Defending the Catholic Campaign for Human Development?
Alinskyian organizing is intrinsic to the CCHD.
After three years of intense scrutiny into problematic Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD) grants, the American Life League and other concerned groups gave the beleaguered “charity” some space to reorganize. CCHD’s 2013 collection came and went with hardly a peep from its critics and the next year of grants was announced unchallenged.
CCHD allies, however, have used the hiatus to argue against any reform or redirection.
One of those allies is Faith in Public Life. In anticipation of the
2008 elections, Faith in Public Life was created by Soros-connected
individuals[i] to be a media machine that could give a religious voice
to progressive political positions. To this end, progressive clergy
from various “faith traditions” were brought together to deliver
coordinated messages concerning the election – most critically, that
voting for a president needed to be about more than his abortion record.
They were so successful that the organization continued to coordinate
other campaigns, such as a push for universal health care regardless of
any moral failures built into the new system.[ii]
The secular media was encouraged to use Faith in Public Life sources
for commentary about how “faith communities” saw particular policy
proposals. Progressive clergy, rather than more conservatively-oriented
religious spokespersons, would represent the “moral” perspective. And
this “moral” perspective quite deliberatively laid the question of
abortion and same-sex marriage to the side. There were, Faith in Public
Life insisted, more relevant things to discuss.
Who came under the Faith in Public Life umbrella? Most of the
individuals and groups who are part of this religious-progressive media
machine were – and are – exactly what might be expected: people from
denominations that officially support abortion and homosexual “rights”
as well as activist groups founded to further these particular
causes.[iii]
It is shocking, however, to realize the number of Catholic
organizations that also appear as Faith in Public Life contacts.
Catholics are staunchly opposed to abortion. Yet, because of nuanced
positions on issues such as universal health care and immigration,
official Catholic bodies are often positioned in active political
fellowship with pro-aborts and homosexual activists. And because there
are many genuinely progressive individuals at the helm of Catholic
institutions – individuals who often have a compromised personal
relationship to Church teaching – this political fellowship is extremely
comfortable.
So, when CCHD came
under increasing internal examination, Faith in Public Life sprang to
its defense. One recent defense is in the form of a report titled “’Be
Not Afraid?’ Guilt by Association, Catholic McCarthyism and Growing Threats to the U.S. Bishops’ Anti-Poverty Mission,” authored by John Gehring and released in the summer of 2013.[iv] Gehring,
very wisely, got a number of progressive Catholics to “endorse” the
report and a quick glance at the list reveals that most, if not all, of
the report’s endorsing Catholic groups have been associated with Faith
in Public Life since its inception. The report’s endorsing individuals –
many directly working for the CCHD, either currently or in the past – show how closely Faith in Public Life’s progressive political ambitions and CCHD’s grant patterns are associated.
The report’s introductory comments set the stage. It begins by
characterizing its critics: “Using guilt by association and other
tactics from the McCarthy-era playbook, these activists are part of an
increasingly aggressive movement of Catholic culture warriors who view
themselves as fighting for a smaller, “purer” church.” (page 2) A few
pages further, the report complains that “[t]hreats
to anti-poverty work are part of a toxic climate of fear in which
efforts to narrow Catholic identity to a few hot-button issues distort
the debate over Catholic values in public life, and social justice
advocates face character assassination.” (page 4)
In particular, the Faith in Public Life report makes a point of defending CCHD’s funding of community organizing – and not just any community organizing but Alinskyian community organizing. Alinskyian community organizing is the key to understanding CCHD’s response to poverty. “Not all of CCHD defunding involves guilt by association,” the report admits in a section called “A rejection of ‘Alinsky-Style’
Organizing.” “In some cases, there is also a deeper hostility toward
the principles of community organizing despite the church’s long history
of shaping and supporting this movement.” (page 17).
