Faith Magazine (Catholic Journal)
Faith Magazine (Catholic Journal)
Faith Magazine (Catholic Journal)
P RO M OT I N G A N E W S Y N T H E S I S O F FA I T H A N D R E A S O N
Editorial
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Can we be sure God exists? What makes Man unique? The Disaster of Sin Jesus Christ Our Saviour Jesus Christ Our Redeemer NEW The Church: Christs Voice to the World
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Contents
02 Editorial: Science and Religion: Is Synthesis Possible? 06 The Vocation of Marriage
Mgr Cormac Burke
15 Notes From Across the Atlantic Fr Peter Mitchell on John Paul IIs continuing witness. 16 Letters Newman on Evolution, Christs Suffering, Quantum Mechanics, and the Secondary Curriculum. 19 The Road From Regensburg The Popes latest calls for synthesis. 20 Comment on the Comments William Oddie takes a sobering stock of the latest information concerning the horror of abuse of the young. 22 The Truth Will Set You Free Roy Peachey offers practical suggestions for Catholicising the English curriculum. 24 Book Reviews Christopher Zealley finds a well researched investigation into the spirit of Tractarianism largely enlightening. Fr Chris Colven recommends a deep but accessible guide to maintaining spiritual growth by the new Bishop of Aberdeen. Fr Stephen Brown applauds some much needed catechetical DVDs. 28 Cutting Edge Vatican appoints a protestant, Templeton honours an atheist.
Editor Hugh MacKenzie, St. Mary Magdalens, Clergy House, Peter Avenue, Willesden Green, London NW10 2DD, Tel 020 8451 6720, [email protected] Deputy Editor Kevin Douglas Editorial Board David Barrett, Timothy Finigan, Andrea Fraile, Roger Nesbitt, Christina Read, Dominic Rolls, Luiz Ruscillo, Mark Vickers. Book Reviews Mark Vickers, St. Peters, Bishops Rise, Hatfield, Herts AL10 9HN, [email protected] Advertising Manager Scott Deeley, c/o Holy Cross, 11 Bangholm Loan, Edinburgh EH5 3AH, [email protected] Subscriptions and Faith-Keyway Trust Publications Office Sr Roseann Reddy, 104 Albert Road, Glasgow G42 8DR, [email protected] UK 25/year, Europe (inc.Eire) 29/E37/year. Surface Mail overseas 28/$56/E36/year. Air Mail overseas 33/$66/E42/year. Student rate 17/$34/E22/year. Single copies 5 inc. p&p. Bulk orders 3.50 plus p&p. Published by the Faith-Keyway Trust, registered charity No. 278314. Printed by Tudor Printing 01772 633098, ISSN 1356-126X.
faith
July and August 2011 Volume 43 Number 4
Synthesis
The word synthesis implies something more than harmonious co-existence. Our regular readers would not be flabbergasted to learn that we aim for that something more when we write about science and religion. We do that because we believe in what John Paul II called the profound and indissoluble unity between the knowledge of reason and the knowledge of faith (Fides et Ratio, 16). Our editorial argues, among other things, that the object of modern science is not a radically delimited subset of the physical realm, and thus that scientific methodology, properly understood, is just a part of that exercise of human reason which is ultimately in profound synthetic harmony with faith. If one attempts to reduce science to something that, for instance, has no effect upon metaphysics you undermine the dynamic interweaving of the personal actions of faith and reason, which comprise the personal relationship with God in Christ. This thoroughgoing approach to faith and reason means that, as ever, we publish pieces that reveal what we think are aspects of the effect upon our church and society of the 20th century collapse of an agreed and coherent vision of the faith to hand on to our seminarians and our people. Fiorella Nash shows how the ungrounded slogans of the anti-life mentality can impact upon the harrowing reality of mothers dying in childbirth. Cormac Burke shows how it is surprising that we, as a culture and even in the Church, need to be reminded of the purposes of marriage concerning procreation and mutual growth in generosity. William Oddie shows how the abuse crisis reveals a Church shamefully embroiled in a particularly decadent strand of our society, and so points to our own need of purification and penance. Our philosophical discussion with Fr McDermott on whether the universe is ultimately rational shows a mutual, and we hope heartening, search for synthesis. Yet it also shows some of the divergent metaphysical approaches which characterise modern Catholic thought and, in as much as they put a brake upon coherent vision, also slow up the new evangelisation to which we are called. It is a further sign that we must wait upon the Lord with patience and penance. For as John Paul II expressed it: This unity of truth, natural and revealed, is embodied in a living and personal way in Christ He is the eternal Word in whom all things were created, and he is the incarnate Word who in his entire person reveals the Father [Fides et Ratio, 34].
02 Faith I Synthesis
Opposition Competition
In this position, science are religion are thought to make mutually exclusive truth claims. Either science explains everything or religion does. Radical creationists can be found on the religious side of this divide, although not all who are called creationists go as far as to dismiss all science as opposed to faith. On the scientific side are the secular materialists who deny a priori the existence of anything tanscending the material cosmos. As the Oxford University chemist Peter Atkins puts it in his new book On Being: If absolutely and unreservedly everything is an aspect of the physical, material world, then I do not see how it can be closed to scientific investigation The scientific method is the only means of discovering the nature of reality. Atkins even argues that the substrate of existence is nothing at all, because the total electrical charge of the universe is zero due to the balance of positive and negative particles. Charge was not created at the creation. Nothing separated into equal and opposite charges. Since matter is really nothing, he concludes that nothing really matters or even really exists. Like most atheist scientists he shows himself to be a very poor philosopher. With rather obvious sleight of mind he has made Nothing into a Something with cosmic potential. The scholastic mind of the middle ages called this materia prima and recognised that it cannot exist except in relation to a principle of form a principle of organisation and identity. Even if there are only positive and negative charges at the beginning, there is already a system and a context, a meaning that encompasses those mutual definitions. And where there is meaning, there is Mind. The tendency of most Western scientists is to be reductionist, looking for the key to existence in the lowest common components of matter/energy. Yet in doing so they fail to notice that the most basic concepts of their science depends on matter embodying organised information at every level. To reject reductionism in this way is to be open to the question: What is the Prime Principle of Organisation? Within the terms of its own reference as an enquiry into material things, experimental science cannot address the question of the ultimate cause of the universe. It is not within its remit. However, in its broader, philosophical sense, scientific thought cannot escape the question of creation because it is about the Cause of all causality. Faced with the ultimate question of where the ordered energies of the universe and ordering laws of science themselves come from, many atheist materialists simply abdicate the search for truth and say that there is no reason. Others, like Atkins fellow Oxford academic, Thomas Nagel, are more honest in admitting that this refusal to face the ultimate question thrown up by scientific enquiry is based on a desire to avoid its conclusion and a positive will to disbelieve: even if in due course science has to throw in the towel and, heaven forbid, concede that the universe was created
Identity Conflation
The second possible position with regard to science and religion is to identify them more or less completely by seeing the evolving universe as driven by a single energy which runs through and builds into everything that we call matter and everything that we call spirit. This is explicitly the thought of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin within Christian theology, and also of many variants of New Age thinking. For him all spiritual realities, including the soul of man and indeed Christ Himself, are the product of matter in evolution, because evolution is itself the product of God who immerses Himself in matter; and the spiritual energy that is latent in all physical energy crystallises into the presence of the Divine. Such a world view can be found in more subtle and nuanced forms in the thought of other major thinkers in Catholic theology. The all-embracing sweep of this way of seeing the world has its attractions, but when matter and spirit are identified in this way, it has some serious implications which are not compatible with orthodox Christianity. The process of cosmic evolution becomes the measure of all reality, spiritual as well as physical. The moral law and doctrinal truth are no longer objective, but are ever-changing as human nature itself evolves. Most serious of all, the literal Divinity of Christ is compromised, and the distinction between God and creation is blurred a mistake that can eventually lead to pantheism. By the same token, the objectivity of scientific law and scientific enquiry is also compromised by conflating matter and spirit at every level of creation. Matter is determined by laws that can be expressed mathematically. Even the so-called and much misunderstood uncertainty principle, and quantum physics as a whole, work according to precise levels of mathematically expressible variability within a defined system. Scientists are rightly suspicious about attributing spirituality to material processes or bringing religious ideas directly into the laboratory.
