Inevitably, whenever Newman’s ideas on the developing understanding of doctrine are mentioned, there will be those who see in it an excuse for justifying any change in doctrine; that is usually a sure sign of one of two things: they have either not read Newman’s essay, or they have not understood it. Newman was a great opponent of what he called ‘liberalism in religion’ – that is the idea that dogma and doctrine did not matter; it was because they mattered profoundly that he crossed the Tiber – even though, from every earthly personal point of view, that was a step away from the fame he had enjoyed in the Church of England.
Newman’s thinking on the developing understanding of doctrine was anchored in his Patristic studies, not least in his great work on the Arian crisis. What he saw, as he worked out the ways in which Christians had tried to make sense of what it meant to say Jesus was the Word Incarnate, was at the basis of his idea of development. As he put it:
The development of an idea [like Christianity] is not like an investigation worked out on paper, in which each successive advance is a pure evolution from a foregoing, but it is carried on through and by means of communities of men and their leaders and guides; and it employs their minds as instruments
As he wrote in 1868:
the apostles had the fulness of revealed knowledge, a fulness which they could as little realise to themselves, as the human mind, as such, can have all its thoughts present before it at once. . . in an apostle’s mind great part of his knowledge is latent or implicit. . . I wish to hold that there is nothing which the Church has defined or shall define but what an apostle, if asked would have been fully able to answer and would have answered, as the Church has answered, the one answering by inspiration, the other from its gift of infallibility
By this he meant that, had someone asked the Apostles if they believed in the Trinity, they might have asked for an explanation of the word (which is used nowhere in Scripture), but would have understood what it meant and affirmed the doctrine.
Those who use the idea of development as an excuse to justify any change they want, ignore this, and they ignore the seven tests which Newman himself thought should apply to any claim of ‘development’. Those tests amounted to whether the developments could be read within what Benedict XVI called the hermeneutic of continuity. So, something, for example, like the ordination of women could not be considered an authentic development: the Church has never practised it; it is not implicit neither can it be read from Scripture or tradition; neither can it be deduced from Catholic teaching on the role of the priest at Mass; still less is it in accord with the teaching of the Fathers. To call such a thing ‘development’ would be like claiming that an ash tree could grow from an acorn.
Newman was soaked in the works of the Fathers, and it was this intimate knowledge of how Christians. Newman had studied closely the growth in the development of the understanding of Divine Truth, and his theory of development was not a systematic attempt to explain how doctrine develops, but rather how our understanding the Apostolic Deposit is advanced. Those in his own time, and later, who argue that the discontinuity between the Church of the apostles and contemporary Roman Catholicism, is too great to make it possible that the two are even connected, were, Newman argued, ignoring the fact that the acorn develops into the oak tree. To those who asked how it was possible that anyone could judge rightly between differing theological views, Newman’s riposte was twofold: first, in any Church guided by the Spirit, there would be lively debate (as had been the case from the beginning); and that the Church founded by Jesus Christ had a teaching Magisterium with the authority to bind and loose, and to make the necessary judgment as to whether a claimed development in understanding was, or was not, authentic. These were great claims to make – but not, Newman argued, to make of Christ’s Church and the successors of St Peter. It was for that reason – that he had found the authority which could make such claims, and a Church which had developed the understanding of the Apostolic deposit by it – that he left the comforts, emoluments and fame of Oxford for the discomforts, poverty and obscurity of the Birmingham Oratory. He had found the pearl of great price.
Those who have read and understood Newman, know that any attempts to employ his words to justify radical changes, are an illegitimate use of them. As he said in 1879 on receiving his Cardinal’s hat:
Liberalism in religion is the doctrine that there is no positive truth in religion, but that one creed is as good as another, and this is the teaching which is gaining substance and force daily. It is inconsistent with any recognition of any religion, as true. It teaches that all are to be tolerated, for all are matters of opinion. Revealed religion is not a truth, but a sentiment and a taste; not an objective fact, not miraculous; and it is the right of each individual to make it say just what strikes his fancy
The right reception of what the Blessed John Henry wrote is that the Church founded by Jesus Christ has nothing to fear from debate and discussion – that was the way in which the Church hammered out the doctrines of the Trinity and the two natures of Christ in one hypostasis – what the Church has to fear most, is the absence of discussion and debate – that way would lie stagnation caused by fear.
