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A Jesuit's Jesuit
petersvoice.com ^ | March 23, 2002 | John Mallon

Posted on 03/23/2002 9:44:56 AM PST by nickcarraway

A Jesuit's Jesuit

Father Joseph Fessio, SJ, is not a child molester. He is not even a homosexual. If he were it's likely he wouldn't have run afoul of his superiors. What Father Fessio is is a great priest. He is a scholar, having earned his doctorate, along with his friend and classmate Christoph Schönborn, now Cardinal Archbishop of Vienna, under the direction of Professor Doctor Joseph Ratzinger, now Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican.

Fessio is an entrepreneur who saw a need for the theologians he studied under Cardinal Ratzinger to be published in English and started Ignatius Press; which ignited a revolution in Catholic publishing becoming the premier publisher of Catholic books in English. Under the umbrella of Ignatius Press several Catholic Magazines are published including Catholic World Report and Catholic Dossier.

He is a teacher, having founded the Saint Ignatius Institute (SII), a great books program at the Jesuit University of San Francisco (USF). He is a pastor who is infinitely kind and understanding in the confessional, and a much in demand retreat master. Along with Cardinal Ratzinger and Cardinal Schönborn, he founded Casa Balthasar, a house of discernment in Rome for young men who were turned away from American and European seminaries because of their orthodox beliefs.

His extraordinary energy, zeal and intelligence have brought him into prominence in the Church and a household name in Catholic circles around the world. He is also a fighter who took on none other than Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston and stopped the publication of the English language Catechism of the Catholic Church because of its theologically inaccurate "inclusive language" translation. The story goes that he and a linguist colleague stayed up all night for days correcting the text and feeding it into a fax machine to Cardinal Ratzinger in Rome. It was this corrected English text that was finally published.

Father Fessio's fame — and what some would call power — is not something he sought, but it grew because of the strength of his accomplishments, his boldness, quick wit and a happy warrior's joy of in the face of the ruthless structures of dissent in the Church of the West.

In this he is also a prophet. While Catholic dissenters get all the secular media attention for their attacks on Pope John Paul II and the teachings of the Church, Father Fessio became a beloved priest because he stood for those teachings.

While Catholic dissenters like to pass themselves off as rebels and misunderstood prophets over their rosé and brie, it really doesn't take a lot of courage to oppose the Church in a world that rejects the Gospel. Nevertheless, some people still expect the Church to give her blessing to the sexual revolution — the tribute vice pays to virtue.

However, it has come to pass that a growing number of Catholics are demanding the authentic teachings of Catholicism and run into no small opposition in their dioceses, parishes and schools. And for this growing body of Catholics Father Fessio has emerged as a champion.

This apparently became too much for Fessio's leftist Jesuit brothers and superiors. Last year the newly installed left-wing president of USF, Father Steven Privett, SJ, fired most of the staff of the Saint Ignatius Institute placing it more under the authority of the dissident theology faculty of USF. This created a firestorm among SII alumni, many of whom have become prominent as Catholics in their professions. Undaunted, Father Fessio and his colleagues went to work and just last month announced the launching of Campion College, with campuses in San Francisco and Washington, DC featuring much of the former faculty of the SII.

For his efforts, Father Fessio has been "exiled." According to a letter from his Jesuit provincial, Father Thomas Smolich, Fessio is to assume duties of assistant chaplain at a small hospital in southern California, and ordered to have nothing to do with Campion College publicly or privately. He may continue his association with Ignatius Press. At this small hospital Father Fessio joins one of his Jesuit brothers. a priest in his 70s who was also uprooted from his long-time post, friends and family for being too "uppity" in his support of the Church.

But make no mistake. Perhaps Fessio's most admirable quality is his genuine humility. It is Christ who matters in his eyes, not himself. Serving the sick is by no means a "demotion" for him. As John Galten, former director of SII, now president of Campion College, and long-time friend of Fessio, once told me, "Father Fessio is a true priest. He is not in the least concerned with power or prestige. If the Jesuits finally 'got him' and exiled him to Siberia to minister to some little outpost he would be just as happy being a priest and serving the poor as he would anywhere else."

Be that as it may, a Jesuit friend told me that given who Fessio is, this could only be seen as a punishment. Punishment for what? Because Fessio is faithful to the Church, and boldly so, he is an embarrassment to his fellow Jesuits. While perverted or dissident priests get cover and protection, this, too often, is what happens to the really good ones. But Father Fessio is loved by the people. Despite decades of propaganda to the contrary, it seems that the Faithful in the pews like to see some testosterone in their priests after all.

