"It is...Our will that Catholics should abstain from certain appellations which have recently been brought into use to distinguish one group of Catholics from another. They are to be avoided not only as 'profane novelties of words,' out of harmony with both truth and justice, but also because they give rise to great trouble and confusion among Catholics. Such is the nature of Catholicism that it does not admit of more or less, but must be held as a whole or as a whole rejected: 'This is the Catholic faith, which unless a man believe faithfully and firmly; he cannot be saved' (Athanasian Creed). There is no need of adding any qualifying terms to the profession of Catholicism: it is quite enough for each one to proclaim 'Christian is my name and Catholic my surname,' only let him endeavour to be in reality what he calls himself." -- Pope Benedict XV, Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum 24 (1914)

Monday, July 16, 2012

Bishop Matthew Clark leaving indelible mark on diocese




Bishop Matthew Clark



Written by
Sean Dobbin
Staff writer



Bishop Matthew H. Clark acknowledges the crowd at his installation in Rochester on June 26, 1979.



Bishop Clark, who will reach the mandatory retirement age of 75 this summer, celebrates Mass at St. Thomas More church on East Avenue in Rochester on June 17. / KRIS J. MURANTE / staff photographer

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Some would welcome new blood, others won't
Bishop Matthew H. Clark


Bishop Matthew H. Clark remembers the letter: stern, foreboding, and signed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — the man whom the world knows today as Pope Benedict XVI.

Delivered to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester in 1986, the Vatican’s letter said that Rev. Charles E. Curran’s beliefs on the subjects of masturbation, homosexuality and premarital sex would promote a questionable “pluralism in teaching moral doctrine,” and that Clark was not to defend the man’s opinions any more.

But Clark didn’t back down.

“Your Eminence, I fail to see how such a description does justice to what I wrote,” Clark responded in a return letter. “My intention was to portray moral theology as a living discipline, which ever faces new questions and which historically has developed a great deal.”

The exchange occurred only a quarter of the way through his tenure, but is a microcosm of Matthew Clark’s 33-year career as bishop of the Rochester diocese.

Sunday, Clark turns 75 years old, and is submitting his resignation to the Holy See, as is required of all bishops in the Catholic Church who reach that age.

With beliefs shaped by the historic Second Vatican Council, Clark’s willingness to explore evolving viewpoints on issues not supported by the Catholic Church have endeared him to his supporters, who call him caring, thoughtful, and compassionate in an era where some Catholics find themselves conflicted over church teachings.

He’s shown benevolence towards gay and lesbian Catholics, given leadership roles to women not seen in other dioceses, and has generally been accepting of progressive theologians, such as Curran.

But his willingness to compromise on certain subjects has also distressed his critics, who say that Clark has skirted Vatican authority at every turn, weakened the Catholic school system, confused parishioners through lenience on social issues, and turned the Rochester diocese into the most liberal district in the country.



The size of that district has fluctuated, as it has throughout much of the country. Following the sexual abuse scandal that rocked the Catholic church around the turn of the century, the percentage of people who identify themselves as Catholic dropped to a low point of 19 percent in the 12-county diocese. But it has since rebounded to 23 percent — about 354,000 people — close to what it was when Clark arrived in Rochester.

As Clark’s tenure nears its end, the memories of both his strongest supporters and his harshest critics are studded with the same touchstones.

LGBT issues

James Likoudis remembers arriving at Bishop Clark’s office with a group of other parishioners in August 1979, just two months after Clark had been named bishop.

The group put forth a list of concerns, including a lack of orthodox teaching at the diocese’s seminary, sex education in Catholic schools that flew in the face of Catholic doctrine, and a seeming endorsement of the aforementioned Rev. Charles Curran’s beliefs.

But Clark treated the group dismissively, said Likoudis, 83, of Montour Falls, Schuyler County.

“He was obviously on another wavelength,” said Likoudis, who has authored several theological books, one of which bears Clark’s imprimatur, or official license. “He has his own theological agenda, and it’s hung very loosely to the dictates of the Vatican.”

