Friday, January 27, 2006

Deus Caritas Est

Fresh from reading the Pope's first encyclical, officially released a few days ago, I must say that it strikes me as more an extended homily than the lecture I had expected. Too long for a Mass, it is nonetheless very much the sort of homily I used to love hearing at Masses celebrated by intellectual priests, such as Raymond Brown and George Maloney, when I was a college student. As such it contains some of what might be considered arguments, especially in the first part, and is obviously the product of an academic mind. Yet the main thoughts do not develop in linear fashion but radiate outward from the central theme as in a meditation. In that way and others, it illustrates its author's very personal way of answering his own invitation (§36) to prayer. In that lies both its strength and its weakness as the sounding of what Benedict apparently wants his pontificate's theme to be.

Given by the title, the theme is worked out first conceptually and then more concretely. Erotic love is an "ascending" intimation of the divine; but it must be leavened and matured by the sort of love that "descends" to us from God lest it spoil its promise. Benedict is especially good on how divine revelation, as evidenced in both Old and New Testaments, challenges us with a radical, liberating vision of love that transcends the dualisms and distortions of the ancient world, which are still very much with us under other forms and names. The Christian understanding of God as love, and of how we are to live accordingly, is the only understanding that does full justice to the human person as an intimate unity of body and soul corresponding to eros and agape: "ascending" and "descending" love. Passionately in love with us, God empties himself to fill us and thus draw us into his life. His eros is his agape. And the former is pure because it does not arise from need but overflows gratuitously from fullness. It is according to the same pattern that our love for one another must grow if we are not to become fractured, exploitive, and despairing.

That insight is applied, albeit not in detail and without naming any names, to the two most obvious spheres of human life in which Christian love must manifest itself: marriage and the social order generally. The former illustrates, in the clearest and most primordial form, that true love is unity-in-difference and difference-in-unity, integrating eros and agape and thus facilitating the relationship God wants to have with us. As Bride of Christ the Bridegroom, the Church exists to make such love concrete and thus bring it into the world. That arises from her faith and hope, nourished by her liturgy and prayer and manifest most clearly and directly in her charitable work, which struck even the unfortunate emperor Julian the Apostate (perhaps the "patron saint" of "recovering" Catholics) as a model to be emulated in his own religious project.

Here again, however, Benedict observes a finely tuned balance. Thus:

The Church cannot and must not take upon herself the political battle to bring about the most just society possible. She cannot and must not replace the State. Yet at the same time she cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice. She has to play her part through rational argument and she has to reawaken the spiritual energy without which justice, which always demands sacrifice, cannot prevail and prosper. A just society must be the achievement of politics, not of the Church. Yet the promotion of justice through efforts to bring about openness of mind and will to the demands of the common good is something which concerns the Church deeply.

Love—caritas—will always prove necessary, even in the most just society. There is no ordering of the State so just that it can eliminate the need for a service of love. Whoever wants to eliminate love is preparing to eliminate man as such. There will always be suffering which cries out for consolation and help. There will always be loneliness. There will always be situations of material need where help in the form of concrete love of neighbour is indispensable.[20] The State which would provide everything, absorbing everything into itself, would ultimately become a mere bureaucracy incapable of guaranteeing the very thing which the suffering person—every person—needs: namely, loving personal concern. We do not need a State which regulates and controls everything, but a State which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, generously acknowledges and supports initiatives arising from the different social forces and combines spontaneity with closeness to those in need. The Church is one of those living forces: she is alive with the love enkindled by the Spirit of Christ. This love does not simply offer people material help, but refreshment and care for their souls, something which often is even more necessary than material support. In the end, the claim that just social structures would make works of charity superfluous masks a materialist conception of man: the mistaken notion that man can live “by bread alone” (Mt 4:4; cf. Dt 8:3)—a conviction that demeans man and ultimately disregards all that is specifically human.
That will probably be the most controversial aspect of the encyclical among those who care what popes think. It has something to please everybody and something to offend everybody. The Church must not control or replace the State, but neither can she "remain on the sidelines in the fight for justice." Her social teaching plays a valid political role with its "rational arguments" yet, at the same time, she "purifies reason" with insights made possible only by faith. And whatever the political situation, her vast charitable works will always witness to Christ in civil society. They can never be replaced by just "structures" of the kind that government can create and regulate.

The encyclical ends with an paean to saints of outstanding charity and to Mary, Mother of God, in particular. Her intimate union with God is presented as the paradigm of all that the Christian is called to do and be. Formulaic, but fitting and needful.

