If there's one thing that the Traditional Church gets accused of, it's arrogance. Time and again, I hear complaints of the RCC hierarchy being deemed "out of touch" and "dismissive" of modern values. I hear of my brother priests (in various jurisdictions) being described as "arrogant" or "hypocritical" or "having their heads too heavenly bound so that they are no earthly good." Priests do get a lot of stick, and sometimes rightly so. We have to remember that the sacramental grace of being alter Christus does not extend to the weakness of our fallen humanity.
But is the Church really arrogant? How do people say that it is? Well, much of this comes down to morality. The Traditional Church is necessarily morally absolutist and absolutism is something that is socially frowned upon. It is almost taboo to be certain of something these days. The main evidence of this seems to be the claims that "atheists cannot be good people" and "only Christians can be good people". Indeed, the objection is raised that the Church has no business pronouncing judgment upon an individual since it has no claim to be the sole arbiter of morality.
This is where the claim of arrogance comes in, for what is arrogance defined if not the inflation of one's own importance? The Church in regarding herself as the sole arbiter of morality would certainly be a pretty hefty claim, but is it indeed an exaggeration?
First, let us be clear that moral absolutism is the claim that objective moral values exist independently of time and culture. The Church must believe that absolute values exist because it believes in an absolute God. Notice please that the monotheistic version of the Euthyphro argument fails to hold when it comes to the existence of God.
Plato's Socrates states "Is the pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods?" This supposedly makes Piety either arbitrary or renders the gods impotent against Piety. These days one might substitute the word "good" for "pious". This is pretty effective against the capricious Greek gods, but what about the True God Himself? As Boethius and Aquinas effectively point out, God is His own goodness. Goodness comes from Him by His very nature of being God. Hence Goodness is neither arbitrary nor above God.
If what is good comes from God, then that good must be absolute because it is of God who is absolute, and the existence of moral absolutes is proven.
So the Church is clearly bound by the morality she receives from God and if so,then she cannot promote any morality other than that which is necessarily imposed upon her. This is not arrogance. One cannot define arrogance as being absolute - this is a very modern phenomena. Arrogance is about assuming that which is above one's capabilities. The Church is not doing that at all. It is abiding by the morality that comes from the Absolute. Arrogance in this situation would be trying to change that morality for something else.
The problem here is when the Church tries to do just that, or when priests acts as one for whom morality is flexible. that's the real arrogance. As I said above, we are all fallen. I cannot really speak for other priests but I am acutely aware that I am fallible and that I have sinned. That doesn't mean that I am aware of all my sins.
However, I can still say "Murder is wrong" without being branded arrogant, because that is the moral fact. What I cannot do is pronounce the sentence of murder on any specific killing unless I am in possession of all the facts. Not all killing is murder, but all murder is killing. I can still say "Murder is wrong" even if I have just stabbed someone to death in front of my Diocesan Synod. To say that my claim doesn't hold because of what I have done is an ad hominem response and doesn't affect the argument.
Yet, the fact remains, I cannot possibly make the blanket generalisation that all killings are murder and I invite my readers to think of as many circumstances as they can. A sweeping generalisation is as much an invalid argument as an ad hominem attack if it cannot be shown to be generally true. Sweeping generalisations are likely to be the product of arrogance since they demonstrate an inflated grasp of the situation.
The Church is not arrogant if it holds to moral absolutism, nor is it arrogant because it intends to proclaim the goodness of God. It is if it tries to apply that morality without careful thought or in situations where she cannot know. We have to remember that there is none good save God Himself. Let us therefore just commit ourselves to bringing the goodness of God into the life of the world rather than trying to point out where it is not. If there is good already there, then more will change nothing. If there is no good there, then the good we bring will improve the situation.
...it's round here somewhere. Seriously, here's a disclaimer. On this blog, I draw my own interpretations, publish my own sermons, and ruminate on the state of the Church independently of any establishment to which I'm affiliated. There are statements contained herein which may be wrong. Please correct me so that I can learn from this.
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Friday, January 31, 2014
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Reflexive Catholicism
Moreover, in the Catholic Church itself, all possible care must be taken, that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all. For that is truly and in the strictest sense Catholic, which, as the name itself and the reason of the thing declare, comprehends all universally. This rule we shall observe if we follow universality, antiquity, consent. We shall follow universality if we confess that one faith to be true, which the whole Church throughout the world confesses; antiquity, if we in no wise depart from those interpretations which it is manifest were notoriously held by our holy ancestors and fathers; consent, in like manner, if in antiquity itself we adhere to the consentient definitions and determinations of all, or at the least of almost all priests and doctors. (St Vincent of Lerins: Commonitorium, chapter 2)
Fr Chadwick has been ruminating on the Vincentian Canon which I've quoted above. St Vincent was writing between the third and fourth Oecumenical Councils at a time when the Monophysite controversy was raging before it was condemned at the Council of Chalcedon in 451. He writes in order to help the Church find a way of detecting heresy citing the great Heretics, Novatian, Sabellius, Donatus, Arius, Eunomius, Macedonius, Photinus, Apollinaris, Priscillian, Iovinian, Pelagius, Celestius, and Nestorius, all of whom were denounced by the first three Oecumenical Councils.
