Aftermath News

Jesuits plan for life post-Kolvenbach

January 1, 2008 · 11 Comments

 

Fr. Peter-Hans Kolvenbach: Jesuits meeting to elect new Black Pope

National Catholic Reporter | Dec 28, 2007

By RAYMOND A. SCHROTH

There’s a story in the 1892 Jesuit review Woodstock Letters where an older Jesuit tells a younger man who is about to start teaching that the order’s schools nationwide the previous year were weak because they had to hire laymen. Now that the faculty are all Jesuits, he says, the secular schools will be coming to the order for advice.

Today, 107 years later, when, although numbers are rising in the developing world, the American Society has shrunk from 8,000 in 1960 to 3,000, Jesuits are turning to lay collaboration and leadership to achieve the Jesuit mission. How to continue doing this will be a central concern of the order’s General Congregation, its highest governing body, when it convenes in Rome Jan. 6.

General Congregations — this is the 35th — are usually held either to elect a general or when the general, having consulted advisers, convenes one for special reasons.

Some 219 delegates from all over the world, including 27 from the United States, both ex officio and elected, will gather to select a new general to replace Fr. Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, 80, the first general in modern times to resign. The rest of the agenda of the meeting indicates that while there may be fewer to carry it out, the Jesuit mission in the future will clearly emphasize justice and environmental issues.

After electing a new general, delegates will consider 262 postulates (proposals), from which the new general and the delegates will set priorities for the new generation. Soon the leadership of Jesuits will belong to men born after the 1960s, with no memories of Vatican II, Vietnam, civil rights marches, the movement in those years of the Jesuit seminaries from remote suburbs into the big cities, and the thrill of turning the altar around and saying Mass in English.

This year the American assistancy ordained only 16 men. By 2021 the 10 geographical provinces will be five. For example, the New England, New York, and Maryland plus the South Carolina and Georgia provinces will all be one.

The new general, says Fr. Howard Gray, former rector of John Carroll University and now adviser to Georgetown’s lay president, will be in the mold of Fr. Pedro Arrupe, who served from 1965 until 1983 and whose influence and skills set the tone of the modern Society. Kolvenbach has continued Arrupe’s priorities, while he improved relations with the Vatican by keeping a low personal profile and establishing links between the Jesuit curia and Vatican offices. As a result, Jesuits interviewed for this article do not foresee Jesuit-papal friction, in spite of then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger’s role in removing Fr. Thomas Reese as editor of America magazine, the U.S. Jesuits’ flagship publication. Jesuit Fr. George Coyne, former director of the Vatican Observatory, describes Benedict XVI as bright and open-minded to people who can match his intellectual acumen.

According to Gray, Coyne, the Whispers in the Loggia Web site and other sources, the delegates will be asking about: Fr. Orlando Torres, a Puerto Rican, now secretary for formation in Rome; Fr. Mark Rotsaert, Belgian president of the European Jesuit Conference; Fr. Lisbert D’Sousa from India; Fr. Mark Raper, Australian provincial and onetime head of the Jesuit Refugee Service; and possibly Fr. Frederico Lombardi, former head of the Vatican Radio who is now the pope’s PR man.

They are expected to reaffirm the sometimes controversial statements of Congregations 32-34 on the relationship between faith and justice, inculturation and the Society’s relationship with lay men and women. But of the 262 proposals, 42 concern justice, and the next 41 are on ecology, the new generation’s Vietnam.

Dedication to the environment, said Fr. Roger de la Rosa, a California Jesuit chemist, will move the Society into the 21st century, in dialogue with culture and science. The other issues — governance and lay collaboration — are linked. How will new initiatives be received?

The following assessment of what can be expected in the upcoming General Congregation is based on the planning documents, a lecture by historian Jesuit Fr. John Padberg and interviews with a cross section of American Jesuits from different age groups and different parts of the country, including: Frs. Howard Gray, George Coyne, Ross Romero, Paul Mueller, Thomas Greene and Roger de la Rosa — the last four of whom are young.

* The delegates will elect a general with international experience and vision. Americans must start thinking internationally. More Third-World young Jesuits will be getting degrees in the United States and living in American communities. In California, with the most vocations, half the scholastics were born outside the United States, including de la Rosa. A high percentage of men in formation have already spent many months in Latin America and the Third World. The East will teach the West about dialogue, said de la Rosa. Some older Jesuits must quickly adjust to the fact that the Jesuit complexion will darken and the new generation will be sensitive to any whiff of racism.