So in this time when reports of Jesuits dying of AIDS and rampant homosexuality in the ranks, the term "a Jesuit's Jesuit" has taken a whole new meaning. But in the original meaning of the term, Joseph Fessio is indeed a Jesuit's Jesuit and a real priest. We have not heard the last of him.

John Mallon is contributing editor to Inside the Vatican magazine and an editorial consultant and contributor to The Daily Oklahoman editorial page. Read more about John here!


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: California; US: Oklahoma
KEYWORDS: academia; catholic
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1 posted on 03/23/2002 9:44:56 AM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
Thanks. I mailed this to my Dad (a retired teacher at a Jesuit University).
2 posted on 03/23/2002 9:51:13 AM PST by Hacksaw
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To: nickcarraway
Bump for The Fez!
3 posted on 03/23/2002 9:57:02 AM PST by choirboy
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To: Lady in Blue;Diago;father_elijah;jrherreid;Askel5;patent;patented;jobim;Dumb_Ox;saradippity...
ping
4 posted on 03/23/2002 10:05:17 AM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

"Dear Father Privett....

when I founded the society
as a Catholic order I never
intended this to be interpreted
as some sort of joke...
I have, therefore, decided to have
Fr. Fessio assigned as the new
Father General..."

5 posted on 03/23/2002 10:18:48 AM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
``This letter I just recieved validates my decisions.''-Steve Privett
6 posted on 03/23/2002 10:24:06 AM PST by nickcarraway
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
Thank you, we needed to hear from the soldier-priest himself. Glad he e-mailed you.
7 posted on 03/23/2002 10:25:35 AM PST by pbear8
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To: nickcarraway

"...furthermore, it has come to my attention
that there is a mission in the Amazonian jungle
of Brazil which we have decided is very well suited
to your talents. Fr. Privett, I know that you are the
right man to take on this most important work..."


8 posted on 03/23/2002 10:34:08 AM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: nickcarraway
Thanks Nick, an inspiring story of a true soldier of Christ. Jim (PA Lurker)
9 posted on 03/23/2002 10:41:18 AM PST by PA Lurker
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To: nickcarraway
Thank you, Nick, for the ping. This is excellent.
10 posted on 03/23/2002 10:49:32 AM PST by father_elijah
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To: nickcarraway
bump
11 posted on 03/23/2002 10:51:12 AM PST by Diago
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To: nickcarraway
Thanks for the PING!
12 posted on 03/23/2002 10:53:43 AM PST by grumpster-dumpster
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To: nickcarraway
I really enjoed reading this post. I sent it to my mom and dad who never met a Jesuit they didn't love!
13 posted on 03/23/2002 11:11:42 AM PST by FryingPan101
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To: nickcarraway
bump
14 posted on 03/23/2002 11:30:44 AM PST by patent
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To: nickcarraway
While the pc press is criticizing priests, it is interesting to find the NY Times book review has a book praising the deterioration of the Jesuit order by Gay culture. LINK

The New York Review of Books

March 28, 2002

Review

Jesuits in Disarray By Garry Wills

Passionate Uncertainty: Inside the American Jesuits by Peter McDonough and Eugene C. Bianchi University of California Press, 380 pp., $29.95

In 1951, I entered a novitiate of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). Our large group of novices set a new record— over sixty of us in just one province (of eight at the time) in America. Buildings were hastily being built to house this influx during the height of post–World War II religiosity. Jesuits were considered the most intellectual order of priests, famous for their long (thirteen-year) lead-up to ordination, followed by an extra year of study after that. I left well before I reached the halfway mark in this course. Those who did get halfway through were given a detour of three years to teach in one of the many (forty-five, nationwide) Jesuit high schools, and their work at this stage was a principal source of "vocations" from those schools. Young idealists still on their way to the priesthood offered stirring models for their students, who wanted to join them in their high calling.

