Corruption of the best is the worst. Latin proverb.
"They (Jesuits) meet without affection. They depart without regret." Jesuit alumnus Voltaire, not entirely grateful, but observant of the loneliness, individuality of the Jesuit.
This essay is best read, for balance and context, after the earlier one on "Jesuits I Have Loved."
For almost 500 years, they were for the Post-Trent Catholic Church the elite, the rock of Gibraltar, the Marine Corps, the most loyal, reliable, virile, lucid, erudite, heroic, grounded, aggressive force in the Church. Then, 1965, the conclusion of the Council and eruption of the Cultural Revolution, as if by some black magic, they (not every one, but in the critical mass of their leadership and elite institutions) surrender to a progressivism hostile to core Catholic principles.
Early in his papacy, 1981, John Paul suspended the leadership of the society and placed a papal delegate temporarily in charge. This was an enormous rebuke of the leadership of Pedro Arrupe who had been in charge since 1965. Clearly, the legacies of Arrupe and John Paul are opposed to each other.
But specific human ideas and personalities were key to the drama. This essay will identify such ideas and persons. The Jesuits are widely respected for their encouragement of open, honest argumentation. In that spirit of respectful candor, this scrutiny is offered. First, two important clarifications.
This is not a judgement against the persons identified: against their character or holiness. It is a critique of their ideas. These men have reputations, not only for intellectual genius, strong leadership and wide influence, but also for good character, love of the Church and prayerful lives. They made immense contributions to the Church. Arrupe is now a "servant of God" and being considered by the Vatican on the path to canonization. Even were he (or others here) canonized, that would not shield all his views and decisions from scrutiny. Recent saints...including John Paul, Mother Theresa and Father Josemaria Escriva...are not above criticism.
Secondly, it is my experience that the majority of Jesuits do not clearly advance the views presented here. Rather, it is a small, elite, leadership group, primarily in colleges and universities, who do so. I would guess that in the society (as in the broader priesthood and church) there are perhaps 10% on each side of the culture war who publicly, clearly present the competing visions. The vast majority abstain from the conflict in a posture intended to be peaceful, accepting, neutral, moderate, pastoral. They do so for at least three reasons. First, a (largely) wholesome sense of privacy about things sexual, including abortion, makes them reticent to address these issues publicly. This is strong among the Irish who carry residues of not-so-wholesome Jansenism. Second, there is an aversion to offend, even by presenting a clear Catholic teaching. Third, many are themselves uncertain and undecided. Few priests or Jesuits are prepared and inclined to give a clear statement on birth control, gay blessings or the masculine priesthood. Progressive ideas are broadly and deeply pervasive, inhibiting the clear elucidation of Catholic positions, even if not clearly affirmed by most Jesuits. What follows are twelve important spiritual/intellectual developments and a particular individual associated with them.
Retreat from Chastity and Virility: James Martin.
By virtue of his charm and intelligence, James Martin is easily the most visible and respected, if controversial, English-speaking Jesuit of our time. He is the only living Jesuit on this list, but his influence warrants his place. Shrewdly, he does not explicitly contradict Catholic teaching on the spousal/fertile purpose of sexuality. But he undermines it, powerfully if implicitly, by his crusade for the affirmation of "gay" identity and homosexual activity. His message: deliberately sterile sexual activity, homosexuality (and by extension contraception, masturbation, etc.) is itself morally neutral and sometimes affectional and wholesome. He strenuously affirms and encourages, thereby, acts that have always been considered mortally sinful by the Church.
Perhaps more significant than this moral inversion is the affirmation of "gay" identity. Homosexuality as an attraction and action has been with us throughout human history. This confection of a "gay identity" was, until 1965 and the Cultural Revolution, restricted to very small, transgressive, bohemian groups. It's explosion as a mass movement and culture was only possible in a culture that had become wealthy, materialistic, indulgent and had replaced sterile-romantic for spousal-fertile sex, the therapeutic for the virtuous, the narcissistic for the generous/generative. "Gay" is not a reality, not a form. It is a cultural construction, a fallacy, an artificial construction. I love my homosexual friends and family for who they are, but not as "gay." I try not to concern myself with their sexual proclivities or activities! Similarly, I loved my schizophrenic friend Marie (of happy memory) for who she is, not as "Queen of the Universe." (I did not challenge her on this, but would sometimes suggest she was in symptoms with which she would partially agree.)