Of course, the great phrase defining "Catholic" as "quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus" is probably not as easy to apply when Church Fathers or Schools of Theology disagree. The Alexandrian School ultimately produced Arius, and Apollinaris was linked to the School of Antioch. The two schools of themselves were quite orthodox and produced a tension from which our view of the person of Our Lord Jesus Christ was revealed and clarified somewhat; yet they produced extremists whose work required the Councils to resolve.
I can only leave intellectual theology to my betters such as Fr Chadwick and his readers. My question is somewhat more pernickity. St Vincent produces a general statement, and general statements have to apply generally. That's the trouble with Universals.
If one says "Only physical evidence determines the truth" then where is the physical evidence which will determine the truth of that statement? If there's no such thing as absolute truth, then is the statement "there is no absolute truth" an absolute truth or not?
So, the question is, does the Vincentian Canon satisfy the Vincentian Canon? Can we say that "Moreover, in the Catholic Church itself, all possible care must be taken, that we hold that faith which has been believed everywhere, always, by all. For that is truly and in the strictest sense Catholic, which, as the name itself and the reason of the thing declare, comprehends all universally. This rule we shall observe if we follow universality, antiquity, consent. We shall follow universality if we confess that one faith to be true, which the whole Church throughout the world confesses; antiquity, if we in no wise depart from those interpretations which it is manifest were notoriously held by our holy ancestors and fathers; consent, in like manner, if in antiquity itself we adhere to the consentient definitions and determinations of all, or at the least of almost all priests and doctors." has been believed everywhere, always, by all?
If we can, then we have a self-consistent definition of Catholicism. If not, then the Vincentian Canon possesses no evidence to be part of the Catholic Faith. If Arianism fails the Vincentian Canon, then we can legitimately doubt that Arianism is Catholic. So what if the Vincentian Canon fails the Vincentian Canon?
Fortunately, it seems from the Commonitorium that St Vincent is setting up the basis upon which the Orthodox Churches understand the Faith. What can be considered more truly Universal than an Oecumenical Council? After all, the whole point is for the Bishops from all around the world to gather together in order to find consensus on matters of Faith in order to preserve the Faith and promulgate it into all territories. Thus in an Oecumenical Council, we have quod ubique in the gathering of the world's bishops, the quod semper in their intention to find and preserve the "faith which was once delivered unto the saints" in a consensus giving us the quod ubique. Thus we see that it is very much the raison d'etre of the Oecumenical Council to produce the Vincentian Canon. If the Councils are thus Catholic, so is the Vincentian Canon and thus it can be regarded as a proper universal statement.
This might be an exercise in raising futility or tautology to a high art for some folk; however, it does actually demonstrate the reliability of St Vincent's definition of "Catholic" as something the Early Church understood before it was thus phrased and as something accepted afterwards. We can accept this definition in good Faith. It means that any Church that accepts the doctrine of the Seven Oecumenical Councils of the Undivded Church is truly Catholic in principle. From the Eighth Council (the fourth in Constantinople) we see the beginnings of the schism which came to a head in 1054.
It also means that we can rule out the weaker definitions that have been promulgated since then. I've already said that the Catholic Church is not a church for anyone but for everyone. "Catholic" cannot mean "all-inclusive" because that would mean that it could include atheists and other religions which rather defeats the central tenets of Christianity. That's certainly not to say that non-Christians are irredeemable. Indeed, if the prayers of the Church at Mass are answered then the possibility does exist. For, at the offering of the Chalice we prayer that it may ascend as a sweet-smelling savour for our salvation and for that of the whole world.
This does actually bring out another aspect of the Catholic Church that is indeed universal. It should harbour the love of God for all of God's Creation. Time and again do we see the Church fail to do just that and inso failing, it fails to do what Our Lord demanded to be done always, everywhere and by all. That is just the fallibility of Man. The Church may indeed teach infallibly even if it is a case of "whatsoever they bid you observe , that observe and do; but do not ye after their works: for they say, and do not."
One must remember that St Ignatius of Antioch said in his letter to the Church in Smyrna. "wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church" (ὥσπερ ὅπου ἂν ῇ Ἰησοῦς Χριστός, ἐκεῖ ἡ καθολικὴ ἐκκλησία.) We also have the famous ubi caritas et amor, Deus ibi est. Thus the Catholic Church cannot exist where no love is. Without love, it really is all men dressing up in silly clothes and speaking old-fashioned words with no consideration for the meaning.
If we really do mean that we are catholic with either a C or a c, then we really need to be changing ourselves to become conveyors of the love of God into our communities. We are the ones that have to be for everyone, holding the Catholic Faith in our hearts as well as our minds so that all people can know Christ in us whoever we are, Jew or Greek, bond or free, male or female. One certainly does not have to be a Catholic Priest for that, for this is all our calling as Christians.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Epiphamily
Sermon
preached at Our Lady of Walsingham and St Francis on the first Sunday after
Epiphany 2014
Ben has been
found
wandering
around Bluewater
having run off
from his parents.