Clark’s critics acknowledge that publicly, Clark has never explicitly said that he supports same-sex marriage.

But they feel his actions have shown his personal stance on the issue, citing events as far back as 1986, when Clark placed his imprimatur on Rev. Matthew Kawiak’s sexuality handbook, which discussed homosexuality, contraception and masturbation; Clark later removed the imprimatur on the orders of Cardinal Ratzinger.

More recently, in the lead-up to the vote on same-sex marriage in New York, Clark was largely absent from the debate.

“He put out a few letters (last year), but it was the same letter they put out years before that just said ‘This is what the Catholic Church believes,’ ” said Ben Anderson, who contributes to the website Cleansing Fire, a blog critical of Bishop Clark. “That was it. There was no standing up. No going in front of the media and saying ‘You can’t propose this.’ Bishop Clark was just sort of mum on that legislation.”

Anderson called the Rochester diocese one of Catholicism’s “last progressive strongholds” in the United States.

“Things like human sexuality, these are things that the church has ruled infallible,” said Anderson. “These things never change. If your job is to defend Catholicism, and you’re doing something else, then you’re not being completely honest.”

***

Thomas Wahl remembers Bishop Clark taking the pulpit in September 1998, before a Mass of gay and lesbian Catholics.

Wahl, the one-time head of the local chapter of Dignity U.S.A., a group of gay and lesbian Catholics seeking acceptance from the Catholic Church, was among the more than 600 who pushed passed the protesting crowds at the door and watched as Bishop Clark took the altar at St. Mary’s Church.

“He said ‘Good afternoon,’ and then he just stopped,” said Wahl. “And for 15 or 20 seconds, the tears rolled down his cheeks.”

It was only the second such Mass that Clark had attended, and it came in the midst of a two-year stretch that saw the Rochester diocese take center stage in a national debate on how the Catholic Church should treat its gay parishioners.

After the diocese’s first gay Mass, which Clark had convened in March 1997, protestors got the attention of the Vatican, who began keeping a close eye on the region as the diocese made some seemingly conflicting decisions regarding its gay outreach.

In the summer of 1998, Clark reassigned Rev. James Callan of Corpus Christi Church for three offenses, one of which was blessing gay weddings. Shortly after, he ordered diocesan priests to stop participating in a special weekly Mass for members of Dignity U.S.A.

But just one week after barring his own priests from the Dignity Masses, Clark turned around and hosted a national conference of Catholics that minister to homosexuals, and gave his second Mass for gays and lesbians, further confounding his critics.

“I have so much love for this man, because he doesn’t really care who he pisses off,” said Wahl. “He will go as far as he can while still staying within the letter of the law so he can continue to be a shepherd for the Rochester gay Catholic community.”

Corpus Christi Church eventually split from the Catholic Church in a schism that drew national attention. But Callan — who was also cited for offering communion to non-Catholics and allowing women to concelebrate Mass — recently expressed admiration for Clark, calling him a “wonderful bishop.”

“He protected us from the Vatican for years and years with those three issues,” said Callan, a pastor at the renamed Spiritus Christi Church in Rochester. “We all believe that he feels the same way about all these issues that we did. I think the reason he let all those things go on at Corpus Christi is because he believed in them.”

Like Clark’s critics, Callan and Wahl are among those that think his actions speak louder than his lack of words.

“The church has some very high ideologues,” said Wahl. “But from a caring, compassionate point of view, you will not find anyone better than Bishop Clark.”

Women in the church



Charlotte Bruney remembers meeting Bishop Clark briefly when he spoke on the role of women in the Catholic Church at a 1993 conference in Hartford, Conn.

Five years later, as she was interviewing for a position in the Rochester diocese, she bumped into him in the hallway.

“We’ve met before, haven’t we?” Bruney remembers Clark asking.

“I was just so touched by that,” said Bruney, a pastoral administrator at the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Brockport who has served in the diocese since 1998.