* Lay leadership of Jesuit institutions will be the norm. Leaders will have to experiment in training laypersons in the Jesuit ethos. From novitiate to final vows, it takes about 13 years to “form” a Jesuit. Now the hope is that through a series of experiences — doing the Spiritual Exercises, attending workshops on Jesuit identity and international tours or pilgrimages, such as those run by Gray and Fr. Patrick Samway of St. Joseph’s University, to visit St. Ignatius’ birthplace in Paris, and the Jesuit-founded AIDS orphanage-hospice-and village in Nairobi — lay leaders will emerge with a Jesuit “brand.”

* Jesuit leadership will think nationally more than locally. The new governance structure will likely give powers to a national superior who can override province structures and decide that this school will be closed or handed over to lay leadership and that school will get Jesuit personnel.

* Local communities will be asked to face their weaknesses. A provincial’s statement, “Responding to the Call of Christ,” says successful communities have a weekly community Eucharist and meal where all are expected to be present; regular community meetings for prayer and conversations; days of reflection twice a year; and regular hospitality, especially for apostolic partners.

Mueller notes that some Jesuits see their community as a “place of refuge,” away from apostolic obligations. This, he said, is no way to reestablish our credibility. We must deliberately design our communities, he said, for both hospitality and prayer, where visitors see us at home and are attracted to our way of life.

There’s a story about 16th-century Pedro Martinez, the first Jesuit to land and die in North America. He was a Spanish swordsman who disdained religion, but accompanied friends to a Jesuit community one day just to mock them. Instead, he was so impressed that he wanted to join. Could that happen today?

* Paradoxically, as numbers fall, the Society takes on more responsibilities. In starting Nativity middle schools and Cristo Rey high schools in poor, racially mixed neighborhoods, Jesuits seem confident that somehow we can staff them with idealistic young lay men and women. Fr. Mark Raper, in a newsletter, grants that prudence may require us to cut back our commitments, but adds that Ignatius counseled that we “be ready to be regarded as fools.” Jesuit Fr. James Brodrick concludes his biography of Francis Xavier with the observation that Xavier’s zeal surpassed his judgment in his decision to go to China, a country he knew nothing about. But Brodrick quotes Robert Browning: “Man’s reach should exceed his grasp. Or what’s a heaven for?”

Jesuit Fr. Raymond A. Schroth of St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, N.J., has just published The American Jesuits: A History.

Categories: Christianity · Illuminati · Vatican

11 responses so far ↓

  • god // January 2, 2008 at 12:14 pm

    The Jesuits apear to be a pretty sad bunch of rejects, ‘Half-men’ as all priests who vow chastity. Of course this sexual supression has no effect on the Religious Doctrines of the Moral actions, or does it?
    In fact if we take a look at the Catholics Payout, of 500 million dollars, to familys victim of Priests Sexual Peadafilia, [sex with children] we can see the consequenses on the rationale of these ‘Halfmen.’
    They Join the church because they don’t have to worry about paying bills ever. Same as all people working in institutions.
    They are dying out, and not to soon, if you ask me.
    It is obnoxious of the Vatican to Preach charity when it is the wealthyist Religion on Earth. In fact we Now see just how the Wars have been run by these Jesuits since their inception.
    We can safely bet, all these types of broken, weak and morally defective people, are by their very nature going to say ‘yes’ to absolutly anything rather than face their own short-commings on a personal level, even when it includes the goal of Global Genocide in the Billions, reducing the Earths Human population to under 500′million. [any corralation to their pay-out fine?] I’ll bet every thing is significant to these nut-jobs.

  • quazimodo // January 2, 2008 at 4:10 pm

    The problem with the catholic church is that gays dont need to join the church anymore. There were four priests who taught in my grammar school. Three were as camp as a row of tents and the fourth has now left priesthood and living as a gay man. The only places that have growth in churches are 3rd world countries where priests are well paid and fed. The plans for us when all our food has been put in to biofuels and we are all starving people may become priests again. Anybody who thinks all this gay activity in the church isnt true i know a gay man who once was a priest and he said all the people in the semen- ary as its root word is the same “to sow” i think in greek. All the priesthoods of ancient world were gay. There is an intersting book i read and explains about homosexuals and religion and the shape of things to come. Check out Cutting Through Volume I by Alan Watt The Androgynous( Hermaphroditic) Agenda available at http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com.
    The book more or less said the world has been taken over by twisted psychopaths and alot of them are so twisted there gay added to that they want to kill of natural procreation of the masses. gay priests for 1500 years is a good way to keep population down. When i was in greece i seen priests had like 4 children in average were as normla greeks had 2. The greek bishops arnt allowed to have wives. Read the following to see whats wrong with greek bishops who arnt allowed wives. http://www.guardian.co.uk/religion/Story/0,2763,1418094,00.html

  • quazimodo // January 2, 2008 at 4:11 pm

    My speeling is bad sorry

  • Yoda // January 3, 2008 at 12:27 pm

    If Loyola was still around… he would be modelling the Jesuits after the Jedi-Knights, because that’s what he was… A Knight.

