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Thursday, October 14, 2010

YOU fill up my senses...and my whole being

About a week ago, in a review of USCCB's book "Pope Benedict: Essays and Reflections on his Papacy, I read the most stunning paragraph that I have read in since Fr. Greeley's description of the Catholic imagination. The following selection is from "On Devotion to the Papacy" By Michael Sean Winters:

"We Catholics like to touch our faith. We like the smell of incense in our nostrils. We like the taste of the Most Previous Blood on our lips. We like the feel of Holy oils on our foreheads. We like the kiss of peace with our brethren. We want to worship in a beautiful church that excites our eyes as well as our imaginations. Our faith is decidedly incarnational because our God is incarnational. The papacy is a part of that. Our tradition is not only held in our minds as a great principle of faith. You can see the successors of the apostles. You can shake their hands. And you can fill the Paul VI Hall and stand on your chair, and scream and shout when the successor of Peter enters the room."


All I can say is "Wow!" Yeah, that's definitely how it has been for me. I like the feel of the medals of my saintly friends who pray with me against my skin, and the clink they make when I move. I like the smell of a votive candle. Incense -- well, I can do without it as now that I'm older it makes me ill most of the time; I find bells during the eucharistic prayer a distraction rather than a help to attentiveness. But, we're all Catholics in word and in practice, we worship from both sides of the brain, with our eyes and ears, with our entire bodies, our entire being. I really like being Catholic, too.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

This just blew me away... I hadn't watched this debate, which a lot of atheists seem to like for some reason. (Personally, it just confirmed my impression that most atheists have a 5th grade religious sensibility.) I've always liked the Persian Muslim scholar, Reza Aslan, though. After I watched for a few minutes, though, it just blew me away how very CATHOLIC Reza's description of the engagement of religious people with Scripture sounded. Turns out he spent the 90s teaching some classes at one of the Christian Brothers' high schools in Connecticut. Who would'a thunk?

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Lecture against Christian Dominionalists

*** WARNING: THIS GUY IS A 'LIBERAL', SO DON'T WATCH IF THAT 'OFFENDS' YOU ***

The Great Awakening in the U.S.A. brought us all sorts of wild theological ideas: hellfire and damnation preaching, 'personal' salvation, extreme Bible literalism, the Rapture... but by far the most dangerous was then and is now that curious blend of Christian extremism twisted to political ideology known as Dominion theology:



Chris Hedges explores the rise of the Christian right in America in a lecture 3 years ago at Boston College. He's a 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, son of a preacher, and student of theology schooled by many of those who similar times elsewhere.

I'm re-posting this, as the video I originally linked to apparently no longer exists. This is a much longer version that includes the clip on dominion theology.

What is Truth?

(these are notes from my summer Scripture class that I hadn't published)

Rather, 'Who is Truth'? An ancient Catholic idea related to ideas of Bible inerrancy is the idea that Truth is the very person of Jesus Christ as he declares in the gospel. For truth to be a living person, i.e. the Risen Lord, implies that Christian understanding encompasses a dynamic rather than static view.

"...Christian faith immerses human beings in the order of grace, which enables them to share in the mystery of Christ, which in turn offers them a true and coherent knowledge of the Triune God. In Jesus Christ, who is the Truth, faith recognizes the ultimate appeal to humanity, an appeal made in order that what we experience as desire and nostalgia may come to its fulfilment." ~ John Paul II encylical Fides et ratio (1998)

St Augustine "On Christian Doctrine, in Four Books"
' There are two things on which all interpretation of Scripture depends: the mode of ascertaining the proper meaning, and the mode of making known the meaning when it is ascertained.'


Leo XIII - Apostolic Letter Hierosolymae coenobio in 1892 established the
Ecole Biblique & encyclical PROVIDENTISSIMUS DEUS ON THE STUDY OF HOLY SCRIPTURE followed in (1893)
Preamble "...This supernatural revelation, according to the belief of the universal Church,is contained both in unwritten Tradition, and in written Books, which are therefore called sacred and canonical because, "being written under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, they have God for their author and as such have been delivered to the Church."
4. And it is this peculiar and singular power of Holy Scripture, arising from the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, which gives authority to the sacred orator, fills him with apostolic liberty of speech, and communicates force and power to his eloquence.
18. "...There can never, indeed, be any real discrepancy between the theologian and the physicist, as long as each confines himself within his own lines, and both are careful, as St. Augustine warns us, "not to make rash assertions, or to assert what is not known as known."(51) If dissension should arise between them, here is the rule also laid down by St. Augustine, for the theologian: "Whatever they can really demonstrate to be true of physical nature, we must show to be capable of reconciliation with our Scriptures; and whatever they assert in their treatises which is contrary to these Scriptures of ours, that is to Catholic faith, we must either prove it as well as we can to be entirely false, or at all events we must, without the smallest hesitation, believe it to be so."(52) To understand how just is the rule here formulated we must remember, first, that the sacred writers, or to speak more accurately, the Holy Ghost "Who spoke by them, did not intend to teach men these things (that is to say, the essential nature of the things of the visible universe), things in no way profitable unto salvation."(53)
51. In Gen. op. imperf. ix., 30. 52. De Gen.ad litt. i. 21, 41. 53. St. Augustine, "De Genesi ad Litteram" 2, 9, 20

