Consider: we all (especially we self-obsessed Boomers) know that physical health requires a solid, steady program or routine: a good night's sleep; balanced, temperate, nourishing diet; and daily exercise of some sort. Consider: some high schools and colleges produce competitive, championship-level teams year after year because they have good programs, rigorous workouts and high motivation. Even more does our spiritual thriving require a good program.
In 1973, the year my wife and I dived into the Catholic Charismatic Renewal, as that movement was surging powerfully, John Haughey S.J. published his classic: Conspiracy of God: the Holy Spirit in Man. He intended the word "conspiracy" in its etymological, Latin sense: "to breathe with." So, we "conspire" with God when we breathe with him: aspire, collaborate, journey, commune together. He distinguished three types of spirituality: programmatic, which emphasizes habit, institutions, traditions; pneumatic, which seeks the interior inspiration of the Holy Spirit; and autogenic, which highlights the agency of the person, in freedom, initiative and love. At the time I read the book, I happily identified with the pneumatic or charismatic which I saw as superior to the autogenic social justice politics of my late adolescence as well as the institutional Catholicism of my childhood. In the half century since then, I see that a wholesome spirituality blends all three, but the programmatic is fundamental.
The enthusiasms of "the Spirit" easily vanish and the agency of the Self proves itself to be largely volatile and impotent. We are communal: we need steady support of others. We are creatures of habit: we need good ones. We are sinful: we need rituals of repentance, encouragement, pardon, support. A good Catholic is one with a good program. My grandfather used to say: "Just go to confession every other Saturday, as a habit." Catholicism is a programmatic, institutional, traditional faith.
Poison of Protestant Individualism
Our nation is deeply Protestant, or late-Protestant if not post-Protestant. In its various forms...mainline, progressive, Evangelical, fundamentalist, Pentecostal...it can be a living, lively Christianity, but its core infection is individualism. At its origin in Luther, Calvin, Henry VII and the others, it renounced the Church community in favor of some individual, subjective faith. And so, through the centuries it has proliferated into thousands of different denominations. Many today identify simply as "Christian." This means that they follow no authority or tradition, but contrive their own system...or they follow some local, rando pastor who has contrived his own religion.
American Catholics have mostly gone "protestant." In our hospital visits, between 10 and 20% who identify as Catholic practice their faith. By this I mean: attend mass every Sunday. Most of the others, if they still identify as such, explain that they relate to God, they pray on their own. It is, in other words, an isolated, lonely faith. It is not nothing. It is faith. It can be highly Catholic in flavor: devotion to Mary, the rosary, the saints, sacramentals and such. Of course I do not challenge or correct these people of faith, however anemic, who are sick in bed. But as we pray together, almost always the Our Father, my hope for them is that our shared prayer will awaken a desire to return to communion with the community.
We are NOT created to live and pray in isolation. We need communion with each other. We need steady, reliable patterns and habits to carry us when we are weak. We need resources to correct, encourage, revive, inspire and eventually sanctify us. We need program. Let's consider ten good ones.
1. Classic Tridentine Catholicism
Counter reformation Catholicism, reactive to Protestantism and defined at Trent, is arguably the most programmatic, institutional religion imaginable. The subjectivity of "faith alone" of Luther was countered by a solid, objective program.
"It's all bullshit, pure bullshit! All this liberal Vatican II stuff! All you need is two things: the commandments and the sacraments. That is all you need!" This was my conservative high school friend Frank who disapproved of my liberal enthusiasms, in 1965. Frank served as a Catholic priest for 25 years; as an Episcopalian priest for 25 years; and is retired. Now he is the progressive, I am (obvi!) the conservative. We get together every few months for burger and drink, but don't go too deeply into theology. Nevertheless, my buddy provided a succinct summary of the Catholicism in which we were raised. Clear, defined, objective. Obey the commandments. Receive the sacraments. Fidelity to your state in life (marriage, priesthood, religious life.) Hard, durable, clear, simple.
In its full baroque grandeur, it was magnificent: art and architecture, missionary accomplishments, religious orders, theology, religious devotions (Mary, the cross of Jesus, penance for sin, sacramentals) and more. It's singular weakness was that it was not always firmly rooted in the foundation: the person and event of Jesus Christ. To the extent that it lacked this, it tended to and was perceived as dogmatic, moralistic, ritualistic, clericalist...all in the negative sense.
In the form we received it (1950s) it was still intact, but already leavened by our postwar prosperity, implicit ecumenism, and positivity. It was, for those two decades 1945-65 a thriving, exuberant American Catholicism. But its spiritual, intellectual roots were not deep. The bonds of communion and prayer were not deep enough to renounce the subjectivity, the individualism, the therapeutic narcissism at the core of the Cultural Revolution. And so, Catholicism entered into a 60 year period of steady decline.
2. Evangelical, Pneumatic Catholicism of John Paul and Benedict
These two pope fully engaged Vatican II, especially the recentering on the person of Jesus Christ. They interpreted the Council in continuity with the past, as they engaged modernity, critically, but appreciatively. So, they strongly affirmed the best contemporary developments in the Church and the world: ecumenism, dialogue with other religions, appreciation for Judaism, centrality of religious freedom, the role of and call to holiness of the laity, social justice for the poor, the positive accomplishments of science and technology, liturgical and biblical revivals. Patiently and peacefully they resisted the progressive assault on Catholic principles around incompetent life, sexuality/gender/family, objectivity of morality, and the balance of faith/reason. Their authoritative teaching aligns with and mutually strengthens the lay renewal programs below.