    When they lost the Warrior aspect, they lost the understanding of Mankind and turned to politics etc.

    The world needs a new Loyola/Yoda that is for sure.

  • pjwalker911 // January 3, 2008 at 5:03 pm

    Don’t worry. Loyola’s spirit lives on in the Marines who slaughter children for fun. Just as the Jesuits were behind the Nazi SS, they are behind the US in Iraq.

  • DaftAida // January 4, 2008 at 3:01 pm

    I happily imagine some disaster intervening, wiping out the lot of them; all in one place, at one time! I happily imagine the snake choking on it’s tale and in my dreams I fly.

  • Kenjiro Shoda // January 10, 2008 at 3:24 pm

    Since the disaster of Vatican II (1962-65) the Jesuits have declined from 36,200 to approx. 18,784 today. That’s almost -20,000. Huge declines. Over 1,000 Jesuit foundations have been closed since Vatican II, most in Europe.
    The average age of Jesuit priests in 65, of the nearly extinc class of Jesuit brothers, the average age is nearly 70. There are barely 1,000 Jesuit brothers left in the entire world. Down from over 6,000 before Vatican II.
    In the USA alone, Jesuits priests declined from 8,000 (1961-62) to approx. 2,704. The number of Jesuit seminarians declined from over 3,500 in the USA in 1962, to barely 200 last year.
    There is no hope for the Jesuit Order to return to Catholic tradition……nor for most Orders.
    There is hope, however. New religious Orders are being founded (many communities of nuns being founded which wear the old fashioned 1950’s style habits!!). New priestly Orders are being founded which celebrate the Tridentine Latin Mass and are flourishing. There are even new, traditionalist branches of the Capuchins, Dominicans, Franciscans, Redemptorists, and others being formed to step in and replace the radical liberal “Vatican II” Orders when they die out.
    So we have to just wait. The Jesuits will decline to the point of near extinction, and then they will either reform themselves and return to Catholic tradition….or they will go extinct. Hopefully a traditionalist branch of the Jesuits is waiting in the wings to replace them.

  • T-Bone // January 17, 2008 at 3:17 am

    There is a new movement afoot in the Church and it will be seen more clearly over time. There is a generation in power in the Jesuits, as in the world in general, that is misguided and sees itself as idealist while their actions give them away as something else. As these aging hippies pass on there is a new generation that has learned from the errors and arrogance of those before them. The irony is that many of these will come fromthe third world…the dumping ground for the Jesuits that didn’t buy into the new age philosophies post Vatican II.

  • julie // February 5, 2008 at 12:23 pm

    the jesuits trained Mugabe really well, he has depopulated the whole of Zimbabwe… they are behind everything nasty.

  • asoul // March 10, 2009 at 9:07 am

    It is a known fact that Loyola was interested in the Occult Kabbalah (teaching of Rabbi Moses De Leon?). Maybe some dark complexions of the Kabbalah have found own place in ideology/deeds of jesuits? The words in Latin by Loyola “Perinde ac cadaver in omnibus ubi peccatum non cerneretur” (”To obey like a corpse in all maters in which one does not fall into sin.”) and the title “Monita Secreta Societatis Jesu” may be interpreted in Hebrew with famous kabbalistic method PaRDeS. It seems hidden Hebrew is present in the article “Maronites Between Two Worlds” by Fr. Peter-Kolvenbach also. So maybe Society of Jesus is much more mysterious one than it appears at first sight?

  • pjwalker911 // March 10, 2009 at 4:03 pm

    Some think the Jesuit logo “IHS” stands for Isis Horus Set. I wouldn’t be surprised if that were true. Also, the Jesuits have been deeply involved with everything from Rosicrucianism, to the Bavarian Illuminati, to Freemasonry, to Nazism, Communism, across the board. The only debate is really whether they are behind such movements or that they have merely infiltrated them.

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