What to Think of 'Small Faith Communities'
    
    
    by 
		 James Likoudis 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
	Description
    James Likoudis discusses the pros and cons of "Small Faith Communities". He says there is nothing wrong with gatherings of Catholics who meet in small groups regularly, ostensibly to study the truths of the Catholic Faith, to deepen their spiritual life, or to engage in the Church's mission for social justice. The problem is that in the United States they have developed a different agenda focusing on the leftest-liberal struggle for "social justice".
    
	Larger Work
    CUF NEWS
	
	
      Publisher & Date
	Catholics United for the Faith, May/June/July 1996
	
		
	
 
	
     First, it must be said that "Small Faith Communities" (SFC's) are an                ambiguous phenomenon. There is nothing wrong with gatherings of Catholics who                meet in small groups regularly, ostensibly to study the truths of the                Catholic Faith, to deepen their spiritual life, or to engage in the Church's                mission for social justice. An SFC should mean a Christ-centered group of lay                believers intent upon strengthening the bonds of real community in the                Church, encouraging fidelity to the Magisterium, and entering the field of                politics, economics, education, media and general culture by infusing into                such realities the spirit of the Gospel. Third Orders, the Legion of Mary,                Altar and Rosary societies, Holy Name Societies, chapters of Catholics United                for the Faith, and many other groups engaged in aspects of the lay apostolate                well fit such a definition of SFC's. Pope John Paul II has many times                expressed the support the Church gives for SFC's faithful to                the Church's teaching and spirit:                        
                "It is also necessary for us to create around us an environment that fosters                and strengthens the faith of the individual. Authentic Christian life needs                the support of a living community of faith and love. A Christian community at                the service of the faith has to grow from being a simple Bible Study or                Prayer group, or a social action group to a group in which the members share                their faith with one another through the proclamation of God's Word, bear                common witness to the Word they proclaim, carry the Word beyond the group to                the society in which they live.
                Pastors and Catechists should exert more effort in the formation of suitable                community leaders and animators, so that our small Christian communities may                develop into truly self-evangelizing communities in which the faithful are                progressively formed in the faith in an on-going manner, and trained to be                evangelizers and witnesses to Christ reaching out to those who do not yet                know Him or do not know Him sufficiently."  (Address 3/13/96)                
                                             Unfortunately, the SFC's that have appeared in various countries seem                to have developed a different agenda. In the USA they have assumed the need                to take over from "defunct parishes" and to establish a democratic,                "lay-centered Church" that is focused on Leftist-liberal struggle for "social                justice". There are overtones of liberating Catholics from the "restraints of                Catholic dogma", being freed from the "oppressive shackles of priests and                Bishops", and to control their own liturgies. The most extreme SFC's may be                said to be in Latin America where 100,000 "Base Communities" have been active                as heralds of "Liberation theology", being influenced by Marxist class                warfare ideas and becoming involved in Leftist socialist revolutions.                        
                In the USA, advocates of SFC's declare the Catholic Church is being "reborn                with small grassroots communities" to restructure the Church. There are 3                groups involved in their organization:                        
                -                   The North American Forum for Small Christian communities in Joliet,                  Illinois (Claiming 15,000 SFC's);                
-                   The National Alliance of parishes Restructuring Into Communities based in                  Troy, Michigan;                
-                   and, Buena Vista in Arvada, Colorado.                
                SFC's are said to come about because "too many of us feel                unseen, unheard, or anonymous within the parish to experience any sense of                belonging to community." The leading guru of SFC's who has held                countless workshops is Detroit's Fr. Arthur Baranowski who registers his                pleasure that: "SFC's change the way people view the Church; they start to                see themselves as the Church." Many SFC's have resulted from members'                participation in other groups: Marriage Encounter, Cursillo, Christian                Family Movement, various Peace and Justice groups, the parish'                Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults, and, of course, the                over-estimated RENEW groups.                        
                What is disturbing about the kind of SFC's one usually encounters is the                sense of satisfaction they register at the shortage of priests in parishes                and the increase of "priestless parishes". Then too, there is the dominance                of "facilitators" wedded to ultra-liberal ideas about the "Social Gospel".                They express, along the lines of a democratic-congregationalism, the desire                to shift power from the clergy to the laity with an accompanying disdain for                the pronouncements of the Successor of Peter on the moral issues of the day.                        
                There is disregard for the teaching of the Magisterium on contraception,                abortion and homosexuality as allegedly violating the freedom of individual                conscience. Thus, the life-experiences of "grassroots Church communities"                allowing dissent from Magisterial teachings becomes their "faith-sharing".                Where Dissent and Disobedience to Papal authority becomes part of the                mind-set of SFC's rebellion against Catholic doctrine on contraception,                abortion and homosexuality, clearly their "community faith-sharing" is NOT a                sharing in the Catholic Faith. It is not surprising, then, that such SFC's                have little concern to evangelize, that is, to actually convert non-Catholics                to the "Institutional Church" which, in fact, they condemn as irrelevant to                "modern Catholics".                        
                It is not surprising, also, that the "faith-sharing" and "community                life-experiences" of the SFC's degenerate into the sharing of personal                feelings about life (and the Church) where people are manipulated in a kind                of therapy session to "let it all hang out".                        
                Fr. Baranowski explains a major theme of the SFC approach:                        
                "Where are you going to find God if not in your life? Not in some Bible or on                some altar. If people don't begin to hear God in the day-to-day events of                their lives, they don't find God elsewhere."              
                              The key question, of course, to ask the Detroit priest (who is a favorite of                the Chicago CALL TO ACTION' crowd that has compiled a "Directory" of                their favorite SFC's) is:                        
                "Is it really God one is experiencing in the humanist busy-ness and radical                activities provided by SFC's or is it someone else?"              
                       Mr. James               Likoudis' Homepage 
    
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