Separation Coexistence
For some, this has led to a third option with regard to science and religion: saying that they do not contradict but simply coexist in their separate arenas. They may coincide in persons who are scientists and also believers, or in private encounters between individuals, but there is no possibility of, or need for, a synthesis between our scientific and religious world views.
04 Faith I Science and Religion: Is Synthesis Possible?
Science studies the world from the point of view of its physical components. Theology studies the same world from the point of view of what it tells us about God, and what God has told us
Revelation, as the highest Wisdom, synthesises and illuminates all the insights of the lower sciences. So, while scientific enquiry and theology retain their own proper methods, theres only one reality, illuminated by both reason and revelation. If it comes from the Mind of God, synthesis must ultimately be possible. Unless you say theres no such thing as Truth, just different truths that coexist. words and meanings. Likewise the cosmic equation of energies which is the universe becomes intelligible once we see that it is centred on a truly transcendent Mind which is not identified with the flow of matter-energy itself. Mind is that which controls and directs substantially and of its nature: Matter-energy is that which is controlled and directed substantially, and of its nature, by Mind. (Catholicism p. 11) This is the core principle of what Holloway names The Law of Control and Direction. The Law of Control and Direction is not a law of matter in a specific sense. It is not the law of this or that event and effect. It is a Law in Matter that is cosmic and all-inclusive, so that the entire universe is one equation of meaningful development in mutual relativity of part on part at all times and throughout all space. (Catholicism p. 64) Scientists already intuit that the various laws of matter/energy are really a partial expression of a unified law that makes the universe a single equational reality. It is the very thrust of science to connect everything on a mathematical as well as an experimental level. We can go much further and say that the whole cosmos will only make sense, even as a material equation, within a higher Wisdom or Law that relates all creatures to the Creator; relates body and soul in Man as one creature without confusion of orders, and Man to God as his true environment; and, finally relates all Creation and the whole of humanity to God Incarnate in Christ as their source and their goal.
Conclusion
Galileos famous quip that the Bible was written to show us how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go is, of course, true. Similarly, the stars cannot reveal the depths of God any more than they can redeem us from sin and draw us into the fullness of Divine Intimacy. Yet the heavens do proclaim the glory of God (Ps 19) and the human mind does begin to recognise its Creator though created things. Moreover, Christ sheds light on the meaning of all things and brings them to perfection: even the stars of the night sky find their ultimate purpose as the crowning glory of the vocation of matter through Our Blessed Lady, through whom God becomes Incarnate as Lord of all Time and Space, as we graphically proclaim every Easter on the Paschal candle. While scientists like Brian Cox give popular and compelling accounts of the wonders of the universe (see his BBC2 TV series of that name), and atheists like Dawkins and Hawkin claim it all disproves God, we need to show how science and religion come from one Wisdom and lead to the One Wisdom Incarnate, Jesus Christ. Science and religion do come together in persons, but it needs to be in persons who can give answers to a sceptical world and restore the full Catholic vision of Creation in Christ. See our first Road from Regensburg entry for some relevant Papal comments.
Science and Religion: Is Synthesis Possible? I Faith 05
Marriage is not a haven of love, but a school of love, for love must be learnt
To come out of self-love is not easy, and yet it is essential. If I retreat from the generous dedication demanded by a permanent and worthwhile commitment, I am falling back into that false self-love which always wants to put self ones comfort or preference or sterile independence at the centre of ones concerns. That is the lot not only of those who divorce but also, even if to a lesser extent, of those spouses who remain together but have given up on the effort to love.
Disadvantaged Children
What a pity and impoverishment if parents forget this truly God-given mission and privilege: to endeavour that their children grow in an atmosphere of dedicated and generous love. The lack of experience of this in childhood is surely a significant contributory factor to selfishness and sadness in adulthood. So many of todays children are disadvantaged, in the lack not so much of material things as of the experience of a family life that could turn them into mature, generous and responsible young persons. Instead of that, what do we see? More and more young people who are turned in on themselves, mean or vain, prone to greed or jealousy, lacking self-control, inconstant. It is particularly in well-off families that one finds such underdeveloped children. The fault in large part lies with the parents; and that in two ways.
It is not that people expect too much of marriage, they expect the wrong thing
On the one hand is the fact that the parents are physically absent from the home for so much of the time. Parents can be so absorbed in being a success as professionals that they become a dismal failure as parents; or devoting so much time to earning money, perhaps precisely so that their children can go to good schools, that they have no concern or energy left to create that type of family life which forms children more than any school, however good. But there is also the absence of other brothers and sisters, not only sufficient in number (three or four or five) but also close enough in age (with a gap of no more than a couple of years down the line), so that they can grow up in the rough and tumble that should be an essential component of family life. Yes (the point needs to be emphasised), some brawling and fighting between the children may be bothersome for the parents (do they marry so as never to be bothered?), but it is an integral part of family education. Without this children will be less likely to learn that it is selfishness to want always to have ones own way, meanness never to wish to share, and fatal to bear grudges (because God will not forgive those who do not learn to forgive). And how otherwise can parents fulfill that indispensable part of their role which, through their presence on the family playing field itself, is to be referees or arbiters of those natural sibling squabbles, gradually preparing their children to grow up into open, fair-minded and responsible members of adult society?
more and more Catholics have become infected with the mindset that regards children as optional extras and by the quasi-exaltation of Natural Family Planning
[Perhaps one should add that, in some places at least, young people are let down by marriage preparation courses which fail to emphasise, in all its beauty, the call to generous co-creation inherent in the married vocation.]
Many Catholic couples today seem to have lost the sense of the divine adventure
The Career Woman
But surely another may object the Church today insists that the world needs to be evangelised by the witness of ordinary Christians in their professional work; and that is what I want to do. Indeed; but your objection seems to imply an opposition between your professional work outside the home and your work in the home, as if the latter were not work which is obviously false but also as if it were not professional which it certainly is.
parents have let themselves be brainwashed into thinking that their roles must be equal, not complementary
Raising a family is a job and a profession as much as any other; one with its challenges, satisfactions, disappointments It is a profession in the most noble sense, and one that you should be especially proud of. In fact it has a dignity to it that cannot be rivalled by any other human calling. If you dont realise and rejoice in that, something is seriously missing in your human formation and outlook. In all societies until our own, motherhood, along with virginity, has been considered the special dignity and glory of woman. God wished that dignity to be supremely expressed in his own ideal woman, Mary, Virgin and Mother. Modern radical feminism despises this ideal.4 The true feminist is proud of being a woman and seeks to develop a truly feminine identity. Women who are not proud of being women have indeed an identity problem on their hands. They need to ask themselves: Am I glad that I am a woman? Why? How feminine am I? Is the way of fulfilment that I have in mind a feminine way or a masculine way? Do I think of fulfilment or success mainly in terms of being higher on the professional or social ladder? Am I happy to serve or do I want to be the boss? Suppose it is a husband and wife who set up as partners or managers in a wholesaling or retailing business. Do they first sit down to calculate how much each one will be paid? Or do they not rather think that as a joint venture the profit will accrue to both, even though each will no doubt be assigned different responsibilities? Well, that is exactly what a couple, if they are normal, set about when they marry: to engage together in the joint venture of setting up a family. The problem today is that in that marvellous shared family venture, parents have let themselves be brainwashed into thinking that their roles must be equal, not complementary, that they can measure each ones performance by the amount of money each earns, that the bread-winner is more important than the home-maker. But this is simply senseless. It shows that they have not thought for themselves or that they do not know what marriage is really about or why, in this case, they have married. It is no exaggeration to say that the family is the crisis area in society. The health of any society depends on the health of the family, and in general today the family is very, very weak. It is the mission of parents to make it strong. It is a God-given task that was never so urgent and that God must bless and reward as never before.
