Posted December 18, 2005
Book: Opus Dei: An Objective Look Behind the Myths and Reality of the Most
Controversial Force in the Catholic Church
Author: John L. Allen
An Excerpt from the Book:
The Tablet of London, a well-known English Catholic publication, recently
published a series of jokes about various groups within the Catholic Church,
and here's how the one on Opus Dei goes: How many members of Opus Dei does
it take to screw in a lightbulb? The answer is, one hundred . . . one to screw
in the bulb, and ninety-nine to chant, "We are not a movement, we are not a
movement."
Though perhaps a bit catty, the joke makes a good point, which is that Opus
Dei has sometimes been better at explaining what it is not rather than what
it is. Escriva strongly insisted that Opus Dei is not a religious order,
thus it is not comparable to the Franciscans or the Dominicans. Its members
remain fully immersed in the world and do not retreat to monasteries or
cloisters. They find God through the mundane details of daily secular life.
In later years Opus Dei has fought similar battles to insist that it is not
a "lay movement," because it includes clergy. This is precisely what gives
Opus Dei its unique character: It is an institution of laypeople and priests
together, men and women, sharing the same vocation but playing different
roles. Over the years Opus Dei has been classified within Church structures
in a variety of different ways: as a pious union, a priestly society of
common life without vows, a secular institute, and finally, since 1982, as a
"personal prelature." At each stage before the final one, Opus Dei's leading
thinkers insisted that the existing structures within the 1917 Code of Canon
Law, the official body of law for the Catholic Church prior to 1983, were
inadequate to reflect the group's true nature. In effect, members argued, an
entirely new concept, something like the personal prelature, had to be
carved out in order to give Opus Dei the juridical configuration that
corresponded to its original spiritual impulse and vision.
So what was that impulse?
Members of Opus Dei date the group's foundation to October 2, 1928, when
Josemar’a Escriva, then a young Spanish priest making a retreat at a
Vincentian monastery in Madrid, experienced a vision, revealing to him
"whole and entire" God's wish for what would later become Opus Dei.
Obviously the vision was not "entire" in the sense that it answered every
question, since it required subsequent inspirations to demonstrate to
Escriva that there should be a women's branch to Opus Dei (that came in
1930) and that Opus Dei should also include a body of priests, the Priestly
Society of the Holy Cross (1943). Yet in some sense, Escriva insisted, the
blueprint for Opus Dei was contained in that original experience on the
Feast of the Guardian Angels in 1928. Here's how he once described it: "On
October 2, 1928, the feast of the Holy Guardian Angels — by now nearly forty
years have gone by — the Lord willed that Opus Dei might come to be, a
mobilization of Christians disposed to sacrifice themselves with joy for
others, to render divine all the ways of man on earth, sanctifying every
upright work, every honest labor, every earthly occupation."
Escriva and the members of Opus Dei are thus convinced that their
organization is rooted in God's will. As Escriva himself once put it, "I was
not the founder of Opus Dei. Opus Dei was founded in spite of me."
Originally Escriva did not even give this new reality a name; "Opus Dei,"
which is Latin for "work of God," came from an offhand comment from
Escriva's confessor, who once asked him, "How's that Work of God going?"
This is why members usually refer to Opus Dei as "the Work."
The core idea revealed to Escriva in that 1928 vision, and unfolded in
subsequent stages of Opus Dei's development, was the sanctification of
ordinary life by laypeople living the gospel and Church teaching in their
fullness. This is why one of the leading symbols for Opus Dei is a simple
cross within a circle — the symbolism betokens the sanctification of the
world from within. The idea is that holiness, "being a saint," is not just
the province of a few spiritual athletes, but is the universal destiny of
every Christian. Holiness is not exclusively, or even principally, for
priests and nuns. Further, holiness is not something to be achieved in the
first place through prayer and spiritual discipline, but rather through the
mundane details of everyday work. Holiness thus doesn't require a change in
external circumstances, but a change in attitude, seeing everything anew in
the light of one's supernatural destiny.
