The church will become small and
will have to start afresh more or less from the beginning.
She will no longer be able to
inhabit many of the edifices she built in prosperity. As the number of her
adherents diminishes . . . she will lose many of her social privileges. . . As
a small society, [the Church] will make much bigger demands on the initiative
of her individual members....
It will be hard-going for the
Church, for the process of crystallization and clarification will cost her much
valuable energy. It will make her poor and cause her to become the Church of
the meek . . . The process will be long and wearisome as was the road from the
false progressivism on the eve of the French Revolution — when a bishop might
be thought smart if he made fun of dogmas and even insinuated that the
existence of God was by no means certain . . . But when the trial of this
sifting is past, a great power will flow from a more spiritualized and
simplified Church. Men in a totally planned world will find themselves
unspeakably lonely. If they have completely lost sight of God, they will feel
the whole horror of their poverty. Then they will discover the little flock of
believers as something wholly new. They will discover it as a hope that is
meant for them, an answer for which they have always been searching in secret.
And so it seems certain to me
that the Church is facing very hard times. The real crisis has scarcely begun.
We will have to count on terrific upheavals. But I am equally certain about
what will remain at the end: not the Church of the political cult, which is
dead already, but the Church of faith. She may well no longer be the dominant
social power to the extent that she was until recently; but she will enjoy a
fresh blossoming and be seen as man's home, where he will find life and hope
beyond death.
~Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, excerpted from his book Faith and the
Future.
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