Notes 1 Some writers, especially among canonists, have taken the bonum or good of the spouses to mean essentially their human fulfilment or a satisfying marital life. This is groundless, both theologically and canonically. Good in this expression has much the same meaning as in common good or good of the people. Taxes or traffic laws are meant to be for the good of the people, including those who find them burdensome. 2 Suggestions that Church magisterium no longer teaches that serious reasons are required for practising NFP have no foundation. Humanae Vitae says, those are considered to exercise responsible parenthood who prudently and generously decide to have a large family, or who, for serious reasons and with due respect to the moral law, choose to have no more children for the time being or even for an indeterminate period (no. 10; cf. no. 16). Pope John Paul was emphatic in teaching that [t]he use of the infertile periods for conjugal union can be an abuse if the couple, for unworthy reasons, seeks in this way to avoid having children, thus lowering the number of births in their family below the morally correct level. This morally correct level must be established by taking into account not only the good of ones own family, and even the state of health and the means of the couple themselves, but also the good of the society to which they belong, of the Church, and even of the whole of mankind. Humanae Vitae presents responsible parenthood as an expression of a high ethical value. In no way is it exclusively directed to limiting, much less excluding, children. It means also the willingness to accept a larger family (General Audience, Sept 5, 1984). In his 1995 encyclical, Evangelium Vitae, he taught: In its true meaning, responsible procreation requires couples to be obedient to the Lords call and to act as faithful interpreters of his plan. This happens when the family is generously open to new lives, and when couples maintain an attitude of openness and service to life, even if, for serious reasons and in respect for the moral law, they choose to avoid a new birth for the time being or indefinitely (no. 97; emphasis added). The Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992) says, For just reasons, spouses may wish to space the births of their children The Compendium of the Catechism of 2005, in answer to the question, When is it moral to regulate births?, replies: The regulation of births, which is an aspect of responsible fatherhood and motherhood, is objectively morally acceptable when it is pursued by the spouses without external pressure; when it is practised not out of selfishness but for serious reasons; and with methods that conform to the objective criteria of morality, that is, periodic continence and use of the infertile periods (no. 497). 3 Men admire motherhood. More than women do today. Nothing makes a husband look up more to his wife than the fact that she is the mother, the dedicated mother, of his children. 4 What it proposes instead is in effect a masculinisation of women, who are then left with no feminine identity and are even ashamed of being considered feminine. A feminism that despises what is feminine is a contradiction in terms.
For a couple to avoid having a child, without serious reason, is a sign that their mutual love is marred by calculation and self-centredness
Service, love for the spirit of service, is the key to solving the problems implied here. Only the person man or woman whose approach to life is one of service can live an admirable and fulfilled life. This is elementary for a Christian. Mary, the greatest woman and human person ever, is proud to see herself as ancilla Domini, handmaid of the Lord. Jesus comes as one who serves and says that if anyone wants to be great, he or she must serve. Most people are far from thinking in these terms today, and so are far from any true greatness and perhaps indeed of salvation. As Christians, service has to be the ideal of our life. If it is not, then we are not following the way of Christ; and whatever hopes we may have for our salvation, sanctity in this life is clearly out of the question for us.
statistics alone cannot convey the full horror of young women dying unattended
First, this category usually includes deaths as a result of spontaneous abortion, otherwise known as miscarriage, giving a distorted picture of the number of women who are dying as a result of induced abortion. Second, it should be noted that it can be extremely difficult even for a trained doctor to determine whether a woman in the first trimester of pregnancy is experiencing life-threatening complications as a result of miscarriage or abortion. The symptoms are so similar that an online abortion group which sells pills to women in pro-life countries instructs women who suffer complications: If you live in a place where abortion is a crime and you dont have a doctor you trust, you can still access medical care. You do not have to tell the medical staff that you tried to induce an abortion; you can tell them that you had a spontaneous miscarriageThe symptoms are exactly the same and the doctor will not be able to see or test for any evidence of an abortion. Third, we should note the loaded use of unsafe here. Any medical procedure which involves the ending of one or both human lives involved is by definition unsafe and it is unsafe whether it occurs in Nairobi or New York. The abortion lobby has been very successful in creating a false association between safe and legal abortion (a favourite line of pro-abortion politicians is that abortion should be safe, legal and rare) with the implication being that if abortion were only decriminalised in every country of the world, maternal deaths as a result of abortion would be virtually eliminated. But any medical procedure involves a level of risk and abortion is no different, legal or otherwise. In developed countries (where abortion is most likely to be legal) 8.2% of maternal deaths are the result of abortion complications; in India, where abortion is legal, mortality from abortion accounts for around 16% of all maternal deaths. South Africa, which has had abortion on demand for years has witnessed a fourfold increase in maternal mortality since a UK-funded abortion organisation set up clinics around that country. As SPUCs Peter Smith commented:
A Pro-Life Response
It is not enough simply to condemn the actions of anti-life forces for exploiting the suffering of women to promote the ideology of abortion. The tragedy of maternal mortality needs to be addressed, not exploited, and it requires a courageous and honest response. It is for this reason that SPUC has launched The Mayisha Campaign (Mayisha meaning Life in Swahili) to raise awareness about maternal mortality, dispel the myths put about by abortion groups and lobby the Department for International Development to adopt an ethical foreign policy which respects the lives of both mothers and their babies. Abortion is not the sad necessity nor the empowering procedure it iks presented as by groups like Marie Stopes International and International Planned Parenthood Federation it needs to be recognised as part of the problem. Dr Robert Walley, the British-born founder and director of the international organisation of Catholic obstetricians and gynaecologists MaterCare International, puts it succinctly when he says: Unfortunately, the international safe motherhood initiative has accepted the current culture of death prevalent in obstetrics and gynaecology, as abortion is included as the solution to maternal health problems. All of this points to a real poverty the lack of love and compassion. The staff and volunteers at MaterCare International (MCI) know something about love and compassion for the forgotten mothers of the developing world. They provide life-saving assistance to mothers in Kenya and Ghana and have been providing emergency help in Haiti since an
12 Faith I The Exploitation of Maternal Mortality/Discerning Ultimate Intelligibility: A Discussion With John M. Mcdermott
Materia for Aquinas is not non-being in the sense of chaos or negation, but the lowest degree of esse/being. (2 Sentences d.12 art. 4 resp). Aristotle and Aquinas speak rather of polymorphic potential, not an infinite void, which could (erroneously) imply an equal and opposite pole of existence to Gods infinite Being. As we argued in our November 2010 editorial, science is not the study merely of individual entities in the Aristotelian sense, which must condemn it to the realm of the metaphysically unknowable and irrelevant. Science is the study of the created order in its material/formal relationships up to and including the bodily existence of Man. It cannot, therefore, in Christian terms, be an all-sufficient answer to Life, Love and even to the Universe. For material existence relates intrinsically to the higher order of Mind or Spirit. Matter (in the modern sense of material creatures with their potential/formal identities) not only relates to the Mind of God through which it is framed in meaningful and dynamic order, it is an order that is founded through the living Wisdom of God whose Personal Incarnation is the very raison dtre of the physical creation in the first place. If matter were indeed the ultimate unknowable and were meaningless, then Sartre would be right and the turn to a God of love would be an attempt to escape the inevitable conclusion that individual existence is indeed intrinsically empty and absurd. And if that were true, then how could God manifest himself through matter or through anything created at all?
Gods infinity does not mean he is the most abstract, but that he is the most absolutely individual and concrete.