This campaign of "gay affirmation" disparages the Catholic reverence for sexual purity (or chastity or sobriety) as a form of ignorance, homophobia, hatred, and emotional cruelty.
Separate, but related is the retreat from virility. This preceded the gay revolution in the form of a faux feminism that denied a substantial differentiation between men and women. This anthropological revolution discarded the perennial binary ("...man and woman He created them...) in favor of the neutered, androgynous Self. Our culture no longer offered virility as an ideal form...of generosity, generativity, heroism, honor...of humility, chastity, fortitude, sobriety, serenity, prudence and justice.
Especially regrettable, in my view, is that the magnificent network of Jesuit high schools for boys embraced this ideology and distanced itself from any explicit ideal of masculinity. Happily, these schools (in my experience) retain wholesome traditions and virile energies in sports, academics, and other things so that they continue to provide a fine education and formation. This would be much stronger if they deliberately encouraged the masculine virtues. This has long been Fleckinstein's theme song: the crisis in society is one of virility which is no longer explicitly recognized, much lest encouraged. In regard to manly heroism and holiness, the Jesuit legacy is incomparable. It is a tragedy that it has been discarded in favor of a shallow progressivism.
Individualism: Karl Rahner.
The core, sacred idol at the heart of Cultural Liberalism is the exaltation of the isolated, sovereign Self. Individualism. The self-determining, competent (but not incompetent) Ego as agent and subject of choice. On the political right this is a libertarianism, economics of the marketplace, limited government, and maximal economic choice; on the cultural left this is sexual license.
What made the Jesuits particularly vulnerable to this revolution was that it is itself the most individualist, least communal of the religious traditions. Monks and friars center their life in communal prayer; the liturgy of the hours. The Jesuits replace this with the spiritual exercises of Ignatius. This discipline is solitary: the retreatant seeks the private, particular guidance of the Holy Spirit, assisted by a spiritual director who is largely non-directive, facilitating the communication between God and the retreatant. It is highly individualistic.
A prime example is the theology of Karl Rahner, who has had more influence upon Jesuits than any other theologian of the last 60 years. He works within the Cartesian/Kantian philosophical universe: that of the solitary, thinking, deciding, desiring Subject. He explores the interior life, the spiritual yearnings of the human spirit. He is dealing with the isolated subject. He does not start from the Trinity as revealed. He does not start from the community in worship. He discovers the "anonymous Christian" which is the ordinary non-Christian who nevertheless yearns for and seeks God and so is implicitly a believer.
There is about his worldview a loneliness. It is typical of his generation: he came of age as a young priest in the Germany of Hitler. He studied under Martin Heideggar and was influenced by his views. Significantly, his first doctoral dissertation was rejected because it leaned too much into existentialism and not enough into classic Thomism. Another interesting fact: in 1962 he was forbidden by the Vatican from teaching theology because of his problematic views. But later that same year, he was appointed by Pope John as a peritus at the Council. From there and afterwards, he had immense influence upon the Church. He published over 4,000 works. His grasp of the tradition and contemporary thought is probably second only to his competitor-friend-Jesuit Balthasar.
The following generation, such as his Spanish protege Jon Sobrino, rejected his individualism in favor of a liberation theology that emulates Marx in its obsession with class oppression and conflict. Both extremes, individualism and collectivism, suggest a prior privation of community life and worship.
Pivot From Supernatural to Political: Pedro Arrupe.
Superior General from 1965-83, the period of profound change, Arrupe is arguably more responsible for the transformation than any other individual. He did not cause but certainly allowed the change. Interestingly, he credited his vocation to time spent at Lourdes where he clearly saw miraculous healings, scientifically inexplainable, in contradiction of the atheistic materialism that characterized his medical training. Perhaps as significant was his presence at Hiroshima in 1945 where he attended to the victims of the atomic bomb making use of his medical training.
