are predominantly Catholic, but of some other race, language, or culture...
...Whenever there is a fight in a parish, the "Cry of Rodney King" goes up...
...The concept of the ethnic parish served the American church extremely well for over a hundred years...
...is heard in parishes whenever the gears of Christian fellowship lose their grease...
...Some of the old-timers understand and accept the The Reverend Kevin Codd is a priest of the Diocese of Spokane and pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in Oroville, Washington...
...The parish works, sort of...
...Our modern American sense of "getting along" is keeping our church from ministering effectively to immigrant populations...
...They never plotted any hostile takeover of someone else's spiritual home...
...a parish fighting over race or ethnicity...
...Our misguided ecclesiology of parish as the locus of all that is church is preventing us from allowing others to bloom evangelically in their own right...
...Attendance of the once dominant group at such events drops off as that of the immigrant group increases...
...It is time to trust, respect, and love our new Catholics by giving them their own parishes, as our grandparents were given theirs...
...Masses are celebrated, confessions are heard, some Bible study or Renew groups might be formed, perhaps a Cursillo or Lenten mission happens, but little more...
...The pastoral wisdom of the church has recognized that communities of the faithful brought together by common cultures, nationalities, or languages may best be served by parishes of their own rather than by integration into pre-existing, geographically based parishes...
...Such sentiments are sincere, but naive and not pastorally helpful...
...sitivities and expectations, not according to those of the dominant group...
...The parish limps into the future with the old-timers and the newcomers going their separate and unequal ways, though the pretense of a single parish is maintained...
...If we all just ate each other's foods and learned how to say 'hello' in each other's language, and just loved each other more then we wouldn't have any of these problems...
...Father Andrew Greeley's studies indicate that 20 percent of Hispanics raised Catholic are no longer so (see, America, September 27, 1997...
...Occasional skirmishes erupt but are quickly subdued so as not to disrupt the illusion of a "church" free of such unchurch-like realities as race or ethnic-based strife...
...That parishes are "church" communities does not free them from having to contend with the social forces at work in the nitty-gritty realities of society...
...As ownership developed, financial commitment would increase...
...The immigrants would soon learn English, adopt American customs, and come to live their religion the way the rest of us do...
...This is not an imaginary scenario...
...We tried ethnic parishes in this country once...
...Other struggles often occur over the Mass...
...The hemorrhaging of the church among immigrant communities that Father Greeley reports in his studies is one sobering sign of how ineffective our one-parish-fits-all ministry has been to new immigrant communities...
...Why can't we all just get along...
...Like a car limping home after a mechanical failure on the road, ministry, outreach, and real evangelization are carried out at a minimal, "just get along" level...
...But it is not the parish that the church has traditionally seen as the locus for "catholicity...
...Commonweal 2 5 September 11, 1998...
...And most serious of all, in too many dioceses there has been a hidden abdication of the local church's mission to minister evangelically, pastorally, and strategically to immigrants...
...In most of these parishes, there has been minimal success in integrating immigrant populations with existing ones...
...There were no other options...
...there is no ecclesial reason why it couldn't be taken out of our pastoral closet once again, polished up a bit with necessary adaptations, and put back to work as the American church strives once again to meet the massive pastoral challenges presented by large new immigrant communities...
...Sooner or later, the parish finds itself in one of those parochial nightmares where the old-timers are fiercely trying to keep control from slipping through their fingers while the defenders of the newcomers valiantly make the case for a new dispensation in the life of the parish...
...After a time or two, the line counters begin their work...
...Cultural and racial gaps widen rather than shrink as naive hopes for "bridge building" become strained beyond repair...
...Financial resources for pastoral outreach are limited because they are already dedicated to other parish programs or to parochial schools that too often are only minimally accessible to the new immigrant communities...
...They themselves are not only aging, but their children and grandchildren have moved on, and other folks are moving in...
