FIRST THINGS
A Su and Public Life
November 1995. Number 57
Editor-in-Chief: Richard John Neuhaus
Editor: James Nuechterlein
Managing Editor: Matthew Berke
Associate Editor: J. Bottum
Poetry Editor: Jill P. Baumgaertner
Publisher: Institute on Religion and Public Life, New York Publishing Service:
Publishing Management Associates
THE PUBLIC SQUARE
A Continuing Survey of Religion and Public Life
Richard John Neuhaus
THE WORK OF GOD
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The Ku Klux Klan, the Michigan Militia, and Scientology. To hear some folk
tell it, Opus Dei (The Work of God) belongs to that company, except it is
bigger and more dangerous. Opus Dei is, they say, a secretive, cult-like
organization that is running a vast international conspiracy with unlimited
funding and tentacles reaching into the most unlikely centers of power.
In short, Opus Dei is "controversial".
So how does one go about making up his mind about a movement such as this?
I have no connections with Opus Dei, but over the last ten years I have
developed friendships with a number of people, priests and laity, who are
involved in The Work. For example, Dr. Joaquin Navarro-Valls, the communications
director for the Vatican. He is an extraordinarily personable gentleman,
and we have had long conversations about, inter alia, the importance of
Opus Dei in his life. He does not push the movement, but speaks in a matter-of-fact
and utterly persuasive manner about how Opus Dei has helped him to understand
and sustain his vocation as a Christian layman. And there are others in
Opus Dei who speak in a similar vein. But in making up one's mind there
is no denying that a privileged witness is Pope John Paul II. He has been
publicly and consistently supportive of Opus Dei, granting it in 1982 the
singular status of a "personal prelature," which means the jurisdiction
of its bishop is not limited to a region but includes everyone in Opus Dei.
In 1992 he beatified the founder of Opus Dei, Msgr. Josemaria Escriva, who
died in 1975. The Pope has spoken of Opus Dei as an instrument of energetic
orthodoxy that is a great gift for the renewal of the Church and its mission
in the world. Of course that does not mean that Catholics must agree. Orthodox
Catholics who otherwise have the greatest respect for the Pope have had
bad experiences with Opus Dei and think that maybe he does not always know
what the organization is actually doing. Be that as it may, in forming one's
approach to Opus Dei, the strong and consistent affirmation of John Paul
II cannot help but carry very considerable weigth.
Since it was established in Spain in 1928, there have been a slew of books
attacking Opus Dei, and we are told that more are in the works. For those
of a leftist disposition, it is sufficient damnation that Opus Dei members
were prominent in the government of General Franco. It is seldom mentioned
that those same Opus Dei members were key players in Spain's successful
transition to democracy. Today Opus Dei has about seventy-seven thousand
members in eighty-three countries, including fifteen hundred priests and
fifteen bishops.
One cannot emphasize too strongly that Opus Dei understands its mission
to be the revival of the lay apostolate. While priests do the things that
priests do in their capacity as spiritual directors, Opus Dei members frequently
describe themselves as anticlerical. Not in the sense that they are opposed
to clergy, but in that they oppose the old clericalist notion that lay people
are second -class (at best) members of the Church. Opus Dei members sometimes
suggest that the movement is responsible for Vatican II's lifting up of
the dignity of the lay vocation, which is undoubtedly going one claim too
far. But it is ironic that some of the harshest critics, who think of themselves
as great champions of the laity, have not recognized the similar inspiration
in Opus Dei.
The Work became active in North America about twenty years ago, and now
has approximately three thousand members and runs sixty-four centers (often
residences near major universities), five high schools, and several retreats.
The Opus Dei presence has not always heen welcomed by Catholic ministries
on campuses, and this has occasioned some notable controversies. The cause,
it seems, is sometimes personality conflict, sometirmes a too aggressive
approach by Opus Dei, and, in a number of cases, resentment by superprogressive
priests of a rnovement that proposes a different, and deeply conservative,
way of being Catholic. The charge heard again and again is that Opus Dei
is secretive and cult-like in recruiting new members.
The Disillusioned
These and other charges were again aired in a major article this past
year in America, the Jesuit magazine (February 25, 1995). The issue had
a lurid red cover with nothing but the words "Opus Dei" in sharp
relief, and I approached it with the expectation of reading another slash-and-burn
attack on the movement. It lurned out, however, to be a reasonably temperate
and balanced treatment -in comparison, that is, with the usual stuff on
Opus Dei. A great deal of attention was given to the testimony of people
who had had unhappy experiences with Opus Dei, and to the views of Kenneth
Woodward, religion reporter for Newsweek, often a fair-minded fellow, who
has a long-standing hostility to Opus Dei.
Every movement has people who left for one reason or another, and, as is
the case with jilted lovers, it is hard to know how to evaluate their testimony.
They complain that they were recruited under the guise of friendship, that
they were not told at first what they would be getting into, that women
are separated from and subordinate to men, and so forth. What it apparently
amounts to is that some people discovered that Opus Dei was not for them
and were disappointed and embittered about that. Certainly Opus Dei is demanding.