I'm somewhat disappointed that the encyclical is not more specific and therefore more offensive. There's much talk of eros but no direct talk of sexual morality. There's much talk of the social embodiment of charity, but no efforts are actually named and singled out for either praise or criticism. It's all true, but all too general. To be sure, the generality is explicable by the Pope's evident desire to use this occasion to establish a theme for his pontificate. But I would have preferred a mission statement. At 79, he seems unlikely to have much time to proceed to specifics at his current leisurely pace.

Even so, this may be the disarming appearance of the velvet glove before the iron fist. If Benedict does get specific about controversial matters, he will be able to present that as simply the working out through his Petrine ministry of what he's been talking about in Deus Caritas Est: love, but tough love. I sure hope so. Much of the Catholic Church in the developed countries lives in a state of de facto internal schism with Rome. The constant, irreformable moral teaching of the Church is accepted only selectively; in the case of contraception, it is mostly ignored. I'm not talking about mere sinners; we are all sinners. I'm talking about people who don't even listen anymore to the voice of Christ spoken through Peter and who therefore don't even consider themselves sinners in the relevant respects. If Catholicism is to remain a distinctive voice in the world, such people must be forced to choose between the real thing and the comfortably ersatz Catholicism they now profess. When Ratzinger was elected pope, I hoped he would be the one to impose that choice. I'm still waiting.

11 comments:

  1. Mark Antony:

    I too found it intelligent, inspiring, and pastoral. I also found it too general and not challenging enough—to myself as well as to heterodox Catholics.

    I note from your profile that you're a parish business manager. You are then surely aware of the phenomenon of internal schism that I alluded to. If you follow Pontifications, as I'm pretty sure you do, you know that I am far from alone in believing that something can and must be done about it. From that standpoint one sees that love, rather than being incompatible with insistence on the truth, often requires it. Like many other people I've encountered, you're thinking in terms of a false dichotomy: love vs. truth. It is not pastoral love for souls to soft-pedal uncomfortable truths and give the impression that living by them is purely optional for the disciple of Christ. Failure to dispel that impression undermines the authority he has given his Church and endangers many souls.

    Best,
    Mike

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  2. Craig:

    I agree with your exposition of the encyclical and, as far as I can tell, it jibes with my own. The whole thing is an elegant and lofty meditation on its chosen themes.

    What we appear to disagree about is its usefulness. You appear to believe that it accomplishes enough in its own terms. I don't. But I suspect we need to wait for more of this pontificate to know who's right.

    Best,
    Mike

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  3. Anonymous7:45 PM

    Like Craig above, this encyclical struck me very much the way JP's Theology of the Body did.

    I think Pope Benedict is putting portions of TotB into more authoritative documents than JP's Wednesday audiences. All the Church's conclusions about homosexuality and the like fall out of the adequate anthropology of TotB, but let's face it, people are just as happy to dismiss TotB as non-authoritative if it suits their purposes. B16 appears to be moving toward putting more authority into the teachings.

    As per B16's style in general, I think he's far more "suggestive" than forceful. His choice of the episcopal miter instead of the papal tiara in his coat of arms, for instance, seems more geared toward collegiality than authority. The soft reception of the "Instruction" and the quiet response (if any!) from the Vatican says to me, "hey, I'm telling you what I think, but this is the local ordinary's job to enforce." This is my impression so far, but the curia is not known for it's swift responses so I could be proven wrong.

    I was expecting more comment about B16's call for the Church's charitable organizations to be a-political. Section 31 (b) specifically states that they are to be independent of parties and ideologies. That strikes me as something that could be gravely offensive to some.

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  4. Anonymous6:39 AM

    Mike,

    As to the "utility" of DCE, may I present a little (admittedly anecdotal) evidence? An Internet Acquaintance who is both brilliant and Russian Orthodox commented that he was deeply impressed with B-XVI's first encyclical. Perhaps other like-minded EO's will read it and -- like the "ecumenical" social cooperation with pro-life Protestants who "convert," etc., a genuine contribution to East/West reconciliation will have been made by Pope Benedict. I believe that is one of his stated desires.

    As an aside, my Internet Acquaintance asked me a question I could not really answer: why do you suppose Pope Benedict seems not to have brought the Dinoysian corpus to bear on the subject of DCE? I'd be curious to hear your thoughts. Thanks!

    Mike Burgess

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  5. Wow Mike. If the Orthodox end up being impressed as a group with DCE, then its utility will indeed have been greater than I've seen so far.