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DIVINO AFFLANTE SPIRITU - encyclical of Pius XII, 1943
(42)...For Catholic exegetes, by a right use of those same scientific arms, not infrequently abused by the adversaries, proposed such interpretations, which are in harmony with Catholic doctrine and the genuine current of tradition, and at the same time are seen to have proved equal to the difficulties, either raised by new explorations and discoveries, or bequeathed by antiquity for solution in our time.

43. Thus has it come about that confidence in the authority and historical value of the Bible, somewhat shaken in the case of some by so many attacks, today among Catholics is completely restored; moreover there are not wanting even non-Catholic writers, who by serious and calm inquiry have been led to abandon modern opinion and to return, at least in some points, to the more ancient ideas. ~

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Pius X's
Lamentabili Sane Exitu ("with truly lamentable results") condemns 65 propositions in Bible exegesis, most of which were softened when less anti-intellectual and more learned heads defined proper methodology.

Pope Benedict XVI - speech to secular authorities at Regensburg, condemning literalism & fundamentalist fanatics, denying that 'People of the Book' is an apt description of Christians, and re-affirming the importance both of the Person of Jesus as the truth Himself, and the contribution the believing community's relationship to him makes to our Catholic Tradition:
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/speeches/2006/september/documents/hf_ben-xvi_spe_20060912_university-regensburg_en.html

Benedict XV. Encyclical Spiritus Paraclitus (September 15, 1920) anniversary of the death of St. Jerome - "Since the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, had bestowed the Scriptures on the human race for their instruction in Divine things, He also raised up in successive ages saintly and learned men whose task it should be to develop that treasure and so provide for the faithful plenteous "consolation from the Scriptures." (emphasis mine)

"Therefore the Catechism of the Catholic Church can rightly say that Christianity does not simply represent a religion of the book in the classical sense (cf. par. 108). It perceives in the words the Word, the Logos itself, which spreads its mystery through this multiplicity and the reality of a human history. This particular structure of the Bible issues a constantly new challenge to every generation. It excludes by its nature everything that today is known as fundamentalism. In effect, the word of God can never simply be equated with the letter of the text. To attain to it involves a transcending and a process of understanding, led by the inner movement of the whole and hence it also has to become a process of living. Only within the dynamic unity of the whole are the many books one book."
Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI at Collège des Bernardins, Paris, 12 Sept 2008

Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation Dei Verbum
#9 -
"There exists a close connection and communication between Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture. For both of them, flowing from the same divine wellspring, in a certain way merge into a unity and tend toward the same end"

#10 - "It is clear, therefore, that, in the supremely wise arrangement of God, sacred Tradition, sacred Scripture and the Magisterium of the Church are so connected and associated that one of them cannot stand without the others. Working together, each in its own way under the action of the one Holy Spirit, they all contribute effectively to the salvation of souls"
#11 - "the books of Scripture must be acknowledged as teaching solidly, faithfully and without error that truth which God wanted put into sacred writings for the sake of salvation. "
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12. However, since God speaks in Sacred Scripture through men in human fashion, the interpreter of Sacred Scripture, in order to see clearly what God wanted to communicate to us, should carefully investigate what meaning the sacred writers really intended, and what God wanted to manifest by means of their words...(in addition to literary forms)... no less serious attention must be given to the content and unity of the whole of Scripture if the meaning of the sacred texts is to be correctly worked out. The living tradition of the whole Church must be taken into account along with the harmony which exists between elements of the faith.

Further study: Church Documents and Writings Related to Biblical Studies

http://catholic-resources.org/ChurchDocs/ - compiled by Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D.

http://www.hospeiron.com/mod/resource/view.php?id=3
FrPatrickBrady@hospeiron.com

Witherup, Ronald D. . "The Challenges of Biblical Translation."
In The Catholic Study Bible. Oxford Biblical Studies Online.