He is widely loved and revered as a saintly priest. He is already designated a "servant of God" and his cause for canonization is in the Vatican. He was clearly a holy, kind, intelligent, compassionate man. Yet this very tenderness may have contributed to a certain imbalance he encouraged in the society.
He had to be traumatized at Hiroshima. Such intimate engagement with profound human suffering can take a limited number of directions. There can be loss of faith, cynicism, discouragement and despair. There can be rage and fury. There can be a deepening in the supernatural gifts of faith, hope and love. There can also be a decision, a determination to exert all human agency, especially the political, to eliminate such suffering. These last two are not contradictory of each other. The Catholic life includes both: a sense of impotency, a surrender to God, along with intention to fight evil.
A good friend, who has been active in assisting immigrants, confided to me yesterday that he was falling into depression in recent weeks in watching the suffering of people he has been assisting. His wife helped him to realize there is little he can do other than surrender it all to God. He is 77 years old; he will continue to do what he can; he has some peace now in this surrender.
In his leadership, Arrupe strongly urged the Jesuits to identify with the poor and suffering. This is, of course, at the core of the Gospel. But there is a danger here of over-identification, if it is not overwhelmed by the more positive immersion in God's love within a community of faith, praise and support. If there is inadequate attention to the supernatural, the transcendent, the holy, one can succumb to a political ideology involving anger, righteousness, and a confidence in human agency.
Consider what I will call "Simone Weil Complex." Weil was the brilliant young Jewish philosopher who died of malnutrition in World War II. She had a deep, mystical union with the suffering Christ, in those afflicted here on earth. But she suffered an imbalance. She believed in Christ but never was baptized so deprived herself of the sacraments. She basically starved herself to death, in communion with the afflicted, in an anorexia mirabilis. She engaged too much with the suffering, not enough with the comforting food from heaven. Tridentine Catholic piety had a similar imbalance at times with an unbalanced focus on the suffering Christ (stations of cross, etc.) and the wrath of the Father.
The suggestion here is that the elite of the society developed an imbalance in focus upon political oppression, on the Marxist dialectic and class war, and a soft secularization that downplayed the supernatural. And so we find today across the Jesuit academic world, especially college but also in high schools, a leftist political ideology with a religious force within it.
Progress/Science/Technology: Teilhard de Chardin.
"Progressivism" as a philosophical tendency obviously places trust in the continual, linear progress of humanity through science, technology and education. The past is in large part an obstacle of ignorance, prejudice, tribal hatred and oppressive authority... to be overcome. This pits it against Catholicism which (like all ancient religions) looks to the past, to a definitive revelation, an authoritative history and tradition. No Catholic articulated this positivism about progress and science as strongly as paleontologist-theologian Teilhard de Chardin. For Teilhard Darwinian evolution is now in a new stage of movement towards the Eschaton. This tends to a positivity about change and a suspicion of the past. This is, of course, the vaunted "Spirit of Vatican II" which detached from the actual documents of that Council in favor of a vague openness to change which in fact succumbed to the Cultural Revolution.
Liberation Theology: Jon Sobrino and Juan Segundo.
Liberation and feminist theology, along with all their cousins, find in the Marxist paradigm of oppressor/oppressed the hermeneutical key to life. EVERYTHING is: Power! That such dynamics exist is, of course, obvious. But that they constitute the most fundamental human and religious reality is kind of obsessive thinking. But this conviction pervades Jesuit schooling as it apes the elite liberal academia.
Historicity, Weakened Ontology and Tradition: Bernard Lonergan.
Midcentury Catholic theology broke with the past in its more pronounced sense of history: that things change throughout history, including religious and Church practice and belief. The more static, stable universe of the ancient and medieval mind was replaced by a sense of historicity. This positive change risked going too far in the opposite direction: abandoning all sense of permanence, stability and continuity in favor of endless change. It became fashionable, for example, to renounce the static Hellenic tradition in favor of the dynamism of the Hebraic. Pope Benedict and others, by contrast, are clear on the providential role of Greek philosophy in Catholic teaching. It is not Lonergan himself that surrendered to this as much as his disciples. That entire generation of midcentury Jesuits (Rahner, Murray, Dulles, Danielou, DeLubac) were firmly grounded in Thomas and tradition as they engaged modern thought. Their disciples were not so blessed. And so the distortions in the thought of Lonergan and others, concerning historicity and other things, became exaggerated into outright contradictions of Catholic belief. Such thought lost its roots in an ontology of Being and a realistic epistemology.
