INTRODUCTION: JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY

Similar documents
The Trinity and the Enhypostasia

Secularization in Western territory has another background, namely modernity. Modernity is evaluated from the following philosophical point of view.

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SCIENCE, RELIGION AND ARISTOTELIAN THEOLOGY TODAY

for Christians and non-christians alike (26). This universal act of the incarnate Logos is the

Logic and the Absolute: Platonic and Christian Views

Christianity Among Other Religions Book Review

CHRISTIAN MORALITY: A MORALITY OF THE DMNE GOOD SUPREMELY LOVED ACCORDING TO jacques MARITAIN AND john PAUL II

RESPONSE TO ANDREW K. GABRIEL, THE LORD IS THE SPIRIT: THE HOLY SPIRIT AND THE DIVINE ATTRIBUTES JEROMEY Q. MARTINI

FAITH & REASON THE JOURNAL OF CHRISTENDOM COLLEGE

JOHNNIE COLEMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY. Title KEYS TO THE KINGDOM

EUCHARIST AND KENOSIS

Pope Benedict, influenced by Vatican II, can shape its implementation

Man and the Presence of Evil in Christian and Platonic Doctrine by Philip Sherrard

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant

Christian Scriptures: Testimony and Theological Reflection 5 Three Classic Paradigms of Theology 6

CHARITY AND JUSTICE IN THE RELATIONS AMONG PEOPLE AND NATIONS: THE ENCYCLICAL DEUS CARITAS EST OF POPE BENEDICT XVI

As mentioned in this mailing, the National Cursillo Movement in the United States recently celebrated its 50th Anniversary.

Personal Bible Study-97 Galatians 4:16 It really is all about Truth.5 (Excursus: The Need for Philosophical Realism)

READING REVIEW I: Gender in the Trinity David T. Williams (Jared Shaw)

42 Articles of the Essentials of a Christian World View

VATICAN II COUNCIL PRESENTATION 6C DIGNITATIS HUMANAE ON RELIGIOUS LIBERTY

Newman's "Idea" for Catholic Higher Education (Part 1)

The Role of Love in the Thought of Kant and Kierkegaard

Sophia Perennis. by Frithjof Schuon

Symbol of Faith Carlos Castro MSpS and Pilar Sarabia Chapter 5

Eucharistic prayer in the 21st century

UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER AND LOVE

Brief Glossary of Theological Terms

1/12. The A Paralogisms

From Speculation to Salvation The Trinitarian Theology of Edward Schillebeeckx. Stephan van Erp

ARTICLE 1 (CCCC) "I BELIEVE IN GOD THE FATHER ALMIGHTY, CREATOR

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ABOUT ATHEISM

THE0 266 The Church in the World

A Conservative Christian Declaration. Preamble: On the Need for Conservative Christianity

The Chalcedonian Formula Without Confusion and Without Separation in the Light of the Documents Issued by the International Theological Commission

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN THE PAPACY OF POPE BENEDICT XVI. SEVEN YEARS OF INTERVENTIONS BEFORE THE UN

Home-Learning Guide. FINDING GOD for Junior High

Theology of the Body! 1 of! 9

The Sources of Religious Freedom: Dignitatis Humanae and American Experience

Being Human Prepared by Gerald Gleeson

Class 11 - February 23 Leibniz, Monadology and Discourse on Metaphysics

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations

PHILOSOPHY AS THE HANDMAID OF RELIGION LECTURE 2/ PHI. OF THEO.

10/31/2014. Nov. 5 Dec. 10, 2013 Kino Institute Rev. Paul Sullivan

Resolutio of Idealism into Atheism in Fichte

J.f. Stephen s On Fraternity And Mill s Universal Love 1

The Divine Nature. from Summa Theologiae (Part I, Questions 3-11) by Thomas Aquinas (~1265 AD) translated by Brian J.