Newman worked on this assumption:
Trust me, rather than the world, when I tell you, that it is no difficult thing for a Catholic to believe; and that unless he grievously mismanages himself, the difficult thing is for him to doubt. He has received a gift which makes faith easy: it is not without an effort, a miserable effort that any one who has received that gift, unlearns to believe
Inquiry proceeded faith, and no-one, he thought, should become a Catholic without without a firm purpose of taking her [the Church] word in all matters of doctrine and morals, and that, on the ground of her coming directly from the God of Truth
Only those determined to do so, can derive from the works of the Blessed John Henry Newman an excuse for justifying the introduction of novelties into the Church.
I would have to contemplate the meanings of Newman’s statement on belief and doubt to make sense of many of our most celebrated saints. It might be that many of us living in the world and having been deprived of any consolations or lights from Christ for a long time might begin to feel abandoned and even doubt that the faith is, in fact, a reality and the voices of the world and the trials of the particular refining that God has sent them might leave the mind of the saint to doubt their faith. Since doubt lies squarely between belief and unbelief, it might be similar to the statement, “Yea, I believe. Help my disbelief.”
But faith is in the soul and in the will more than it is proven in the thoughts of the mind that is undergoing the trials of this world. It is the persistence of the Catholic to practice and perform acts consistent with the faith that prove their faith more than these anxious moments of self-doubt which spill over to our conscious belief in the Gospels. If it were not so, one could say that many a saint lost their faith but that would not accurately describe the reality of what was occuring in their souls.
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As Newman said, a thousand difficulties don’t make one doubt.
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http://www.cruxnow.com/faith/2014/09/24/maybe-we-catholics-should-talk-more-about-doubt/
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Fr. Z has reproduced one of my favorite essays by Sheen on today’s post and podcast. It seems appropriate with this post and with the new exhortation to ponder this a bit.
http://wdtprs.com/blog/2016/04/podcazt-143-fulton-j-sheen-in-the-face-of-this-false-broadmindedness-what-the-world-needs-is-intolerance/
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Many thanks my friend.
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Attention – USA are you aware that Muslim indoctrination in our public schools is fast becoming a more common occurrence.
John Kevin Wood, A Marine Corps veteran is suing the public school system in Maryland for promoting Islam in his daughter’s class. The school has not taught any other religion and solely focused on teaching Islam.
http://usherald.com/marine-dad-makes-school-pay-price-pushing-islamic-propaganda-daughter/#
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We’ve seen sporadic far left wing zealots ushering in radical indoctrination exercises for some time now. The problem is getting the teachers fired and how to undo the damage that they have already wrought on the kids.
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I doubt they will be fired, but the damage can be undone – which is why the way we witness to damaged people is so important – they’ve been taught we’re the bigoted zealots, but the real bigoted zealots.
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I’m assuming your last sentence was supposed to say, “. . . but the real bigoted zealots are them.: ??? To which, of course, I totally agree. We do give far too much protection to teachers like the one Rob points out. It seems they are increasing because so many are getting away with it.
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Yes, it was 😄
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Bravo, C, I was disgusted with Michigan Man’s recent post when he decided to post a defense on his position with subtlety attempting to shame those who express our thoughts on Religious Liberty and by extension these thought.
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Thanks Philip. I have never understood what the Faith has to fear from freedom of thought.
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You’re welcome and forgive the atrocious typos! I had just returned from a weekend with family and no sleep last night when I made those posts! I read them this morning and thought, “oh my!”
I have difficulty understanding those who profess such a Catholicism. It’s as if they can only bathe themselves in High Christology and any sip from the Low is heresy. They want to quote nothing but encyclicals from the Pius’ and cherry-picked history. However, when confronted with Jesus’ actions, they do not even want to address it.
I just shake my head.
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Me too!
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It’s further ironic when he you both quoted Father Benedict, I think you have the far better understanding on what Benedict actually means.
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And,of course, Fr Benedict is a great admirer of Newman’s.
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Well, C, if you, Pope Benedict XVI, and John Henry Cardinal Newman are on the same page, then answer me this.
It seems to me that the liberalism Newman was talking about: “Liberalism in religion is the doctrine that there is no positive truth in religion, but that one creed is as good as another, and this is the teaching which is gaining substance and force daily. It is inconsistent with any recognition of any religion, as true. It teaches that all are to be tolerated, for all are matters of opinion. Revealed religion is not a truth, but a sentiment and a taste; not an objective fact, not miraculous; and it is the right of each individual to make it say just what strikes his fancy”– is personified by Pope Francis. Do you agree or not?
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No, I don’t think the Pope is saying it is as OK to be a Hindu as a Christian, or that is is as OK to be an Anglican as a Catholic. What he is saying is that we have to show respect for those who have chosen, or been born into, a different church/religion.
