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By Gretchen Keiser
In a freshly painted house on Piedmont Avenue, the
Glenmary Research Center has opened.
Father Bernard Quinn, the soft-spoken director, is
seated at a cleared table in the front room, sunlit in the morning. He is
talking about something that is hard for a novice to grasp, even with the help
of an hospitable cup of coffee from an automatic percolator in the next room.
Father Quinn has already explained the relationship of the Glenmary Home
Missioners to the Glenmary Research Center and is now explaining the heart of
his work for the past 15 years. It involves the development of "middle range
principles," he said. A man whose work involves the development of principles
has a love for both the theoretical and the grassroots where good principles
are supposed to work.
The principles that Father Quinn has spent 15
years developing concern the small rural parish. In fact, he has written a book
of almost exactly 100 pages, plus appendices, published by Glenmary in 1980 and
entitled "The Small Rural Parish." On any page, Father Quinn said, abound
"middle range principles" -- that is, information about a small rural parish
that falls between theological abstract ideas about parishes and the actual
skills and how-to manuals that talk about structuring parish life. The
principles "bridge the gap between the vision that might come from Vatican II
and something that would be a skill," he said.
But it is difficult to capsulize the work that is
done at the center because, like the roots of a tree, the research has branched
and branched from its original point.
*****
The Glenmary Research Center, which recently moved
to Atlanta from an office in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., has a concise
history. Founded in 1966 the Center was designed to serve the research needs of
the Church in rural areas, where Glenmary Home Missioners have served since the
order was founded. Glenmarians look upon rural as towns of less than 10,000
"away from cities, suburbs and urban fringes." As missionaries, they come into
areas where, generally, there are fewer than 250 Catholics. Working with the
approval of the local diocese, the Glenmary priest and local Catholics start a
church community. When a certain level of development is reached, the diocese
receives the parish and the Glenmary will move on to another mission area. So,
they are much concerned with, and experienced in, the development of small
parishes in rural areas. The Center, which is probably the only place in the
United States created for formal research into the rural Church, is something
of a link between the front lines, where missionary work is going on, and the
rear guard, where theologians and members of the hierarchy envision the Church.
*****
Is it really necessary to study and plan in order
to come up with what is needed to shape a parish community in, say, rural
Georgia? Perhaps the answer is that it is necessary to study and it is
necessary to work with and learn from pastors in the field in order to connect
the visions of the Second Vatican Council with the reality of a struggling
parish community, Father Quinn said.
"Vatican II opened up so many doors for us" that
the process of examining each aspect and making the vision concrete has become
an overwhelming task for the religious leadership to handle unaided, Father
Quinn said. The type of planning for parish development that is the work of the
Glenmary Research Center and that is contained in the book and other works of
the Center "can contribute to serenity and joy in meeting the challenges of the
Church," Father Quinn said. The book, each chapter extensively rewritten before
the final document emerged, illuminates aspects of church life that many people
may take for granted. Without specifically raising each question, it talks
about what a parish is, how it differs from other types of Christian community,
what a parish can provide to help and support its members as Christians who are
called to live a particular vocation in the world. By inference and sometimes
directly, the book also talks about what a parish is not and what it is not
equipped to do.
*****
While this type of principle is the "product"
produced by the Research Center, it is acquired through a very active
relationship with many different types of people over a long period of time.
When the Center started in 1966, its first 15-year program -- a broad area of
research assigned by the president of Glenmary -- was "The Rural Mission Parish
and Correlative Ministries." In the process of reaching that research goal, the
Center produced some 74 miscellaneous publications and about 100 reports that
addressed different aspects that had to be clarified first. Father Quinn, who
has a doctorate in the theology of mission from Rome's Gregorian University,
participated in workshops in 100 U.S. dioceses and was tied in to field
research in a wide variety of places when that work dovetailed with some aspect
of his research. "That's not why we exist," Father Quinn said of the multiple
reports, educational programs and research projects that occupy files and
storage areas of a large copying room at the Piedmont Avenue Center. "But we
get into those things to learn something."
The method of learning balances pure library
research and raw data gathered in the field against the thoughts and
reflections of pastors, religious, laity, workshop participants and other
researchers. "I do not have the time to actually go out and do pastoral work,"
said Father Quinn, who founded St. Mark's parish in Clarkesville as a Glenmary
missioner before he became research coordinator and then also director of the
Center. "And," he continued, "The pastors don't have time to sit in the library
and read books." Bringing together the two kinds of people in partnership is
the aim of the Center's approach, he said.
"We aren't necessarily the people who have the
answers. We aren't going to teach them. We're going to search with them --
mixing up their experience and our theory."
An equally important dimension of the research is
that statistical information is subordinate to the broad religious mission of
the Church which the Center wants to aid. For example, a recently released
survey of church affiliations and a county-by-county statistical breakdown in
the United States is useful, Father Quinn said, in what it can show Catholics
about themselves and their community: how many people living in their area
belong to no church at all, who their Protestant neighbors are and what
denominations they belong to, what the distribution of priests is in the
region, in the United States. Essentially the information is used to help
Catholics focus concretely upon essential theological ideas: their
relationships with other Christians, their call to reach out to people who live
outside any church community, their need to be active lay members.
The membership study, which is generating data and
maps for dioceses across the county and for several different Christian
denominations, was essentially "a footnote" to the study of rural parishes,
Father Quinn said, which helps to explain why colored index cards dot his
bulletin board, keeping track of the different projects he has a hand in and
their stage of readiness at the moment.
But he is equally aware that, as the Church
welcomes a necessary degree of planning and research into its life, there are
dangers to combat. "Perhaps the greatest danger is to treat the Church like a
business," he said. To work against that danger, Father Quinn actively seeks to
use religious symbols both in the writing of the publications and in the art
and graphics used to illustrate them. More basic yet, he said, the danger is
combated "by integrating prayer at every level" as work progresses. Essentially
the Center is a religious center and its work "a religious mission. We say the
Office, we read the Scriptures, we try to pray for the people we're working
with," in the Church's rural missions, he said.
*****
And the Center's 10,000-volume library,
concentrating upon sociology, literature, history, mission theology and
religion in the South, is an inviting source for those who would like to make
use of it. "We don't have a lending library, but people are very welcome to
come and use the facilities," Father Quinn said. In the renovated house -- with
the traditional carriage house behind -- work, office and library facilities
have taken over the first floor, while living quarters are on the second. The
simple, freshly-painted interior combines some art and hangings that speak of
the Appalachian region and others that stress the Center's Catholicity.
For example, an image hanging prominently just as
one enters the front hall depicts Jesus crowning Mary Queen of Heaven, "not a
familiar image in the South," Father Quinn observed. The conversation turned to
that image as Father Quinn explained a bit about the new program that he will
embark on next year at the request of the president of Glenmary --
"Evangelization of the Unchurched in the Rural Missions." The exploration of
the needs of those who belong to no church community will be undertaken in a
spirit that is neither "a narrow, sectarian spirit, nor a spirit that says
its not important to be a Catholic," he observed.
"There is a strong desire to work with other
Christians in this task of reaching the unchurched," he said. "Yet we affirm
with Vatican II the unique role of the Catholic Church in the process."
Similarly, he said of the Center that it is open
to full ecumenical relationships, "but at the same time we try to be fully
ourselves," stressing, "that we are really Catholic."
"I want the Center to say that by what's around
here," he commented.
(The Glenmary Center is located at 750 Piedmont
Ave., Atlanta, GA, between Fourth and Fifth Streets and may be reached by
calling 404-867-6518)
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