The very fact of the Incarnation sheds light upon the foundations of matter and corporeality, which were gratuitously created for and towards that most meaningful of ends. It tells us that matter is not meaningless and nothing. It is contingent and dependent, only capable of being fully understood within the higher context of the plenary purpose of Gods plan for creation. It is in God, not in matter, that man strikes an absolute limit to his knowing. Gods infinity does not imply that he is the most abstract, but that he is the most absolutely individual and concrete, the most necessary and supremely Existential Being, beyond anything we have the mental or metaphysical capacity to imagine. 4. We deny the concept of absolute and infinite non-being. The concept of non-being is an unconscious hangover from a pagan cosmic dualism which owes more to Plato than to Ariostotle and is alien to Thomas Aquinas. There is only God and that which he creates, however minimal its entitative constitution may be. Non-being simply IS NOT by definition, unless we are to posit some infinite and eternal sea of existential emptiness which surrounds and circumscribes the equally infinite Being of God. For if matter is truly non-being, except in some comparative and analogical sense, then God does not create it!
Discerning Ultimate Intelligibility: A Discussion With John M. Mcdermott I Faith 13
Response by Fr McDermott
I am grateful to the editors of Faith for publishing my article, criticising its insufficiencies, and allowing me a response to clarify some misapprehensions. The first misapprehension concerns non-being. I did not intend an infinite void opposed to God. In the classical tradition of Aristotle and Aquinas prime matter, the principle of individuality conjoined to form, is identified as non-being. For them matter always exists within form. It is unintelligible to the human mind. Thomas writes, Matter in itself has no being (esse) and cannot be known (S.T. I, 15, 3, 3). But God created it and knows it thoroughly; He knows singulars individuated by matter (S.T. I, 14, 11c; 15, 3, 4; 44, 2; ScG I, 65; De Ver. 2, 5). Thus Thomas explicitly denies that matter is of itself unknowable (De Ver. 2, 5, 12). What man cannot know God knows. Thomas clearly oscillates between human and divine perspectives. So he paradoxically affirms that prime matter, non-being, participates in goodness and beauty (De Nom. Div. 4, 4, 355; S.T. I, 5, 3, 1.2; 5, 4, 3). I refer readers to The Mystery of Matter for Thomas complex understanding of prime matter and Matter, Modern Science, and God for the recurrence of matters paradoxes in modern science; both articles are scheduled for proximate publication in Angelicum. Sartres philosophy is abhorrent to me because it recognises no norm outside human reason, sees reason as absurd, and makes all value dependent upon arbitrary choice. That spells
I affirm a structure in reality intelligible to the human mind. It consists of the polar tension between finite and infinite While reason cannot resolve that tension human experience is wider than pure reason.
Since all thought presupposes an absolute (infinite), God can be known by thought, even apart from Christian revelation if man can experience true morality! Such morality involving self-sacrifice for others is ultimately love, grounded in God who is Love. In a fallen world, no man can authoritatively assure others of loves reality except the One who is identically Love. Moreover, only absolute Love can restore creations primordial unity destroyed by sin. Once we can see that meaning is given to us in love, human science surrenders its hubristic claim as judge over all and recognises love as mystery and gift. Then it understands its abstractions as meaningfully approximating Gods mind. This is not Barthian faith, a leap into darkness with an intellect incapable of attaining truth. Rather by acknowledging love, reason finds itself grounded in reality and validated. When confronted by suffering, death, and sin, it does not despair but affirms meaning in Christ crucified, whose resurrection proves that Love is stronger than sin and death.
at the Mass of Beatification, this is what was pleasing to the Lord. Perhaps the most moving moment of the day came at the very beginning of the Mass, immediately following Pope Benedicts pronouncement of the formula of beatification, when the tapestry depicting the smiling face of the new Blessed was unveiled on the faade of St. Peters Basilica. The crowd erupted with joy at that moment, as if John Paul II was again entering the Square in the Popemobile for a Mass or a Wednesday audience. But this time the shouts of joy contained an even deeper and richer significance: the man who by the witness of his life tirelessly proclaimed Jesus Christ to the whole world was now acknowledged to be in the presence of Christ in heaven, radiant in his holiness among the countless throng of blesseds and saints he himself had named over the course of his long pontificate. Throughout the weekend of the beatification celebrations, Rome once again looked like it was in the midst of one of John Pauls World Youth Day celebrations. Along the cobblestone streets surrounding the Vatican, thousands of young people camped out in every direction, packed like sardines in the hope of getting into St. Peters Square, or at least close by, for the Mass of Beatification. Once more the old familiar cheers of Giovanni Paolo! followed by a series of claps resounded through the Square, with an added Santo Subito! to boot. As they had for his funeral, the youth of the world came to Rome to give back to their spiritual father, to thank him by their presence for the way he has irrevocably affected their lives by telling them that the Church believes in them and that the Third Millennium desperately needs their courageous, joyful and radical witness to the Gospel. It was as if John Paul was back, said one young seminarian in attendance,
acknowledging the particular charism of hope and enthusiasm which the Holy Spirit is continuing to pour upon the Church through the witness of Karol Wojtyla. Pope Benedict himself acknowledged this charism of vibrant hopefulness in his homily at the Mass of Beatification, saying that Blessed John Paul directed Christianity once again to the future and rightly reclaimed for Christianity that impulse of hope which had in some sense faltered before Marxism and the ideology of progress. John Paul restored to Christianity its true face as a religion of hope, said Pope Benedict, and that contagious, overflowing hope was again made visible in St. Peters Square and the streets of Rome during the celebration of the beatification of the one who was chosen by the Holy Spirit to lead the Church across the threshold of hope that is the dawn of the Third Millennium of Christianity. The cause of that hope is the fulfilment of every human longing in Jesus Christ, the Redeemer of Man the enduring legacy of Blessed John Paul II is nothing else than Jesus Christ. On a more personal note, the beatification of John Paul II has renewed my faith in and understanding of the communion of saints. I can say proudly that I knew him when he was Pope! I have attended World Youth Days with him, I have listened to his homilies, I have read his encyclicals, I entered the seminary at his urgingand now he has made it to the goal of eternal life in the kingdom of heaven. Blessed John Paul II remains my spiritual father, and he continues to guide and bless my life by his witness and intercession. Such confident hope was expressed by Pope Benedict at the conclusion of his homily that joyful morning: Beloved Pope John Paul II continue, we implore you, to sustain from heaven the faith of Gods people. You often blessed us in this Square from the Apostolic Palace: Bless us, Holy Father! Amen.
Notes From Across the Atlantic I Faith 15
The Editor, St. Mary Magdalens Clergy House, Peter Avenue, Willesden Green, London NW10 2DD [email protected]
trees in full growth whose seed is in themselves, or rocks with fossils in them. I mean that it is as strange that monkeys should be so like men, with no historical connection between them, as that there should be no course of facts by which fossil bones got into rocks. Yours faithfully Ian Devaux Bear Street Nayland, Suffolk
NEWMAN ON EVOLUTION
Dear Father Editor, In the January and February issue there is a quotation from a letter in which Newman explains why he does not fear Darwins theory. Another of Newmans comments is quoted in Father Dessains short biography of Newman (third edition, 1980, page 81), in which he says that Newman found no difficulty in accepting the idea of evolution as long as it was theistic. The quoted passage, which was written in 1863 in Newmans Philosophical Notebook, seems to indicate that Newman was attracted by the conceptually simple way in which Darwins theory accounts for the variety of natural phenomena: There is as much want of simplicity in the idea of the creation of distinct species as in that of the creation of
The suffering is not an arbitrary demand of wrath, but an existential demand of ontological healing.
