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Modernism (Roman Catholicism)

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Modernism was a term mostly used by Pope Pius X to describe the doctrines of a group of theologians (chiefly Alfred Loisy and George Tyrell), notably the assumption that the Christian Church and its dogma are human institutions that have evolved in time like other institutions, and which are expressed like others in human documents that bear the character of their historical context, which can be profitably analyzed in just the way all institutions and texts are scrutinized. Catholic "modernists" did not use this label for their own writings. They did not see themselves as a unified group: the term "modernist" was applied to them.

In his encyclical Lamentabili Sane[link] of July 3, 1907, Pius X, writing “the fact that many Catholic writers also go beyond the limits determined by the Fathers and the Church herself is extremely regrettable,” presented a syllabus condemning the errors of the Modernists in 65 condemned and proscribed propositions.

In his encyclical Pascendi Dominici gregis[link] of 1907, Pius X described Modernism as not so much a heresy, but as the synthesis of all heresies (Pascendi Dominici gregis, 39). This description was used not because Modernism combined ideas from many earlier heresies, but because it undermined Catholic doctrine in a more fundamental way than most earlier heresies: instead of critiquing particular points of doctrine, or setting up a competing source of authority, it denied the idea of objective unchanging truth or any authoritative teaching. Modernism involved the evolution of dogma — a notion distinct from Cardinal Newman’s teaching on the “development of doctrine”, which he characterized in acceptably orthodox fashion as an unfolding in time of what was already implicit in Christ’s initial teaching. In stating the Modernist view on evolution of dogma in order to condemn it, Pius X expressed this as: “Truth is no more unchangeable than man himself, for it evolves with him, in him and through him” (Lamentabili sane).

In some respects, the Catholic Modernists seemed to be influenced by or in agreement with certain Protestant theologians and clergy, starting with the Tübingen school in the mid-19th century. Some, however, such as George Tyrell, disagreed strongly with this analogy; Tyrell saw himself as loyal to the unity of the Church, and disliked liberal Protestantism (Hales 1958).

In some respects the Church appeared to be reacting to cultural themes that had arisen with Renaissance humanism and had informed the Enlightenment of the 18th century.

The Modernist crisis took place chiefly in French and British intellectual Catholic circles, to a lesser extent in Italy, and virtually nowhere else[link].

Forms of Modernism in the Church

Modernism in the Catholic Church might be described under the following broad headings:

The combination of these three currents usually led to other conclusions which were common in various streams of progressive thinking that was characterized as Modernism:

Evolution of dogmas

The final overall teaching of Modernism, is that dogmas (what is taught by the Church and what its members are required to believe) can evolve over time, rather than being the same for all time. This aspect of thought was what made Modernism unique in the history of heresies in the Church. Previously, a heretic (someone who believed and taught something different from what the rest of the church believed) would either claim that he was right and the rest of the church was wrong because he had received a new revelation from God, or that he had understood the true teaching of God which was previously understood but then lost. Both of those scenarios almost necessarily led to an organizational separation away from the Church (schism) or the offender being ejected from the Church (excommunication). With this new idea that doctrines evolve, it was possible for the modernist to believe that the old teachings of the Church and his new seemingly contradictory teachings were both correct — each had their time and place. This system allows almost any type of new belief that the modernist might want to introduce, and for this reason Modernism was labelled the “synthesis of all heresies” by Pope Pius X.

Social/Anthropological causes of Modernism

Catholic historians and theologians have social explanations as to why Modernism developed as it did and became so popular:

Church officials’ responses to Modernism

In 1893, Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Providentissimus Deus seemed to give encouragement to these progressive studies, affirming in principle the legitimacy of Biblical studies, but limited to those pursued in a spirit of faith, which was a discreet warning that the opposing forces within Catholicism were already drawn up. Providentissimus Deus may be considered the opening shot in the battle. In 1903 Leo established a Pontifical Biblical Commission to oversee those studies and ensure that they were conducted with respect for the Catholic doctrines on the inspiration and interpretation of scripture.

Pope St. Pius X, who succeeded Leo, was the first to identify Modernism as a movement. He frequently condemned both its aims and ideas, and was deeply concerned by the ability of Modernism to allow its adherents to believe themselves strict Catholics while having a markedly different belief as to what that meant (a consequence of the notion of evolution of dogma). In July 1907 he published the encyclical Lamentabili Sane, a sweeping condemnation which distinguished sixty-five propositions as a Modernist Heresy. In September of the same year, he promulgated an encyclical Pascendi dominici gregis which enjoined a compulsory Anti-Modernist oath on all Catholic bishops, priests and teachers to force them to come to clear terms with what they believed; this oath remained in force until it was abolished by Paul VI in 1967.

Historian John Cornwell controversially maintains that Pope Pius X introduced a secret society called the Sodalitium Pianum to spy on seminaries to see if Modernism was being taught in them, though other historians such as Ronald J. Rychlak observe that the pope was dealing with modernist seminary professors who withheld or actually falsified information about what was being taught in the seminaries -- i.e., investigations, not spying, is what Pope St. Pius X conducted.

It is generally accepted that measures taken under Pope Pius X led in several cases to injustices being perpetrated against orthodox Catholics, and the structures of ecclesial espionage which characterised his period in office have long since disappeared.

Presently modernism is no longer condemned by the Church hierarchy, with Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (elected Pope Benedict XVI in 2005) and others not having done so in recent decades. In fact, after Vatican II (1962-1965) moderate Modernism gained the favour of many in the ecclesial hierarchy and some of its characteristics were introduced silently into seminary courses starting from the 1950s, when the so-called "New Theology" rose up. To this New Theology most in the ecclesial hierarchy adhered since about 1965, including then Fr. Joseph Ratzinger and theologians like present day Cardinals Walter Kasper and Karl Lehmann.

Extreme modernists however are still reprimanded by the Church hierarchy, the most notorious example for this being the case of Hans Küng, formerly a colleague and close collaborator to Benedict XVI in the progressive school of the New Theology. Küng was deprived of his Catholic teaching faculties at the University of Tübingen by the Holy See, because of his controversial Christology.

Some Catholic Modernists

Major figures

Other, less public modernists

Suspected of Modernism

External links

References

 


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