Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,671,890 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

After the big chill: intellectual freedom & Catholic theologians.


Suppose we indulge our fondest hopes. Let us imagine that Pope Benedict XVI Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.  turns out to be quite unlike what many expected, and that he embraces a spirit of theological openness and generosity. No longer would a respected and respectful editor of a Jesuit journal be removed for the sin of advocating fairness; no more would a leading theological ethicist eth·i·cist   also e·thi·cian
n.
A specialist in ethics.

Noun 1. ethicist - a philosopher who specializes in ethics
ethician

philosopher - a specialist in philosophy
 be removed from a tenured ten·ured  
adj.
Having tenure: tenured civil servants; tenured faculty.

Adj. 1. tenured
 position or a systematic theologian be quelled by the same threat.

In this new atmosphere, local pastors would no longer be summoned to account in Rome on the basis of parishioners' calls to the bishop (as priest friends of mine have been). Scholars (like me) would not be disinvited to conferences on Aquinas because they criticized John Paul's theology of the body Theology of the Body refers to a series of 129 lectures given by Pope John Paul II during his Wednesday audiences in the Pope Paul VI Hall between September 1979 and November 1984. , or be asked to sign a statement that they would not do anything to "embarrass the church" when lecturing at a university, or, on the basis of other anonymous calls, be warned by the vicar-general of an archbishop who is now a cardinal against being "soft on the bodily Resurrection" of Christ when teaching New Testament to adult Catholics. The "big chill" within contemporary Catholicism includes all those mechanisms, overt and covert, by which the Vatican has deliberately sought to suppress theological intelligence and imagination in the name of doctrinal and moral "Truth."

Now suppose all these measures stopped because Benedict XVI Benedict XVI, 1927–, pope (2005–) and Roman Catholic theologian, a German (b. Marktl am Inn, Bavaria) named Josef (or Joseph) Alois Ratzinger; successor of John Paul II. He entered the seminary in 1939, but his training was interrupted by World War II.  turned out to be someone who actually moderated his predecessor's repressive instincts. Would the church then be in a state beatific be·a·tif·ic  
adj.
Showing or producing exalted joy or blessedness: a beatific smile.



[Latin be
? Would a healthy balance between magisterial mag·is·te·ri·al  
adj.
1.
a. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a master or teacher; authoritative: a magisterial account of the history of the English language.

b.
 authority and theological inquiry be struck then?

I am not sanguine. For one thing, the chill has become systemic. The episcopacy episcopacy

System of church government by bishops. It existed as early as the 2nd century AD, when bishops were chosen to oversee preaching and worship within a specific region, now called a diocese.
 shaped by John Paul II John Paul II, 1920–2005, pope (1978–2005), a Pole (b. Wadowice) named Karol Józef Wojtyła; successor of John Paul I. He was the first non-Italian pope elected since the Dutch Adrian VI (1522–23) and the first Polish and Slavic pope.  will continue to perpetuate its fearful distrust of theologians. Defenders of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) (Congregatio pro Doctrina Fidei), previously known as the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, is the oldest of the nine congregations of the Roman Curia.  (CDF (1) (Central Distribution Frame) A connecting unit (typically a hub) that acts as a central distribution point to all the nodes in a zone or domain. See MDF. ) argue that its investigations and sanctions of theologians are about "truth in advertising"--Catholic theologians in Catholic colleges should teach the way the Vatican says they should teach. Such a claim does little more than reduce theological truth to catechesis cat·e·che·sis  
n. pl. cat·e·che·ses
Oral instruction given to catechumens.



[Late Latin cat
.

Is there a better way to think about the relationship between theologians and the church's hierarchy? I think so. If we focus our hope for the church on the personality or policy proclivities of this or the last or the next pope, we simply perpetuate the Vatican's tendency to identify the church with the magisterium mag·is·te·ri·um  
n. Roman Catholic Church
The authority to teach religious doctrine.



