Today's Crisis of Faith

by Father Paul A. Duffner, O.P.

How often in recent years have we heard the question: "What
has happened in the Church in the past few decades? What has brought about the
religious crisis on the part of many who were brought up in Catholic families,
but no longer practice their faith? What has brought about the conflicting
opinions we hear expressed in dogma and morals, opinions not always in keeping
with traditional doctrine and practice" ?
As Pope Paul VI stated: "We thought that
after the Council there would be a day of sunshine for the history of the
Church, and instead we found storms". The years that followed the
Council have seen the rise of divisions within the
Church and dissent from
its teaching authority. What is the
source of this turmoil, this
confusion?
Not the Fruit of the Council
While the celebration of Vatican II might have been the occasion of
the outbreak of these problems, it was
not
its cause. The causes (they are many
and complex) go back many years before the Council. We will look at a few
of them.
While some of the changes brought about by the Council were disturbing to
"old time" Catholics, e.g. in the
liturgy of the Mass, those changes did express
the mind of the Church (I speak of the changes allowed, not the
abuses that
followed). Yet along with these, there came gradually and almost unnoticed some
changes, especially in the field of morality, that did
not express the mind of
the Church. New opinions of
morality began to be taught and
new practices
accepted, which not long before were recognized as against the
law of God.
There is nothing in the teachings of Vatican II that could be the source of
the errors that cropped up in the years following the
Council. However, when Pope John XXIII called for an "opening of the windows of the Church in order
to let in fresh air," that seemed to signal a certain freedom of thought in
the expression of theological matters; and freedom always brings with it the
possibility of being abused. As Father Hugh O’Connell commented in his book
"Keeping Your Balance in the Modern Church:"
"In the days before Vatican II, there was actually
a very considerable amount of theological speculation and innovation; there
were battles quite as heated as those going on today. The only difference
was that such ideas were quietly presented in theological journals, and were
subjected by experts to analysis and investigation, to weighing of reasons
pro and con, to a more or less general acceptance or rejection by qualified
theologians before they ever came to public attention."
With the new climate of freedom, however, the Council, in its desire
to update the expression of the Church’s liturgy and
practice, seemed to open
the door for the appearance of new ideas many of which were not in line with the
official teaching of the Church.
The Remnants of Modernism
Around the beginning of this century, Pope Pius X issued an
Encyclical Pascendi Gregis, in which he
condemned a number of
errors of his day
that are referred to as the heresy of Modernism.
It was referred to as the "synthesis of all heresies,"
as it affected the fields of philosophy, theology and
scriptures. It was an outgrowth of the agnosticism
of his time, and belief in a form of evolution called vital immanence.
It rejected, among other things, the idea of
a transcendent God, rejected absolute
unchanging norms of truth and
morality. God is identified with His creation, and
manifests His truth through the constant change that is going on in the
universe. His revelation to man does not come from without, but from within,
through personal experience. Thus religion consists in an interior experience,
as awareness of man’s relationship with God.
Along with the publication of the
Encyclical in
1907, there was published a
summary of 65 erroneous Modernist teachings
rejected by the Holy See. While this
helped to assure the clergy and laity of the official
Church teaching, the
sparks of the heresy did not entirely
die out, but kept smoldering - only to
resurface again later in the century under what present day theologians refer to
as Neo-Modernism.
That such ideas have not disappeared is evident from a present day educator,
who, along with others of his school of thought, has had considerable influence
on modern catechetics. Brother Gabriel Moran, for whom the basis of theology is
not supernatural revelation
but
experience, wrote in his book "Catechesis of
Revelation:"
"Revelation consists only in present conscious experience of people.
(p. 13) . . . There is no revelation except in God revealing Himself in
personal experience . . . One must choose to structure it (the curriculum)
according to the people precisely because that is where revelation is.
(p. 144) . . . People who demand that there be a higher norm of truth
than human experience are asking for an idol." (p. 45)
Since these opinions were expressly condemned by
Pope Pius X in 1907, how
true are the words of G.K.. Chesterton:
"Nine out of ten of what we call new ideas are simply old mistakes. The
Catholic Church has for one of her chief duties that of preventing people
from making those old mistakes; from making them over and over again, as
people will always do if they are left to themselves."
Neo-Modernism
Msgr. Eugene Kevane, in his book "Creed and Catechetics," sees the well known
"Dutch Catechism" as being heavily
infected with the remnants of Modernism.
"The characteristics of its Neo-Modernistic catechetical approach, its
ambiguities, its omissions and its outright doctrinal errors, live on in many .
. . programs of religious education, and in teaching aids which implement them."
(p. xvi)
Commenting on that Catechism, Father Edwin C. Garvey, in an article in the
HOMILETIC AND PASTORAL REVIEW entitled "Process Theology and the Crisis in Catechetics," wrote as follows:
"The Declaration of the Papal Commission of Cardinals on the new Dutch
Catechism, published in 1968, found it necessary to accuse this Catechism of
brutal education by the omission of central truths of the Catholic faith.