In that sense, admirers of Escriva, who included Pope John Paul II, believe
the Spanish saint anticipated the "universal call to holiness" that would be
announced by the Second Vatican Council. The late cardinal of Florence and
right-hand man of Pope Paul VI, Giovanni Benelli —who crossed swords with
Escriva over the years — nevertheless once said that what Saint Ignatius of
Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits, was to the sixteenth-century Council of
Trent, Escriva was to the Second Vatican Council. That is, he was the saint
who translated the council into the life of the Church.
In a December 2004 interview, the number-two official of Opus Dei, Monsignor
Fernando Ocariz, a Spanish theologian who has served since 1986 as a
consultor to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican's
doctrinal agency, explained that Escriva's understanding of the "universal
call to holiness" had two dimensions, subjective and objective. The
subjective is the invitation to individual persons to sanctification,
meaning that all people, regardless of their station in life, are called to
become saints. The objective is the realization that all of creation, and
every situation in human experience, is a means to this end.
"All human realities, all the circumstances of human life, all the
professions, every family and social situation, are means of
sanctification," Ocariz said. "It's not just that everyone is supposed to be
a saint despite the fact of not being priests or monks, but precisely that
all the realities of life are places that can lead one to the Lord."
Commenting on The Song of Songs from the Old Testament, Escriva once put
this idea in lyrical form. "I will seek the one my soul loves in the streets
and public squares," he wrote. "I will run from one part of the world to the
other . . . seeking the peace of my soul. And I find it in the things that
come from outside, which for me are not an obstacle; on the contrary, they
are a path and a stairway to draw closer and closer, to unite myself more
and more with God." That instinct to find God "in the things that come from
outside," the normal hustle and bustle of the workaday world, is the Opus
Dei impulse.
Escriva once described Opus Dei as "an intravenous injection in the
bloodstream of society." Members would be doctors and lawyers and university
professors and barbers and bus drivers, and from the outside they would
appear to be exactly the same as everyone else. There's a famous story about
the first three priests ordained for Opus Dei — Alvaro del Portillo, Jose
Mar’a Hernandez de Garnica, and Jose Luis Mœzquiz — that illustrates this
point. Escriva noticed that not one of them smoked, which was rather odd in
Spain in 1944. He told them that one of them was going to have to take up
smoking, lest people get the impression there was something unwordly about
these Opus Dei guys. The choice fell on Portillo, who would eventually
succeed Escriva. Opus Dei's lay members would not wear special religious
habits, they would not be cloistered, and they would not claim to possess a
special state of life. The idea was to redeem the world, not by retreating
from it, but by "Christianizing it," carrying out all the tasks of daily
living with a new spirit. Escriva's shorthand formula was, "Sanctify your
work. Sanctify yourself in your work. Sanctify others through your work."
It's worth underlining the revolutionary character of this vision in Spain
in the 1930s and 1940s. As Escriva described it, Opus Dei is not supposed to
be a clergy-driven enterprise. Laypeople are supposed to share the same
vocation with the clergy, in a situation of full equality. The clergy, in
his understanding, are more akin to support staff, experts in the spiritual
life who offer the sacraments and means of doctrinal and spiritual
formation, but the real "action" is out in the world. Only a layperson can
decide how a particular lawsuit, or surgery, or newspaper article, can be
made an offering to God, carrying others toward sanctification. The idea was
to form people and then "turn them loose," trusting them to exercise their
freedom. This includes, in principle, a commitment to male/female equality.
In Opus Dei, women receive the same doctrinal and theological formation as
men, including those men will eventually be ordained priests. All this was a
break from a traditional clericalist mentality, and Escriva was denounced in
some circles in Spain as an anticlericalist, even a heretic. There was talk
of reporting him to the Vatican.
Everything about Opus Dei, at least from the official point of view, exists
to promote this aim: forming ordinary laymen and women in Christian doctrine
and spirituality, so that they may sanctify the world from within, using
their own judgment about the best means to do so in their particular
profession or walk of life. Officially speaking, Opus Dei is unlike
virtually any other organization with which most people come into contact.