However, the understanding of quantum effects is still incomplete. A scientist called Hugh Everett III who died in 1982 produced a quantum theory of mechanics that all quantum possibilities exist and that this leads to the same predictions for the results of experiments as the Copenhagen (Bohr) interpretation. Everetts rigorous mathematical theory was published in 1957. The theory is known as the many worlds interpretation, which is based on an infinite number of co-existing, parallel, alternative realities in which every conceivable outcome of every possible experimental result is realised. His Theory is now taken very seriously by quantum cosmologists such as Stephen Hawking, who are trying to explain what happened in the Big Bang beginning of the universe. In 1999 at a conference on quantum physics in Cambridge some 90 physicists were asked which interpretation they favour. Only 4 voted for the Copenhagen interpretation but 30 favoured the modern version of Everetts many worlds theory. Some 50 ticked the box labelled none of the above or undecided. Your Cutting Edge article therefore does an injustice to Bell, and is not of any value to theology and science. You should consult Sir Roger Penrose or Sir Anthony Leggett about the modern understanding of quantum theory and Bells fundamental contribution before publishing such a misleading article. Yours faithfully Professor John Rooney Strenmills Road Belfast The many-universes formulation does not, in our opinion, compete philosophically. When we consider the human person, body and unique soul, special problems arise. When the universe splits (zillions of times per second), which version do I end up in? Or does my person split into many copies of itself? It would seem to be meaningless to talk about splitting or multiplying a person (or a soul). To conclude that the Father is an ogre because He requires suffering is to engage in a reductionism that attempts to judge the Divine by human standards. I do not intend to propound a nominalistic view, but can it be denied that there are times when analogy fails in matters addressing the Divine? In Sacred Scripture (RSVCE translation used) there is clear warrant for the concept of there being no sacrifice without cost, cf. 2 Sam 24: 21f: And Araunah said, Why has my lord the king come to his servant? David said, To buy the threshing floor of you, in order to build an altar to the LORD, that the plague may be averted from the people. Then Araunah said to David, Let my lord the king take and offer up what seems good to him; here are the oxen for the burnt offering, and the threshing sledges and the yokes of the oxen for the wood. All this, O king, Araunah gives to the king. And Araunah said to the king, The LORD your God accept you. But the king said to Araunah, No, but I will buy it of you for a price; I will not offer burnt offerings to the LORD my God which cost me nothing. So David bought the threshing floor and the oxen for fifty shekels of silver. (emphasis added) To refine the point, blood sacrifice is required for atonement, cf. Lv 17:11: For the life of the flesh is in the blood; and I have given it for you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement, by reason of the life. As regards vicarious suffering, cf. Is 53:4-6, Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrowsBut he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that made us whole, and with his stripes we are healedthe LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all. See also Jn 18:11 (S)hall I not drink the cup which the Father has given me? This cup of which Jesus speaks is nothing other than Gods wrath, suffering. This imagery is common in the Bible, cf. Ps 75:8; Is 51:17, 22; Jer 25:15; Hab 2:15; Rev 14:10; Rev 19:16.
EDITORIAL COMMENT
Our presentation did indeed ignore other interpretations of quantum mechanics, including the popular many-worlds one. Hawkings preferred Copenhagen interpretation is a key representative of the indeterministic school which proposes that the fundamental laws of physics do not reign supreme. In contrast we suggested that a deterministic representative, namely Bohms, has better philosophical credentials.
Letters continued
In 1 Pet 2:21 the first Pope tells us directly Christsuffered for you We might want to restate this or interpret it in a way more consonant with our sensibilities by saying something along the lines of, Christ exercised love which led to His suffering for you but this would require engaging in semantical/ soteriological gymnastics. The Catechism of the Catholic Church has citations pointing to the direct willing of suffering: 599 Jesus violent death was not the result of chance in an unfortunate coincidence of circumstances, but is part of the mystery of Gods plan, as St. Peter explains to the Jews of Jerusalem in his first sermon on Pentecost: This Jesus [was] delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God. 605 Jesusaffirms that he came to give his life as a ransom for many. 609In suffering and death His humanity became the free and perfect instrument of his divine love which desires the salvation of men. Indeed, out of love for his Father and for men, whom the Father wants to save, Jesus freely accepted his Passion and death. 610 This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. (emphasis added) On p. 4 the editorial states, The crucifixion, awful though it was, is not, arguably, the most physically excruciating martyrdom in history. I think that more than just the physical aspect of Our Lords suffering needs to be considered. Our Holy Father recently cast light on the matter: First, there is the primordial experience of fear, quaking in the face of the power of death, terror before the abyss of nothingness that makes Him tremble to the point that, in Lukes account, His sweat falls to the ground like drops of blood (cf 22:44):emphasises the dark depths of Jesus fear In this way (the Gospel of) John is clearly indicating the primordial fear of created nature in the face of imminent death, and yet there is more: the particular horror felt by Him
18 Faith I Letters to the Editor
Who is Life itself before the abyss of the full power of destruction, evil and enmity with God that is now unleashed upon Him, that He now takes directly into HimselfBecause He is the Son He sees with total clarity the whole foul flood of evil, all the power of lies and pride, all the wiles and cruelty of evil that masks itself as life yet constantly serves to destroy, debase and crush life. Because He is the Son, He experiences deeply all the horror, filth and baseness that He must drink from the chalice prepared for Him: the vast power of sin and death. All this He must take into Himself, so that it can be disarmed and defeated in HimJesus fear is far more radical than the fear that everyone experiences in the face of death: it is a collision between light and darkness, between life and death itself the critical moment of decision in human history. With this understanding, following (Blaise) Pascal, we may see ourselves drawn quite personally into the episode on the Mount of Olives: my own sin was present in that terrifying chalice. Those drops of blood I shed for you, Pascal hears the Lord say to him during the agony on the mount of Olives (cf, Penses VII, 553). [Pope Benedict XVI Jesus of Nazareth-Holy Week Ignatius Press, 2011, pp 154, 156] Yours faithfully Fr Robert Grabner South St Paul Minnesota
that, The crucifixion, awful though it was, is not, arguably, the most physically excruciating martyrdom in history, but we went on to say that the greatest and most incomparable suffering of Christ is found in his spiritual anguish, by which He sets Himself to be a living apology for the blasphemy of our fallen state and medicine for our wounded lives. In this way He makes up the debt or deficit that comes from the corruption of being and the loss of God, which is the objective punishment of sin. By His stripes we have been healed (Is 53:5). Of course all of this is foreknown and willed by the Father as the only way for man to be redeemed. Yet we must be careful not to give the impression that the Father flew into a rage at the fall and personally devised crucifixion as a cruel punishment, then laid it on his Son as the condition of our forgiveness. The price to be paid for sin is the objective price of derogation from the Divine Being, Goodness and Glory. This is indeed real and terrible, and Christ sets Himself to pay it with full understanding, and at the Fathers behest, because he loves mankind and wants our objective restoration. The suffering is not an arbitrary demand of wrath, but an existential demand of ontological healing. The difficulty of expression here arises from that most challenging paradox of free will and Divine providence. The crucifixion was in one sense an act of great blasphemy and sinfulness and undoubtedly Satanic in inspiration. In that sense it cannot be willed directly by the Father, but the Father positively wills the Son to endure this Passion in atonement for fallen man, drawing the greatest good from the greatest evil. The apparent hour of the triumph of darkness is in fact the hour of the triumph of Charity. That is the sense in which we call that awe-full Friday Good.
EDITORIAL COMMENT
We thank Fr Grabner for his kind words and thoughtful response. In the editorial we were trying to answer the Calvinist excesses of a merely juridical and punitive view of Redemption, which for many people makes Christianity not only unattractive but incoherent. At the same time we tried to capture the Catholic truth of the Scriptural language of vicarious suffering and redemptive sacrifice. We said: The Word made flesh alone can restore the lost dignity of Man and make satisfaction to the glory of God in his own humanity for His corrupted brothers and sisters. Yes we did write
Vocation of Matter
28 February To Pontifical Council for Social Communications. Again the bold is ours. new technologies are bringing about a new way of learning and thinking with unprecedented opportunities for establishing relationships and building fellowship. I would like to reflect on the fact that thought and relation are always in the modality of language The new languages developing in digital communications are geared to a different logical organisation of thought and of the relationship with reality reflection on the languages developed by the new technologies is urgently necessary. The starting point is the Revelation which bears witness to us of how, until his full manifestation of self in the Incarnate Son, God communicated his marvels precisely through language and the real experience of human beings, according to the culture proper to each age (Gaudium et Spes, n. 58). if we are to be attentive to Gods work in the world, we must listen attentively to the language of the people of our time It is not only a matter of expressing the Gospel message in contemporary language; it is also necessary to have the courage to think more deeply as happened in other epochs about the relationship between faith, the life of the Church and the changes human beings are experiencing. Is not this effort to imbue in mechanical instruments the reflection of spiritual duties, ennobled and uplifted to a service which touches the sacred? Is it the spirit which is made a prisoner of matter or is it matter, already tamed and obliged to carry out laws of the spirit, which perhaps offers sublime deference to the spirit itself? (Paul VI: Address at the Automation Centre of the Aloisianum, Gallarate, 19 June 1964). It is possible to discern in these words the profound link with the human spirit to which technology is called by vocation (cf. Encyclical Caritas in Veritate, n. 69).