He is twelve
years old,
an
only child
and from
Inverness in Scotland.
He last saw his
parents 3 hours ago
when
he wandered off to look at
what was
happening in Winter Wonderland
and they have
clearly not noticed
that he’s gone.
He has been given no mobile
phone,
no
money
and no idea
where his parents are.
Doesn’t this
seem like
a case of neglect to you?
Should we inform
Social Services?
[PAUSE]
to
promote the notion of the functional family,
the loss and
discovery of Our Lord in the temple
must come as a
bit of an embarrassment.
We are presented
with
Our
Lord deliberately staying away
from His parents
in order to do
what He wants to do.
Even then it
takes Mary and Joseph
a
day to realise that He is not with them.
Just think of
it.
We Christians hold
Our
Lady and St Joseph up
as model
parents,
and we make the
categorical claim
that Our Lord is
sinless.
Does this
running away
mean that the Holy Family are just as,
if not more dysfunctional
than the average
family in Medway?
Does this mean
that Our Lord Jesus
is
not as sinless as one might think?
[PAUSE]
Twelve year-olds
are
actually quite interesting creatures.
A twelve
year-old
may
have completed their first year at secondary school,
so they are much
more confident
about what’s
going on
but they still
have a sense
of the
inquisitive.
They want to
know things
and
do indeed take the trouble to find out.
They have not
yet had that rush of hormones
that
makes the fourteen year-old
find thinking
hard and communication more so.
Twelve year-olds are at
their most articulate
and
communicative.
They will
certainly want to know
where
they have come from,
giving rise to
some potentially difficult questions
for Mum and Dad
to answer.
Our Lord at the
age of twelve
is
no different from any other twelve year-old.
[PAUSE]
We simply do not
know when Our Lord
becomes aware that He is the Son of God
or how He knows
it,
We do know that
He knows He is the Son of God
by the age of twelve.
We must remember
that Epiphany
means
“Revelation” or “Manifesting”
and the whole
life of Christ is spent revealing
the truth about
God and His love for us
in word and in
deed.
That does not
mean that
God’s
revelation of Himself to us
is going to be complete.
There will
always be things
that
we don’t know about Our Lord.
What we do know
is that
Jesus
leaves Mary and Joseph
to go to the
Temple to find His Father.
He goes to His Father’s house.
Why?
[PAUSE]
Again, we do not
have the full reason,
but
we do find Jesus sitting with
the thinkers and
teachers and academics
and both asking
and answering
some deep
theological questions.
It is clearly
imperative for Him
to
“be about His Father’s business”
whatever that
business is.
It is business
that clearly goes
above
normal family relationships
and yet it is
business which
Our Lady and St
Joseph
simply do not
understand,
and neither do
we – not fully.
There are times
when the family life of Jesus
does
not answer our questions
about how to be
a good family
as carefully as
we like.
Many people try
to live their lives by WWJD
– “what would Jesus do?”
If we go
strictly by this,
the example of Jesus here for twelve year olds
seems to be to
run off from your parents
to the nearest Church
at the next available
opportunity!
When your child
is the Son of God
and
He seeks to be in the place
where His
Father’s presence is closest to us,
this is
perfectly reasonable.
Surely it is a
child’s right to see his father!
However,
if your child is not the Son of God,
running off
anywhere without telling anyone
is just not the
right thing to do.
The family life
of Our Lord Jesus
is
not meant to be an absolute model
for the good
family.
So what does make a family a good family?
[PAUSE]
You know the
answer to that already!
It’s Love, that
wonderful unconditional love!
Any family that
truly
and unconditionally loves
each of its
members
is a good family.
This must
involve God somewhere
because
God is Love.
Our Lord may run
off to the Temple
without
telling His family,
but that doesn’t
mean He doesn’t love them.
It means that in
order to love His family,
He
must find His Father.
Love is His
Father’s business,
though we cannot fathom
the depths of that Love.
St John tells
us,
“Beloved,
let us love one another:
for love is of
God;
and every one
that loveth is born of God,
and knoweth God.
He that loveth
not knoweth not God;
for
God is love.
In this was
manifested the love of God toward us,
because
that God sent His only begotten Son into the world,
that we might live through Him.
Herein is love,
not
that we loved God,
but that He
loved us,
and sent His Son
to be
the propitiation
for our sins.”
We might not
understand that love fully,
but
we can certainly trust Our Lord
when he says
“seek and ye shall find”.
[PAUSE]
There are often
times when it seems
Jesus has run off and left us, His adopted
family,
without any reason.
Clearly, like
Our Lady and St Joseph,
we need to seek Him
and to help
others when they are seeking Him.
How can we make
sure that our Church
is
going to be the place - a good family!
- in which people
can find Him?