Thursday Theology #569
May 7, 2009
Topic: Testing Benedict XVI By the Company He Would Keep
Colleagues,
The Thursday Theology post for February 26, 2009 was Steve Krueger's
analysis of the "working theology" of the current pope, Benedict XVI. I thought
it was superb, creme-de-la-creme, so I sent it on to you. Want to check it
again? Here's the URL:
http://www.crossings.org/thursday/2009/thur022609.shtml.
Yet one of my dearest Roman colleagues, erstwhile priest and missionary in
distant lands--and never one to say (in my hearing, at least) "If the pope
says it, that settles it"--was very unhappy with Steve's analysis and
critique. He had some sharp words for Steve and also for the book Steve was
reviewing, David Gibson's THE RULE OF BENEDICT. That surprised me, since the
Jesuits (seldom inclined to give unmerited acclaim) in their official magazine
AMERICA praised Gibson's book: "extraordinarily well-written, informative,
insightful, and page-turning (yes, it is a page-turner) book." But for my
Roman friend, creme-de-la-creme it was not. More like sour milk. It was all
wrong.
What I saw Steve doing--and he told us that more than once in his
essay--was taking B16's own claim "I am a decided Augustinian," and laying it
alongside Luther's own kind of Augustinianism and showing us what he found.
Brilliant, I thought. The very outline of his essay took us through "three
Augustinian issues" with ML and B16 side by side. Yes, there are differences,
and they are important differences. Steve's conclusion: "Though Benedict
claims to be a fan of Luther, the theology of the cross--central to Luther's
Augustinianism--is a side of Luther that seems to have eluded Benedict
entirely."
Is that a serious defect or not? For the Augustinianism of an
"Augsburg-Catholic" it is indeed. So whose theological tradition has a major "defect"?
That's the standard Roman term for what non-Roman Christians are missing.
And a defective theology of the cross--is that something subsidiary, or at
the very center?
In order to show me and Steve the "other side"of the picture about Benedict
XVI my Roman friend sent two texts just off the press--one from the pope's
own hand and one from a scholarly defender. I sent these directly to Steve.
"Does this change the picture?" I asked. What he tells us below is his
answer. Though he didn't quote Pilate's famous dictum "What I have written, I
have written," he might have. For the texts which purportedly would show
the "other side," still show the very "same" side, says Steve. Granted,
that's a veredict coming through Luther's kind of Augustinian lenses. Here's
what he found.
Peace and joy!
Ed Schroeder
Testing Benedict By the Company He Would Keep
A good test for the church is to notice the company it would keep. Robert
Bertram used to remind his students that it was precisely the company Jesus
would keep that led him to the cross. The haunting question is raised from
the Gospels, "Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?"
(Matthew 9: 11; see also Mark 2: 16 and Luke 5: 30). The question recurs
also with equal force when you notice just who it is at the last judgment who
had been in solidarity all along with the hungry, the thirsty, the
estranged, the naked, the sick and the imprisoned noted in Matthew 25. The church,
with its Lord, would be judged ultimately by the company it keeps.
Ed Schroeder asked me to do a follow up essay to my earlier review of David
Gibson's THE RULE OF BENEDICT (2006) in light of some new data we have on
this pope. Just before Benedict's recent globe-trotting to Cameroon and
Angola in mid-March, presumably to keep company with the faithful there, the
holy father found himself defending an action he had taken in January. In a
letter dated March 10th, Benedict sought to make his case on why he lifted
(the Vatican word is "remitted") the excommunication of four right-wing bishops
associated with Archbishop Marcel Lafebvre (1905-1991) and his
traditionalist Society of Pius X. The papal action is a good test case on evaluating
where this pope's pontificate seems to be headed. Why would the pope want to
hang out with these guys and the kind of Catholicism they represent?
Of course to a Lutheran, lifting excommunications by the Vatican wouldn't
necessarily raise all the red flags and groundswell of criticism which the
January 24th action by the pope appears to have triggered. Just on the face
of it, lifting excommunications for the sake of bridge building could be
seen, as Benedict would want the world to see it, as a rather nice "discreet
gesture of mercy." Had Leo X of the 16th century been as generous in spirit
who knows what might have happened almost half a millennium ago when one
excommunicated Augustinian monk instead got the boot in 1521? Yet a deeper
reading of the situation with the Lefebvrists most certainly places them at polar
opposites to Luther. We are then left wondering what kind of new company
this pope is urging upon his church if he is all that interested in building
bridges in the name of Christ.