[Latin, the office of a teacher or other person in authority, from magister, master; see
 and the magisterium with the pope. That, in turn, contributes to the ill-conceived conviction that all theological wisdom must spring from a single source. This fixation is problematic even--perhaps especially--if we grant that John Paul II and Benedict XVI are genuine and even important theologians. This fixation on the papacy results in the steady theological impoverishment of the church as a whole, precisely at a time when the task of articulating the church's faith is urgent and daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
. The effort by the Vatican and its allies to control theological debate reflects little trust in the capacity of theologians to criticize one another--something they have never been reluctant to do--and even less trust in the best-educated laity in Catholic history that is hungry for intellectual engagement with the faith that is not condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 and condescending. Defenders of the CDF's actions like to say that theology is an ecclesial Ec`cle´si`al

a. 1. Ecclesiastical.
, not merely an academic, vocation. I agree. It is precisely because theology is done by and for the church that it requires the highest gifts of theological intelligence and imagination. Some of the best theological talent available to the church today is found outside the clergy. If these lay theologians teach in Catholic colleges or seminaries, they are placed under strict control; if they teach in Protestant or secular schools, they are largely ignored. Many in the hierarchy seem indifferent to the academic theological community, while others seem hostile to the climate of intellectual freedom that theology needs.

Conditions Chronic & Acute

As the long history of heresy and schism shows, maintaining a healthy tension between authority and theological inquiry has never been easy. Those who value tradition and good order find it convenient to regard impulses toward exploration and liberty as a dangerous enthusiasm. And those who treasure freedom and creativity dismiss the concern for tradition as legalism le·gal·ism  
n.
1. Strict, literal adherence to the law or to a particular code, as of religion or morality.

2. A legal word, expression, or rule.
 and authoritarianism. It is extraordinarily difficult to honor equally both impulses, both sets of values.

At the Second Vatican Council Noun 1. Second Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms
Vatican II

Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church
, the spirit of theological openness and imagination was welcomed into the highest deliberations of the church. Bishops sat as students of theologians who had somehow survived an earlier ice age characterized by Rome's war against modernism. In the council's statements on ecumenism ecumenism

Movement toward unity or cooperation among the Christian churches. The first major step in the direction of ecumenism was the International Missionary Conference of 1910, a gathering of Protestants.
, on collegiality col·le·gi·al·i·ty  
n.
1. Shared power and authority vested among colleagues.

2. Roman Catholic Church The doctrine that bishops collectively share collegiate power.
, on the role of the laity, and on religious liberty, the spirit of open inquiry seemed to be institutionalized in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize  
tr.v. in·sti·tu·tion·al·ized, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·ing, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·es
1.
a. To make into, treat as, or give the character of an institution to.

b.
. Alas, the forty years since the council have seen a steady retreat from intellectual freedom. The present situation is especially worrisome since theological values that should be mutual and held in balance are thought by many to be opposed to one another. Advocates of freedom and the spirit of theological inquiry can so exaggerate these values as to obscure the value of loyalty to tradition. Defenders of tradition and papal authority The Roman Catholic Church bases Papal authority, the authority of the Pope, on two sources: Matthew 16:18| of the Christian Bible and On the detection and overthrow of the so-called Gnosis (commonly called Adversus Haereses) by Irenaeus.  sometimes speak and act in ways suggesting that intellectual freedom is a luxury too dangerous for the church to afford. It is, indeed, increasingly difficult to assert a middle position in which theological inquiry and intellectual freedom are understood as essential to a genuine loyalty, and loyalty is understood as requiring intellectual integrity--that is, freedom.

A tendency on both sides of the debate to deny the need to make distinctions between what is of lesser and greater importance in the practice of the faith exacerbates the ideological polarization. On the left, making such distinctions is perceived as intolerant, and in the name of freedom, all boundaries are ignored if not denied. On the right, making such distinctions is seen as a way of opening the door to the wholesale betrayal of the faith: everything is of equal importance, and making distinctions risks the loss of everything. This polarization profoundly threatens the integrity of theology within the church. Theology thrives precisely on the making of distinctions, and on the delicate negotiation of fidelity to tradition and openness to new understandings of that tradition.

Theology's role is not simply to transmit the faith, but also to interrogate (1) To search, sum or count records in a file. See query.