That was half a century ago, and the flow of men into the Society at that point has been reversed and canceled since then by a flood of men out—well over five thousand of them in America alone. The new buildings (and some of the old ones) are now sold off or turned to other uses. As Peter McDonough and Eugene Bianchi write in their important new survey of the order, "Membership in the Society of Jesus in the United States peaked in 1965, at 8,393 men. By 2000 it had been cut by more than half, falling to 3,635." The Jesuits are not unique in this. The steep decline in their numbers is equaled or surpassed by those in other Catholic ministries. The number of aspirant priests in all Catholic seminaries (mainly diocesan) between 1966 and 1993 dropped by 85 percent.[1] Without fresh recruits to the priesthood, the average age of priests has been climbing sharply. The falloff in women's orders was even more abrupt. In 1955, there were ten times as many nuns as priests in America. Now there are fewer, and they are even older than the aging priests. Approximately fifty thousand nuns left in the decade between 1966 and 1976—a little-heralded achievement of the women's movement.[2] Women can now have meaningful careers that were closed to the young idealists who used to enter convents. Many nuns discovered this while participating in, or watching other women participate in, the civil rights demonstrations of the Sixties.

So the general decline of religious orders is a familiar story. But the book on the Jesuits has a special poignancy, since the order entered the crisis period with extraordinarily high prestige and recruitment. If even the priestly elite has suffered setbacks, the portents for other orders, and for the celibate priesthood in general, are grim. The Jesuits' loss of numbers has led to a drastic rearrangement of the Society's demographics, a change described by the authors as "the gaying and the graying of the Jesuits." There are no longer young seminarians, in any number, to teach in the high schools and recruit new troops. In fact, there are few Jesuit priests left in the colleges, which have largely been turned over to lay administrators and staff. Well over half of the teachers were Jesuits in the high school I attended, most of them young. Now less than a tenth of Jesuit high school faculties are Jesuits, most of them old.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This situation is studied, sympathetically but clinically, by McDonough, a professor of political science at Arizona State University, and Bianchi, a professor emeritus of religion at Emory. The authors conducted long confidential interviews, either in person or by correspondence, with over two hundred Jesuits, with an equal number of ex-Jesuits, and with a hundred or so lay people who work closely with the Jesuits (principally in higher education). The inclusion of those who have left the order was a brilliant idea, and it led to some unexpected results. "Work satisfaction," for instance, is higher among present Jesuits than among former ones, suggesting that the morale problem in the order may not be as severe as could be expected. Regard for the order is still high among those who left, while criticism of Church authorities is almost as intense among those who stayed as among those who did not. In fact, many Jesuits have a higher regard for their order's leadership than for Church authority. A spiritual director in his fifties said, "If I could remain a Jesuit while joining the Quakers, I could be tempted!" One Jesuit administrator in his thirties says of the hierarchy under John Paul II's guidance, "I think the church is being governed by thugs." No present or former Jesuit in this book, no matter how disaffected, says anything like that about his Jesuit superiors.

To meet the crisis of declining numbers and rising ages, the Jesuits have become more adaptable. The cumbrous long training, never intended by Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the order, has been streamlined. The month-long retreat undergone at the beginning of the novitiate is no longer given to the whole group (for one thing, groups no longer enter) but has returned to Ignatius' own practice of tailoring these "Spiritual Exercises" to the needs of a single person. Jesuits who complete the flexible new training are given greater choice in their assignments and form of ministry.

Reforms of this sort make it more difficult for the order to superintend its vast educational apparatus, which includes twenty-eight colleges or universities as well as the forty-five high schools already mentioned. Trying to maintain a Jesuit presence or aura at so many institutions involves the order in what one respondent calls "feeding the monster." Most of the universities have been turned over to lay control, for legal and financial reasons as much as because of reduced Jesuit numbers. This makes it hard for superiors to deploy the dwindling number of Jesuits in an efficient way. The lay faculties have their own priorities, and no longer just accept Jesuits foisted on them, while the Jesuits to be assigned have greater control over their own lives.