Religious Freedom
29 April 2011 To Pontifical Academy of Science. Deeply inscribed in our human nature are a yearning for truth and meaning and an openness to the transcendent; Many centuries ago, Tertullian coined the term libertas religionis (cf. Apologeticum, 24:6). Since man enjoys the capacity for a free personal choice in truth the right to religious freedom should be viewed as innate to the fundamental dignity of every human person all people are impelled by nature and also bound by our moral obligation to seek the truth, especially religious truth (Second Vatican Council, Dignitatis Humanae, 2) let me express my sincere hope that your expertise in the fields of law, political science, sociology and economics will converge in these days to bring about fresh insights on this important question and thus bear much fruit now and into the future.
The Road From Regensburg I Faith 19
and parents friends were the most common. Very few said that the person involved was a professional. Nowhere does the report refer to the Church or to Catholic priests, who, here at least, are simply not on the NSPCCs radar. The second document, much more detailed, and specifically focused on the clergy (because thats what the American Catholic bishops asked for), is a report by a research team from the non-Catholic John Jay College, who have a track record in this field. I wrote in the January 2009 issue of this magazine about a previous John Jay report into this subject, their 2004 report The Nature and Scope of the Problem of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests and Deacons in the United States, which was carried out in 2004 for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. This was a survey of 90% of the priests and deacons reported to have had allegations of child sexual abuse made against them, from the 70s to the 90s. One conclusion was that if the yearly ordination totals for diocesan priests accused are compared to the overall number of diocesan priests ordained in that year, the percentages of accused priests range from a maximum of almost 10% in 1970, decreasing to 8% in 1980 and to fewer than 4% in 1990. Four per cent, however, is still a lot of priests, far too many. But as I wrote then, The John Jay reports most important finding. had to do not with the number but with the nature of the sexual abuses alleged: The report states that 80% to 90% of priests who sexually abused children over the past 52 years had been involved with adolescent boys ephebophilia not prepubescent children paedophilia. The scope of the John Jay Colleges latest report is wider. Its title is identical with one exception: The Causes and Context of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests in the United States,
1950-2010. The New York Times mostly reported it with more respect than one might have expected from an organ which has in the past exhibited a distinctly anti-Catholic tinge: A five-year study commissioned by the nations Roman Catholic bishops to provide a definitive answer to what caused the churchs sexual abuse crisis has concluded that neither the all-male celibate priesthood nor homosexuality were to blame. Instead, the report says, the abuse occurred because priests who were poorly prepared and monitored, and were under stress, landed amid the social and sexual turmoil of the 1960s and 70s. Known occurrences of sexual abuse of minors by priests rose sharply during those decades, the report found, and the problem grew worse when the churchs hierarchy responded by showing more care for the perpetrators than the victims. The blame Woodstock explanation [The NY Times showing its true colours?] has been floated by bishops since the church was engulfed by scandal in the United States in 2002 and by Pope Benedict XVI [not much, surely?] after it erupted in Europe in 2010. But this study is likely to be regarded as the most authoritative analysis of the scandal in the Catholic Church in America. The study, initiated in 2006, was conducted by a team of researchers at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City at a cost of $1.8 million. About half was provided by the bishops, with additional money contributed by Catholic organisations and foundations. The National Institute of Justice, the research agency of the United States Department of Justice, supplied about $280,000. What The New York Times calls the blame Woodstock explanation for the
repentance. There have been services of repentance and many victims have finally felt that they have been heard by the Church. May they continue to find the healing love of Jesus Christ. He also opens his report (which should be widely read and pondered) with the same reflection (p3): In this work, no excuses will be offered in order to justify the appalling crime of sexual abuse perpetrated by a small number of Catholic priests about 2 to 4% credible accusations in the United States and less than this in the United Kingdom in the last forty years nor for the pastoral negligence of some bishops. To quote Pope Benedict, sexual abuse has profoundly wounded people in their childhood, damaging them for a whole lifetime. But he adds: The Pope has also said that the crimes of priests, while reprehensible, should be seen in the context of the times in which these events took place. Citing the rise of child pornography and sexual tourism, he concludes that moral standards in society at large have broken down. This is, I suggest, what we should now focus on. Continuing to reflect on our own involvement in this appalling problem, we need to understand that though, as the American researcher Charol Shakeshaft reflected in a report for the US Department of Education, children are, as Dr Thevathasan also points out, a hundred times more likely to be abused in school than by priests, and though this does indicate that the sexual abuse of minors is significantly higher in secular society than in the Church, we cannot be complacent: this does not excuse the behaviour of abusive priests. The Holy Fathers clear guidance is that the Church at large is still called upon to enter a period of purification and repentance and of prayer for the victims of clerical child abuse. All the same, he says, one of the immense dangers of focussing unduly on clergy abuse is that we might fail to
protect vulnerable children in the wider society. And this is indeed a real danger. For, the trouble with scapegoats is that they are set apart as such to make society feel better about itself, and not to cope with the real problem thus shuffled off into the wilderness. Child sex abuse is a problem for society at large which it has barely begun seriously to address. The JJC report has been greeted by howls of fury by atheist bloggers, determined not to be thus cheated of their prime article of indictment against the Catholic Church, their favourite target. Take Miranda Scott Hale, who immediately concluded: This report isnt better than nothing. Its a major setback in the movement towards Church accountability. By this, of course, she means indelible and above all exclusive guilt. She neglected to mention her aggressively atheist agenda, posing as a dispassionate observer. A fellow atheist blogger, however, on his site The Heathen Hub (http://heathen-hub.com/blog. php?b=344) revealed that she is actually one of the atheist movements footsoldiers, and quotes her as saying that she is really tired of sceptics who are committed to investigating and criticising irrationality unless that irrationality is of the religious sort. just so that the sceptic in question can . avoid offending religious individuals. Well, she and many others are still out for Catholic scalps: we arent just scapegoats for them, we are the ultimate enemy, and against us no tactic is out of bounds. But if The New York Times can report that the JJC report is likely to be regarded as the most authoritative analysis of the scandal in the Catholic Church in America, maybe, just maybe, the atheists are now on the back foot and we are finally on the way to seeing this all but intractable problem on the way to being successfully confronted and lived through. There may be light at the end of the tunnel; on the other hand, the sour old joke may still come true: it could be an oncoming train.
The creative act itself assumes a greater significance than is usually given to it in English curricula
There is, of course, a good deal more to the study of English than the study of literature. The teaching of non-fiction texts, especially at Key Stage 3 (age 11-14), is often a rather haphazard affair and so, if Catholic teachers are not careful, Catholic perspectives on the world can easily be written out of the curriculum here too. Non-fiction texts are important in their own right but they can also provide useful contextual information for fictional texts. One does not need to believe that Shakespeare was a closet Catholic, for example, to appreciate the need to see him in his Catholic context. Students can only benefit, linguistically and in other ways, by looking at some of the writing in publications like Early Modern Catholicism: An Anthology of Primary Sources (Miola 2007). There is also plenty of more recent non-fiction that could happily fit into the Catholic classroom. It is possible to argue with Ian Ker, for example, that Chestertons non-fiction outstrips his fiction by some margin, placing him in the same league as Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold, and especially, of course, Newman. (Ker 2003, 75) Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold and Newman may not be taught much in British schools these days though the beatification of Newman has provided a clear opportunity to raise his profile but Chestertons prose would seem admirably suited to the classroom. Non-fiction also provides an opportunity for teachers to redress the rather Eurocentric imbalance that can overwhelm English studies. Takashi Nagais The Bells of Nagasaki, for example, deserves a place on any curriculum for its powerfully restrained description of the bombing of Nagasaki at the end of World War II. Teaching Catholic non-fiction does not mean teaching theology (or hagiography) but that does not mean that great Catholic theologians and priests need be excluded from the curriculum either: there could well be room for extracts from St. Augustines Confessions or Francis Xavier Nguyen Van Thuans The Road of Hope when looking at autobiographical writing, for instance.