Bruney was drawn to Rochester by a diocesan culture that she’d loved — and lost — in her previous post in Connecticut.

She’d been working as part of a collaborative team ministry in the Hartford diocese, but after the bishop’s sudden death, the Vatican appointed a successor who had little interest in allowing women to serve in leadership roles. Bruney and the other women were dismissed.

“I was really distraught,” said Bruney. “I had given up so much to work for the church and it felt like a big slap in the face to be dismissed without even a conversation. I wrestled with whether or not I’d stay in the Catholic Church.”

Then she remembered Clark’s speech years earlier and decided to apply for a pastoral administrator position in the Rochester diocese.

The title pastoral administrator suggests a behind-the-scenes position, and in many dioceses, that’s what they are. But in Rochester, the women who serve in these roles are visible, they are active, and they are leaders.

“He’s permitted women to preach pretty extensively in this diocese,” Bruney said. “He’s always been conscious of the voice of women, and he’s felt our pain when he’s had to restrict us.”

In addition to allowing a somewhat expansive role for pastoral administrators in the diocese, Clark has also made several statements in the past suggesting his support for one of the church’s most divisive issues: the ordination of female priests.



He’s often couched such statements, saying in 1991, for example, that “Were it possible, I would do it. It is not possible.”

But his support of the issue is commonly discussed as fact by both supporters and critics.

“He’s been very open to women’s participation in the church process, but there are certain parameters that he can’t get past,” said Mary Kate Driscoll of Rochester, a former member of the diocese’s Women’s Commission, an 18-member advisory council. “I think he’s done absolutely the best he can, given those parameters.”

Clark’s outreach to Latino parishioners is also praised by many throughout the region. At diocesan churches with high percentages of Latinos, Clark regularly gives Masses in Spanish, which he learned early in his tenure in Rochester.

“Every time that we invite him to come to our special Spanish celebrations, he’s always said yes to us,” said Bruni Martinez, 56, of Rochester, a parishioner at Holy Apostles Church. “He’s shown up to many, many of those services.”

***

Mary Aramini remembers the first time she saw Bishop Clark preside over a daily Mass, but only recalls the incident because for her, running across the bishop was extremely rare.

Aramini has come full circle with Catholicism, having left the church and adopted a pro-choice stance for about 10 years when she was younger.

Eventually, the Catholic Church drew her back. But the one she found in the Rochester diocese was not what she was looking for when she moved to the area in 1986.

She couldn’t find a novena to participate in, and most churches weren’t providing regular confession. Having returned to pro-life beliefs, she was disappointed that she never saw the bishop attending any pro-life rallies or praying outside any abortion clinics, as she’d seen bishops elsewhere do in the past.

Additionally, she felt that the church had always revered women, and didn’t think much of Clark’s progressive stances on various women’s issues.

“Everything doesn’t have to be identical to be equal in dignity,” said Aramini, a Rochester lawyer. “Women can have babies. Men cannot. You start with your basic anatomy, and you’re not the same.”

“So I don’t believe a woman has to be a priest,” she said. “I don’t believe a woman necessarily should be a priest. That doesn’t mean a woman can’t be just as active in the church, fulfilling whatever dreams they have in terms of promoting their faith.”

In recent years, Aramini has taken to attending church in Niagara County whenever possible, where she can sit through a “proper Mass” and relax, she said.

“They tolerate all diversity, except if you want to be traditional,” Aramini said.



Shrinking schools

Gretchen Garrity remembers meeting Bishop Clark at a Chrism Mass shortly after she converted to Catholicism in 2006.

“He’s a very kind and gentle man, and he knew our names and took the time to speak with us,” said Garrity, 52, of Corning, Steuben County. “It was a wonderful, wonderful experience.”

Garrity said that after the Mass, she proceeded to “enter vigorously into the life of the parish,” but quickly became dismayed at some of the diocesan closures that she started to see around her.