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OK, but when he has a teaching moment, as with the Anglican woman married to a Catholic man. She was upset that they couldn’t receive together in each others’ church. http://www.catholic.com/blog/jimmy-akin/pope-francis-on-intercommunion-with-lutherans
I picked Jimmy Akin’s answer because he is rather neutral about the pope. But, if you read just the first 10 comments, you will hear many saying the correct answer was the simple one. The pope should ask her to become Catholic! That it goes back to when Luther threw a fit and left the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. She should learn the difference in teachings and make a decision, but, no, we are not changing our teachings just because her sensibilities are too delicate. Why is this so difficult?
Pope Francis runs into many “teaching moments” where he fails to proclaim the Catholic faith. He wants to muddy the waters instead of clearing them. As a Catholic I don’t think this is too much to ask of our pope.
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Steve, Luther did not leave the Church on a hissy fit. He, like many others, thought reform was necessary – and like so many, thought he knew better than the Pope of the day. Some things never change.
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C, I assume by your silence on my last comment that you agree wholeheartedly! 🙂 BUT, you would rather talk about Luther, so we will. Warren H. Carroll would disagree with you.
In his “The Cleaving of Christendom” he quotes one of Luther’s letters in response to his former professor of philosophy at the Univ. of Erfurt, Jodocus Trutfetter, who, and I quote Carroll, ” solemnly warmed his former student against the path he was taking, urging him to turn back before it was too late. On May 9 [1518] Luther replied: “To speak plainly, my firm belief is that the reform of the Church is impossible unless the ecclesiastical laws, the papal regulations, scholastic theology, philosophy and logic as they at present exist, are thoroughly uprooted.” Such uprooting, he said, had now become his fixed purpose, “a resolution from which neither your authority, although it is certainly of the greatest weight for me, much less that of any others, can turn me aside.”
Carroll in his next paragraph states: “This is one of the most important of the thousands of letters Luther wrote in his long, full lifetime. It reveals that as early as May 1518 he was essentially committed to the destruction of the Church as he knew it, though he had not yet proceeded to total public defiance of all Church authority. It shows this revolutionary temper, his purpose to “uproot” rather than simply to reform, which is the goal of every revolutionary. It provides our first evidence that the upheaval to come was rightly to be called a revolt or a revolution, not a “reformation.” It also shows Luther in the act of coldly and deliberately breaking a bond whose quality and strength only the dedicated teacher and his former student know; the love and loyalty that emanate from their memories of each other.” End quote of Carroll, page 7-8.
So, “fit” is a much better description than “reform.” This cleaving of Christendom by Luther is not worthy of celebration by Pope Francis, but a slap in the face of Catholicism.
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This looks to me like a semantic argument between levels of reform. That passage, to me, says Luther had come to the view there were systemic problems and reform needed to go go further than he had first imagined – a not uncommon phenomenon.
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Semantics, eh. Well, here are some of Luther’s quotes, pick 2 or 3 or as many as you can handle and I’ll have a jolly time listening to you trying to justify them. Now I know you don’t like Ann Barnhardt, so just skip down to some of Luther’s finest expressions.
http://www.barnhardt.biz/2016/01/26/luther-in-his-own-words/
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This is the same game Bosco plays when he cites Catholic anti-semitism. I refuse to join it – it simply goes to show Merton had a point. How does citing what Luther believed in his era or what Popes said about Jews help? But perhaps point scoring matters to you and Bosco?
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C, that high and mighty horse you are riding must be 50 hands high! YOU are the one that wanted to talk about Luther when you picked one sentence out of my comment instead of responding to my point about Pope Francis. You are the one who wanted to play this game. I suggest that you might want to re-read this tread and then figure out how you will dismount without busting your ass.
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Indeed, and what I was suggesting was that if we do not just cherry pick quotes but read what say Luther, or even this Pope. actually wrote, we might be better off and understand more.
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e.g., I think Socci would also be in the Benedict, Newman, and C camp. http://rorate-caeli.blogspot.com/2016/04/socci-apostolic-exhortation-is-turning.html
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I wonder sometimes whether some people don’t come with their own agenda as to what they think the Pope is up to? If you start off being the caricature the Pope raises – of wanting to use dogma as a stone – you end up actually justifying the way he is going about things.
There is the world of some people’s imagining where rules set up to deal with families in a Christian ethos can still be easily applied to ones where that is not the case, and then there is the one many priests have to deal with, where some degree of pastoral allowance is appropriate. Anyone who wants a tick box culture for these things seems to me to be making the Pope’s point for him.
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