    As for the Dionysian corpus, B16 is right to be circumspect about it. In the Renaissance period it became clear that the author of that corpus was not, as had been believed before, a disciple of St. Paul. Hence, Aquinas' commentaries on and interpretations of him, which seemed strained to me to begin with, needn't be accepted. It wasn't even clear that, whoever he really was, he was an orthodox Christian. And his key idea of God-in-himself as hyperousios ousia, once understood as certain of the Byzantines understood it, seems nonsensical to this Thomistic mind.

    Best,
    Mike

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  6. Anonymous3:28 PM

    Ah... I remember reading, of course, that the (Pseudo)Dionysius was not a disciple of St. Paul, but I am not familiar with the corpus except for a few referential passages, and those don't easily spring to mind. I am hoping you could elaborate on the criticism you made vis-a-vis *hyperousios ousia*? As a budding Thomist, this intrigues me. The acquaintance of whom I spoke said:

    "But it seemed that Dionysius would have "re-presented" the problem in such a startling way (for moderns) that it might move the audience to think about the reason why eros exists in an entirely new light. That is, eros exists because everything we are (in our rightly ordered state, of course), including eros, participates in what God is, on the grounds that without Him nothing could exist and we exist only in and through Him.

    "Everything good and created in us must reflect His attributes, as we are made in His image, and so the challenge is to understand what rightly ordered eros would be like. As Dionysius would argue, the rightly ordered eros is directed towards the contemplation of and union with God, and that all good erotic desire, such as does exist in marriage, resembles this yearning for the Divine.

    "The Neoplatonism could be a problem, especially if he does want to get bogged down in the question of how we participate in superessential Being. In that sense, he would be solving one problem and possibly opening up a proverbial can of worms.

    "I recommend the Dionysian corpus in general. Many people seek its obvious Proklean system and dismiss it as merely being knock-off Neoplatonism, while others dislike the emphasis on hierarchy, and still others find the theology insufficiently Christocentric and insufficiently Biblical. Prof. (and Fr.) Andrew Louth has done great work trying to show why these criticisms are mistaken or misplaced, and I would recommend reading his Pseudo-Denys book in tandem with any reading in Dionysian works."

    Quite a lot for me to chew on. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance, Dr. L.

    Mike

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  7. Um... if that encyclical had gotten any more pointed, you could have used it to carve a turkey. How much more definite did you want the man to get? "And Mary Jones of Scrimshaw, South Dakota, is scandalizing the faithful, so stop it now!"?

    Furthermore, it's needful to make an encyclical on the subject of love and charity an encyclical for all times, rather than just for this one. It didn't have something to offend everyone; it had something to pierce everyone's heart.

    It was, in short, the letter of a practical, scholarly, and mystical Pope, who understands that he is just God's employee and not God.

    I'm not sure it's not a classic. I know it made me think and feel like I had to do something.

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  8. I hoped he would be the one to impose that choice.

    Err, how can one impose something that is a choice ?

    Love never imposes but invites to choose. As Benedict XVI does.

    God Bless

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  9. banshee:

    The sort of specificity I was hoping for was about sexual morality (divorce, contraception, etc.) and practical charity (just how do we work for justice without obscuring or downplaying charity). But perhaps the very generality of DCE might enable more people, such as yourself, to listen when he does get down to specifics. So my complaint was entirely personal.

    Chris:

    Life often forces us to make choices when we would rather not. Such moments are called 'crisis', from the Greek for 'decision'.

    I believe that, for their own spiritual good, many Catholics need to be forced to choose between what I called "the real thing" and the comfortable ersatz they now profess. Sometimes life imposes that choice; the clergy rarely do. The Pope can, and at some point should.

    Best,
    Mike

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  10. I believe that, for their own spiritual good, many Catholics need to be forced to choose between what I called "the real thing" and the comfortable ersatz they now profess.

    Maybe, but this is for God to decide and not for us. Our job is to pray for our sisters and brothers and help them to see the truth. Forcing won't help them. Love never forces.

    God Bless

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  11. Chris:

    Of course I agree that prayer is primary and that nobody's conscience can be forced to believe that P rather than not-P. But I'm not suggesting otherwise; all I'm suggesting is that sometimes the choice between P and not-P must be made, and that the Church's role is sometimes to make that choice inescapable.

    Your point entails that the Church should not explicitly make full communion with her depend on assent to doctrines hitherto undefined and not otherwise made mandatory for full communion. That seems to me to go against the very idea of defining dogma on faith or morals. And that in turn seems incompatible with the established tradition of the Church, as illustrated in, e.g., the Nicene Creed, which was formulated and proposed in order to make Arians choose between being Arians and being in the Church.

    Best,
    Mike

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