This commission pointed out that basic doctrines such as original sin,
satisfaction and redemption by Christ, the nature of the Mass, the Real
Presence, the ten commandments, the communion of saints, the angels and the
devils, immortality of the soul, the nature of the church, the role and
prerogatives of Mary, were either completely neglected or were vaguely
taught. Those familiar with religion textbooks presently used in America
know that the same criticism can be validly made of many . . . At the
present time the disease of Modernism has become so pervasive and so
virulent that, by comparison, as Maritain writes, the Modernism of Pius X’s
time was only a mild hay fever compared to the neo-modernist fever of
today."
It was precisely to emphasize the elements being
passed over in many modern
educational systems, or being incorrectly taught, that
Pope Paul VI issued his
'Creed of the People of God.'
The New Morality
Definition
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Conscience is an Act, a judgment of reason whereby the
human person recognizes the moral quality of a concrete act that he is going to perform, is in
the process of performing, or has already completed.
Conscience is not the Intellect,
it is not a Virtue,
it is a Practical Judgment
of the Intellect; and Prudence is the Virtue (a permanent
disposition of the soul) that guides that Practical Judgment. It
does not stem from emotions or
feelings. We never act on a doubtful conscience. If we do we say to God, "This
may please or offend You, but I don't care. I will do it anyway." |
Prudence
crushes
Satan
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As we have already pointed out, after the Council there was a growing
acceptance of new ideas of
morality, where certain practices began to be
accepted, which not long before were considered sinful. What is this "new
morality", and where did it come from? Without doubt
it did not come from
Vatican II, nor from any branch of the teaching authority of the Church. The
weakening of the faith of many
Catholics by Modernism paved the way for
it, but
the more immediate source from which it sprang was
existentialism, a
system of thought rejected by Pope Pius XII, that is based on the premise that
there is nothing that is absolute and unchangeable, that all things are in
continuous evolution. Applied to human activity,
it holds there are no
absolute,
universal moral laws. (Humani Generis, 6)
The new morality is known by various names. Sometimes
it is called
"existential ethics," but more often
it is known as "situation ethics."
It does
not obligate one to rely on the Church for guidance,
but allows one to rely on
conscience
alone in determining one’s course of action.
Situation ethics maintains that
moral decisions should no longer be based on
universal moral laws - such as the
10 commandments, that
objective moral
standards or laws are of little value in such decisions, because
moral problems
are personal and unique. Thus they hold that
moral decisions should be based on
one’s personal judgment in a given particular situation (hence "situation"
ethics). They reason in this manner:
since each situation is different, the
individual’s conscience alone must determine what is morally right for him,
apart from any universal principle or law. It is a matter between the individual
conscience and God. If one is sincere and conscientious, that is all that God
asks. Christians must learn to take the responsibility for their own acts,
instead of relying on external laws as a guide. Such (they say) is Christian
maturity.
Without going into further details as to this system of ethics, it might help
to a better understanding of these matters if we contrast the
traditional
theology on which the Church has relied over the
centuries, and the so-called
"new theology," or "new morality" of which we have been speaking. While all
dissenters from the
magisterium may not do so in all of these ways, the
following are some of the major areas of conflict.
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TRADITIONAL THEOLOGY stresses
God as the center of all things;
while the NEW THEOLOGY makes
man the center. Their attention is
mainly on man. God is not denied, but
love and service of God is reduced to
love and service of neighbor. Love of neighbor becomes the
first and
principal commandment. Commenting on this, Pope Paul VI said that while
love
of neighbor is essential, and on it we will be judged, "to give priority
of place to humanitarianism leads to the danger of transforming theology
into sociology, and of forgetting the basic hierarchy of things and their
values." (Allocution: July 3, 1968)
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TRADITIONAL THEOLOGY stresses that
truth is eternal and
changeless,
based on the changeless nature of things, and ultimately on
God Who is
eternal and changeless Truth. The
NEW MORALITY claims that all things are in
constant evolution, so there are no
absolute norms that apply to all
situations.
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TRADITIONAL THEOLOGY stresses that
God gave man an
interior guide - conscience,
but also an exterior guide - the
Church, which was established
by Christ to safeguard and interpret
divine revelation. The
NEW MORALITY
stresses that conscience
alone need be our guide in following Christ.
They
would not do away with the norms found in Scripture, but with any guidance
of the Church in interpreting them, so that the
conscience of the individual
would be the absolute master of his own decisions.
This, said Pope Pius XII, is the central weakness of the
new morality. It
was to the Church, and not to
individuals, that Christ gave
His revelation;
and it was to the Church that
Christ promised the
divine aid required for
avoiding error. "The autonomy of the individual conscience," said the
Pope, "cannot be reconciled with the divine plan, and can produce only
poisonous" (Radio Address, March 23, 1952).