Non-Evangelical, Non-Miraculous, Low Christology, Weakened Sacramentology: Roger Haight.
Haight, who died recently, was a later generation of Jesuit than most on this select list. He was directed by the Vatican not to teach Catholic theology and so worked in his last years at Union Theological, NYC, a place more congenial to his thought. His defining book was Jesus, Symbol of God. The title itself reveals his thought: Jesus is a manifestation of God, rather than God's very self. So he advocates a theocentrism against a Christocentrism to be more respectful of non-Christian religions. His trinitarian theology moves towards unitarianism as he see the Holy Spirit and Christ as both manifestations of the one God. He is The Non-Evangelical! In this he reflects the trend among fellow Jesuit theologians. He has a strong spiritual sense, but has clearly not personally encountered the divine-human person of Jesus Christ as his own Lord and Savior. He is reminiscent of Paul Tillich, the quintessential Protestant liberal who taught at Union a generation earlier, in contrast to the pronounced Christology of the Council. His theology of "symbol" compares poorly, from a Catholic perspective, with the classic Christ: the Sacrament of Encounter with God written at the beginning of the Council by Edward Schillebeeckx, who at the time was firmly within the Catholic theological world but wandered beyond it later. Haight's is a hygienic secular vision in that it accepts the scientific, reduced, disenchanted universe and denies entirely the miraculous which has always saturated Catholic life, prayer and thought.
Very practically, this carries over into the sacramental life. A symbolic Christ leads to a symbolic sacrament: shallow, superficial, artificial. And so, we find the troubling tendency in Jesuit colleges and high schools to diminish the sacramental life. Typically, in a Jesuit chapel, the Eucharistic chapel may be in the corner or hidden or allowing only two kneelers. This indicates the demotion of the Eucharistic presence. One is unlikely to find in Jesuit circles holy hours, benediction, procession or devotion to the Sacrament. Liturgies are more informal, meal-like, avoiding the reverence of temple worship, silence, and sacrifice. Practice of sacramental confession is not a priority in the Ignatian curriculum. Graduates from Jesuit schools are probably less prone to attend Sunday mass regularly. In short, the sacramental life is diminished.
A Convoluted Clericalism: Robert Drinan.
Jesuits, in my experience, tend to be non-clerical. At their best, they are priestly but not clerical. This can be a good thing. They prefer to be called by their first names, not addressed as "Father..." They avoid clerical attire for the most part. In formation, they are many years a Jesuit, studying and teaching and even professing final vows prior to ordination. The sacrament of orders seems to play a smaller part in their lives than it does, for example, in that of the ordinary diocesan priest.
This can be appealing and pastorally advantageous in many ways, especially in regard to the educated, the secular, and those offended by the clerical. Correctly it accentuates the baptismal reality that primarily our priests are our brothers-in-Christ. However, there are dangers associated with this.
Catholicism is inherently a clerical religion: centered upon the Eucharist and the sacramental economy, it depends upon a sacred, "set aside," clerical caste that is normatively male, celibate, educated, carefully vetted for psychological integrity, virtuous character, love of the Church and holiness of life. This clerical class creates, inevitably, a clerical culture. At its best it is: holy, loving, wholesome, intelligent, pastoral. At its worst it can become arrogant, distant, insensitive, and awkward with women. However, anti-or-non-clericalism leads to a weakening of the sacramental life (noted above.)
Another danger, in progressive circles, is an inverted or convoluted clericalism. The liberal pivot is away from the sacraments and worship and to a social justice activism. Here, the cleric becomes the justice activist leader. The Church transfigures from its supernatural, transcendent character to become an agent of social change on behalf of the poor and oppressed.