A Conservative Christian Declaration. Preamble: On the Need for Conservative Christianity

Letter & Spirit 7 (2011): 7-12

Correlations for Who Is Jesus Christ? A Primary Source Reader

ETHICAL POSITIONS STATEMENT

Pope Francis presented the following reflection in his homily

STUDENT WORKBOOK. T1 Chapter One T11 Chapter Two T19 Chapter Three T29 Chapter Four T39 Chapter Five T49 Chapter Six T59 Chapter Seven T69 Epilogue

Christian Evidences. The Verification of Biblical Christianity, Part 2. CA312 LESSON 06 of 12

1 - Conscience & Truth

Vatican City, July 2013 Published below is a broad summary of Pope Francis' first encyclical, Lumen Fidei, published 5 July 2013.

ANNOTATIONS. Series 2 Lesson 1 THE TRUE CHARACTER OP GOD

Liberal Theology Friedrich Schleiermacher ( ). The Father of Liberal theology. Pastored the large and influential Trinity Church

LUCIAN BLAGA UNIVERSITY OF SIBIU ANDREI ȘAGUNA FACULTY OF ORTHODOX THEOLOGY

Kant and his Successors

Taoist and Confucian Contributions to Harmony in East Asia: Christians in dialogue with Confucian Thought and Taoist Spirituality.

STATEMENT OF EXPECTATION FOR GRAND CANYON UNIVERSITY FACULTY

THAT TRINITARIAN CURRENT OF LOVE

THE SPIRITUALIT ALITY OF MY SCIENTIFIC WORK. Ignacimuthu Savarimuthu, SJ Director Entomology Research Institute Loyola College, Chennai, India

The Knowledge of the Holy

Sanders, Fred and Klaus Issler, eds. Jesus in Trinitarian Perspective: An Introductory Christology

How do we ensure that reform enriches the liturgy rather than detracts from it?

Lesson 6: The Doctrine of God: The Existence of God

LESSON 3: CST THE LIFE AND DIGNITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON

The Encyclical Letter of Benedict XVI, Deus Caritas Est, and its African Reception

Fr. Augustine Hoelke, O. Cist. Our Lady of Dallas Cistercian Abbey 6 th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year A February 13, 2011

The title of this collection of essays is a question that I expect many professional philosophers have

The Pope Engages the Jesus Debate: Benedict XVI on Jesus

by Br. Dunstan Robidoux OSB

July 19, Opening: Mat 22:37-40; 1 Cor 6:20; 7:23; John 15:17-19; Mat 11:28-30;; Jn 8:32; 1 Tim 3:15; Psa 73:24.

Honorary Doctorate Speech given at the Dominican University College convocation

Mary, the Mother of God. James R. Dennis Advent, 2015 Holy Spirit Episcopal Church

Doctrine of the Trinity

MOTU PROPRIO: FIDES PER DOCTRINAM

The Advancement: A Book Review

[MJTM 18 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

LIBERTY: RETHINKING AN IMPERILED IDEAL. By Glenn Tinder. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company Pp. xiv, 407. $ ISBN: X.

THE CRISIS OF THE SCmNCES AS EXPRESSION OF THE RADICAL LIFE-CRISIS OF EUROPEAN HUMANITY

INTRODUCTION - KNOW YOURSELF

Proprietors or Priests of Creation?

Development of Soul Through Contemplation and Action Seen from the Viewpoint of lslamic Philosophers and Gnostics

The Holy One Bore God's Wrath But Did Not See Corruption

On Public Theologians

Ecumenism and Inter-Religious Dialogue

Remarks by Pope Benedict XVI The Catholic University of America April 17, 2008

Revelation & Faith. Table of Contents

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10.

MESSAGE FOR THE END OF RAMADAN

The Encountering Jesus Series Grid

RAHNER AND DEMYTHOLOGIZATION 555

SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY, VOLUME 1. Wolfhart Pannenberg ( ) has had a long and distinguished career as a

DALLAS BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE ILLOGIC OF FAITH: FEAR AND TREMBLING IN LIGHT OF MODERNISM SUBMITTED TO THE GENTLE READER FOR SPRING CONFERENCE

UNITARIANISM tolerance of all but intolerance. Rom.1: Unitarianism

THE RE-VITALISATION of the doctrine

Finding God and Being Found by God

Transcription:

