My Life with God in and out of the Church

This excerpt from chapter 11 pages 168-183 reveals a blunder by Pope Pius X11
when he declared ex officio Mary's Assumption into heaven without any evidence
 from history or scripture, simply on his say-so

The Assumption of Mary

attributed to Bartolome Murillo
around  1640

         One evening, as I pondered Galileo’s tragedy, the infamous words of the commission, still smoldering in my mind, burst into flame. By that light, I saw the Church’s habitual way of formulating doctrine and defending it against all attack.

          First, the Church searched the Scriptures for texts that supported its doctrine. Many texts that she advanced in favor of a doctrine in fact proved nothing; but the words satisfied the unlearned. In that way she disproved Galileo’s sun-centered theory. Similarly, she proved Christ’s divinity by quoting Peter who called Jesus, “the Son of the living God”. More than likely Peter only meant that Jesus was approved by God like the other holy men whom the Bible called “Sons of God”.

          Secondly, when proposing a doctrine, the Church regularly sought the support of the Fathers of the Church. These were pre-seven-century writers, mostly bishops, who agreed with the Church’s teachings. Her doctrines gained credence by having been taught in the centuries just following the apostles. The Church claimed that the New Testament did not contain Christ’s entire revelation. Some truths were handed down orally for some time and eventually written down by a Church Father.

          When proposing a doctrine as revealed by God, the Church always valued the testimony of the Church Fathers, especially when Scripture contained no relevant text. For example, the Bible reported Christ’s Ascension but said nothing about Mary’s Assumption into heaven. To make matters worst, no Church Father mentioned it before the seventh century. Around 625, an obscure bishop, called Theoteknos, spoke about a feast of the Assumption. He reported that Mary’s devotees celebrated her entrance into heaven, happy for her and hopeful for themselves.

          In Theoteknos’s brief statement, the Church saw a revealed truth, just as she uncovered other revelations in simple Bible texts. For example, the Church says that the four words of Jesus “This in my body” reveal his real presence in the blessed bread. The Church also teaches that, when Jesus said, “You are Peter and on this rock I will build my church,” he revealed that Peter and his successors would be the highest authority on revelation. According to the Church, when the angel Gabriel called Mary “full of grace,” he made another revelation. These texts and hundreds of others resemble tiny seeds which the Church Fathers first nurtured and which theologians then developed into trees, as described in the Gospel parable of the mustard seed.

          For theologians, unfolding and explaining spiritual phenomena was glorious work. But it was also difficult because Scripture revealed spiritual realities that humans could not observe and prove. Moreover all human concepts were derived from physical and material things. Such concepts cannot grasp spiritual reality. At best they only catch a glimmer of the supernatural.

          Thus, when theologians applied human concepts and logic to explain and develop the seeds of revelation in Scripture, they could only express opinions and theories. Inevitably other theologians thought differently. Alone they could not resolve their differences. They needed a reliable, authoritative arbiter to declare what was true.

          Very early the Roman Church claimed that ability as guaranteed by Jesus in the Bible. To certify the truth of revealed realities, ecumenical councils were convened. There the bishops of the Church including the Bishop of Rome decreed what God had revealed through Jesus. The councils needn’t prove anything; they simply declared the truth.

          When many refused to believe the Roman Church, it managed to have some ecumenical councils declare its infallibility. In 1870 the Roman Church went a step further and had Vatican Council I decree the infallibility of the Bishop of Rome, the Pope. Thus the Pope alone acting in the name of the Church can declare without fear of error a doctrine to be true. For example, on November 1, 1950 Pope Pius XII solemnly defined Mary’s bodily Assumption into heaven as a dogma of faith. He said, “We pronounce, declare, and define it to be a divinely revealed dogma: that the Immaculate Mother of God, the ever Virgin Mary, having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and soul into heavenly glory.” The Pope didn’t have to prove Mary’s Assumption; he simply said it was so. No spiritual reality can be proved or disproved. It lies beyond the ken of humans, including popes. Arriving at that conclusion, I called it a night and headed home with peace of mind. This evening I had made some progress towards solving my problem with the Church. I felt confident that the end was near. Looking at the stars, I thanked my friends and they winked back in support.

          Days later, on August 15, Catholics celebrated the Feast of Mary’s Assumption. As the sun rose into the sky, our parish offered Holy Mass to glorify God and honor Mary. At sunset, the women, many with babies on their backs, returned to the church to see Mary’s statue arrived that day and to pray the rosary. In the village down the hill, the men continued the day’s celebration by beating drums and drinking banana beer - “in Mary’s honor,” they said.

          Starting my evening walk, I passed by the church and heard the women praying. Their singsong repetition of the Hail Mary revived many memories of Mary. Soon these thoughts lined up beside my recollections of Galileo and struck a spark. In a flash I saw how differently the Church had treated Mary’s Assumption into heaven and Galileo’s assumption that the earth circles the sun.

          Since Galileo’s theory tried to explain the physical process of the earth circling the sun, the Church demanded the observation of this movement. Without the trustworthy testimony of eyewitnesses, the Church would not accept Galileo’s theory. The Church would continue to teach what all humans experience: the earth does not move while the sun clearly rises in the East and sets in the West.

