http://www.latimes.com/features/religion/la-me-communion4jun04,1,5605440.story?coll=la-news-religion
From the Los Angeles Times
Faithful, Yet
Not Traditional Catholics
Doctrinal differences, social issues, scandals lead
congregations away from church hierarchy.
By David
Haldane
Times Staff Writer
June 4, 2006
Like Catholic priests everywhere, Bishop Peter Hickman dons a white tunic each
Sunday to celebrate Mass in a sanctuary laden with incense and crosses.
Unlike most, he'll often have lunch with his wife and children afterward.
"Marriage promotes growth," says Hickman, 50, who has fathered five
children, been married three times and divorced twice. "People who've
never been married have a hard time knowing themselves."
Marriage and children aren't the only things separating Hickman from nearly all
Roman Catholic clergy. The church he has pastored for more than 20 years, St.
Matthew in Orange, operates much like any other Catholic church, and offers
what appear to be the same sacraments. Yet it ordains female, married and
openly gay priests, recognizes divorce, accepts birth control and premarital
sex, blesses same-sex unions and, most important, rejects the authority of the
pope.
Occupying cramped storefront quarters in a strip mall, Hickman and his church
have become the center of the nation's largest coalition of liberal independent
Catholic churches, the Ecumenical Catholic Communion.
"Hickman is a missionary," says Kathleen Kautzer, a sociology
professor at Regis College, a Massachusetts Catholic school. "This is an
important development in the field."
Fueled by the church's sexual abuse scandal and increasing demands for full
participation by women, gays and others, the independent Catholic movement has
gained momentum in the last several years. After starting out three years ago
with seven parishes representing about 1,700 people, Hickman said, the
Ecumenical Catholic Communion now comprises 23 parishes serving nearly 3,200
people in California, Colorado, New Mexico, Missouri, Minnesota, Florida and
New York.
Kautzer, who is writing a book on breakaway Catholic churches like the ECC,
estimates there are more than 300 independent Catholic congregations nationwide
serving at least 5,000 people. That's a tiny percentage of the country's
estimated 60 million Catholics. But the number is growing rapidly, experts say,
among those who reject the faith's conservative social teachings yet remain
theologically Catholic.
"Our Catholic identity is very important to us," Hickman says,
"but the Catholic Church no longer has a monopoly on sacraments."
Speaking to his congregation, Hickman goes even further, saying the Roman
church hierarchy has betrayed the Gospel.
Those, of course, are fighting words to some Roman Catholic Church leaders who
described the ECC in canon documents as "in conflict with divine
law," and recently convicted a breakaway priest of heresy.
Many conservative Roman Catholics have criticized their church for what they
see as its post-Vatican II drift from its conservative roots. Yet many liberals
see the ECC as the leading edge of progressive-minded Catholics who are
declaring their independence from traditional church dogma.
"It's quite clear that a growing number of Catholics find that churches
like Hickman's offer an openness they prefer," said Bill D'Antonio, a
visiting research professor at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., and
author of several books on church-related issues.
According to theologians, independent Catholic movements arose as early as the
11th century, some of which, including the Jesuits, the Vatican incorporated
into the church. Following the First Vatican Council of 1870, a handful of
German, Austrian and Swiss Catholics opposed to the concept of papal
infallibility formed the Old Catholic Church, to which some current dissenters,
including Hickman, trace their roots.
For a time, hundreds of independent Catholic congregations operated separately.
Then came the ordination of Mary Ramerman in 2001, an event that thrust Hickman
into the limelight, sparking the beginning of his new coalition.
A lay leader in a Rochester, N.Y., Roman Catholic diocese whose parish priest
had been dismissed for, among other things, blessing homosexual unions and
allowing women on the altar during Mass, Ramerman began conducting communion
services in the priest's stead. She too ran afoul of the diocese and was fired.
Ramerman formed her own Catholic religious community, drawing hundreds of
former parishioners. Hickman then ordained her in a well-attended public
ceremony.
"It's what really got us started," Hickman says.
Half of the ECC's 40 priests are former Roman Catholic clergymen; the others,
including several women, were ordained for the first time by Hickman. Some
large groups have broken away from Roman Catholic parishes to join the ECC.
One of them is Light of Christ, a congregation of about 100 families outside
Denver, formed a year ago. Most of the families had belonged to a Roman
Catholic parish whose longtime pastor retired in the late 1990s. His successor
put less emphasis on social justice, and the church became less inclusive of
women and gays, said Mary Franch, the new congregation's interim lay pastoral
associate. "He had a different vision of what it meant to be a good
Catholic," Franch said.
Franch and two other lay pastoral leaders resigned and took about 10% of the
parish to the ECC.
Many independent Catholics came from the liberalization movement born of
Vatican II, the landmark reassessment of church teachings in the early 1960s.
After nearly three decades of rule by Pope John Paul II, a new pope who
promises more of the same and the clerical sex abuse scandal, Kautzer said,
"some have given up."
Yet they want to be Catholic.
Some say the ECC's growth may have contributed to the Diocese of San
Bernardino's recent decision to try Father Ned Reidy for heresy. Reidy, 69,
says he stopped calling himself a Roman Catholic priest in 1999 after 37 years
of ministry. He formed the Community of the Risen Christ in Bermuda Dunes and
affiliated with the ECC. Last year, the diocese charged him with heresy.
Diocesan spokesman Father Howard Lincoln has said the action was necessary to
formally separate Reidy from his Roman Catholic collar.
Lincoln declined to explain why Reidy was singled out among other breakaway
priests, adding only that the diocese holds "absolutely no antagonism
toward the ECC."
Experts say they are aware of only one other heresy trial in the United States,
a 2003 case in the same diocese involving a priest who had formed a church in
Riverside County that permitted priests to marry.
Not all church leaders share the San Bernardino fathers' concern.
"It's a separate church that operates independently," said Father Joe
Fenton, a spokesman for the Diocese of Orange, in whose territory Bishop
Hickman says Mass every Sunday. "We respect everyone's right to religious
freedom."
Hickman's church, featuring a large wooden cross with chairs in a semicircle,
serves as spiritual home to some 130 families.
"We dream of a Catholic Church that's open to everyone," Hickman said
in a recent Sunday sermon. The Roman Catholic hierarchy, he said, "betrays
the Gospel they are called to preach. We pray they will be delivered from the
demonic hold they have been caught up in."
All of which sounded just fine to Tony Bomkamp, a 52-year-old graduate of Mater
Dei, a Roman Catholic high school in Santa Ana. "I like the inclusive
aspect of this church," he said. "It's the perfect balance: still
Catholic but with everyone invited. That resonates with me. It's what Jesus
would have done."