(2) To test the condition or status of a terminal or computer system.
 the faith in the name of and on the behalf of truth. To be sure, without catechesis, theological imagination descends into an amorphous spirituality. I have written recently in these pages about "the new gnosticism," and proponents of that ancient but seemingly perennial theological error, such as Matthew Fox Matthew Fox may be:
  • Matthew Fox (priest) (born 1940) Catholic & Episcopal priest and author
  • Matthew Fox (actor) (born 1966) American actor
  • Matthew Fox (engineer) (born 1974) American engineer
, are easy to spot. But without theology, catechesis devolves into sterile repetition of formulas that become less and less intelligible for not being interrogated afresh a·fresh  
adv.
Once more; anew; again: start afresh.


afresh
Adverb

once more

Adv. 1.
.

The greatest theologians in the church, from Origen through Aquinas to Rahner, have tried to strike this delicate and dangerous balance. All were profoundly loyal to the tradition and could, in sermon and in lesson, express that faith with utter simplicity, and their lives expressed that faith in genuine discipleship. Yet each was willing, indeed, impelled im·pel  
tr.v. im·pelled, im·pel·ling, im·pels
1. To urge to action through moral pressure; drive: I was impelled by events to take a stand.

2. To drive forward; propel.
, to bring the most stringent questioning to the tradition. Do those who now regard Thomism as fundamental for Christian theology Noun 1. Christian theology - the teachings of Christian churches
free grace, grace of God, grace - (Christian theology) the free and unmerited favor or beneficence of God; "God's grace is manifested in the salvation of sinners"; "there but for the grace of God go
 not understand how radical and dangerous a thinker St. Thomas Aquinas was? His willingness to address the wisdom of the nations (Greeks and Muslims) and allow the tradition to be challenged by Aristotle required a kind of loyalty to tradition and an intellectual integrity that could never be commanded or controlled from the outside. Aquinas's renewed synthesis of faith and intellect emerged because his great mind and heart were given the liberty to find a new expression of the good news. Do those demanding the suppression of theological work not see that the best way to imitate Thomas is to engage, with equal fidelity and creativity, the intellectual challenges posed by our own day? Is there no wisdom God wants us to learn from the movements for women's liberation Women's Liberation
Noun

a movement promoting the removal of inequalities based upon the assumption that men are superior to women Also called: (women's lib)
, for democracy, for freedom of conscience? Is not the challenge presented by evolution at least as great as that posed by Muslim philosophers
''This is a subarticle to Islamic philosophy and Islamic scholars


A Muslim philosopher is a person that professes Islam and engaged in the philosophical aspect of Islamic studies, for example theology or eschatology and other fields of Islamic philosophy.
 of the Middle Ages?

The Church & Revelation

Like Aquinas, theologians today ask hard questions in the language of our own age concerning the truth of the gospel, not in order to erode or compromise that truth, but to allow its splendor to become more powerfully manifest. Theologians of this age, as of every age, are obliged to inquire into the ways in which the structures and processes of the church itself best serve the truth of the gospel. In every age, Christians must struggle with deep intrinsic tensions that derive from the church's peculiar and paradoxical character. On one side, there is what we might call the resurrection principle: the powerful gift of the Holy Spirit that comes from the exalted Lord Jesus and pushes believers toward transformation and growth, toward the exercise of spiritual gifts and of responsible freedom in response to the urgings of the Spirit. "The Lord is the Spirit," declares Paul, "and where the spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom" (2 Cor 3:17). In Jesus, all previous human understanding of the law and prophets is transcended. And because this spirit of freedom comes from the Lord and not from humans, its exercise must ultimately be responsible to the Lord rather than to humans.

In addition to the resurrection principle the church also embodies what may be called the incarnational principle. Christianity is embodied in the same way that the human Jesus was embodied, which means that, like Jesus himself, the church is always particular, historical, and conditioned by the social realities of each age. In sociological terms, it has always been an intentional community intentional community
n.
A small, localized, often rural community of persons or families pursuing common interests or concentrating on certain basic values.
, one that exists because of the commitment of its members. It is, therefore, an inherently unstable community. Those who grasp this fact appreciate that tradition is a delicate business. Tradition seeks not to live in the past, but to remember the past in order to secure the future. As a consequence, tradition must be tended carefully and respectfully.