          Like the movement of the earth, the ascending of a human body into the sky is a physical phenomenon. It can be observed and reported. That’s what happened when Christ’s body ascended into heaven. As the apostles were watching, Jesus was lifted up into heaven. They saw his body go up into the clouds and later they recorded the event in the Acts of the Apostles.(1:9-11)

          Jesus could have ascended into heaven during the night in secrecy. He chose to let the apostles observe the event to strengthen their faith in heaven where Christ awaits his followers. For the same reason, if Jesus had assumed Mary into heaven, he would have let someone observe and record her Assumption. But during the first 600 years after Christ’s Ascension, no one ever mentioned seeing or hearing about the event.

          Despite this total silence, Pope Pius XII stood ready in 1950 to define infallibly Mary’s Assumption. Where and how did he learn about the event? Did God speak to him in the papal garden as he did to Abraham from the burning bush? No! Did angel Gabriel inform him about Mary’s Assumption as he told Mary about her conceiving Jesus? No! Did Jesus speak to him as he did to Paul in a blinding light? No! Pope Pius XII simply received letters from the bishops supporting his proposal to define Mary’s glorious Assumption into heaven. With that and nothing more, the Pope declared that Mary’s body was assumed into heaven. Then and there I felt strongly that the Pope, in doing so, had strained his infallibility beyond belief. Too tired to pursue this thought further, I turned around and headed home reviewing today’s celebration of Mary’s Assumption.

          These thoughts evoked childhood memories of the Assumption Church in which I was baptized and made my first communion. There, as an altar boy, I served Mass thousands of times and later as a priest I offered mass at the same altar. Tonight, I clearly recalled the 15x20 foot mural above the altar. The marble sculpture depicted Mary ascending into heaven. Flanked by cheerful cherubs, Mary raised her eyes heavenward as though looking for her son or already seeing him in glory. Her serene smile brightened the heavens more than the crescent moon at her feet.

          I then remembered that in 1939 during my mother’s funeral mass, I gazed up at Mary’s mural above the altar. I strongly believed that someday I too would go to heaven and see my mother again with Mary and God. Belief in Mary’s Assumption provided solace in my sorrow then. But tonight I was deeply disturbed, thinking that the Pope might have defined Mary’s Assumption simply to shore up a fairy tale without historical foundation.

          After I fell asleep, my anxieties concocted dreams that mixed the past and the present in a ghastly way. The original flawless marble of Mary’s mural was now stained with greenish mildew and cracking badly. The entire sculpture threatened to crumble. In my dream, the pastor explained that the basic problem was the foundation of the church which proved to be shaky shale and not solid rock as originally believed. The priest said that my boyhood church could collapse with its granite pillars and its marble mural of Mary’s Assumption. Before that could happen in my nightmare, I opened my eyes.

          In the Bible, some patriarchs and prophets had dreams that predicted future events. But my dream last night did not prophesy the collapse of the Church and the demise of its dogmas. It simply indicated that my belief in Mary’s Assumption and every other dogma of the Church was founded on my faith in the infallibility of the Church. If this fundamental faith should disintegrate, the whole superstructure of the Church, its dogmas and laws, would crumble and leave a landscape of rubble in my soul. Following the direction of my dream, I recalled that in July 1870, the First Vatican Council solemnly defined the infallibility of the Pope. It declared that the Pope, even without a General Council, has the authority to pronounce definitive judgments on questions of faith and morals. When so doing, he has God’s guaranteed assistance that prevents him from teaching error.

          When Pope Pius XII proclaimed the Assumption of Mary, he had zero evidence that it happened. How could he dare define this dogma, knowing that God should stop him if it were not true? Apparently he did not fear God  and surely not man. Nineteen centuries after Mary’s death, who could possibly discover and identify her body? With a steady pen, he signed the Assumption decree. He was safe.

          Likewise down the centuries, Popes and Ecumenical Councils never feared to define supernatural events and realities because humans cannot disprove things spiritual. For instance, the Church teaches that, during Mass, the priest changes bread into the living body of Christ. Nobody can prove otherwise. The Church also declares that, for every human embryo, God creates a special spiritual soul. It is immaterial and immortal. At death it separates from the body and goes to heaven or hell for all eternity. That whole doctrine and every other dogma of the Church cannot be disproved by humans.

          Nor can the Church prove her doctrines. She cannot demonstrate the reality of anything supernatural because the spiritual is beyond the ken of humans. For example, the Church cannot prove the existence of original sin and grace, the efficacy of sacraments and indulgences, the reality of heaven and hell, the divinity of Jesus anymore than the Assumption of Mary. The Church cannot prove any of its supernatural doctrines. She can only allege that one or more persons in the distant past said so. Then, claiming infallibility, she defines and elaborates doctrines and offers them to the world. To accept without doubt the Church’s unquestionable and glorious vision of the universe, one need only believe in her infallibility.