And so we consider Father-Congressman Robert Drinan. As Jesuit priest and US Congressman from Massachusettes through the 1970s he erred gravely in several ways. The incompatibility of being a priest-politician was eventually clarified by John Paul who directed all such priests to leave politics of the priesthood. The incompatibility between the two should be obvious. A priest primarily presides at the Eucharist which unites Catholics of all politics around the altar of sacrifice. A priest who is a partisan clearly is dysfunctional and dissonant. And so, for example, Drinan was the first to move to impeach Nixon. Obviously, this would interfere with his ministry to Catholics who support that president.
To make matters worse, he was an ardent supporter of legal abortion. He even argued in favor of the Obama veto of the born-alive abortion bill. He was a zealot opposed to key Catholic values.
To make things worse: he habitually wore his clericals to Congress. In this he contradicted the non-clericalism more common among his Jesuit brothers. In doing so, he used his priesthood to add clerical power to his positions. This is a more perverse clericalism: bad enough that he is partisan as a priest; bad enough that he works feverishly for abortion even of the born alive; but even worse he wears his clerics to bring Catholic power to his positions. He is, and remains, a highly esteemed icon of Jesuit political progressivism.
Mimicry of Secular, Ivy Schools: Ted Hesburg.
Hesburg was not, of course, a Jesuit. But he deserves a place on this listing as the dominant force in midcentury Catholic higher education and a huge influence upon Jesuit colleges. He convened, 1967, the historic Land O'Lakes conference in which presidents of prestigious Catholic schools, many Jesuit, announced their independence from Church authority. They proclaimed independence from any external actor beyond the academy itself. It is ironic that at this very time Notre Dame was hosting pro-contraception conferences, funded by Ford and Rockefeller foundations. These were fueled by fear of the "population explosion" but more maliciously by the WASP anxiety around the fertility of Catholics and Blacks. This was a harbinger of the increasing allegiance of Catholic higher education to causes of the political and cultural left.
Hesburg was a powerful, influential, midcentury Catholic figure: charming, intelligent, deeply devout. His failing was his urgent compulsion to win approval of American elites of the time: White, Anglo, Protestants turning secular. He wanted Notre Dame and similar schools to emulate the Ivy leagues and share in that prestige. None followed his example in the following years as closely as Jesuit universities. Underlying this mimesis was a certain Catholic intellectual inferiority complex.
In the years before 1967, there was much awareness that in the years after the war, the Catholic community had vastly increased in size, wealth, institutions, economic/political/cultural power and influence. The exception was in the academy: Catholics lacked reputation in higher education. The Church had maintained, of course, its own parallel system of education. It was widely felt that intellectually it was inferior. And so, there emerged in the 1960s a powerful compulsion to emulate the Ivy schools and other prestigious centers.
And so, we find Jesuit schools proclaiming dependence from the Church but emulating the secular elites. This effected hiring especially, but administration and campus life in many ways. Most mainstream schools renounced the Catholic in favor of the progressive.
A similar dynamic effected Jesuit high schools. These have remained committed to academic excellence, to care of the person, and the legacy of the Church. But for many shareholders, especially parents and students, a primary goal is to move on to Ivy or Ivy-comparable schools in order to ensure a secure, affluent career. In this the schools serve the class interests of the upwardly aspirational middle class. This is not bad in itself. But it is at least morally questionable as a pillar of a meritocratic, severely divided class society. Jesuits have always been the elite of the Church. They compete with other elites. They serve those who aspire to rise above the working class to the managerial, affluent class. They compensate by teaching social justice, by emphasizing the suffering of oppressed groups, and by worthwhile experiences such as immersion trips. And yet, the paradox remains: the system of schools is in service of the upwardly aspirational and mobile within a broader universe that privileges the educated. It is a pillar supporting the upper tier of an increasingly unequal society. This is a tension, a contradiction at the heart of Jesuit secondary education.