The report singles out bishops who have rejected Alinskyian-style organizing with snarky, comments such as: “In a nod to the 1950s
McCarthy era when ‘blacklists’ were emblematic of a culture of fear,
the protocol in the Cleveland diocese requires a list of all
organizations ‘found to espouse, support, finance or otherwise promote
in any way any position or program that is contrary to the teachings of
the Catholic Church, whether in practice or in philosophy.’” (page 19)
How much it says about Faith in Public Life (and its Catholic
endorsers) that a bishop who rejects funding anti-Catholic programs or
positions because those programs or positions are contrary to the
teachings of the Catholic Church is dubbed a “McCarthyite.” Isn’t that
what a bishop is supposed to do – to lay down his life in defense Christ
and his Church?
Faith in Public Life has argued that there are many Church teachings and that concern for the poor is among them. CCHD critics agree with this statement.
However, the report fails to explain why it insists that the novelty of Alinskyian
community organizing is the only way to accomplish concern for the poor
when, for two millennia, the Church was faithful to her teaching
without Alinskyian
community organizing. The report also fails to explain why, for the
first time in her history, it is necessary for the Church to chose to
obey one teaching – concern for the poor – at the expense of others,
such as “thou shall not kill.”
The problem is that the CCHD
– as represented by the Faith in Public Life and its Catholic endorsers
– is part of a progressive political package that is essentially
pro-abortion.
And, despite the defunding of a few token organizations, CCHD’s trajectory is exactly what it has been since the 1970s.[v] CCHD grants continue to be skewed toward progressive political organizations, most particularly Alinskyian community organizing.
Of the 193 grantees on the national[vi] 2012-2013 CCHD grant list, well over half can be positively identified as belonging to Alinskyian
community organizations (the number may be higher given how frequently
new affiliates form and old affiliates change their names). Among
these, at least 30 went to affiliates of the organization founded by
Saul Alinsky, the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF); over 45 went to IAF clone networks – 20 to PICO affiliates, 15 to Gamaliel
affiliates, and about 10 to DART affiliates; and the rest went to
affiliates of National People’s Action, Interfaith Worker Justice, USAction, and several of the smaller organizing networks.
These groups are well-represented among the Faith in Public Life media
machine. This is not “guilt by association” – these people openly work
together in support of a common vision that “serves the poor” without
charity, via mandatory societal restructuring. They are part of a
progressive fellowship that includes Planned Parenthood and chapters of
the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice.
There have been very real affronts to Church teaching about abortion and homosexual issues in past CCHD grant awards. But the problem is more systemic than a grant here or there.
As the Faith in Public Life report make plain, those affronts are so woven into the fabric of Alinskyian organizing that to address them is to threaten the very essence of not only CCHD but the entire United States progressive machine.
Spero columnist Stephanie Block is the author of the four volume study "Change Agents: Alinskian Organizing among Religious Bodies."
[i] See Sr. Mary Ann Walsh, “Memo to Journalists,” 6-27-12: www.usccb.org/news/2012/12-118.cfm
[ii] It was apparent, long before the Affordable Health Care Act
became law, that this legislation would have ethical problems: Block, “Alinskyian organizing linked to abortion movement: The Catholic Church is a supporter of Alinskyian community organizing. Why?”
www.speroforum.com/site/print.asp?idarticle=20148
[iii] A more extensive discussion of the groups making up Faith in
Public Life can be read: Block, “American Catholics and Faith in Public
Life,” www.catholicmediacoalition.org/faith_public_life2.htm
[iv] John Gehring
is Catholic Program Director at Faith in Public Life. Previously, he
served as Director of Communications at Catholics in Alliance for the
Common Good and was Assistant Director for Media Relations at the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops in Washington.
[v] A few dioceses have attempted to respond to CCHD scandals by including more “economic development” grants and/or awarding unobjectionable grants that are presented in CCHD
terms. Thus, the perfectly laudable grant of $30,000 to the Washington
DC Gabriel Network – which provides assistance to women in crisis
pregnancies – is described as a “community development” grant.
[vi] CCHD
gives back a percentage of the collection to each diocese who can
distribute the money locally as it sees fit. This analysis doesn’t
account for those local grants but only those disbursed at the national
level.
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