A full-fledged "numerary," for instance, makes a commitment to
celibacy, lives in an Opus Dei center, and follows a rigorous daily schedule
of prayer and spiritual discipline. Clearly, it is not for everyone. But
the critics say it is more than that, that Opus Dei is a cult. A few parents
unhappy with their children's association with Opus Dei have even formed
an Opus Dei Awareness Network, and make the usual claims about "brainwashing"
and the like.
I know some of these parents and cannot help but feel considerable sympathy.
One wonders, however, if in some cases they are not experiencing, in intensified
form, the pain of recognizing that their children are growing up and therefore,
in a certain necessary sense, away from them. The mother of a young man
I will here call Billy relates in tears how he went away to university,
came into contact with Opus Dei in his third year, and now has decided to
commit himself as a numerary. "He's completely alienated from us."
"His father and I had such plans for him." "He's not my Billy
that I knew four years ago".
Sympathy yes, but tempered sympathy. He strikes one as a sensible young
man, mature for his years, and enormously grateful for the life he has found
with Opus Dei. He insists he is not alienated from his parents, but every
contact with them, especially with his mother, is an ongoing and ugly hassle
over Opus Dei. "She can't accept that I must do with my life what I
believe God wants me to do."
It is an intergenerational conflict that has been around from the beginning
of time. Innumerable young people, including recognized saints, have caught
a vision of radical discipleship and pursued a course vehemently opposed
by parents and family. This should come as no surprise to people who follow
the One who said, "He who loves father or mother more than me..."
It is especially odd that this conflict should figure so large in a Jesuit
magazine, for it is within living memory that a more demanding Society of
Jesus was frequently accused of recruiting young men to a pattern of discipleship
that pitted them against parents who had other plans for their children's
lives.
The America article also highlights the fact that the formal "constitutions"
of Opus Dei are available in Latin and Spanish but not in English. This
is taken as evidence that the organization is concealing something from
outsiders, and even from its own members. Opus Dei responds that the Holy
See, for some unknown reason, does not want the constitutions translated
into English, although some members have told me that they are being translated.
They add that the constitutions are merely legal stipulations, and that
they contain nothing that members and prospective members are not told.
In any event, the constitutions are readily available in Latin, and we know
that there are still Jesuits who can read Latin. If there is anything they
find objectionable in the constitutions, the critics of Opus Dei have ample
opportunities to publicize their objections.
So why the intense, sometimes venomous, attacks on Opus Dei? In my experience,
the members of Opus Dei are not secretive, but they are sometimes very defensive.
This is perhaps understandable given the nature and persistence of the attacks,
but it is still a problem, and Opus Dei members with whom I have spoken
generally recognize it as a problem. Then too, Opus Dei sometimes presents
itself as the saving remnant of orthodoxy in a Church that is largely apostate.
This is unattractive and, if not entirely untrue, greatly exaggerated. But
such exaggeration is not surprising among people who feel that they are
part of a rare, comprehensive, and commanding vision of what it means to
serve Christ and his Church with the entirety of their being. Of course
there is the danger of fanaticism, but it seems to me that Opus Dei is keenly
aware of that, and its program of spiritual direction assiduously guards
against it. People who think that the way to avoid fanaticism is never to
surrender oneself to a commanding thruth live desiccated lives and end up
breeding their own, and usually less interesting, fanaticism.
The opposition to Opus Dei cannot be explained without at least some reference
to jealousy. Competition and jealousy among religious movements in the Catholic
Church is nothing new, and some Opus Dei members are not hesitant to suggest
that theirs is now the role in the Church once played by the Jesuits. The
Jesuits, who were once viewed as the elite corps of the papacy, have in
recent decades had a sharply attenuated relationship to the hierarchical
leadership of the Church. The famous "fourth vow" of allegiance
to the pope is now frequently understood by Jesuits as a vow to the papacy
in general -meaning the papacy as they think it ought to be. (The articles
on Jesuits and Jesuit spirituality in the new Encyclopedia of Catholicism,
edited by Richard McBrien, make no mention of obedience to the pope).
It is not surprising that this pontificate has looked with particular
favour on Opus Dei, Focolare, Legionaries of Christ, and similar movements
that have sprung up to champion the magisterium's understanding of the renewal
called for by Vatican II. As for Opus Dei itself, it is, as the Catholic
Church views things, still a very young movement, and in this country its
work has hardly gotten underway. From the general media and from liberal
Catholics, it is not going to get a fair shake for a very long time, if
ever. Opus Dei has, as they say, a big image problem, and it will have to
learn to live with that without being intimidated by it. Over time, as more
people became acquainted with the people who are Opus Dei, and as Opus Dei
members engage in works that are generally respected, the day may come when
Opus Dei will no longer be routinely described as "controversial".
And maybe not. There are some things eminently worth being controversial
for. Meanwhile, one cannot help but be impressed by the people who believe
that they have found in Opus De a way to make an unqualified gift of their
lives to Christ and his Church.