3. Catholic Charismatic Renewal
This movement of the Holy Spirit, which exploded in Duquesne University in 1967, is arguably the most significant of our time as it is part of the broader Pentecostal movement that started in 1900 and has spread around the globe in many churches. In terms of Christianity writ large, within and beyond the Catholic Church, this is the most consequential development of the last 126 years and going into the future. In part this was a brilliant synthesis into Catholicism of elements of Pentecostalism and Evangelicalism: love of Scripture, focus on Jesus as savior and lord, invocation of the Holy Spirit, gifts of the Holy Spirit (tongues, prophesy, etc.), spiritual warfare, gender roles, authority, emphasis on praise and strong spiritual community.
4. Divine Mercy
The revelations to Saint Faustina constitute the most significant development within Catholicism and are the interpretive key to the pontificate of John Paul. They are a revival of traditional themes but with a new clarity, emphasis and luminosity. Practically, there are simple practices: the litany of Divine Mercy, the image of the merciful Jesus and the celebration of Mercy Sunday a week after Easter.
5. Neocatechumenal Way, Communion and Liberation and Lay Renewal Movements
These all flow from a distinctive encounter with Christ in the unique charism of the founder and find expression in practices and habits that are creative, novel, and fruitful as they draw deeply from tradition.
6. 12-Step Groups
Not explicitly Catholic, these might be conceived as "anonymous Catholicism" (with a nod to Karl Rahner's famous "anonymous Christian." Famously, they aspire to be "spiritual" rather than "religious" rather than associate with baggage attached to institutional faiths. In clear, definite practical manners they practice the fundamentals of Christianity and Catholicism: awareness of weakness and need, trust in God, accountability, community of support, and a clear body of literature and practice. In the deeper etymological sense, it is itself a "religion": a "bonding" of a community through shared beliefs, values ands practices. It does not inherently replace or compete with other faiths, but is best practiced as an "accompaniment" to them. It addresses addiction and provides a path to sobriety and does not ambition to be a total plan of life as a full religion does.
7. Our Lady's Missionaries of the Eucharist and similar Traditional Programs
About a dozen years ago my wife and I made promises to OLME, Our Lady's Missionaries of the Eucharist, of now deceased Sister Joan Noreen, a gifted spiritual guide. It is a refreshing synthesis of the traditional elements of Catholicism: Eucharist, Mary, obedience to the Church, the sacraments, liturgy of the hours and simplicity of life. There are many such traditional movements: Opus Dei, Regnum Christi, Legion of Mary, and others.
8. Liturgical Year
The Church year with its seasons, it feasts and fasts, its "saint of the day" is a dazzlying program for holiness in itself.
9. Eucharistic and Marian Devotions
The Catholic soul is particularly fascinated by the Eucharist and the Mother of God: daily mass, visits to the Church, 40-hour devotion, processions, rosary, Marian feast days, and other.
10. Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy: Service of the Poor and Suffering
Within the Catholic economy of grace, special blessings come with programmatic, systemic, habitual service of the poor and suffering. This is strikingly evident in saintly figures such as St. Mother Theresa of Calcutta, Dorothy Day, Catherine Doherty and a litany of others.
Conclusion
In addition to the above, Catholicism offers a rich banquet of optional programs: novenas, devotions, retreats, spiritual direction (including the famous Spiritual Exercises of Ignatius), pilgrimages (my favorite being the Camino of Santiago in Spain) and other. No single person could practice all of these. They all feed into and draw from the presence of our Crucified-Risen-Ascended-Spirit-Sending Lord in his Church incarnated in Word and Sacrament.
The core, essential program of the Catholic: Sunday mass.
You have to show up Sunday morning.
You don't have to be pure and holy; you don't have to receive communion; you don't have to fully believe in everything Catholic; you don't have to pay attention for the whole time. You have to show up. And stay there for the full hour.
The key Catholic word is: EFFICACIOUS.
The sacraments are efficacious: they effect what they symbolize. This is not magic. It is Mystery. They effectively and fruitfully give us Christ's grace, of their very nature. They do not depend upon the merit or worth of the minister: an evil priest still confects the Eucharist; he still pardons sin in confession; he still heals body and soul in anointing of the sick.
Their full force is released only with the cooperation, the ascent, the surrender of the recipient. But their power is not limited by that subjectivity. For example, imagine someone receiving a sacrament in a state of distraction and inattention. Subjectively, consciously the mind is elsewhere: anxieties, regrets, resentments, sadness. Nevertheless, if there is even a faint intention to receive Christ in the sacrament than that grace is given, miraculously.
The entirety of Catholic life flows from the sacraments. In this it contrasts sharply with the subjectivity inherent to Protestantism and its offspring narcissistic, therapeutic, moralistic individualism.
By analogy, the rest of Catholicism shares a certain, lessor but nevertheless miraculous efficacy inherent to the sacraments. So simple practices themselves, in their form, give grace, even when the subjectivity is distracted: carrying a rosary, wearing a medal, hanging a crucifix in a room, blessing yourself when passing a Church, donating to a Church or charity, receiving ashes, casually saying "God bless you."
Modernity is pure, isolated, individualistic subjectivity. Catholicism is pure, communal, connected objectivity.
May we all, celebrating tomorrow Pentecost and moving into ordinary time, deepen, strengthen and intensify our Catholic program of holiness of life!