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If the
Church Isn't about Jesus, It Isn't about Anything
By Bill Tammeus National Catholic Reporter
February 5, 2014
http://ncronline.org/blogs/small-c-catholic/if-church-isnt-about-jesus-it-isn-t-about-anything
Hans Küng has long been an important
prophetic voice, primarily within Catholicism but more broadly
within Christianity.
He continues in that role in his latest book, Can We Save the Catholic Church?, just now
published in the U.S. In it, he offers the sorrowful but hopeful
pleadings of a priest and theologian who has sought for decades
to reform the church in the liberating spirit of the Second
Vatican Council.
Küng's battles with the church's hierarchy are well
known, and much of that gets retold in this book. But what
especially struck me about this volume is that Küng's familiar
arguments to salvage Vatican II reforms are overshadowed by a
different, more important call to the whole of Christianity, not
just to Catholicism.
Here's how Küng puts it: "The crucial question is
always the same: Does one's church faithfully incorporate and
reflect the original Christian message, the Gospel, which to all
intents and purposes is Jesus Christ himself, to whom each
church appeals as its ultimate authority?" And again: "Without a
concrete and consequent return to the historical Jesus Christ,
to his message, his behavior and his fate ... a Christian church
-- whatever its name -- will have neither true Christian
identity nor relevance for modern human beings and society."
Here's how I would paraphrase Küng: Set aside your
disappointment about the church's moves away from Vatican II and
your objections to the historically regal papacy. Set aside
everything else that bothers you about the church and return to
the church's first, most important confession: "Jesus is lord."
Küng is arguing that we tether everything we do to
that. And, of course, he's right.
The problem is that this core message often gets
drowned out by Küng's and other voices that have been so
insistent -- even strident -- about naming what is wrong inside
the church. Those voices raise valid objections, and they point
to real failures in the church universal. But eventually we must
ask again this flat-footed, naïve question: What is the church
all about?
And if the church isn't about honoring and following
Jesus, it isn't about anything important.
Küng's book turns out to be an example of seeming to
make the goal of being Christ-centered secondary. He spends so
much time bemoaning the way the Vatican and bishops have handled
the church, the ways in which they have undermined the Gospels'
call to simplicity and love, that his message about returning to
Jesus as the center of faith is easy to miss.
Some of that has to do with Küng's occasional drift
into hyperbole. For instance, he says that Pope Emeritus
Benedict XVI proved himself "over the years to be incapable of
learning anything ... on the issue of abortion."
"Anything" is like the word "all" in its radical
inclusiveness. And to accuse the former pope of an incapacity to
learn "anything" struck me as the bitter denunciation of a man
who has been beaten down repeatedly by a church he loves and
refuses to leave.
Perhaps it's time to thank Küng for his tremendous
contributions to the faith and to seek out voices of reform and
renewal that aren't locked into all the old fights. Perhaps it's
time to recognize that as important as Vatican II was, it did
not accomplish everything it should have (as even Küng notes in
this book), and what's needed now is some new way forward.
Küng had to go into his original book text and revise
it in the wake of the hopeful beginnings of the papacy of
Francis. It's an awkward revision. Küng seems to want to give
the new pope credit for the new spirit he's evidenced, but
because there's so much in the past to complain about, even that
praise seems overly tentative, muted.
It's time to find a new generation of Christ-centered
visionaries to move the church universal toward what we
Presbyterians call "the church reformed, always reforming."
[Bill Tammeus, a Presbyterian elder and former
award-winning faith columnist for The Kansas City Star, writes
the daily "Faith
Matters" blog for the Star's website and a monthly column for
The Presbyterian Outlook. His latest book, co-authored with
Rabbi Jacques Cukierkorn, is They
Were Just People: Stories of Rescue in Poland During the
Holocaust. Email him at wtammeus@gmail.com.]
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