After two decades of decline, enrollment at Catholic schools nationally had slowly started to rebound in the 1990s, but in many regions, the sexual abuse scandal that would rock the church for years to come wiped out the gains. The Rochester diocese was among those that were forced to consolidate churches and close schools in the years that followed.

Most recently, the Diocese closed 13 of its remaining 24 schools in 2008, and fewer than 4,000 students are now enrolled in schools in the diocese.

But Garrity called such closures shortsighted, saying they lead to a self-fulfilling prophecy.

“They were operating like they were going to go out of business,” said Garrity, who said she considered the school system to be the foundation of the Catholic community. “And when you operate like you’re going to go out of business, you probably do.”

***

Bishop Clark remembers the school closings. And the schism with Corpus Christi, and the gay Masses, and the meetings with the women’s commission.

He remembers the time spent in his youth helping the priests in his local church, which eventually inspired him to join the priesthood.

He remembers the day in 1979 when he was appointed bishop of Rochester by Pope John Paul II, which at the time made him the second youngest bishop to ever be appointed in the U.S.

He remembers the diocesan-wide Synod in 1993, which brought together ideas and concerns from throughout the entire region and steered the diocese’s future.

But he also recalls the more painful decisions he’s had to make, and the closing of schools is among them.

So does the nationwide abuse scandal that led to the diocese’s removal of 23 priests over the last 10 years due to sexual abuse complaints.



“It is still a very dark time, but I think there are some rays of light emerging, thanks be to God, in the work that’s been done since then to train people, to educate people, to take measures of security and do what we can to make sure that will never happen again,” said Clark.

One day soon, he will have only memories.

But the diocese he led will have something more substantial: A church more accepting of the modern world’s complexities; one more open to expanded roles for women and laypeople.

And, for better or worse, those are things that will fade far less quickly.

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On related topics...


Vocation-poor dioceses
The nation’s dioceses with the lowest ratio of seminarians to Catholics (starting with the bottom-ranked diocese) are Honolulu, Hawaii; San Diego, California; El Paso, Texas; Rockville Centre, New York; Hartford, Connecticut; Santa Rosa, California; Las Vegas, Nevada; Paterson, New Jersey; San Bernardino, California; Dallas, Texas; Brooklyn, New York; and Rochester, New York.


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The February 2007 issue of Crisis Magazine has an article entitled The State of the Catholic Church in America, Diocese by Diocese. It is an evaluation/analysis of the current health of the various Latin rite dioceses of the Catholic Church in America. The article starts out with a very interesting question that sets the tone & direction of the analysis, "Does the bishop matter?"


The bottom 5 are:

172. Albany NY

173. Metuchen NJ

174. Rochester NY

175. Rockville Center NY

176. Hartford CT*


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CatholicCulture.org: Pray. Think. Act.


Diocese of Rochester’s Mass attendance plummets 25% in eight years


CWN - October 06, 2009

Between 2000 and 2008, Sunday Mass attendance plunged in the Diocese of Rochester by 25%, according to a diocesan newspaper report. During the same time period, the diocese reduced the number of parishes from 161 to 131. Bishop Matthew Clark, now 72, has governed the diocese since 1979 and recently installed a labyrinth in his cathedral.
An analysis of seminarian data by Catholic World Report magazine found that the upstate New York diocese is one of the most “vocation poor” in the nation.
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Cathedral Renovation Foes Turn to City for Help


by Judy Roberts, Register Correspondent Sunday, Jan 05, 2003 1:00 AM Comment

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Opponents of the renovation of Sacred Heart Cathedral here are fighting their battle on two fronts these days by working with a canon lawyer and attempting to have the building declared a landmark by the city.

The Sacred Heart Preservation Committee, which has hired canon lawyer Alan Kershaw to challenge the renovation in Rome, lost its initial bid to have the cathedral designated a landmark on Oct. 7 when the city planning commission voted 5-3 against the proposal.
Now nine members of the committee have filed a petition in the Monroe County division of the New York State Supreme Court to ask that the planning commission decision be overturned.

