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<text id=94TT1807>
<title>
Dec. 26, 1994: Man of the Year:Tale of One Parish
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Dec. 26, 1994 Man of the Year:Pope John Paul II
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER/MAN OF THE YEAR, Page 74
Tale of One Parish
</hdr>
<body>
<p> St. Gertrude's struggles with the question of being Catholic
while disagreeing with the Pope
</p>
<p>By Jon D. Hull/Chicago
</p>
<p> At St. Gertrude's Church on Chicago's North Side, even the
traditional Mass is a little too hip for some old-timers. "I
miss the Latin Mass; it just seemed more reverent," says Raymond
Seitz, 68, who married into the middle-class parish in 1950
and is still smarting from the seismic Vatican II reforms of
the early 1960s. "And when they started ending the Mass with
this `peace be with you' stuff, where you have to shake your
neighbors' hands or kiss them, well, that didn't go over well
at all." But at St. Gertrude's, the 10 a.m. Mass is downright
stuffy compared with the alternative 10:30 Mass held each Sunday
in the adjacent parish gymnasium. It features folk music and
an open dialogue between priest and parishioners during the
homily. "When they started that folk Mass I was waiting for
John Wayne to come down the aisle on a horse singing `Yippee-yi-yo-ti-yay!'"
grumbles Seitz, a member of the parish council. "They say,
`Oh, you old fogies, all you want to do is hear the 45-minute
Mass and get out.' But we go to church to pray and meditate.
We don't want to listen to pop music."
</p>
<p> Liberal parishioners counter that they don't want to petrify
in their pews listening to stodgy sermons, which is why the
"gym Mass" attracts about 80 mostly young worshippers a week.
Keeping both factions happy is the delicate challenge that confronts
Father William Kenneally and thousands of other priests like
him throughout the U.S., who must minister to the world's most
rambunctious group of Catholics. That tumult is reflected in
the way American Catholics view the Pope. A TIME poll shows
John Paul II enjoying a 74% approval rating. However, 73% of
Catholics also feel they can make up their own minds on such
issues as birth control. In fact, 89% believe it is possible
to disagree with the Pope and still be a good Catholic--a
stance that John Paul II would vigorously contest.
</p>
<p> Caught between pre-Vatican II conservatives who threaten to
leave the church if the Mass is further altered and liberals
who find the current liturgy too limiting, Kenneally, 59, must
regularly supplement prayers with politicking. "The challenge
for me is not in being between the church hierarchy and the
ordinary people but in being between the flanks of the ordinary
people," he says. Especially when the ordinary people have such
deep and conflicting feelings about the church hierarchy.
</p>
<p> Stocked with Irish and German Catholics when it first opened
in 1912, the middle-class parish on the city's northern edge
is increasingly filled with Asians, African Americans and Hispanics.
That influx has not been enough to offset the impact of smaller
families and the exodus of many parishioners fleeing rising
crime. Since Mass attendance peaked in 1975 at about 2,700,
it has steadily declined 5% a year. Kenneally decided to start
the gym Mass just months after he arrived at the parish in 1984
as a way to lure back Catholics who considered the traditional
Mass too male-dominated, or intimidating, or simply boring.
"Folks who are divorced, as well as gays, lesbians and feminists,
might find a home in the gym Mass," says pastoral associate
Peter Buttitta. The informal service, which can include dance
performances by children, offers open discussion between priest
and parishioners on topics ranging from feminism to divorce.
"There is much more of a sense of warmth and community," says
Judy Pier, 50. "The bigger church feels much colder and anonymous."
Conservatives remain baffled--at best. "I attended it once,"
says Dorothy Papachristos, 43. "It was so liberal! They talk
openly about a lot of things that the church teaches against."
</p>
<p> Over the past decade, attendance at weekend Mass has fallen
from 1,400 to 950. (Nationwide, only 41% of those who call themselves
Catholics say they attend weekly Mass.) Kenneally must cope
with the challenge of bringing people back into the fold at
the same time as he and his fellow pastors face a growing priest
shortage. Since Kenneally joined the parish 10 years ago, the
number of full-time priests has dropped from four to just one:
himself. St. Gertrude's five-year plan identifies one key challenge
as "Saving Pastor From Burnout." Kenneally jokes, "Maybe it's
my hangdog look." With six different Masses to officiate at
each weekend, as well as weddings, baptisms, confessions and
funerals, Kenneally must delegate. But to whom?
</p>
<p> He gets some part-time help. But last summer, when he gingerly
suggested that ex-priests--who left holy orders to marry--be allowed to preside over the alternative Mass, the proposal
was quickly quashed after angry parishioners complained to the
archdiocese. Says Chicago's Joseph Cardinal Bernardin: "It was
I who indicated to Father Kenneally that `you are going against
church discipline.'" At a meeting in January, church members
will debate a proposal to allow lay people to preside over a
Communion service once a month using wine and wafers that have
been previously consecrated by a priest. Whatever the outcome,
Kenneally is certain the church will eventually accept married
priests and ordained women. He says, "These things are inevitable."