It is not a lobby or an interest group, has no collective financial or
political interests, and has no agenda. Escriva called it "a disorganized
organization," in the sense that the home office does not issue memos at
8:00 a.m. with marching orders for the day. Opus Dei is responsible for
formation, and its members do the rest. "Opus Dei does not act, its members
do" is a frequent mantra.
Critics, it should be noted, generally insist that this is a smoke screen,
that the "real" aims of the organization — the acquisition of political
power, or financial gain, or new recruits — are hidden. For now, however,
it's worth stepping through the way Opus Dei organizes its life and
describes itself, in part so we can compare that with the criticisms later
on.
Becoming a Member
As Opus Dei has become more prominent, it sometimes happens that a person
walks in off the street and announces, "I want to be a member of Opus Dei."
In such cases, these people are advised to learn a little something about
Opus Dei first. Generally, however, it doesn't work this way. Membership
usually arises out of getting to know Opus Dei, either through family who
are members, or by exposure to one of Opus Dei's "corporate works" such as a
school or youth center, or through some other activity that may be run by
members even though it's not formally sponsored by Opus Dei, such as a TV
news agency or a clinic — anyplace it's possible to form a personal
friendship. However it happens, a prospective member usually has been
attending evenings of recollection, retreats, and other Opus Dei events well
ahead of the decision to "whistle," the insider's lingo for the moment of
joining. It is treated as a very serious choice, because belonging to Opus
Dei is not seen as being a pastime or a hobby. It is a vocation, thus akin
in life-changing significance to the decision to get married or to enter the
priesthood.
What's the draw? At a supernatural level, the answer is always that God has
given someone a vocation to Opus Dei. At the human level, however, various
factors can be the points of initial attraction. For some, it may be reading
the works of Escriva; in that department, most members say the first thing
to catch their attention was the idea that study or work could be their path
to holiness. For others, it may be that Opus Dei offers an environment in
which a serious, prayerful Catholic can feel supported. For many, it's the
example set by the numeraries, who often come across as smart, dedicated,
devout, and happy people, living coherent lives based on their faith. In
other words, they "walk the walk." Opus Dei centers can also be a lot of
fun. When I visited the Windmoor Center at Notre Dame in September 2004, for
example, I arrived for their weekly Friday night fried chicken dinner, which
was preceded by a meditation and followed by beers and chat. The atmosphere
can be infectious, combining prayer and Catholic orthodoxy with a
lighthearted, collegial, and intellectually stimulating group of people.
Since Opus Dei is not a religious order, members do not take "vows," nor
does their status under Church law change when they join. Laypeople remain
laity. Instead, they affliate themselves by means of that quintessential
secular instrument, a contract. Essentially, members strike a deal with Opus
Dei: They agree to live in the spirit of Opus Dei and to support its
apostolic activities, and in return Opus Dei agrees to provide doctrinal and
spiritual formation.
The formula of the contract is as follows:
Member
I, in the full use of my freedom, declare that with firm resolve I dedicate
myself to pursue sanctity and to practice apostolate with all my energy
according to the spirit and praxis of Opus Dei. From this moment until next
March 19th, I assume the obligation:
First, to remain under the jurisdiction of the Prelate and the other
competent authorities of the Prelature, in order to dedicate myself
faithfully to everything that has to do with the special purposes of the
Prelature;
Second, to fulfill all the duties of a Numerary/Associate/Supernumerary
member of Opus Dei, and to observe the norms by which the Prelature is
governed, as well as the legitimate rulings of the Prelate and the other
competent authorities of the Prelature regarding its government, spirit and
apostolate.
Representative of the Prelate
I, representing the Prelate, declare that from the moment of your
incorporation into the Prelature, and for as long as that incorporation
continues in force, Opus Dei assumes the obligation:
First, to devote constant care and attention to your doctrinal, spiritual,
ascetical and apostolic formation, and to provide you with the special
pastoral attention of the priests of the Prelature;
Second, to fulfill its other obligations with respect to its faithful, as
determined in the norms by which the Prelature is governed.