In light of this tension between the resurrection and incarnational impulses, two distinct understandings of the church and its relation to God's revelation come into play for the theologian. Both understandings (or metaphors or models) are found in the New Testament, both contain genuine, even indispensable values, and in both the relation of the church to revelation is distinct. In one, there seems to be little place for the theologian. In the other, the role of the theologian is critical. Today, one model has almost totally eclipsed the other, and a renewed appreciation for both as held in a creative tension may help us think anew about the ecclesial vocation of the theologian.

One metaphor for the church in the New Testament is the household. The image has roots in the metaphor of "house" for the people of Israel, but is even more directly connected to the Hellenistic household (oikos) in which early Christians gathered as an assembly (ekklesia). The image leads naturally to thinking of the church in terms of authority--moving from top to bottom, as in the patriarchal household of antiquity--and good order. The image is especially associated with the Pastoral Epistles Pastoral Epistles: name for the New Testament letters of Timothy and Titus. . Paul tells his delegate Timothy to tend to "how to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God" (1 Tim 3:15). By no means is the image disconnected from the power of the Holy Spirit. Paul elsewhere speaks of the Corinthian community as "God's building" (1 Cor 3:9) and as "God's Temple" since "God dwells among you" (1 Cor 3:16). But the metaphor's entailments move in the direction of an administration of "God's mysteries" by those, like Paul and Apollos, who are "servants and household managers" (1 Cor 4:1). And in the Pastoral Letters, when Paul is faced with deviant teaching that threatens the truth of the gospel, the image helps secure a chain of authority that will preserve the deposit of the faith (2 Tim 1:13; 2:2). Already in these letters, we see Paul speaking of the "supervisor" (episkopos = bishop) of the community in terms analogous to the head of the household: the moral and intellectual qualities appropriate in one are appropriate in the other too (1 Tim 3:1-7; Tit 1:7-9).

This household model of the church is positive and powerful and it does some things very well. It is good at preserving tradition and passing it on. But this model is not good at facilitating the contributions of those who are not the head of the household. Nor does it welcome the possibility that the church may have something to learn from those outside the household. Small wonder that this image proved so attractive to an early Christianity The term Early Christianity here refers to Christianity of the period after the Death of Jesus in the early 30s and before the First Council of Nicaea in 325. The term is sometimes used in a narrower sense of just the very first followers (disciples) of Jesus of Nazareth and the  that was trying to secure its place in the world. It maintained the boundaries of the "household of faith" against the rival claims of Jew and Gentile, and, as early as the second century, against the confusions perpetrated by heretics.

In Catholicism, the image of the household has been merged with a strongly juridical Pertaining to the administration of justice or to the office of a judge.

A juridical act is one that conforms to the laws and the rules of court. A juridical day is one on which the courts are in session.


JURIDICAL.
 reading of Matthew 16:18-19, which reports Jesus designating Peter as the rock "on which I will build (as a house = oikodomeso) my church (ekklesia)," and gives Peter the keys of the kingdom of heaven and the power to bind and loose. Ecclesial development has tended toward the establishment of the bishop of Rome as the supreme "head of the household of the faith." Just as Caesar was the paterfamilias of a worldwide household, the oikoumene, so the pope is the paterfamilias of the ecumenical church. The line of authority--and of teaching--moves downward from pope to bishops to priests to laity.

Even in the best of circumstances (assuming the integrity and intelligence of the hierarchy), what this arrangement relies on is catechesis: the handing on of the tradition as it has already been formed. Yet catechesis does not encompass all of theology. When the pope is understood not only as final arbiter of fidelity to the deposit of faith but also its only source of theological reinterpretation re·in·ter·pret  
tr.v. re·in·ter·pret·ed, re·in·ter·pret·ing, re·in·ter·prets
To interpret again or anew.



re
, there is surely at least an impoverishment of the church's theological life. For the premise that revelation is closed or that it is limited to certain church offices is simply wrong. To think so would be to adhere to adhere to
verb 1. follow, keep, maintain, respect, observe, be true, fulfil, obey, heed, keep to, abide by, be loyal, mind, be constant, be faithful

2.
 a dead rather than a living God. If Jesus truly shares the life of God as "life-giving spirit" (1 Cor 15:45), then we must consider that God, through Jesus Christ Jesus Christ: see Jesus.

