Benevenio wrote: If we are to truly collaborate, why not have formation of clergy and lay-people together?
Why not write to your Ordinary and suggest it then? I must abmit though, from my albeit limited experience, that formation for the laity might be best achieved from sensitive preaching and, to start with, gentle, personal encouragement and invitation from the p.p. to his flock. The process of formation, I suggest, is more suited to the initmacy of a parish meeting room rather than the hiring of theatres or large lecture halls and one could not really attempt the formation sessions in
The Sign We Give with very large numbers. Please don't suggest a large church is used. The discomfort would be intolerable.
Benevenio wrote:I did not say power resides in the cheque book. It was an example where many lay people have far greater training and understanding of the use of money than that the parish priest might have, and is an area where responsibility could be shared... yet cannot be because of the structure and law of the Church.
I'm sorry but which particular structure and law of the Church are you making reference to? One is tempted to comment on your supposition - so I will
- through that remark on a Churchillian (?) marginal note: "Who is Round and to what does he object?" Let me see - I believe the aforementioned diocese has a priest Treasurer (himself well qualified in finance) but in the Treasurer's Department there are some seven or eight lay employees, four of whom have particular expertise in specific areas of financial management. Then at a parish level, a Finance Committee is mandatory (in Canon law) and that same diocese has recently updated and published its parochial financial administration procedures. Furthemore, it is not only the procedures in Canon Law that should be observed but also, in this country, the requirements of the Charity Commissioners. All parishes are subject to audit. All parishes should have considerable lay involvement in the management of their finances, leaving - ideally - the priest just to sign the cheques. That dream may exceed the reality in some places but believe me, most clergy really do want the dream to come true.
Benevenio wrote: Do I want to share that responsibility for Christ's Mission? I already do ....... with as much responsibility as the RC Church will let me today.
So what is so frustrating for you? No - don't answer that in a public forum - sorry. But I think I should say that IMHO, the choice that an individual makes to act out a response to one's Baptism in his or her life is but one aspect of what we are discussing. For sure, radiate the light of Christ in all you do and say in the world or "let your good deed be done in secret." But - and it's a big BUT - when it comes to collaborative ministry and the exercise of co-responsibility with the clergy in the pastoral care of parishes, there is consultation to be done,
charismata to be discerned and processes of formation to be undertaken (even CRB checks sometimes these days - ha!). No-one is commissioned as an extrordinary minister of the Eucharist, for example, without some wisdom and prudence in that choice of individual being exercised and then a process of formation....... and now I am even wondering if in future programmes of formation for musicians, there might not be a formal commissioning which could include the question demanded at an ordination: "After enquiry among the People of God, do you find him/her to be worthy?" Hmmm - now there's a thought.
I think that what is of great importance in setting up collaborative ministry is that the individual can put aside self. It is God's will that needs discerning, not one's own, and yes, that is through the lens of centuries of Divine Revelation in Scripture and Tradition. Any perceived present action of the Spirit needs assessing in that light and personally, I would avoid anyone who thinks they have an instant hot-line to God.
And then no-one, for example, sits on a Parish Pastoral Council as the representative of a particular group in a parish (see the documents) nor as someone who just wants to do "their own thing", let alone for their own ends - heaven forbid. How might you discern someone who is masking their intent? Or might you want to avoid the intense "single issue" Catholic? Important, for example, as pro-life issues in the Church (and the world) are, would you necessarily want someone who is narrowly all-consumed and obsessively active in pro-life issues, to the exclusion of all other pastoral concerns, as a member of a pastoral council? I just raise the question.
Even though it might sound a reasonable thing to do, I myself would caution against an initial formation of clergy and laity together. Certainly, an open invitation would just attract maverick elements in the Church, people with axes to grind, individuals who concentrate narrowly on single issues and, I'm sorry to say, just plain nutters. Even good souls who are keen and enthusiastic may not be the right people to be on a pastoral council. For sure, all baptised have the right and duty to be involved in the life of the Church but one only has to read I Corinthians and the gentle yet firm hand of the Apostle applied to that community to see what happens when involvement becomes a free for all.
The divinely given faculty of oversight is needed!
But, of course, that is not to say that formation in parishes should not be a conjoint clerical and lay process - it has to be. We are all being challenged to take on a new mind-set. What is it St Paul says? "Modelled by your new mind, let your behaviour change." (Romans somewhere) It's not easy.
In the setting up of my first PPC, we were all learning together and a demanding but very worthwhile exercise it was too. Yet the discernment as to who might be suitable to be a member of that council had already taken place within the parish. (Here I will confess that the result of that process was me being delated to my Ordinary by an individual (and his wife) who thought he had a right to be on the council but was not chosen. My Bishop asked me what this was all about, to which I replied that the parish think this man is a pain in the neck and should be restricted in what he is allowed to do at church. As to whether or not the Bishop wrote back and told the man everybody thought he was a pain, I don't know!)
I'm rambling and must stop. Whatever you do - don't think this is going to be easy - but do think it is worthwhile. Do take time over the process, learning as you go along..... and I hope, as I did, you learn from others sharing their faith and from their wisdom.
Let me turn this on its head........... The question about collaboration is: will you let me be your servant, too?
Consider
CL in the light of the Evening Mass of Holy Thursday. Could we all be being asked to wash one another's feet - and - more importantly? - allow all others to wash ours?