Practical Suggestions
One way to bring Catholic culture back into the school curriculum is to make more use of the Churchs liturgical year. By definition the great feasts of the Church fall in the school holidays but that clearly does not prevent the Catholic teacher from making use of these feasts in the classroom. Christmas alone provides multiple opportunities: Dickens Christmas classics can be supplemented, for example, by Willi Chens Caribbean or George Mackay Browns Orcadian short stories. Older students could usefully look at Oscar Hijueloss Mr Ives Christmas or Alice Thomas Elliss The Birds of the Air. Another approach might be to use Christmas carols and poetry to examine language use and language change. Robert Southwells The Burning Babe could be studied alongside Ding dong merrily on high and Christina Rossettis In the Bleak Midwinter, for example. T.S. Eliots Journey of the Magi is widely studied but placing it alongside Michael Symmons Roberts The Gifts, in which the poet speculates about what Mary and Joseph did with the Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh, adds another dimension to it. The great feasts may fall outside term time but saints days may well fall within the term, thereby providing an opportunity for students to look at the work of, for example, St. Thomas More, St. Robert Southwell and now Blessed John Henry Newman.
A Return to Beauty
However, there is more to the English teachers task than simply allowing the Catholic voice to be heard. If each person is created in the image of the creator God then the creative act itself, as Pope John Paul II suggested in his Letter to Artists of 1999, assumes a greater significance than is usually given to it in English curricula. As Tolkien put it: The heart of Man is not compound of lies, but draws some wisdom from the only Wise, and still recalls him. Though now long estranged, Man is not wholly lost nor wholly changed. Dis-graced he may be, yet is not dethroned, and keeps the rags of lordship once he owned, his world-dominion by creative act: not his to worship the great Artefact, Man, Sub-creator, the refracted light through whom is splintered from a single White to many hues, and endlessly combinedin living shapes that move from mind to mind. (Tolkien 1989, 98) If, in writing, we become sub-creators (in Tolkiens words) or craftsmen mirroring the Creator (in the words of John Paul II) then surely we ought to take childrens creative writing more seriously than we usually do. Creative writing in schools gets very mixed treatment: while it is privileged at key stage 2 and, to a certain extent, at key stage 3, it usually receives less attention at key stage 4 and almost none at key stage 5 (though there are signs of change here with a renewed emphasis on recreative writing as an A Level coursework option). By giving creative writing a much more central place in the curriculum, Catholic educators would be responding to authentic theological analyses of the arts while simultaneously demonstrating that bringing Catholic culture back into the school curriculum does not mean indoctrination or the abandonment of thought and choice.
Catholicism has been forced into the fortress of the Religious Studies classroom but we do our faith no favours by allowing it to be compartmentalised in this way.
Indeed it is striking how rarely we allow our faith to influence our English teaching even when there are opportunities to do so. The Model United Nations movement, for example, has become something of an international phenomenon and yet, despite the Vaticans presence with permanent observer status at the UN, it is virtually unheard of for students to assume the role of the Vatican at such conferences. A great deal of what we need to do as Catholic educators, in other words, is to redress the balance not by overturning English curricula as currently instituted but by refusing to allow the Catholic voice to be expunged altogether.
Book Reviews
in his The State of Religious Parties published in The British Critic in 1839. There Newman saw Tractarianism as the religious counterpart of the literary romanticism expressed in the works of prominent literary figures, naming in particular Scott, Coleridge, Southey and Wordsworth, in the early decades of the 19th century. Wood by contrast singled out the influence of the ethical thought of Aristotle and Joseph Butler in the immediate pre-Tractarian period (1820-30) in Oxford itself. Pereiro suggests Wood was right on the basis that a specifically Tractarian concept of ethos was drawn from the philosophies of these two thinkers. To summarise briefly, Aristotle believed that progress in virtue depended on the interaction of good affective temper and sound practical judgment. A man who habitually made right moral decisions would develop good moral dispositions, and these dispositions would clarify his vision such that further correct decisions about conduct would be made. The Anglican philosopherbishop Joseph Butler extended this theory to explain why some men accepted evidence which pointed to the truth of Christianity and others did not. He posited that virtuous habits enabled good men to have not only good moral judgement, but also a clearer perception of the truth of Revelation. This meant that a bad man (one whose passions were least under control) was more likely to reject Christianity, whereas a good man (whose moral virtues showed that reason had trained his affections) would be more receptive to the evidence and open to conversion. Fr Pereiro shows that the Tractarian leader John Keble took the argument a step further, arguing that the better the character of a Christian, the more able he was to discriminate truth from falsehood within Christianity, in dealing with the conflicting claims of the various denominations and church parties. This was the basic ethos theory; but as with Aristotle a reflexive process was also possible. Once true doctrines had been accepted, further progress in holiness became possible, and then in turn a further acceptance of apostolic doctrine. Pereiro calls this process an ascending spiral movement, the vision of which lay behind the Tractarian belief that following the path of holiness would lead to the recovery of Catholic truths lost in previous centuries within the Church of England. The converse of the theory conveniently provided the Tractarians with a summary explanation for the damage done to the English church at the Reformation, just as Butler had found himself a moralistic explanation for the popularity of early 18th century Deism. Newman declared heresy to be the fruit of an ethos marked by worldliness, intellectual pride, or some other deficiency, and even tried to associate different vices with different types of error. Fr Pereiros book explores the importance of this Tractarian concept of ethos through a collection of disparate essays more or less closely related to the central theme. The first chapter is a pioneering study of the local impact of the Oxford Movement in London, focusing on a reconstruction of Woods Tractarian activities. The second surveys recent historiographical debate over the vitality of the Church of England in the pre-Tractarian period. He shows how the Tractarians (and others) in the 1820s and 30s believed the Church to be in a condition of spiritual torpor, whereas after the split within the movement between the so-called Xs and Zs in the wake of Tract 90 and the radical takeover of The British Critic, the Zs (Newmans opponents) tried to create a picture of a continuous stream of living High Church belief and devotion linking the 18th century Non-Jurors and Hutchinsonians to their own Old High Church segment of Tractarianism. The key figure in this rewriting of church history was William Palmer of Worcester College, and his influence on the historiography of the Oxford Movement remains to be worked out in detail. Fr Pereiro is at his most original and revisionist in identifying this Palmerian historiography as a form of propaganda, and in seeking to rehabilitate Newmans view that both
documentary evidence which doesnt exclude the possibility that Newman had discussed the idea of development with Wood before Wood committed his thoughts to paper. If this had happened it would explain Woods surprise (noted by Fr Pereiro) at Newmans rejection of much of his sketch of a development theory. Moreover if Wood had in fact anticipated Newman, it would mean that by the time he wrote the Apologia in 1864 Newman had forgotten that Wood had influenced him. (It was one of the most important of Newmans aims in the Apologia to list the influences on his thought while an Anglican). Such amnesia is highly unlikely given Newmans intense devotion to his friends and their memory. The main problem with Fr Pereiros attempts to achieve his second goal, of establishing a late genesis for Newmans theory of development, is that his efforts to explain away Newmans contrary recollections are unduly strained. Fr Pereiro relies heavily on the rather dubious argument that if Newman opposed, in writing and conversation, Woods and Abbe Jagers theories of development in the early 1830s then he cannot at the same time or earlier have entertained similar ideas himself. Fr Pereiros book might have been improved if he had replaced this conjectural chapter with one exploring the nature and importance of the concept of ethos in the ecclesiastical culture preceding and surrounding the Oxford Movement. This would enable him to demonstrate much more securely that the Tractarian theory of ethos was in fact distinctively Tractarian. As it is, some doubts must remain. In passing Fr Pereiro himself admits that the major Evangelical writer Daniel Wilson seemed to hold the basic theory that moral character affects belief; and in chapter five, where Fr Pereiro reviews reactions from nonTractarians to the spate of conversions to Rome, we find that various hostile Protestant observers ascribed these conversions to bad moral character. He also concedes that the basic theory was found in William Law and the