Jesus Christ

40 days after Resurrection, ascended into heaven. [N.T.: Acts 1:1–11]

See : Ascension


Jesus Christ

kind to the poor, forgiving to the sinful. [N.T.
, can continue to reach us in new ways. It follows that revelation is open and ongoing in the world, specifically in human experience. If God acts in human stories, both within and outside the structures of the church, then the church's relationship to revelation is not simply that of protector and purveyor (World-Wide Web) Purveyor - A World-Wide Web server for Windows NT and Windows 95 (when available).

http://process.com/.

E-mail: <info@process.com>.
. The church must also find a way to become an effective interpreter of God's self-disclosure in the world. This is not a plea for the privileging of every private human experience. Not every human story reveals God. It is a plea to consider the theological implications of the millions of stories of believers (such as women and homosexuals) whom the church has persisted in regarding as "objects" to be "explained" rather than subjects, that is, persons through whose struggles the Holy Spirit speaks a word to the church.

Paul's letters offer another image of the church that is no less authoritative than that of the household, but is more directly responsive to the resurrection and incarnational character of Christian existence. This is the metaphor of the "body of Christ
This article is about the religious concept. For article about the sect, see The Body of Christ.


The Body of Christ is a term used by Christians to describe believers in Christ. Jesus Christ is seen as the "head" of the body, which is the church.
," which Paul uses for the church in Rom 12:4-5, Col 1:18, and Eph 1:23, 2:16, 4:16, 5:23-28, but which he develops most fully in 1 Cor 12:4-31. It should be noted that Paul does not oppose this image to that of the household. We find both images side by side in 1 Cor 6:15-18, and they even merge in Eph 2:16-22. He plainly regards the metaphors as compatible and complementary. Yet they are not identical; each presents a distinct set of values. The household image, I have suggested, communicates the values of authority and order and the passing on of tradition in a way that the image of the body does not. So the question arises: What values does the image of the body of Christ communicate that the metaphor of the household cannot?

Most obviously, the body metaphor understands the church as a living organism immediately and intimately joined to the risen Lord Jesus as its source of life, and as intimately and immediately directed by the Holy Spirit in its activities (1 Cor 12:4-6). Paul emphasizes the diversity in unity that should characterize the body. No member can replace or do the work of another, and the work of each member should be for the well-being and growth of the body as a whole. Nor can any member of the body dismiss another as useless; all are needed. Paul even provides a list that includes apostles, but also prophets and teachers. Their gifts are not identical, nor are their roles. He lists the gifts of healing Gifts of healing are regarded among Charismatics and Pentecostals to be supernatural enablements to minister various kinds of healing and restoration to individuals through the power of the Holy Spirit.  and governance and speaking in tongues and interpretation; these also are not all possessed by one member, but are distributed according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the will of the Holy Spirit (12:28-30).

Paul, moreover, sees some of these gifts as having a specific role with regard to the continuing revelation of God's word. The Corinthians are attracted to the spectacular gift of speaking in tongues, but Paul insists on the greater importance of a "revelation or knowledge or prophecy or teaching" (12:6). The revelatory function is not restricted to the apostle, but is dispersed throughout the assembly. Paul places particular emphasis on the gift of prophecy, a form of public discourse that, in contrast to speaking in tongues, makes use of the mind (14:14-19). Prophecy both builds the church within (14:4) and convinces outsiders that God is truly present in the faith community (14:20-25).

Paul does not think of the spiritual gifts exercised by the community as being without norm or good order. They must cohere cohere (kōhēr´),
v to stick together, to unite, to form a solid mass.
 with the confession that Jesus is Lord The saying "Jesus is Lord" serves as a statement of faith for millions of Christians who regard Jesus as both fully man and fully God. It is also the motto adopted by the World Council of Churches and by Kenneth Copeland Ministries.  (12:3) and must build rather than tear down the community (3:16-17; 14:5), and all the gifts should be practiced "decently and in order" (14:40). The value of all spiritual utterances must be discerned. Paul tells the Thessalonians, "do not quench quench,
v to cool a hot object rapidly by plunging it into water or oil.


quench

to put out, extinguish, or suppress; to cool (as hot metal) by immersing in water.
 the Spirit. Do not despise prophecy. But test everything" (1 Thess 5:19). The process of discernment, like the gift of prophecy itself, is public and serves to build up the community. It must be carried out by the entire community.