This same rejection of the
Church as guide in interpreting
God’s revealed
word is found in many who seek to apply Liberation Theology to the
social
problems of today. In line with Marxist thinking,
they claim the Church is
influenced by capitalistic ideology which colors
its interpretation of the
gospel. The gospel, they say, must be read from the standpoint of the
poor,
the oppressed. Only the
poor, they believe, and those who take the side of
the poor and fight for
them, can understand its true meaning.
In line with this, the present writer spent
eight years working with the
poor in Central America, where the teachings of
Liberation Theology were
being applied; and the principal "liberation" that he witnessed was the
liberation of those proposing these ideas - from traditional theology and
from the magisterium of the Church.
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TRADITIONAL THEOLOGY stresses that
supernatural public revelation of
God’s message to
mankind ended with the death of the apostles. As the
Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation in
Vatican II expressed it: "We now await no further new public revelation before the glorious
manifestation of Our Lord Jesus Christ." (Note: We distinguish
public
revelation [which ended with the apostles] from private revelation, which
does not add to the deposit of faith, i.e. belief in it is
not a requisite
for salvation; e.g., the revelations at
Lourdes and Fatima.)
The NEW THEOLOGY holds that public revelation did not end with the
apostles, but is still going on, something that is communicated and
understood through the mode of personal experience. In this manner an
"on-going" revelation is still bringing new divine truths to mankind.
Consequently they don’t speak of the development of
dogma or of moral norms,
but the evolution of them. Thus doctrines and moral norms can change from
age to age. |
We can see this concept at work if we examine the instructions in
faith and
morals given in some of our catechetical texts. The true dogmas of our
faith are
slighted, if not ignored; while the students are urged to discern their
feelings
and experience . . . which means they are to draw from their own
experience and
feelings - whether or not they will accept this or that
teaching of the Church.
A common example of this in modern education methods is referred to as "values
clarification."
Safeguarding the Gift of Faith
Since our Catholic faith is a
divine gift enabling us to believe with
conviction divine truths as proposed by the
Church, we can see how the
subjectivism of the
false doctrines we have been considering will
undermine and
pave the way for the loss of that
precious gift. No Catholic ever
loses that
gift of faith, except he deliberately
rejects God’s revealed word as handed down
by the Church.
When a heresy has to do with the very
nature of God, and His relationship with
His creation, it is bound to have
fundamental and far-reaching effects on religion and religious beliefs. While
there may be few today who publicly hold in full these erroneous religious
doctrines of which we have been speaking, there are many overtones of
them in
some of our present day texts; and the effects of them is seen in the thinking
of many Catholics. How else could there be (if the polls are correct) a
considerable percentage of Catholics who reject the
Church’s official teaching
on contraceptives, the use of which Pope Paul VI declared is
intrinsically
wrong, and can never be right.
As to when one loses the
gift of faith, God
only knows. Externally one’s life may remain much the same . . . still going to
Mass, receiving the
Sacraments. One can use his free will to
reject the official
teaching of the Church, and no longer be guided by the
divine light (faith)
received at baptism. Contrary to what the "new theology" might say,
faith is not
a matter of the feelings.
The gift of faith (for one with the use of
reason) requires a surrender of
both mind and
will. Hence Vatican II, quoting Saint Paul refers to the
obedience
of faith (Romans 16:26) ". . . an obedience by which man commits his whole self
freely to God, offering full submission of intellect and will to God Who
reveals, and freely assenting to the truth revealed by Him." (Dei Verbum, 5)
Through the virtue of faith, the
mind of
man is brought into contact with the mind of God Who
is Infinite Truth. Thus, a condition of sharing in
God’s truth is the humble
submission of the mind, accepting
His revealed word, not because one sees
clearly the reasons for
it, but on the authority of the
infinite God revealing
it, and on His promise to
preserve from error the
Church through which that
truth is handed down.
Saint Paul speaks of this submission of the
mind when he says that by means of
spiritual weapons "we demolish sophistries . . . and all that rears its proud
head against the knowledge of God . . . bringing every mind into captivity to
the obedience of Christ." (2Corinthians 10:4-5)
Pope Leo XIII applies that text to those who dissent: "They who take from
Christian doctrine what they please, lean on their own judgment, not on faith .
. . not ‘bringing the mind into captivity to the obedience of Christ,’ . . .
they more truly obey themselves than God."
This surrender of the mind does
not in any way infringe on the freedom and
liberty of man. It does not degrade
him, but rather
perfects his
knowledge of
God’s truth. It is a surrender, a submission, yes,
but one that is freely given,
and a surrender not to man,
but to God. It is a surrender that does
not enslave,
but rather one that frees one from the
doubts and uncertainties that would
invariably arise if man were left to
himself. It is a necessary condition to
attain "the truth that makes one free." (John 3:32)

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