Members remain free outside the terms of this contract, as does Opus Dei. At
least in theory, members have no right to "represent" Opus Dei in their
professional work, or to act on its behalf, and Opus Dei does not seek to
influence them beyond their spiritual growth. To take a concrete example,
Luis Valls, a seventy-eight-year-old Spanish member of Opus Dei, recently
stepped down as executive chairman of Banco Popular, Spain's third-largest
commercial bank with $47.9 billion in assets. Valls, who lives in an Opus
Dei center in Madrid, has always insisted that nobody in Opus Dei dictated
banking strategy to him, and that at no time were any resources from the
bank diverted for Opus Dei purposes. He was not an "Opus Dei banker," but a
banker who happened to be in Opus Dei. The impact of Opus on his business
career and on his life, he insists, has been of a different order: "Without
religious convictions, I would have been a rascal."
Reviewer: Libratius (France)
I read Mr Allen book in just two days . . . It s a well and an easy written
book and does try to answer all the "usual" questions raised about Opus
Dei . . . I do recommend this book to every person who wants to know more about
Opus Dei, but, as a former member who is in good terms with the Work, I have
to say that this books is far from being a definite analysis of an
objectively controversial force in the Church.
All the books written about Opus Dei prior to this one fall into two
categories : approved by Opus Dei (and sold in its centers, like Le Tourneau
or even Messori) and totally disapproved by Opus Dei as containing harsh
criticism of the organization . . . Mr Allen's book seems (but is it
really? --- to be kind of in between these two categories . . . It does not
contain usual "incense" offering for the Founder, nor does it offer a usual
stuff about how original and new Opus Dei was/is for the Church . . . but even
if Mr Allen tries to be critical, his sens of criticism is somehow biased by
his constant strive to be balanced (at any cost ?) . . . that’s why some of the
chapters looks like a patchwork of very critical words form some critics and
very sweet, "sprinkled with rose water" stories of happy families that are
written exactly in the way Opus Dei like to present things . . . This is the
reason why this book might be considered balanced (artificially though, as
its only a formally balanced book) but it s not an objective look as the
covers states it to be . . .
Mr Allen was, to a certain extend, very successfully manipulated by Opus
Dei . . . Mr Allen book was as a matter of fact approved by Opus Dei officials
in Rome long before its publication (of course "nothing formal", just some
"advisers given" : it was even presented to some important directors in
different countries as an example of a "better communication" Opus Dei
should put in place in order to face Da Vinci Code trouble . . . The comments
from Rome sounded like : "This guy is liberal (and not openly sympathetic)
and thus people will think the book is reliable . . . This guy did not
understand some important things about Opus Dei (well its due to his "too
clerical" background, he compares Opus Dei with some religious groups
despite all that we tried to tell him) . . . But, most importantly, he shows
how ridiculous are the statements of the most critical ex-members and he
quotes some "positive" experiences of ex members . . . Opus Dei itself could
not produce a better book in this sens . . . so it should not be advised as a
primary reading material for "potential" members, but it should be
"discreetly" advised by Opus Dei members as a reading material for
critically oriented "friends".
Besides this internal approval-advise-endorsement, what makes me think Mr
Allen was manipulated ? Let's see some examples . . .
As "ecclesiastically minded" journalist he shows us the list of Bishops and
Vatican officials that are "connected" to Opus Dei . . . and as a prove of the
transparency (the list was obviously prepared by somebody from Villa
Tevere), this list includes not only numerary members, but also members of
the Priestly society of the Holy Cross . . . and then Mr Allen shows us that
this list is clearly shorter then the one of Jesuits or Salisians, etc . . .
looks like good objective journalist work . . . but, Mr Allen forgot to inquire
about COOPERATORS of Opus Dei who are bishops and Cardinals and Vatican
officials . . . They are legally not members of Opus Dei, but as a metter of
fact, they are "part of the thing", they are part of the power of Opus
Dei . . . they do hold the same views, the same spiritual ideas and follow some
of the practices of the Work and advises of the Prelate . . . Well, to be
honest, Opus Dei will never give this list because this list is much more
impressive then that of its actual members(Don Stanislas, former Pope's
private secretary and current Archibishop of Krakow is one of them) . . . I
suspect that Mr Allen knew about it . . .