...A typical scenario might go like this: A long-established parish has a capable and dedicated cadre of people that over the years has built the place, invested in its infrastructure, and warmly worn the varnish off its pews...
...Their job is to monitor how much of the Mass is said or sung or prayed in "our" language, and how much is in "theirs...
...no parish ever is...
...The immigrant group is still dropping little more than loose Commonweal 2 3 September 11, 1998 change into the Sunday basket...
...newly developing order, but resentment builds among most of the former majority who, though still dominant, are now the minority...
...the various parties take their unequal share of the marbles and go back to their corners...
...rules are set in place for use of the plant that effectively cut out the newcomers...
...In an effort to "bring us all together," bilingual liturgies are planned for special feast days...
...The number that have had to adapt themselves to an influx of Hispanic or other immigrant groups is substantial, and few dioceses have been left untouched over the past thirty years...
...There would be no need for substantial structural change in our parishes or dioceses...
...One of the battle-lines is the parish facility: the dominant minority controls access to the hall, the gym, and even the church building...
...There are in fact many very good reasons why the ethnic or language-based parish should be allowed an opportunity to serve our church again...
...The families who built the parish over the years and sacrificed to keep it running are still the ones giving the lion's share of the parish income...
...The immigrants can't be blamed either...
...It doesn't matter if the issue is a church renovation gone haywire, a pastor who too liberally offends, or (dare we say it aloud...
...Any renewed effort to redress the still unequal balance of "ownership" is met by extraordinary pressure to maintain the stasis already achieved by wearily imploring, "Let's all just get along...
...They are fun and interesting for all concerned--up to a point...
...there would be no fundamental need for us to change for their sake...
...To receive an application cover sheet, please contact: The Center for the Study of Values in Public Life, Harvard Divinity School, 45 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138 (telephone: 617-496-3586...
...Eventually a new pastor or parish administrator arrives who acknowledges the new social reality of the parish and uses whatever skills he has available to welcome the immigrants more warmly and offer them the full services of the church...
...Gradually the newcomers become the numerical majority...
...In many, if not most, U.S...
...As it is in our big cities, so, often enough, it is in our parishes...
...this need not have been...
...They had to walk a tightrope while wondering with not a little anguish what it means to "pastor" two such diverse families under one parochial roof...
...Sometimes there are forces at work in our collective soul--long-term injustices, generations-old fears, and deeply felt angers---that keep people from just getting along...
...Who's the bad guy in this story of a parish caught in a trap from which it can't escape...
...home institutions are expected to provide additional support, plus all benefits...
...fax: 617-496-3668...
...Few preexisting parishes, and few parish pastors, have ever been equipped structurally, financially, or pastorally to minister effectively in bicultural or multicultural situations...
...But it would be better, significantly better, than what our bicultural parishes have been trying to do over the past twenty or thirty years...
...It hasn't worked out that way...
...and convene a student working group around a central issue in one's area of expertise...
...we don't need to make that mistake again...
...Quietly, though, the demographics around them are changing...
...e-maih csvpl@hds.harvard.edu...
...The consequences have eroded the "Catholicity" of the new immigrant communities...
...They do not find a spiritual home in our Anglo-American parishes...
...Pastoral planning and execution could proceed on their terms and according to their senFELLOWSHIPS AT THE CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF VALUES IN PUBLIC LIFE Harvard Divinity School, 1999-2000 The Center for the Study of Values in Public Life at Harvard Divinity School invites applications from scholars and practitioners to be in residence for one semester or one academic year...
...If they were to remain Catholic in a strange land, there was nowhere else for them to go...
...People of different cultural and linguistic, not to mention racial, backgrounds were expected to fold neatly into pre-existing parishes with different traditions, social expectations, and even gut-level understandings of Catholicism itself...
...For a good number of parishes find themselves caught up in a tug-of-war over ethnic, cultural, and linguistic differences among their members...

Vol. 125 • September 1998 • No. 15


 
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