Cambridge Platonists, which is highly significant since both these sources of Protestant spirituality exerted widespread influence through the 18th century. The claim (implied by the books subtitle At the Heart of Tractarianism) that ethos can be regarded as central to the phenomenon of the Oxford Movement may also be doubted. Christian religious movements do not usually have as their central dynamic a theory of knowledge, an academic abstraction, but something more personal and affective, typically the example and spiritual guidance of a saint or charismatic leader. Just as, for example, John Wesley attracted disciples and left behind a system of Christian discipline, so the origin and heart of the Oxford Movement can be traced to the holy characters of Keble, Newman and Pusey, and the spiritual practices associated with them. Most notable among these was a renewed attention to the sacraments and corporate worship (as Wood noted in his history), leading ultimately to the introduction, for the first time, of Roman-style Eucharistic devotion into the Church of England. Fr Pereiros interest is chiefly, it appears, in the Oxford Movement as an episode in the history of ideas rather than in the history of religion, and as such he seems to see it as culminating, through the growth of Newmans ideas about ethos, in the philosophy of The Grammar of Assent, rather than in the conversion of numerous Anglicans to Rome. Indeed in his final paragraph he refuses to endorse the view that the Oxford Movement had a Providential outcome in directing Newman and others to the Catholic Church. If, as Catholics, we think we can detect the workings of Gods Providence anywhere in history, surely we have little to do to convince ourselves here. Either God intended the Oxford Movement to benefit the Catholic Church or he did not, and the indications in favour of the former proposition seem to accumulate with every passing year. Christopher Zealley Oxford
Book Reviews I Faith 25
concrete, direct, vivid, inner apprehension of the person of Christ, engaging thought, will, action and emotions that is, the whole of ourselves. Pluscardens Abbot makes the same point as St. Francis de Sales that, though the vocational paths may be different (and unique to each individual), the goal is ever the same: nothing short of knowing the love of Christ which is beyond all knowledge and being filled with the utter fullness of God (Ephesians 3:19). There are no short cuts here. The rich range of sources drawn on is a strong attraction though a call to read Origen might seem pretty daunting to the more general reader! Taking the Curve ties in the mid-life crisis experienced by many with St. Peters part in the Paschal Mystery the one thing necessary is to follow. The one thing necessary is obedience. It is as simple as that, while perhaps the most substantial of the offerings is The Spiritual Senses, a series of reflections on the nature of interior apprehension which contains a comment on Saint Bonaventure neatly summing up Dom Hughs whole approach: For him the recovery of the spiritual sense is part of the re-ordering of the human person that comes through the encounter with Christ. This reviewer chose to use Living the Mystery as a Lenten exercise for a study group within the parish: it was much appreciated and stimulated wide ranging discussion, combining, as it does, an accessible orthodoxy with fresh insight. Fr Christopher Colven St. Jamess Spanish Place London
Arise Once More, Reviving Catholic Britain, Christian Holden, 33 mins., 9.95
Not only is a knowledge of Church history fascinating and inspiring, it also helps us to see where we are going by revealing where we have come from. This DVD is not just about the history of the Catholic Church in Britain, but addresses the question How do we recover what has been lost? The influence of Catholicism on the development of this country was fundamental, a fact well brought out in the DVDs condensing of 1,500 years of religious history into its first 20 minutes no mean feat! Catholicism in Britain is looked at under six headings: the arrival of Christianity, the Medieval
Keys of the Kingdom, Understanding the Papacy, Steve Ray and others, 40 mins., 9.95
Starting with some beautiful shots of St. Peters in Rome and stirring music,
faith
PA MP HL E TS
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CONFESSION: WHY WE GO CHRIST OUR EUCHARIST SEXUAL ORDER AND HOLY ORDER THE PATH FROM SCIENCE TO JESUS CHRIST THE PATH FROM SCIENCE TO GOD EVOLUTION AND THE EXISTENCE OF GOD EVOLUTION AND ORIGINAL SIN CHRISTIAN FORMATION THE PRIEST AND HIS LOVING MARY, MODEL OF THE CHURCH THE GOSPELS, HISTORICAL AND TRUE CHRIST AND HIS CHURCH: WHY INFALLIBLE? JESUS: DID HE KNOW WHO HE WAS? THE GRACE OF GOD NUCLEAR WAR: THE DEEPER ISSUES CAN WE BE SURE GOD EXISTS? WHAT MAKES MAN UNIQUE? JESUS CHRIST OUR SAVIOUR JESUS CHRIST OUR REDEEMER THE DISASTER OF SIN The Church: Christs Voice to the World
JAMES TOLHURST EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY ROGER NESBITT ROGER NESBITT ROGER NESBITT EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY ROGER NESBITT DOMENICO GRASSO SJ EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY EDWARD HOLLOWAY REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES REASONS FOR BELIEVING SERIES TOTAL (1 each)
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Cutting Edge
New Pontifical Academy President Says he is Agnostic on Natural Theology but that the Pope is not
The new Swiss president of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Werner Arber, won the 1978 Nobel Prize for Medicine. He is the first Protestant to hold the position. Presumably including the philosophy of science in his general use of the word science he says: Until now science hasnt been able to prove whether God exists or not whatever God may be. What might be possible in 100 years, I cant say. As a scientist, I dont see any primordial will to create human beings. But I as an evolutionary biologist cant say how the first living organism came into being. Ive been told by those surrounding [the Pope] that the Catholic Church sees permanent creation in biological and cosmic evolution. [source: swissinfo.ch]
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES
EDWARD HOLLOWAY
Volume 1: A Critique of an Abstract Scholasticism and Principles Towards Replacement Volume 2: Rethinking the Existential
Volume 3: Noumenon and Phenomenon: Rethinking the Greeks in the Age of Science
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Perspectives in Theology
Vol. One Christ the Sacrament of Creation Edward Holloway
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The first volume of collected writings by Fr Edward Holloway seeks to present his contributions to Faith magazine to a wider readership. A champion of Catholic orthodoxy, Fr Holloway sought to bring about a new reconciliation between science and religion. In this way he anticipated and also participated in Pope John Paul IIs programme of intellectual renewal in the Church. In this volume you will find stimulating writing on the key themes of his synthetic perspective, including the existence of God; the development of Scripture; Christ as Son of Man; Mary Immaculate; the nature of the Church, and much more.
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faith
Faith Movement offers a perspective upon the unity of the cosmos by which we can show clearly the transcendent existence of God and the essential distinction between matter and spirit. We offer a vision of God as the true Environment of men in whom we live and move and have our being (Acts 17:28), and of his unfolding purpose in the relationship of word and grace through the prophets which is brought to its true head in Jesus Christ, the Son of God and Son of Man, Lord of Creation, centre of history and fulfilment of our humanity. Our redemption through the death and resurrection of the Lord, following the tragedy of original sin, is also thereby seen in its crucial and central focus. Our life in his Holy Spirit through the Church and the Sacraments and the necessity of an infallible Magisterium likewise flow naturally from this presentation of Christ and his work through the ages.
Faith Movement
Our understanding of the role of Mary, the Virgin Mother through whom the Divine Word comes into his own things in the flesh (cf. John 1:10-14), is greatly deepened and enhanced through this perspective. So too the dignity of Man, made male and female as the sacrament of Christ and his Church (cf. Ephesians 5:32), is strikingly reaffirmed, and from this many of the Churchs moral and social teachings can be beautifully explained and underlined.
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