Flawed Liberalism: John Courtney Murray
Murray (even more than my beloved Avery Dulles) is our most influential American Jesuit thinker. He peaked in the honeymoon of Catholicism and America, dying in 1967, just as the Cultural Revolution was exploding. He epitomizes the harmony, indeed the love affair, of the Church with the USA at the time of the Council. He explored pluralism, religious freedom, and the best aspects of the American project. He had heavy influence on Dignitatis Humanae, the Council document that significantly developed the Church's understanding of religious freedom. He is the theological icon of the era (1945-65) along with figures like Fulton Sheen, Thomas Merton, John F. Kennedy, Flannery O'Connor and others.
His view on abortion is of interest. He clearly declared the responsibility of the state to protect all human life, including the unborn. At the same time, he cautioned that prudence guides policy so that the implementation of good values is pragmatic and not simple. This left, of course, an opening for his followers to tolerate the legalization of abortion that followed his death by several years. He is an old school liberal, prior to the sexual/abortion revolution.
Yet, we are indebted to David L. Schindler, of happy memory, and his son David C. for a penetrating philosophical critique of the liberalism underlaying Murray's views. Murray views the American experiment as an "order of peace," a process or procedure of neutrality that allows for compromise between competing parties and a wide freedom to pursue disparate aims. Underlying this is an Enlightenment, deist, even Calvinist view of the autonomous individual, free to choose, unhindered by American liberty in the pursuit of the good. This contrasts with a Catholic, deeply incarnational view, that sees that all of reality is created for communion with God in the good. And so, politics, culture, economics, academics, science and all human life is oriented always and already towards God, in grace, or against God in sin.
And so, the apparently Catholic liberalism of Murray camouflages our old enemy: individualism, the core of the Cultural Revolution and the weakness of the Society of Jesus.
Abortion Strategy of 1964 Hyannisport Conference: Richard McCormick and Robert Drinnan
Jesuits Drinan and McCormick were invited with other prominent liberal Catholic theologians (Fuchs, Curran, Milhaven) by the Kennedy family to their Hyannisport compound to develop a Catholic politics on abortion. The group agreed that Courtney-Murray's view that circumstances could allow Catholics to prudentially support legal abortion to recommend a pro-abortion policy. They apparently convinced the Kennedy's of this approach. This was a historic, decisive moment. At that time, the DNC was not prochoice and the RNC was not prolife. At that time a neutral observer would surely conclude that the more probable party to support abortion would be the WASP RNC rather than the Catholic DNC. But this meeting was decisive for the future. A dark question hangs over American Catholicism of the 1970s: why did Catholic democrats so docilely surrender the party to the abortion agenda? A part of the answer: this conference and the theologians there involved.
Populist or Elite? Pope Francis.
Confused, contradictory, incoherent and polarizing, the papacy of Francis exemplified the problems listed above:
Anti-clericalist in his relentless contempt for what he sees as rigidity, legalism, formalism, and dogmatism in the priesthood, he wielded power in an autocratic manner and articulated as papal truth his own views on prudential, policy matters.
Ignoring and implicitly dismissing much of the magisterium of his two predecessors, he presented his own papacy as a novelty, a progressive step beyond the past in the exercise of mercy and a newly contrived "synodality."
"Synodality" itself is a disparagement of holy orders as it replaces the apostolic authority of the bishops with a vague dialogic process that engages even those hostile to Catholic values. Many of us who love our legacy want nothing to do with it; those who want to change the Church welcome it.
Clearly evangelical in his own love for Jesus Christ, he tended to speak of other religions as roughly equivalent paths to God, in a sloppy ecumenical relativism contrasting with the Christocentrism of the Council, John Paul and Benedict.
He advocated a pastoral approach, uprooted from dogma and therefore truth, and so emotional, impulsive, anti-intellectual and uninformed by deep, Catholic traditions of philosophy.
He embraced the gay crusade of James Martin, including the blessing of gay unions, as he used slang to disparage homosexuals in casual contexts.
He continued the pivot, of Arrupe, to the political, with heavy focus on political policy like the environment, capital punishment, walls and immigration. These are prudential issues on which he as pope has neither professional competence nor heavenly guidance.
Perhaps most puzzling of all: he presents as a populist, champion of the poor and oppressed. Yet, he has disparaged the piety of the uneducated. He has cast himself as antagonist of rightwing, populist movements around the globe. He has aligned himself with political causes favored by progressive Western elites. He is, at best, a confused, elitist populist.
