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Atlanta Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory speaks at the Mid-Atlantic Congress in Baltimore. (CR Staff)

Archbishop Lori to pastoral planners at MAC: Is your blueprint Babel or Pentecost?

Paul McMullen February 18, 2017
By Paul McMullen
Filed Under: Evangelization, Local News, News, Pastoral Planning

Will pastoral leaders simply parrot Pope Francis as they explore new ways to build up the church, or truly “deny” themselves and follow the example of Christ, regardless of the consequences?

That was the challenge described by Archbishop William E. Lori Feb. 17, during a late-afternoon Mass at the Baltimore Hilton on day two of the sixth annual Mid-Atlantic Congress.

He began his homily with a comparison of his parents, typical do-it-yourself members of the Greatest Generation, and the builders of the Tower of Babel.

Whereas the former built and remodeled a house in southern Indiana that was founded “on faith, on discipleship and self-giving love,” the ancient builders “sought to build independently of God and even in defiance of God.”

How does that contrast relate to the reorganizations being  undertaken by archdioceses and dioceses around the nation, such as the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s pastorate planning process?

Archbishop William E. Lori greets attendees of the Mid-Atlantic Congress Feb. 17 at the Baltimore Hilton. (Olivia Obineme/Special to the Review)

“As we go about the work of pastoral planning, whether at the diocesan or parish level, we can fall into the trap of thinking about this project solely in terms of managing finances, personnel and buildings,” the archbishop said. “We can sometimes adopt the language of the business world without pausing to ‘baptize’ it sufficiently – giving the process only a patina of evangelization.

“Sometimes we repeat churchy language without really grasping what it means. How many sentences are constructed using the words of Pope Francis – ‘encounter’; ‘accompaniment’; ‘discernment’ – yet they lead to nothing.

“In the process of parroting the lingo,” he continued, “one may well lose sight of the mission that the Risen Lord entrusted to the church on the cusp of his Ascension. ‘Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations’ (Mt 28:19). No wonder Pope Benedict and Pope Francis have both warned us against a type of pastoral planning that has more do with Babel than Pentecost.”

He then cited the day’s Gospel, Mark 8:34-9:1, which begins, “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me.”

“The folks at Babel sought to gain the whole world and lost everything,” Archbishop Lori said. “We are called to lose everything for the sake of our gaining Christ – for we are convinced that we are blessed to the extent that we are his faithful witnesses.

“This is truly the joy of the Gospel and this is truly the way in which the church is built up from generation to generation. All of our plans, all of our meetings, all our writings and strategies – all of this will profit us nothing unless we heed the call to discipleship in its most radical form as presented for us in today’s Gospel.”

Concelebrants included Baltimore’s Bishop Denis J. Madden, auxiliary bishop emeritis, and Auxiliary Bishop Adam Parker. The Gospel was proclaimed and intercessions were given by Deacon Harbey Santiago of St. Michael in Poplar Springs. Deacon Frank Laws, of St. Stephen in Bradshaw, was also among those assisting in the liturgy.

A choir sings during a Feb. 17 Mass at the Mid-Atlantic Congress, held at the Baltimore Hilton. (Olivia Obineme/Special to the Review)

The MAC attracted more than 1,400, including repeat attendees such as Amy Kanich, the director of campus ministry at Mount Aloysius College in Crescent, Pa., in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

She praised not just the lessons brought by keynote speakers such as Sister Regina Marie of the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles, but the spirit shared.

“From morning assembly to adoration to the Eucharist, the initiative of the (Holy) Spirit is so woven into everything here,” said Kanich, a resident of the Cambria County town of Nanty Glo. “I don’t know who plans this, but their heart is being called and informed.

“It’s not just a conference to sell books. You feel the love of the people who put on this conference.”

Also see:

Archbishop Gregory opens Mid-Atlantic Congress with keynote address on creation – See more at: http://www.catholicreview.org/article/home/archbishop-gregory-opens-mid-atlantic-congress-with-keynote-address-on-creation#sthash.5jB8u0JN.dpuf

Archbishop Gregory opens Mid-Atlantic Congress with keynote address on creation

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Paul McMullen

Paul McMullen

Paul McMullen has served as the managing editor of the Catholic Review since 2008.

The author of two books, Paul has been involved in local media since age 12, when he began delivering The News American to 80 homes in his neighborhood. He began his journalism career with the Capital-Gazette Newspapers in Anne Arundel County, and spent more than 25 years as a sports writer for The Sun in Baltimore. His favorite writing assignments have included the Summer Olympics in Australia and Greece, the Archdiocese of Baltimore's response to the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, and “Feet for Francis,” a 2015 walking pilgrimage from the Baltimore Basilica to Philadelphia to see Pope Francis.

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