          Some 600 million adults affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church are assumed to believe in her infallibility. But about 400 million Protestants do not, although they base their faith on the same Bible as the Catholics. Sharing the same Bible, some 200 million Orthodox Christians do not believe in the Pope’s infallibility. Nor do one billion Muslims, 800 million Hindus, 300 million Buddhists, 13 million Jews and countless others. In all, some five billion people do not believe in the infallibility of the Pope, his Church and their doctrine. At that moment, I wondered whether I was now a believer or a nonbeliever.

          To answer that question truthfully, I quickly reviewed my entire life. In rapid replay, it seemed like one long day beginning with a sunny sky. About noon, clouds appeared. Light and gray at first, they became increasingly thicker and darker. By mid-afternoon, clouds blackened the whole sky turning day into night, as when Jesus died on Calvary.

          In that comparison, I recognized that my faith in an infallible Church was the sun of my spiritual life. Just as the sun illumined physical things such as birds, so also the Church revealed spiritual realities such as angels. Clearly the visibility of physical things depended on the firelight in the sun and the credibility of spiritual things depended on my faith in the infallibility of the Church.

          Throughout the morning of my life, I was educated by nuns in elementary school and by priests in seminaries. They gave my life a third dimension filled with spiritual realities as real as the physical world. God, all-powerful and good, was real like my father. Mary in heaven was real like my mother in Chicopee. The resurrected Christ was as real in the Eucharist on the altar as on his heavenly throne. The sacraments and grace were real like flowers and trees. The entire spiritual world as revealed by the Church was beautiful and very real. No cloud of doubt blurred my faith in the Church and none marred my spiritual sky for years.

          Not long after I began my priestly ministry among the people, clouds of doubt regarding the Church’s wisdom appeared and crept across my spiritual sky. I soon saw that the Church was wrong when she refused to replace Latin with the vernacular so that the people would understand the Bible readings and the prayers during mass. When I fell in love with Eva, I realized that the Church wrongly imposed celibacy upon her priests against God’s design as expressed in nature and the Bible. The Church was also wrong when she instructed bishops to attract young boys into seminaries and isolate from the world in order to indoctrinate (brainwash?) them fully before ordination.

          In Africa, darker clouds of doubt appeared while I reviewed the blunders of the Church during my evening walks. The Church was clearly wrong when she preached a crusade to hunt down and kill thousands of Albigensian heretics. The Church was wrong when she organized the Inquisition that tortured thousands and condemned them to life imprisonment or death. The Church was wrong when she had Savonarola burned to death for decrying the immorality of the Roman Church. The Church was wrong when she granted indulgences to raise funds for the construction of monasteries, churches and Saint Peter’s basilica. The Church was also wrong when she condemned the astronomer Galileo for trying to provide irrefutable proof that the earth circles the sun.

          At this point in tonight’s moonlit walk, I lingered awhile on the last years of Galileo’s life. After the Church condemned him in 1633, Galileo returned to his home in Florence. Before long, his eyesight began to fail. By 1637 his left eye saw nothing and a year later Galileo was totally blind. My empathy for him inspired a comparison between his loss of sight and my loss of faith in the Church.

          Both losses were not sudden and total; they were scarcely noticeable at first. Mine began in Cleveland when I disagreed with the Church about using Latin in the Liturgy. Later, when I fell in love with Eva, the Church’s celibacy law dealt my faith a severe blow. Yet I still believed in the Church, if only halfheartedly, just as Galileo could see only with one eye for a time. Then in Africa, as I reviewed the Church’s blunders night after night, the flame of my faith gradually waned to a flicker. The arrogance of the Church in ridiculing Galileo’s sun-centered system and condemning him to house arrest smothered the last ember of my faith. The Church’s blunders had finally reduced my former towering fire of faith to ashes.

          When the blind astronomer walked in his garden, he could not watch the roses unfold their reddish petals. Nor did he see the golden butterflies flutter above the marigolds, while the red-breasted robin rushed to a nestful of hungry chicks. Nor did he see fluffy white clouds float across the bright blue sky. In the evenings, when he looked up to heaven, he could not see his beloved stars, not a single one.

          In contrast, I could see nature’s wonder; but I could not believe the spiritual world that I had accepted on the authority of the Church. I no longer believed in original sin and grace, in the Eucharist and the priesthood, in heaven and hell, in an eternal afterlife, in the divinity of Jesus, in Mary’s Assumption and all the other spiritual realities and events proclaimed by the Church. All that had vanished with my faith in the church.

          To believe in God, however, I had never needed the testimony of the Church. The admirable universe revealed the handiwork of God: his wisdom, power, and goodness. Galileo believed in God to the end. So would I. With that final thought and a last look at the stars that were watching over Galileo’s grave in Florence, I returned home at peace.

          The following morning, I lingered in bed recalling my work in Masaka. My official mission had been to build a church for the people of Kimanya and my personal mission was to reevaluate the infallibility of the Church. I had built the church, plus classrooms and a cafeteria. I had also reviewed the horrific blunders of the Church which totally discredited her infallibility and authority - at least for me. Thus I had accomplished my mission in Africa. It was time to go.  

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