An old sidekick of Benedict's, Fr. Hans Küng (Küng had once brought the
future pope to the University of Tübingen to join him on the faculty), has been
one voice to have weighed in on his former colleague's papal action. In
"Le Monde" Küng was deeply critical. Küng had once written about the kind of
company the church ought to keep but it was of a different crowd than the
traditionalist purist crowd represented by the Society of Pius X. Commenting
on the "Guilty Church" in his monumental ON BEING A CHRISTIAN (which
Benedict had been instrumental in condemning), Küng wrote:
"A Church which will not accept the fact that it consists of sinful men and
exists for sinful men becomes hardhearted, self-righteous, inhuman. It
deserves neither God's mercy nor men's trust...If the Church self-righteously
remains aloof from failures, irreligious and immoral people, it cannot enter
justified into God's kingdom. But if it is aware of its guilt and sin, it can
live in the joyous assurance of forgiveness. The promise has been given to
it that anyone who humbles himself will be exalted" (pp. 507-508).
The folks Küng talks about as worthy of the church's association would not,
more than likely, describe the 491 priests, 215 seminarians, six
seminaries, 88 schools, two university level institutes, 117 religious brothers and
164 religious sisters (and four formerly excommunicated bishops) which
comprise today's Society of Pius X. If anything, the Society's standard
condemnation of the post Vatican II church as an "adulterous union" makes one wonder
just who didn't want to keep company with whom? Was it the church expelling
the Lefebvrists or was it the Lefebvrists expelling the church?
Küng's Tübingen faculty colleague, Peter Hünermann, equally expressed his
serious doubts about Benedict's "remission of excommunication" for just this
very reason. As reported by the "National Catholic Reporter" (March 20),
Hünermann, "one of Germany's most eminent theologians," wondered in "Herder
Korrespondenz" about the validity of the papal excommunication-lifting when
the four bishops in question had shown anything but remorse for their
positions, let alone any genuine repentance required under canon law for the lifting
of excommunication. The action, according to Hünermann, "was a grave
mistake...one that will be very difficult to correct."
In his criticism of Benedict, Hünermann asked his reader to notice the
whole history of the Lefebvrists and of the evolution of the Society of Pius X.
The Society was founded in 1970 by French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, an
embattled prelate who had once been Superior General of the Holy Ghost Fathers
largely responsible for bringing the faith to French Africa. His
traditionalist views, clearly in evidence at Vatican II, ultimately ran afoul of the
more progressive voices of his congregation and the French bishop ended up
turning in his resignation for retirement in 1968 to Pope Paul VI. Lefebvre
had been known for his identification with the defeated monarchists after
the 1789 French Revolution who opposed the revolutionary principles of
liberty, fraternity and equality and who had been sympathetic with the French
Vichy regime of Marshal Petain which had collaborated with Nazi Germany
alongside other right-wing voices and causes in French society.
Archbishop Lefebvre had gained notoriety at the Second Vatican Council for
trying to undercut the language on the Council's approved document "On Human
Dignity." Failing that, after his retirement in 1968 as Superior General
of the Holy Ghost Fathers, Lefebvre took up his cause by responding to a call
from traditionalist French seminarians for a conservative seminary (they
had been refused ordination by Rome). The birth of that seminary in
Switzerland in 1969 ultimately gave rise to the International Priestly Society of
Saint Pius X (SSPX) in 1970, given "provisional" status by Bishop Francois
Charriere of Freibourg, Switzerland for six years.
By 1975, the "Wildcat Seminary" (as it was known to the unsympathetic
French bishops who refused its graduates ordination) had worn out its welcome and
after two unsuccessful meetings with the appropriate commission of
cardinals for reconciliation, was officially closed by the Vatican which also
dissolved the Society of Pius X. Nevertheless Lefebvre, now openly defiant,
persisted in his work. When the Archbishop went ahead with ordinations in 1976,
he was informed that in order to retain his canonical status he needed to
apologize to Pope Paul VI. Instead, Lefebvre in his response blasted the
Roman pontiff and the Council's work declaring Vatican II was "a compromise with
the ideas of modern man." Paul VI responded by suspending the prelate.