If the metaphor of the household excels at catechesis but lacks a capacity to respond to God's ongoing revelation, the metaphor of the body of Christ excels at responding to the prompting of the Holy Spirit among all the faithful, but lacks a capacity for consistent communication of the tradition. Still, which image is more capacious ca·pa·cious  
adj.
Capable of containing a large quantity; spacious or roomy. See Synonyms at spacious.



[From Latin cap
? Which can include the other within itself?

Here, I think, it is clear that the image of the body of Christ can encompass the positive dimensions of the household image--remember that governance and administration and teaching are among the gifts--whereas the image of the household finds little or no place for the diversity of gifts among all the faithful. Which image is more adequate to the good news of the resurrected Christ? Again, the answer would necessarily be the metaphor of Christ's body, which lives and is directed by the Holy Spirit sent by the resurrected Lord. Above all, the image of the church as the body of Christ allows for gifts and speech and discernment among all the faithful, rather than simply a few officials, and for an openness to God's continuing self-disclosure. The church is not simply a place where precedents are handed down, but a place where God's word for the world can find expression in new ways.</p> <pre> Mulching Poems I will mulch my poems & make a compost of images. They'll be more useful that way, something For the moonlight roots to worm through The sycamore so tomorrow we'll have a harvest of moons. Something for the grubs to digest till they grow Fat with chthonic chthon·ic   also chtho·ni·an
adj. Greek Mythology
Of or relating to the underworld.



[From Greek khthonios, of the earth, from khth
 wisdom, something For the plows to put their teeth into Right before they're beaten into swords. I'd like to see how maple seeds rope This trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
, my old anger made sweet. I'd like to see language break down, sentence to syntax To phoneme phoneme

Smallest unit of speech distinguishing one word (or word element) from another (e.g., the sound p in tap, which differentiates that word from tab and tag). The term is usually restricted to vowels and consonants, but some linguists include differences of pitch,
 to the tomato seed that clings to your smile. --Martin Walls </pre> <p>The Role of the Theologian

In our current situation, the image of the church as the body of Christ has been swallowed by the metaphor of the household. Yet the household model has no place for the role of the prophet or of the theologian: all teaching comes from the top down. For a vast number of Catholics, especially younger Catholics, it is axiomatic ax·i·o·mat·ic   also ax·i·o·mat·i·cal
adj.
Of, relating to, or resembling an axiom; self-evident: "It's axiomatic in politics that voters won't throw out a presidential incumbent unless they think his challenger will
 that the pope is not only chief pastor but also sole theologian. On every matter, the pope is not only the last word (arguably a legitimate and even necessary role) but also the first word (arguably a dreadful displacement of ecclesial functions).

Christianity bears within itself certain intractable tensions. These competing impulses cannot be resolved completely without diminishing the community's life in one way or another. In fact, I would argue that the church is healthier when the disparate values that push against one another are allowed full play. In every age, Christians must struggle with deep intrinsic tensions that derive from the church's peculiar and paradoxical character. I am not suggesting that theologians should be regarded as prophets, although some may be. Rather, I suggest that the image of the church as the body of Christ provides a framework for our thinking about the role of the theologian. If God's self-revelation continues in the world, and if the church is obliged to respond to God's ongoing self-disclosure, then the church needs all the eyes and ears and hands and minds it can get.

In some fashion, as I have argued extensively in my book Scripture and Discernment: Decision Making in the Church (Abingdon, 1996), all in the church should practice theology. All Christians are called to discern and bear witness to the ways in which God is at work in their lives, and all are needed to help the community as a whole discern how God's holy Spirit is moving within their lives. The pope's authority, in short, ought not to preempt pre·empt or pre-empt  
v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts

v.tr.
1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate.

2.
a.
 such a process of discernment at every level of the church, but ought to encourage and respond to it.