Jesuit schools were known for their humanistic studies, based on the classics. At my Jesuit high school I took four years of Latin and two of Greek. The demand for that kind of education has slackened, as has the supply of Jesuits to conduct it. When my son and some friends asked for a course in Greek at the Jesuit high school he attended in the 1970s, he was told there was no longer a market for that. Without the order's trademark discipline, and with more lay teachers than Jesuits in "Jesuit schools," an obvious move, one might think, would be to turn over "secular" subjects to the laity and reserve theology classes to the Jesuits. But the order is chary of that move, since so many Jesuits disagree with the teachings of church authority. They know the Society is suspect in Rome, and is being specially targeted for the enforcement of the papal document Ex corde ecclesiae (1990), putting all theology teachers in Catholic schools under the scrutiny of the local bishop. Some Jesuits try to avoid trouble by teaching "spirituality," often with an emphasis on Eastern religions, rather than Catholic theology.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Another attempt to retain a special sense of mission has been to emphasize social activity under the rubric of "faith and justice." One attraction of this move is that Rome is generally liberal on social issues, less likely to discipline those engaged in them than in doctrinal matters. But this program just aggravates the manpower problem of superiors, since it spreads the available pool of talent out into separate activities, making them unavailable to "feed the monster" or maintain close community ties. Allies in social work, lay colleagues in the schools, and professional associates of all sorts offer Jesuits alternative communities to that of the order. The few younger members of the Society have a hard time relating to the large residue of older Jesuits. This "decimation of the bridging generation" (as the authors call it) makes real solidarity hard to maintain. One Jesuit says the younger men have the sense of living with their grandfathers, who speak nostalgically of the past. In this "community as minimalist encounter," communal activities are carried on at the level of "middle-distance pleasantries," driving some to seek deeper friendship among the laity.

Entering the Jesuits used to take one into a stable world; but that is far from the experience of recent times. A thirty-five-year-old still studying theology says: "My novice master left to marry, my formation director left for a relationship with another man, et cetera. One cannot help but get the sense that we of this generation of Jesuits may be the 'last of the Shakers.'" One of the striking findings of the authors is that fewer of those entering the order in recent years come from devout Catholic families. They are following an individual quest for faith, not expressing a faith widely shared. The authors note that Jesuits of the mid-twentieth century tended to come from ethnic subcultures—Irish, Italian, German, and Polish, among others—where their families were embedded in Catholic conventions that set them slightly apart from mainstream America. This gave a sense of solidarity, of belonging, with a countercultural edge to it. Many of those entering already had priests in their extended families, and they knew largely what to expect of clerical life in general.

Now, however, Catholics are both more assimilated to the general American culture and more divided among themselves. Jesuits have, in effect, to make up their own identities, working out their own concept of what it means to be a Catholic, a priest, a religious. They still want to be distinctive, to have a mission not shared by the general population. This leads to experimentation in countercultural styles. Examples of this are the faith-and-justice activism already referred to, or the study of Eastern religions. Another social bond is the Catholic version of the gay movement. The authors report a general agreement among present and former Jesuits that a gay subculture flourishes in the Society. Outsiders became aware of this subculture in 2000, when it was reported that Jesuits by the dozens were suffering from or dying of AIDS. From one novitiate alone—in fact, the one I entered in 1951—five men who were novices in the 1960s were dead of AIDS by the 1990s.[3] There were attempts to hide this rate—when Thom Savage, the popular former president of Rockhurst College in Kansas City, died in 1999, it was said that he died of respiratory problems, but a reporter for The Kansas City Star found only one cause of death, AIDS, listed on his death certificate.[4]

It is not surprising that the numbers of heterosexuals have declined, as many left to marry and others were deterred by the celibacy requirement from entering. The remaining or arriving gays have formed protective networks— the authors call it a "lavender Mafia" —to provide the sense of community otherwise so hard to come by in the order. Of course, this works against a larger sense of community, since some of those Jesuits interviewed express resentment at being excluded by the gays. A straight young Jesuit says: "I feel quite alone when Jesuits of my generation talk about sex and sexuality. Straights complain about being in the minority in the 'younger Society' and about being held to stricter norms of conduct. Gays want shoulders to cry on as they struggle with coming out and are unduly sensitive to any detail of a response which they can interpret as nonacceptance." A man in his thirties teaching in a high school also feels stranded: "Several of my former Jesuit friends would mention the large number of gay Jesuits and the impact that had on community life as being a big reason they left. As a relatively young Jesuit who is heterosexual, I believe I am in the minority, and that raises questions." A priest in his sixties is less tolerant of the younger men: "I get annoyed with those gays who seem stuck on one note—anger." This man seeks escape from the community room by spending time with women friends outside his institution.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Other Christian denominations have accepted gay ministers, and there is no reason to think Catholics could not do this as well. A poll of Catholics in the Boston area, a home of the traditional religion, found that 51 percent of them disagreed with the Pope on the intrinsic immorality of homosexual acts.[5] But that, of course, is the problem— the Jesuits cannot be honest about their sexual life so long as the Vatican is forbidding it. Therefore they quietly ignore papal teaching on homosexuality, just as the laity ignores the ban on contraceptives. There is a collusive secrecy to the whole situation, lay and clerical. That collusion is, paradoxically, confirmed by the presence of a small but determined group of younger Jesuits who are "restorationists," in total agreement with John Paul II's attempt to revive the traditional church. Though at odds with most of their fellow Jesuits, these men feel a mission to draw the order back to older patterns. (Interesting pro gay propaganda. Wonder if Boston polls would be the same today.LadyDoc)

