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Ryan Davidson's avatar

>There’s the realization that if those with responsibilities don’t do their job, someone else can.

Sometimes. Maybe. The problem is that what you're doing is inherently, and unavoidably, subversive. You certainly can "just do things" within an existing institution/organization, but only to a certain point. Beyond that, you're no longer really acting as part of the institution/organization anymore.

In many circumstances, this is fine. I have a long-standing (though good-natured!) disagreement with one of my relatives about reforming/improving government agencies that runs along these lines. His position is that if you try to change an agency too quickly, you wind up alienating people critical to the agency's operations, making it even less efficient and effective than it already his. The point is a valid one, it must be said. But my position is that a lot of agencies are doing things that are net negatives for society, so making them less efficient/effective is no bad thing.

But now you're talking about the church. The Roman Catholic Church, no less. I'm a magisterial Protestant myself (Presbyterian), but I have enough respect for church tradition and authority to recognize that there are plenty of things that can only happen under the auspices of church authority. The Sacraments are an obvious example, but the whole panoply of church discipleship and discipline is very much in view. Like it or not, this woman is part of how your church operates. If you work around her, rather than with/through her, you're ultimately working around the church rather than with/through it.

You have fundamentally misdiagnosed the problem here. It's not the secretary. Not really. Your archetypical "church secretary" takes many forms, obviously. But the real problem here is not that people with soft power are abusing it. It's that the people with "hard," i.e., explicit, formal, hierarchical authority, are asleep at the switch. All of the institutional/organizational power this woman has over you is, in effect, borrowed/delegated from your parish priest. If he isn't satisfied with her performance, he has the ability to do something about it.

After all, there is an obvious solution to this problem: your priest, who presumably has more-or-less unilateral hiring/firing authority over parish staff, can tell this woman to cut out the passive-aggressive bullshit on pain of getting fired.

That he hasn't, and almost certainly won't, tells you most of what you need to know about the situation here. Indeed, you hint at it yourself towards the beginning of the post

>Young families have been streaming in because the priest is solidly orthodox, some unfortunately refugees from other parishes the archdiocese laid the hammer down on.

The real problem here isn't that this progressive harridan is a progressive harridan, though that's obviously not great. Her power isn't really soft at all. It's hard power, though it's borrowed from men higher up the hierarchy. The real problem is that the bishop/archbishop/whoever would take her side in any dispute with your parish priest. Which both you and your priest are presumably aware of.

Ultimately, those invested with hard power are either too afraid/lazy to wield that power for your good and the good of the church, or they are actively, whether covertly or overtly, using that power against you. Your troubles with the church secretary are just secondary-order effects caused by the real elephant in the room: most of the men holding formal leadership positions in the Roman Catholic Church (Just like most other institutions and organizations these days! Including most Protestant denominations!) are cowards.

Viddao's avatar

I wonder to what degree secretaries should just be wives? Like, I made a note joking about how I would hire my wife to be my secretary in order to have an affair with her; but considering how historical this trope is, I wonder if your secretary should actually be your own wife, lest you be tempted. I was also thinking about the "work wife" phenomenon, and honestly if you don't count sleep, you spend more time at work then you do at home. I know the husband being a breadwinner and the wife being a homemaker is trad, but the trad before that was the husband working in the fields right outside your own house while the wife milks the cows and takes care of the chickens.

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