The delicate task of discerning whether new developments in the lives of God's people are in continuity or discontinuity with the tradition of the church requires great learning. It is not enough to be a skilled listener of human stories; the theologian must also know the tradition in great depth and breadth if the conversation between the present and the past is to be healthy and productive, if it is to "build the church."

At the same time, the theologian must be more than a catechist cat·e·chist  
n.
A person who catechizes, especially one who instructs catechumens in preparation for admission into a Christian church.



[French catechiste, from Old French, from Late Latin
. To demand of the theologian that he or she be nothing more than one who hands down what is already known is to "quench the spirit" and "despise prophecy" (1 Thess 5:19). To require of theologians that they strip themselves of all critical intelligence and imagination so that they present no "danger" is actually to place the church in a position of much greater danger, namely, of not responding to the work of the Holy Spirit in the world.

Is the free employment of critical thinking and theological imagination dangerous? Of course, just as all true living is dangerous. The Letter to the Hebrews reminds us that "falling into the hands of the living God is a fearsome thing" (10:31). Yet within the church as the body of Christ, the dangers of false prophecy are mitigated by the practice of discernment by the community. If theologians are loyal as well as critical (as we should always assume until it is absolutely necessary to conclude otherwise), they also understand that their thought and imagination must be in constructive conversation with the church's catechists, above all the hierarchy.

The theological impoverishment of the church today is real and if something is not changed, it will undoubtedly get worse. Perhaps it's too much to hope that the present model of the church as household can open itself to a healthy conversation with the image of the church as the living body of the resurrected Christ, particularly if the present heads of household think that theirs is the only model that is true to revelation. But they are wrong. The alternative (and, I insist, complementary) image of the church is, if anything, truer to the good news as found in Scripture. Those of us who long for a church in which it is possible to be both smart and holy, both loyal and critical, live in hope that something of this vision may gain recognition. Still, suppose the big chill continues, through the papacy of Benedict XVI (despite our fondest hopes) and the papacies to follow. What can theologians do? They can continue to speak prophecy and to practice discernment among God's people. What is at stake is the integrity of the church's witness to the living God.

Luke Timothy Johnson Luke Timothy Johnson (born November 20, 1943) is the R. W. Woodruff Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at Candler School of Theology and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University.  is Robert W. Woodruff Robert Winship Woodruff (December 6, 1889 – March 7, 1985) was the president of The Coca-Cola Company from 1923 until 1954. With his enormous Coke fortune, he was also a major philanthropist, and many educational and cultural landmarks in the U.S.  Professor of New Testament and Christian Origins at Candler School of Theology Candler School of Theology, Emory University, is one of 13 seminaries of the United Methodist Church. Founded in 1914, the school was named after Warren Akin Candler, a former President and Chancellor of Emory University.  at Emory University Emory University (ĕm`ərē), near Atlanta, Ga.; coeducational; United Methodist; chartered as Emory College 1836, opened 1837 at Oxford. It became Emory Univ. in 1915 and in 1919 moved to Atlanta. . Among his most recent books is The Creed (Doubleday). Funding for this essay was provided by a grant from the Henry Luce Noun 1. Henry Luce - United States publisher of magazines (1898-1967)
Henry Robinson Luce, Luce
 Foundation.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Contemporary Theology
Author:Johnson, Luke Timothy
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Jan 27, 2006
Words:4316
Previous Article:The cult of national security: what happened to checks & balances?(Short Take)
Next Article:Patriot Act: "THE COLBERT REPORT".(Television Program Review)
Topics:



Related Articles
Mother, not teacher? (Catholic theologians)
Veritatis Splendor. (Pope John Paul II's encyclical on morality) (Cover Story)
Into the mind and heart of God. (theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar)
Is Rome ready for the 21st century? (Catholic reform; Fr. Thomas J. Reese, S.J.)(Interview)
YOUNG THEOLOGIANS - Between a rock & a hard place.
Notes on Minor Christian Literatures.
Theological Note.(homosexuality and unofficial Catholic theology)(Brief Article)(Column)
Haight on trial.(Catholic theologian Roger Haight)(Brief Article)
Theology at the barricades.(radicalism and the church)
Death of Fr. Richard Cote.(Brief Article)(Obituary)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles