New York, USA - The ouster of a respected editor at a Jesuit magazine has Roman Catholic scholars in the United States wondering whether Pope Benedict XVI will continue, or even extend, the disciplinary actions that John Paul II took against dissenters from church teachings.
As head of the Vatican's all-important doctrinal office, the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger built a reputation as the church's enforcer, taking actions with John Paul's assent against a series of high-profile theologians who drifted from Catholic orthodoxy.
The final act of Ratzinger's tenure in his old job came in mid-March when, according to Jesuit sources, his office pressed leaders of that religious order to remove the Rev. Thomas Reese as editor of America, an influential U.S. weekly.
The irritant wasn't Reese's own doctrinal views, but articles he published by scholars who took issue with Catholic officialdom.
Reese this week declined any comment on the circumstances of his departure or his views on dissent. But others are buzzing.
America's competitor, the lay-edited Commonweal magazine, editorialized that Reese's removal leaves the impression that the church is "a backward-looking, essentially authoritarian, institution run by men who are afraid of open debate and intellectual inquiry."
The Rev. Richard McBrien, a liberal theologian at the University of Notre Dame, said he's "astonished" because Reese was careful to air scholars' varying views on contested topics. Therefore, McBrien says, the ouster implies that the Vatican and its U.S. allies "don't think it's possible to discuss both sides."
Other Americans will be gratified if Benedict pursues John Paul's clampdown.
Days after Benedict was elected, Patrick Reilly mailed a fund-raising appeal for his Cardinal Newman Society's campaign to restore schools' faithfulness to church teachings.
"There are heretics and dissidents at Catholic colleges teaching anti-Catholic theology to our children and grandchildren and leading them away from the one true Faith," Reilly charged. He named theologians at 11 U.S. Catholic campuses as "hard-core" troublemakers, McBrien among them.
The Rev. Joseph Fessio, a conservative Jesuit and provost of Florida's Ave Maria University, figures that around 90 percent of theologians on Catholic campuses don't accept church teaching on one or more of these contested issues: contraception, homosexuality and the all-male priesthood.
"It's only fair to have a wait and see attitude," says Daniel Finn of St. John's University in Minnesota, who did liaison work with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops on behalf of professors in the Catholic Theological Society of America. "I don't see any reason to expect dramatic change," he adds.
Terrence Tilley of the University of Dayton, another former CTSA liaison to U.S. bishops — and another name on Reilly's list — also thinks it's a mistake to draw conclusions about the pope from his performance running the doctrinal office. "We have no clear notion of what he will do administratively because his role is so different," he says.
But Tilley says he wouldn't be shocked by an American clampdown under Benedict "because of his profound concern with religious indifferentism and his view of the United States in general" as being troublesome.
Reilly says that Benedict assumes the papacy knowing full well who the American church dissidents are. "If he has any desire to clean up the problem, it wouldn't take him long to do it," he says.
As a practical matter, what could Benedict do?
The Reese affair demonstrates one option. Vatican agencies could press religious orders or bishops to simply reassign or otherwise limit the activities of priests, brothers and sisters under their authority.
Fessio says that with new bishop appointments and support from Benedict's Vatican, the U.S. bishops could become "more emboldened to exercise their authority" and "take more responsibility" for requiring orthodoxy.
One vehicle is the "mandatum" that all Catholics teaching religious subjects are supposed to receive from the local bishop, under rules the U.S. hierarchy issued in 2001 to implement John Paul's decree on universities. A mandatum recognizes that a professor has pledged "to teach authentic doctrine and to refrain from putting forth as Catholic teaching anything contrary to" officially defined truth.
Finn and Tilley say nobody knows how many teachers have, in fact, been certified because there's no clearing house of information and most bishops have kept the matter private.