Renovation plans call for replacing the cathedral's marble altar with a new one to be located in the nave on a raised platform. Other changes will include relocating the tabernacle to a chapel and removing the baldacchino over the high altar and the pedestal under the pulpit. The diocese also plans to restore the cathedral's stained-glass windows and restore and enhance the ceiling.

Alan Knauf, the attorney representing the group, said his clients allege the commission did not apply the proper tests to the decision. The panel, he said, should have considered only whether the building was a landmark but instead reviewed the appropriateness of the proposed changes, a question he said should have been left to the city's preservation board once landmark status was granted.

A spokesman for the Rochester Diocese, which opposes landmark status for the cathedral on grounds it would place a financial burden on the church whenever work has to be done on the structure, said the planning commission made the right decision.

“We view the church as something that's alive, ever reforming, and we want to be able to respond to changing times and reform,” spokesman Michael Tedesco said. “When you have some of the restrictions landmark status brings about, it doesn't allow for that.”

However, Michael Brennan, a member of the executive board of the Sacred Heart Preservation Committee and one of the nine petitioners, said landmark status would only apply to dramatic changes in the building. He said it would still allow for such alterations as the removal of pews and even replacement of the altar.

“What [would be] protected [is] that sense of Gothic interior,” he said. “They could not destroy the sanctuary, which they're doing.”

Brennan said his group considers the proposed changes destructive. He thinks it is important to preserve the cathedral as a landmark in part because Fulton J. Sheen, who is being considered for beatification, served there as bishop of Rochester from 1966 to 1969. Brennan's group believes this makes the cathedral a potential third-class relic.

“If Archbishop Sheen becomes a saint, the cathedral would be a pilgrimage site,” he said. “If much of what he used is decimated, it would lose its attraction.”


Read more: http://www.ncregister.com/site/article/cathedral_renovation_foes_turn_to_city_for_help/#ixzz20oODcghQ


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Murderin' the Cathedral?: My Trip to Rochester’s Sacred Heart
Catholic Exchange ^ | June 10, 2005 | Rich Leondi


Posted on Fri Jun 10 2005 13:12:54 GMT-0400 (Eastern Daylight Time) by NYer

Bishop Matthew Clark took over my home diocese of Rochester, New York, in 1978 when I was about ten years old. So fixed is his name in my memory that regardless of where I attend Mass, during the liturgy of the Eucharist I half expect the priest to say "Matthew our bishop" despite the fact that I haven't lived in Rochester for almost twenty years.

A Visit Home

The controversy surrounding the renovation of Sacred Heart Cathedral is something I've followed off and on since the bishop announced his intentions in 2000. Clark’s plan was to "update" the small 1928 cathedral with an $11 million renovation. Yet so incensed were some Rochester Catholics that a Sacred Heart Preservation Committee was formed to declare the cathedral a city landmark in an ultimately failed attempt to thwart the bishop.

Sacred Heart is around the corner from my high school, Aquinas Institute, and several of my school friends belonged to the parish and attended its school. Accompanied by my father and my seven-year-old son, I decided to visit the Cathedral during a recent trip home to see what the fuss was about.

Now, I am not an architectural expert — far from it. To date my Catholic focus has been on catechesis. So my recognition of a bad renovation is, on a certain level, like Justice Potter Stewart's famous dictum for identifying obscenity: "I know it when I see it." (More on standards later.)

A House Swept Clean and Empty

You first notice the sea of chairs. That's right, chairs. There are no pews in Clark's self-described "Mother Church." Instead there are padded, movable, light brown chairs not much different from those you’d find at an outdoor wedding reception, only these come with flimsy retractable kneelers. Don't bump one of them, because you're likely to shift noisily the entire row.

Then your eyes are drawn to the plain, box-like structure in the middle of the church. Elevated on a slate and marble riser, it looks like one of those kitchen islands that people place in their homes after a remodeling project. You wouldn't be surprised to find a cast iron range or an indoor grill underneath the linen. If you haven't guessed it, this is what the good bishop thinks an altar — the place where heaven and earth meet — should look like. Where the old altar stood are rows of even more chairs, presumably there for the choir to "entertain" the assembly.