Of particular note, one of Lefebvre's causes had been rejection of the
liturgical reforms of Vatican II, especially the introduction of what the
Archbishop called "the bastard rite" of the Mass of Paul VI. The Society,
instead, defiantly retained only the Tridentine liturgies and made the Latin mass a
major drawing card of support. Lefebvre had even joked that Pope Paul VI
had done him a favor by forbidding him now to perform the new rites and tried
to argue that "he had dodged the penalty by administering the sacraments
using the previous formulas." According to one observer, Paul VI was not
amused.
After several failed attempts with both Paul VI and John Paul II at
reconciliation (in 1976 and 1978), Lefebvre announced his intention in 1981 to
consecrate a bishop to succeed himself. The Archbishop had even finessed an
agreement with the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in 1988 to regularize the
Society of Pius X again and to allow for Lefebvre to consecrate one bishop with
Vatican approval. Later that year on June 30, Lefebvre reneged on that
agreement and, despite Vatican warnings about "a schismatic act" and of
"theological and canonical consequences," consecrated not one but four SSPX priests
as bishops: Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard Williamson, Alfonso de
Galarreta and Bernard Fellay. Bishop Emeritus Antonio de Castro Mayer of
Campos, Brazil joined as co-consecrator.
The next day the Congregation for Bishops issued a decree that this was a
schismatic act and that all six people involved had incurred automatic
excommunication. On July 2, Pope John Paul II condemned the consecration in his
apostolic letter "Ecclesia Dei" and said that, by virtue of canon 1382 of the
Code of Canon Law, the bishops and priests involved were indeed
excommunicated.
Lefebvre himself died in 1991 at the age of 85. His controversial life
included not only his support for a pre-Vatican II church purified from
"modernism" but support for political right-wing causes. Along with endorsing the
authoritarian French Vichy regime (1940-1944), the prelate went on record in
1976 with praise for the regimes of Jorge Videla in Argentina and Augusto
Pinochet in Chile. He also was noted for his historic praise in 1985 of the
governments of Francisco Franco of Spain and Antonio Salazar of Portugal,
noting that their neutrality during
World War II had spared their populations the tragedy of war. In 1985, the
French periodical "Present' quoted Lefebvre as endorsing the far-right
leader Jean-Marie le Pen on the grounds the politician was the only political
leader opposed to abortion. In 1990, Lefebvre was convicted in a French court
of opposing Muslim immigration into Europe through hate speech, stating
that "it is your wives, your daughters, your children who will be kidnapped and
dragged off to certain kinds of places as they exist in Casablanca."
As Peter Hünermann assessed the meaning of lifting the excommunication of
the Lefebvrist bishops, it is this storied life and its legacy that he has in
mind. He noted that as recently as 2005, one of the bishops, Bernard
Fellay, in meeting with the pope, seemed to be the one still laying down the
ground rules for reconciliation, continuing to insist that the Lefebvrists are
the ones "who stand in true tradition of the church." The Hünermann critique
offered two examples of Vatican II changes which the Lefebvrists continue
to regard as "criminal:" First off, "heretics and schismatics" (Protestants
and Orthodox) became "all our brothers and sisters who share our faith in
Jesus Christ" and secondly, "the perfidious Jews" became "the Jewish people,
the first to hear the Word of God." Hünermann seemed to be asking, "Is this
the kind of crowd we want to be reopening the door to?" As the "National
Catholic Reporter" puts it, "'The pope and the cardinals," Hünermann states,
"are just as bound to a valid and accepted council as every Catholic is. The
lifting of the excommunications were therefore a grave mistake on the
pope's part . . . the pope's action is null and void under paragraph 126 of canon
law.'"
In his Letter of March 10th, "Concerning the Remission of the
Excommunication of the Four Bishops Consecrated by Archbishop Lefebvre," Benedict himself
appears to be genuinely perplexed by all the uproar his action created.
The pope begins with acknowledging "a discussion more heated than any we have
seen for a long time." Even though "many bishops and...faithful were disposed
to take a positive view of the Pope's concern for reconciliation, the
question remained whether such a gesture was fitting..."
First off, the pope continues, there was that "unforeseen mishap" of the
Williamson situation, which seems to have doubly complicated the whole affair.
(It turned out that one of the four bishops in question, Richard
Williamson of Britain, has had a long history of holocaust denials and very
anti-Semitic public comments). "The discreet gesture of mercy," says Benedict,
"suddenly appeared as something completely different: as a repudiation of
reconciliation between Christians and Jews."
