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Opus Dei's Secret Revealed: It Takes Spies in From the Cold
The arrest of accused FBI spy Robert Hanssen shines a spotlight on Opus Dei, the enigmatic Catholic group he
belonged to.
BY: Eugene Kennedy
(RNS) The secret spy and the hidden organization were made for each other. Opus Dei means Work of God, the not exactly modest title of an organization founded in Spain in 1928 by Josemaria Escriva de Balaguer, who was put on the fast track to canonization by Pope John Paul II and was beatified by him in 1992.
The trouble with this Work of God is that nobody can tell you exactly what its work is or how it does it. The arrest of accused master F.B.I. spy Robert Hanssen opened the door a crack on this international organization that supposedly counts 80,000 members at various levels of commitment to whatever its work is.
According to the Encyclopedia of Associations, its function is to "spread throughout society a profound awareness of the universal call to holiness and apostolate through one's professional work carried out with freedom and responsibility."
According to some who have had experience with this extraordinary group, its masters' idea of "freedom and responsibility" is to do exactly what you are told exactly the way we want it done. Nonetheless, one can hardly criticize an organization that is out to do good in God's name, if, in fact, that is what they do.
That one of the nation's seemingly most dangerous and damaging spies qualified for membership should alarm its leaders and motivate them, in the examination of conscience that is a staple of their routine, to ask themselves: What is it about us that we attracted a man deep in disloyalty and deception to join and find support for his secret life in the depths of our own secret life?
How, in short, could a man be a member of a Catholic group that emphasizes unquestioning loyalty to the Holy Father and, at the same time, be unscrupulously disloyal to his fatherland?
This intersection of secret group and secret agent, however, demands that Opus Dei either reveal itself and its operations more fully or find that questions and doubts about it will multiply in the future.
What, in fact, justifies any professedly Catholic group's being a secret organization in the first place? There is no secret about being a Catholic. Catholicism believes in revelation not concealment. Why else would we speak about Jesus' public life?
Indeed, Jesus always spoke of doing things "in the light," and Catholicism's richest spiritual vocabulary includes "preaching from the rooftops" and "letting your light shine before others." Jesus, John tells us, was the Light who came into the darkness and the darkness did not comprehend it.
The trouble with this Work of God is that nobody can tell you exactly what its work is or how it does it. The arrest of accused master F.B.I. spy Robert Hanssen opened the door a crack on this international organization that supposedly counts 80,000 members at various levels of commitment to whatever its work is.
According to the Encyclopedia of Associations, its function is to "spread throughout society a profound awareness of the universal call to holiness and apostolate through one's professional work carried out with freedom and responsibility."
According to some who have had experience with this extraordinary group, its masters' idea of "freedom and responsibility" is to do exactly what you are told exactly the way we want it done. Nonetheless, one can hardly criticize an organization that is out to do good in God's name, if, in fact, that is what they do.
That one of the nation's seemingly most dangerous and damaging spies qualified for membership should alarm its leaders and motivate them, in the examination of conscience that is a staple of their routine, to ask themselves: What is it about us that we attracted a man deep in disloyalty and deception to join and find support for his secret life in the depths of our own secret life?
How, in short, could a man be a member of a Catholic group that emphasizes unquestioning loyalty to the Holy Father and, at the same time, be unscrupulously disloyal to his fatherland?
This intersection of secret group and secret agent, however, demands that Opus Dei either reveal itself and its operations more fully or find that questions and doubts about it will multiply in the future.
What, in fact, justifies any professedly Catholic group's being a secret organization in the first place? There is no secret about being a Catholic. Catholicism believes in revelation not concealment. Why else would we speak about Jesus' public life?
Indeed, Jesus always spoke of doing things "in the light," and Catholicism's richest spiritual vocabulary includes "preaching from the rooftops" and "letting your light shine before others." Jesus, John tells us, was the Light who came into the darkness and the darkness did not comprehend it.
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