</p>
<p> Within the parish, the bitterest battles are usually fought
within the hearts of individual parishioners trying to square
their own faith with the dictates of Rome. For Bruce Schermerhorn,
47, the struggle escalated when he got divorced in 1976. Remarried
by a judge in 1985, he attended Mass regularly without taking
Communion. "I've always had an adversarial relationship with
the church," he says. Last year, after joining a weekly men's
prayer group, he finally decided to take Communion. "Well, I
wasn't struck down by a bolt of lightning and the ceiling didn't
open up," he says. "The church and I are at odds, but I feel
I'm right on this one." Bernie O'Connor, who manages the gym
Mass, says, "It's an individual thing. There are no Communion
police, so no one will say, `You're divorced!'"
</p>
<p> Kenneally counsels parishioners to follow their faith in such
decisions. Some issues are less controversial. "Nobody ever
asks me about birth control," he says. "It's just taken for
granted that you do what you've got to do for birth control."
</p>
<p> For conservatives, who still dominate the parish, Pope John
Paul II provides much-needed reinforcement during a period of
discomforting ambiguity. Reaction among liberals varies from
weary toleration to outright ridicule. "To me, this guy is a
saint," says Papachristos. "But my son says he's no good at
all. I say 'Where did I go wrong with my son?'" Andrew, 18, considers
his mom a little closed-minded and counters, "The church has
to keep changing or it will lose people."
</p>
<p> The church already is changing, whether Rome likes it or not.
"We are the church," says Mary Anne Barry, 71, whose faith remains
unshaken by her strong differences with the Vatican. "I'm really
not an admirer of John Paul II," she says. "He still thinks
that sexual sins--I call those pelvic sins--are the big
going-to-hell sins, and I don't believe that." Mike Tobin, a
deeply committed Catholic who helped organize the gym Mass,
says, "Rome is very irrelevant to me. I'm thankful the Pope
helped shut down communism, but in many ways I disagree with
most of what he says. There are a lot of goofy rules."
</p>
<p> However, even liberals have sympathy for Joseph Cardinal Bernardin.
"I just love him," says Barry. "I know he's in the hot seat
because he has to keep Rome happy, but I really respect him."
Kenneally commends Bernardin for not making his own job more
difficult. "It would be tough under some of the other bishops,
but Bernardin believes that pastors are the ones in the trenches,
and he lets us do our job," he says. "He's extraordinarily sensitive."
Says Bernardin: "No good bishop would want any of his priests
to experience a burnout."
</p>
<p> While some parishioners struggle mightily with the seeming contradictions
of their faith, most are too busy trying to raise families and
pay bills to debate the finer points of papal policy. For them,
faith is not about obeying the latest encyclical from Rome but
rather about God and Jesus and the search for meaning in everyday
life. The parish is about community in a society where fellowship
seems harder and harder to find. At the men's Friday-morning
prayer group, half a dozen men grapple with issues ranging from
faith to careers. At the women's Tuesday-morning spiritual meeting,
talk whipsaws from God to child care, jobs and Pap smears. Few
parishioners have read the new catechism published in English
or John Paul II's book Crossing the Threshold of Hope. Says
Kenneally: "Nobody reads papal documents here."
</p>
<p> Especially not the youth. At St. Gertrude's, as elsewhere, Catholic
youth are particularly at risk: American pop culture lures them
out of the pews even as the Vatican's conservative stance repels
many of them. "When I talk to the youth about the Pope they
say, `He doesn't get it. He doesn't have a clue,'" says Joe
Swearingen, 57, who teaches youth religious classes. Swearingen
sometimes agrees, and fears the church is losing touch with
the young. "We lost three kids to a big Pentecostal church that
has a Christian rock band," he complains.
</p>
<p> Swearingen tries to teach teens that it's cool to be Catholic,
no matter how out of touch the leadership might seem. Not all
his lessons are by the book. "When it comes to sex, I tell them
the church says the only way is total abstinence, but if I know
they are not doing that, I'll give them advice on how to protect
themselves," he says. "I'd rather be dealing with a live sinner
than a dead child." That is not Swearingen's only unorthodox
act. A strong believer in both married and female clergy, he
also indulges in an occasional pipe ceremony to honor his Native
American roots. "I'm a faithful dissenter to the Pope," he says
with a smile. "Like most people, I make choices about what I
will or will not accept in church teachings. If they throw me
out the front door I'll just sneak back in through the side
door."
</p>
<p> No problem. At St. Gertrude's, the side door is always open.
</p>
<p>QUESTION:
</p>
<p> Does "too conservative" describe Pope John Paul II?
</p>
<table>
August 1993 December 1994
Yes 58% 50%
</table>
<p> Is the Pope infallible when he teaches formally on matters of
religious faith, such as the divinity of Christ?
</p>
<p> Yes 45% No 45%
</p>
<p> Is the Pope infallible when he teaches formally on matters of
morals, such as birth control and abortion?
</p>
<p> Yes 38% No 56%
</p>
<p> Is it possible to disagree with the Pope and still be a good
Catholic?
</p>
<p> Yes 89% No 8%
</p>
<p> Do you favor:
<table>
Allowing Catholic priests to be married 66%
Allowing women to be priests 59%
Allowing divorced Catholics to marry in the church 70%
</table>
</p>
<p> From a telephone poll of 507 adult American Catholics
taken for TIME/CNN on Dec. 7-8 by Yankelovich Inc. Sampling
error is plus or minus 4.4%.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>