Yet, according to the pope, nothing could have been further from the truth.
The flap over this unintended meaning of the "remission" was a
"misunderstanding."
In his letter, the pope next argues that many critics have failed to
understand the distinction between lifting an excommunication for the sake of the
healing of schism among the college of bishops (that's an individual thing)
and the doctrinal issue of the status of ministers from the Society of Pius
X. "Until the doctrinal questions are clarified, the Society has no
canonical status in the Church, and its ministers-even though they have been freed
of the ecclesiastical penalty-do not legitimately exercise any ministry in
the Church," writes the pope.
However, papal critics who parse pontifical sentences and their meaning
could easily conclude that since the Lefebvrists have never stopped their
sacramental ministry, and, indeed have regarded theirs as the truer and more
faithful ministry, the de facto effect is legitimacy now by the pope. Hünermann
sadly notes that among Benedict's concurrent actions has been to
re-legitimate the Latin rites of the Tridentine Church, one of the very foundations of
the Lefebvrist movement.
Benedict, however, appears to believe he can finesse the differences. His
letter next appeals to the requirement for any group wishing to be in
communion with the bishop of Rome to accept the conclusions of the Second Vatican
Council along with "the post-conciliar magisterium of Popes." Yet, the pope
has added a contextual nuance to Vatican II. "The Church's teaching
authority cannot be frozen in the year 1962," he writes with a sobering caveat for
the benefit of progressives. 'But some of those who put themselves forward
as great defenders of the Council need also to be reminded that Vatican II
embraces the entire doctrinal history of the Church."
However one scrutinizes papal sentences for their nuances, Benedict appears
to believe that his version of bridge building to the extreme right as he
"strengthens your brothers" (Luke 22: 32), is consistent with his overall
pontifical game plan. "The overriding priority is to make God present in the
world and to show men and women the way to God....whose face we recognize in a
love which presses 'to the end' - in Jesus Christ, crucified and risen."
This priority is directed to "the real problem...that God is disappearing from
the human horizon, and, with the dimming of the light which comes from God,
humanity is losing its bearings, with increasingly evident destructive
effects."
The pope then adds that disunity among "all believers...calls into question
the credibility of their talk of God." True enough, the pope continues,
countering disunity involves "ecumenism" and "interreligious dialogue" and the
"social dimension of the Christian faith." It also involves for Benedict the
'gesture of reconciliation" enacted toward the Lefebvrists, who,
ironically, have been among the most outspoken critics of the very ecumenism,
interreligious dialogue and "devotion to the suffering...rejection of hatred and
enmity...the social dimension of the Christian faith" of which Benedict speaks.
It's hard to reconcile this crowd (complete with Nazi sympathies and holocaust
denials) to those lofty goals. But, with Benedict, there you are.
In probably a rare moment of self-pitying, obviously meant to produce guilt
in his critics, Benedict laments, "At times one gets the impression that
our society needs to have at least one group to which no tolerance may be
shown; which one can easily attack and hate. And should someone dare to
approach them-in this case the Pope-he too loses any right to tolerance; he too
can be treated hatefully, without misgiving or restraint."
So, it appears for the Roman communion the Lefebvrists are more or less
back in the fold, at least as far as Benedict is concerned. Benedict has
pressed his point that they represent company the church ought to keep.
Notwithstanding ending his letter on the note of Easter and its "renewed hope," I
would wonder where in the whole episode was the crucified One, the One who
kept company with outcasts, tax collectors and sinners? If, as the pope says,
God is missing from the world, where might God be found?
In his LETTERS AND PAPERS FROM PRISON, Dietrich Bonhöffer offered a
different perspective on the absent-from-the-world-God. There, Bonhöffer wondered
if it wasn't God letting Godself be pushed out of the world as a construct
of human ideas (the explanation of everything we couldn't otherwise explain)
and onto a cross where God could do us all so much more good? As Bertram
would note in his CRUX, it is only as we are awestruck and flabbergasted at
the foot of the cross, that this is what it cost the Son of God to hang out
with the poor likes of me in order to redeem me, that then the greater
questions of God's absence and presence can begin to be asked and answered.
From all reports keeping company with the Lefebvrists takes Benedict's
church to an entirely different place, far away from the Crucified One.
Pastor Stephen Krueger
Sunday of the Passion, 2009