Next, you notice the bishop's chair, the "cathedra" of the cathedral. It looks like a captain’s chair from the inside of a conversion van or a borrowed seat from one of the JetBlue airplanes that shuttle Rochesterians to and from New York City. Like the chairs for the congregation, it too is padded and, like everything else in the place, entirely lacking in sacramentality. As I explained to my son, the chair represents the seat of a bishop's authority in his diocese. Somehow Bishop Clark's chair is a particularly fitting image of his tenure.

The Woeful Record

Am I being too hard on Bishop Clark? I don’t think so. Clark’s twenty-six-year tenure as Rochester’s bishop has been an unmitigated disaster. This once proud diocese of hard-working Italian and Irish immigrants has been turned into a hothouse of pelvic dissent and liturgical loopiness. You might call it Three’s Company Catholicism, since the forward-thinking Christianity practiced here has the feel and reverence of a late '70s sitcom.

Diocesan masses are known for prohibited liturgical dancers, the prohibited "option" of standing during the consecration, similarly prohibited lay homilies, and the sloppy (and prohibited) practice of self-intinction, whereby the communicant is permitted to "dunk" the consecrated host into a chalice containing the Blood of Christ.

In anticipation of a 1997 "Mass for Gay and Lesbian Catholics" held by Clark at the cathedral, he said it would be "oppressive and manipulative" even to mention what the Church teaches about human sexuality. It's no wonder that Clark is barely able to ordain one new priest per year to serve a diocese of 350,000 Catholics.

Wreckovation vs. the Teaching of the Church

The cathedral project was overseen by Fr. (or, variously, "Dr.") Richard Vosko, a collarless, suit-and-tie-wearing priest from the nearby diocese of Albany who claims "we need a new understanding of what religion is and what God is." He has raised the ire of many Catholics by bringing that "new understanding" to cathedrals in Detroit, Los Angeles, Nashville and Seattle.

Vosko and Clark claim the renovation brings Sacred Heart into conformity with "the current norms of the Roman Catholic Church." I presume they're talking about the "norms" set out in Environment and Art in Catholic Worship, a nonbinding pamphlet with no authority published by the Bishops' Committee on Liturgy in 1978 and never voted on by the bishops themselves.

The real norms are contained in the documents of Vatican II, specifically Sacrosanctum Concilium which states that "there must be no innovations unless the good of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them, and care must be taken that any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing."

My father, a "live and let live" Rochester native who has developed a survivor's mentality after a quarter-century of Bishop Clark, took one look inside Sacred Heart and said, "You've got to be kidding me!" before requesting that we leave.

He got no argument from me.

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Bishop's Labyrinth

 
Chrism Mass 2006


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There are even 'reform of the reform' blogs


Cleansing Fire

Defending Truth and Tradition in the Lay-Run Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester


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Another opinion:

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 03, 2009


Congratulations to Bishop Matthew Clark




Dear Blog Visitors:

I want to take this opportunity to congratulate Bishop Matthew Clark for his extraordinary 30 years as shepherd of the Diocese of Rochester, New York.

The first photo above was taken of Bishop Clark and yours truly at a 1990 gathering of older men considering the diocesan priesthood. (As you know, I chose marriage, as opposed to mandatory celibacy, but was ordained outside the institutional church by Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo in 2006.)

Although Bishop Clark would have preferred that I had not pursued an alternate path to ordination, I am nevertheless appreciative of the fact that he appeared in two recent television interviews, during which he articulated his openness to the inclusion of married priests.

In the process of my church-reform activities, I have occasionally criticized hard-line bishops. On the other hand, I have consistently praised Bishop Clark for his pastoral leadership. We need more people like him in the Roman Catholic hierarchy, and I will be sorry to see him retire.  



NAME: 
LOCATION: ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES


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