
The subject of unity has been on my mind a lot lately.
A well-formed, 100% orthodox Catholic friend shared an editorial addressing the danger of the organized dissidence against Pope Francis. Itโs from NCR, which conservative Catholics often donโt trust, so I didnโt share. But Iโve been troubled for a long time by this as well as other signs of division in the Church. How can I make a difference? How can I foster unity in the Church–and, for that matter, in the world?
Wrestling with those questions brings me back to this:

Dang it.
This is hard to swallow. I mean, I know I am flawed and weak. The rush to judgment I excoriate others for is my greatest sin, too. But Iโm trying so hard to think around the issues that divide us. To form myself, educate myself, and discern whether the good in one side outweighs the good in the other. And to share whatever good there is with others. My hope is that taking a measured approach can help bridge the gaps between us. Am I really powerless?
I was contemplating this question with great angst when my laptop unexpectedly switched documents. Thereโs nothing particularly remarkable about that (unfortunately); being an old computer with a first-generation touch screen, it does random things like that pretty regularly. What was remarkable was the document it flipped over toโa nugget carved off another post that wandered too far from its original topic:
For years, Iโve wanted to pull my hair out as our societyโboth within the Church and outside itโmakes a run for the all-or-nothing extremes. If one dares challenge trickle down economic theory, one must, by definition, be against capitalism. If one says โAmerica should be better than this,โ one must, by definition, hate America.
Of course, it happens the other direction, too. Words like “racistโ are getting thrown around pretty freely these days. Now, Iโm a big believer that white privilege and unexamined bias are real problems. I see them manifest in myself daily, and the struggle to conquer them is part of my spiritual journey. But it also seems perfectly self-evident that well-intentioned people suffering from white privilege and unexamined bias are not going to be convinced to confront said privilege by being called racists for it. How we talk about things matters.
I had to stop and chuckle at the Holy Spiritโs timing. It was like a little Divine nudge saying, โYeah, unity is my problem–but I have a job for you, donโt worry.โ
As for the division in the Church: Iโve now read two of Pope Francisโ documents in full, and I am baffled by the voices raised so loudly against him. Everything I see is so clearly, authentically Catholic. Heโs called out people for getting too focused on a sliver of the Kingdom to the exclusion of the rest; heโs called out legalism and extremism; heโs called out the misidentification of things of the world as things of God. But thereโs nothing threatening to the faith in any of that. So my best (most charitable) guess is that people get defensive when challenged to grow beyond the comfortable and familiar.
Thereโs a lot of demonizing going on within the Church, and itโs got to stop. Thereโs got to be room in the Church both for people who are passionately committed to annihilating abortion and people who believe we canโt sacrifice every other Gospel command in pursuit of that worthy goal.
I can’t help feeling that a lot of the negative chatter about Pope Francis is a reaction to him being outspoken on social justice rather than abortion. I have to keep reminding myself of this:

Both in our Church and in the larger world, our habit is to do exactly the oppositeโand to cling so tightly to our assumptions that we end up not even seeing there could be another interpretation.
When we do that, the Devil is the only winner. When we do that, weโre giving the Church and the world to Satan.


