The Church not only takes into account the spiritual dimension of believers but also the needs that can't be meet by dysfunctional international politics. With Pope Francis, it keeps displaying that image, taking care of those who most need it (this is basically the Catholic church in Latin America). — CarlosDiaz
It's indisputably true that the Church does a lot of good work. It also seems true that these good works are good for the reputation of the Church, which increases it's credibility, and thus ability to influence the larger world. Increasing such influence seems an important point of leverage because ideally the Church would not just be doing good works itself, but also inspiring others to do good works, thus multiplying the impact of the Church's good works.
So if good works are good for the Church, would doing more good works be better for the Church? A larger issue would be, is the Church in a position to ask this question? Is the Church capable of using the processes of reason to analyze it's charitable operations so as to dramatically boost their impact? Can the Church both adapt to the crisis of the modern world, and the crisis of confidence within the Church, while remaining true to it's core values?
Here's one example of how such a fully and truly Catholic rethinking might unfold to the benefit of all, including the Church.
I live in the American south, where one comes upon a fancy multi-million dollar Christian church building on every fourth corner. The Catholic Church alone owns billions to trillions of dollars worth of expensive church buildings, which sit empty most of the time. What if this vast investment was redirected out of real estate and in to people in need?
We know what the clergy would say, because they've had 2,000 years to make such a decision and have declined to do so. Their perspective on such a matter is firmly on the record for all to see.
So we arrive at the question of what Jesus would do. What we know from the gospels is that Jesus
the carpenter never led a church construction fund drive. To my knowledge, Jesus
the carpenter never showed the slightest bit of interest in church building construction. When Jesus talked about building his church, he was referring to people, not stained glass.
But, but, but the sleeping faithful will demand, without a fancy building where would we celebrate Mass??? How about in the same place that Jesus did, in a park, an open field, a hill, the town square, anywhere that people would gather. If that was good enough for Jesus, why is it not good enough for you?
Some people, with the best of sincere intentions, will tell us that they are very faithful Catholics, while they ignore the clear example set by Jesus and take food out of the mouths of hungry children so as to construct elaborate expensive buildings which typically get used only one day a week.
Ok, so that's the human condition, and none of us are perfect including this writer. The goal here is not to poke anyone in the eye, because we all live in glass houses. The goal is instead to challenge the Church to rise to the example set by it's founder, and by doing so dramatically improve it's reputation, influence and impact upon the world. That is a very Catholic goal.
But of course, as is always true in life, there is a price tag. And that would be to let go of the tradition of blindly following the clergy as they lose entire continents, drag the Church's reputation through the mud, create a crisis of confidence in the congregation, squabble endlessly among themselves etc.
Can the Church rethink it's future while maintaining it's core values? As a wannabe person of reason I would have to vote no upon examining the evidence. But I could be wrong, and it would be cool if I was.