The same is true about the cooperators outside of the ecclesiastical
areas . . . what about cooperators in politics, business ? No answer form Mr
Allen on this point as he seemed to believe the "teachings" of Opus Dei on
cooperators . . .
Mr Allen shows us that Opus Dei is not as rich as some say it is . . . and
without showing us his methodology for evaluation of Opus Dei assets, he
comes out with a rather modest figure compared to the assets of the Catholic
Church in US . . . There is just one very slight but serious problem . . . once
again, the essential amount of Opus Dei wealth (as its power in politics) is
indeed hidden . . .. because it consists of the assets of its members,
especially its numerary members . . . Some of numeraries are very wealthy
people, especially in Latin America . . . I personally met one whose personal
assets were above 1 billion USD . . . Compare it to the figure of 2 billion USD
given by Mr Allen . . . Once again, Mr Allen's Opus Dei friends-contacts helped
him a lot to count assets "in a correct way".
Then Mr Allen shows us that recruiting efforts of Opus Dei are either not
efficient or are not as pushy as some say . . . because the organization grows
slowly or does not grow at all . . . well this is a good example of a wrong
logical reason due to lack of information provided to Mr Allen . . . Because a
better knowledge of what goes inside could help Mr Allen to come to a
different conclusion . . . As a matter of fact, Opus Dei faces a very serious
crises of "vocations" of numeraries . . . and it grows come only form
supernumeraries . . . It gets roughly twice or trice less numerary members
today then 15 years ago . . . Study centers that Mr Allen mentions in his book
are half empty and some (in Spain and in Latin America) had to be closed in
recent years . . . none of it is ever mentioned in internal publications, and
only authentically close friendships with some high ranking "directors" can
bring this fact to the "external" world . . . The main problem is that the
children of supernumeraries do not want to join the organization . . . despite
hundreds of supernumery families full of children, almost none wants to
join . . . I believe it does not show so much how soft are recruiting
practices, but more that something is deeply wrong with Opus Dei . . . Opus Dei
recruitment efforts are still rather pushy, but the number of former members
is higher and higher . . . and since most of them do remain faithful and quite
conservative Catholics, they are present in the very "milieu" that used to
give a lot of vocations . . . and some honest knowledge about Opus Dei cools
down the "vocation" fever Opus Dei like to mount up . . .
I could continue the list of "half-truths" or "too easy" assumptions that
this book is full of . . .
But its major weakness lies in a totally different field . . . Opus Dei is
about mysticism . . . and Mr Allen seems to admit it in his book . . . he quotes
some members speaking about "contemplation in the middle of the world" etc. . . .
The real problems of Opus Dei lies precisely in the spiritual realm . . . and
only a sort of spiritual, contemplative, mystical look full of deep personal
spiritual experience could lead to a real wise and balanced analysis of the
reality called Opus Dei . . . Mr Allen lacks this look, whether it s a matter
of his journalistic approach and back group or just a matter of some lack of
personal experience in the matter . . .
When you read his pages about a certain "distance" in the relations between
Opus Dei and Jesuits, he gives some facts but fails to understand that the
real difference and opposition is in the approach of spirituality . . . with
different vision of what is the relationship between God and man, what is
the relationship between man and the Church . . . and even a difference in what
is a true holiness live in the middle of the world . . .
Plus, I just could not figure out if Mr Allen was fluent with Spanish,
something essential if you what to understand Opus Dei . . . if he were, he
could have look more into the website he mentions briefly (Opus libros).
This site is actually a sort of meeting place for ex members some of whom
did have very high positions in Opus Dei internal government . . . None of
these peole was quoted by Mr Allen . . . once again, he just came to see the
most prominent (and old) opponents and some very "common" ex members
(recommended by Opus Dei as having stayed in contact) . . . I honestly think
some extra interviews in Spain could help Mr Allen understand some things
better, if that was his real intend . . .
A former numerary from France
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