Yet the price of their intransigence is a willingness to get along with the people they are opposing. In fact, the contemporary Jesuit's pursuit of meaningful ministry creates a loose federation of countercultural efforts (even neoconservatism is one of these) in which each set's survival depends on a protectively vague awareness of what the other groups are up to. This is reflected in the attitude of the order's general in Rome, who must assure the papacy that things are not amiss in the ranks below him. "Peter-Hans Kovenbach, the Dutch general of the Society since 1983, with long experience in the Middle East before coming to Rome, is known for his skill at massaging the grandees of the papal court," write McDonough and Bianchi. If the general should try to enforce the papal ban on any homosexual activity, the already thin ranks could be considerably reduced—gays might leave in droves, as heterosexuals already have.

The resulting permissiveness is excused by the undoubtedly good work that many Jesuits do in their new quest for meaningful activities—in social work, scholarship, counseling, giving retreats—a quest successful enough to be reflected in the high satisfaction they say they take in their jobs. Since "there are almost no mechanisms for processing conflict," it is to everybody's interest not to let conflict arise, at least not openly. But this swarming of separate and self-directed activities looks only to the short term. The loose netting together of different operations does not consider the overall mission of the Society as a single body. No serious thought has been given to what may be necessary steps—like divesting themselves of some if not most of their schools. Jesuits are like most Catholics in thinking that a married priesthood should and will be adopted in time. But only a few of them face the fact that this could seal the fate of their Society—the spouses of priests are unlikely to want to join in community with other married couples, especially if the community still has a remnant of "grandfathers." The authors put it this way: "Progressive measures, like a married clergy, would almost certainly speed up the decline in the number of candidates for holy orders in celibate groups."

Though the methods used in this book are those of sociological surveys, including charts and statistics, the sensitive reading of the interviews and a catchy writing style redeem it from the worst features of such work. There are faults here, like a repetitiveness in the commentary on the interviews. The authors also have an annoying habit of using the end notes to mention any and every book connected with a subject treated in the text, not directing attention to particular positions or passages within the books. But otherwise they succeed very well in presenting the struggle of an organization deeply challenged at many levels and coping with what seem almost insurmountable problems.

15 posted on 03/23/2002 2:14:18 PM PST by LadyDoc
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To: nickcarraway
Perhaps Fessio's most admirable quality is his genuine humility. It is Christ who matters in his eyes, not himself. Serving the sick is by no means a "demotion" for him.

Amen. Have a blessed Holy Week, everyone.

16 posted on 03/23/2002 3:54:45 PM PST by patented
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To: nickcarraway

A restatement of philosophical reflections underlying the Ratio Studiorum.
Shall we send Fr. Privett a copy? One gets the feeling he needs to brush up a little
on foundational principles.

17 posted on 03/23/2002 4:33:25 PM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: LadyDoc
Biggest problem we have in the Church is the invasion of homosexuality into the priestly ranks. Check out the M/O of these people; you'll see their agenda based on Liberalism/Socialism/Marxism/Homosexualism/Feminism.

BTW nickcarraway, thanks for the great article. Fr. Fessio is one of the great priests of our time. He should be made a Cardinal. I never knew he was a friend and classmate of Christoph Cardinal Schönborn. I think he'll will be our next Pope.

18 posted on 03/23/2002 4:53:09 PM PST by ThomasMore
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To: LadyDoc
numbers of heterosexuals have declined, The remaining or arriving gays have formed protective networks— the authors call it a "lavender Mafia" —to provide the sense of community otherwise so hard to come by in the order.

So disgusting! This is a teaching order. Not only are young men in danger from these gays, young women under their care are truly treated like hell, like second-class citizens and probably their grades are affected. I attest to this through long, sad experience. Keep your daughters away from gay priests and other gay teachers.

19 posted on 03/23/2002 5:10:24 PM PST by PoisedWoman
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To: HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
You might want to start with something more remedial.
20 posted on 03/23/2002 5:45:16 PM PST by nickcarraway
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