Genuine Renewal in the Church Since 1965
The action of the Holy Spirit in the Church over the last sixty years has been largely:
1. Evangelical: a recovered intimacy with the Divine person of Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior as well as a communion with Evangelical/Pentecostal Christianity.
2. Communal: the emergence of small, intimate, intense communities of charity around the sacraments and the Word: charismatic renewal, neocatechumenal way. communion and liberation, Latin mass, home schooling(coalitions of Catholic mothers), prolife and maternity centers, new religious communities, and intensively Catholic colleges.
3. Chaste and Fertile: theology of the body, natural family planning, the "spousal mysticism" of Balthasar/John Paul/Benedict. A renewed sense of the sacredness of marriage, family, sacrament. An understanding of Christ's spousal love of his bridegroom Church and the priesthood and religious life as reflective of this groom/bride drama of love.
4. Populist: simple, non-sophisticated devotion to the Divine Mercy (St. Faustina), our Blessed Mother, Eucharistic adoration, remembrance of the saints.
Sadly, you will find almost no Jesuit involvement in these currents of renewal. If you find some they are exceptions, outliers.
As a corporate personality, the Society of Jesus
-Non-Evangelical. It aligns with liberal Protestantism. It experiments with Zen and accentuates the values of the world religions. Thus it diminishes the potency of sin, the need for salvation, the coming of Christ, and the specific efficacy of the cross.
-Individualistic: not engaged in these new forms of community and so accommodating of cultural liberalism.
-Sexually liberational: affirmative of sterile sex and the LGBTQ agenda, indifferent if not hostile to theology of the body, natural family planning and the prolife movement.
-Elitist: mimetic of the liberal ideology that prevails in the upper echelons of society, disparaging of many forms of popular piety, and enabling of bourgeois, meritocratic aspirations.
Future of the Society of Jesuit
My own greatest wish for the society is that it use its magnificent network of secondary schools to develop an authentically Catholic cult of virility as: chaste, humble, courageous, sober, serene, prudent and just. The crisis in masculinity becomes more apparent every day. At the same time, we see emerging a primal hunger in young men for God, virtue, masculinity, guidance, formation and inspiration. The Jesuit schools are an unequalled asset to accomplish this. Sadly, I do not see this happening.
Regarding Jesuit universities, they have already gone too far down the dark hole of cultural liberalism. The institutions are already so solidly committed to an anti-Catholic agenda that the best thing would be for the Church and the Society of Jesus to detach from them. They then can present themselves for what they are: not genuinely Catholic, but a form of cultural liberalism, flavored with Catholicism.
The future of the society is not hopeful. For the most part, it is structurally, inherently individualistic, secular, sexually liberational, elitist, progressive. In 1965 there were 8,400 Jesuits in the USA. In 2025 there were 19 ordinations in USA and Canada combined. It is growing in Africa. The society is not dead; it is on life support.
The Arrupe leadership has been called the "second founding" of the Society. More accurately: it was the founding of a new religious order, discontinuous with the past. The old Jesuits were militant, doctrinally rigorous, pope-obeying, aggressive, evangelistic, heaven-and-hell-concerned, virile, sacramental. The new Jesuits (that is, at the elite, institutional level) are: accommodating of modernity, theologically in dissent, secular, disenchanted, sexually liberational, gay affirming, abortion accepting, Arian-leaning, leftist and anti-populist politically. An old Latin proverb: "The corruption of the best is the worst."
Cardinal Ratzinger wrote about the Church as a garden with much variety. Among religious orders and movements there are annuals and perennials. The former flourish for a time, perform their misson, and vanish. The later remain as permanent life forms within the Church. We would have to consider monks, hermits, friars as perennials. I would have considered the Jesuits to be the same. But increasingly, it seems that that society was much a staple of the church of Trent, for almost 500 years. Sixty years ago it took, institutionally and in critical mass, an erroneous, disastrous turn.
We are grateful for all it has been for half a millennium. We can only pray for its future.