INTRODUCTION: JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY In celebration of the 90th birthday of Joseph Ratzinger, Communio s Summer 2017 issue commemorates this moment in the life of the pope emeritus by revisiting principal themes of his theological legacy. In Ratzinger s preface to the 2000 edition of his seminal Introduction to Christianity, he sums up the teaching of this work in the following way: The God who is Logos guarantees the intelligibility of the world, the intelligibility of our existence, the aptitude of reason to know God and the reasonableness of God, even though his understanding infinitely surpasses ours and to us may so often appear to be darkness. The world comes from reason, and this reason is a Person, is Love this is what our biblical faith tells us about God (26). The essays gathered here carry on Benedict XVI s constant recollection that it is in communion with the God who makes himself known in Jesus Christ that human life is fulfilled and illuminated as a whole. James V. Schall, in A Happening That Really Took Place: Ratzinger on Reason, Revelation, and the Adventure of Thinking, offers an interpretation of Benedict XVI s celebrated Regensburg Lecture. As Schall comments, at the center of this address lies Ratzinger s hallmark concern to uphold finite reason in its capacity for God s self-communication. The Word, the Logos, in whom all things were created, is precisely the measure of all that is. Revelation is not first an incomprehensible act of will but a matter of dialogue, as mind addressed to mind. The Communio 44 (Summer 2017). 2017 by Communio: International Catholic Review

220 INTRODUCTION human intellect is naturally available for receiving a call and conceiving a hope that comes to it with God s free self-gift in Christ. Schall explains that modernity s restricted sense of reason has resulted in a society with the utopic desire to secure resurrection on a wholly immanent, pragmatic basis. In Ratzinger on the Timelessness of Truth, Tracey Rowland considers the relationship between God s invariable truth and the development of history in which this truth is revealed and received. Rowland defends Ratzinger s position that the Church s tradition, as the ever-new unfolding of God s definitive act of revelation, never departs from its origin. As such, doctrinal principles bear the memory of the person, Christ, from whom the Church continues to live today. Ratzinger-Benedict stands for the affirmation of both history and metaphysics, not metaphysics without history (the pre-conciliar problem) or history without metaphysics (the postmodern temptation). He eschews any kind of dualistic choice between the being-christology of Chalcedon and the event-christology of the New Testament. James M. Carr discusses the significance of Ireland s recent legalization of so-called same-sex marriage in The 2015 Marriage Referendum in Ireland: A Ratzingerian Analysis. Carr follows Ratzinger by identifying one source of the West s cultural crisis in a positivism that precludes the givenness of natural order from rational discourse. This viewpoint fuels the modern project to have man progressively decide, or manufacture, his own identity by technical means. The political impetus to redefine marriage s very form, Carr argues, betrays modernity s revolutionary denial that man s self-determination is rooted in the truth of his being as creature. One of the central constraints on freedom in the political sphere is the acknowledgment and respect of human dignity which derives not from human reason but the creative reason of the Logos, Christ. Moreover, freedom must always be understood as a positive, ontological concept: the freedom to be the person created by God to seek and know him and enter into relationship with him. In Ratzinger on the Augustinian Understanding of Religious Freedom, Daniel E. Burns elucidates how Ratzinger s distinctive interpretation of religious freedom takes inspiration from Augustine s City of God. According to Augustine, the com-

JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY 221 munity of the Church both transcends the bounds of the state and liberates the state for its own ancillary task. In this way, Ratzinger says, the Church has given the world a gift of freedom, the gift of a politics free of the false claim that politics can fully determine man s proper relationship to the divine, a demythologised politics. Though the two orders are rightly distinct, the state remains inseparably related to, and dependent on, the Church s authority. Indeed, Ratzinger maintains that the Church s appeal to conscience, understood as the anamnesis of God, recollects man to the ultimate truth in relation to which the political order receives its proper integrity. Two essays reflect Ratzinger s call for the retrieval of an integral vision of reality in an age increasingly oblivious to being and the universal presence of God. In the first, Augusto Del Noce on the New Totalitarianism, Carlo Lancelloti attends to Del Noce s trenchant critiques of liberal society. According to Del Noce, this technological society shares with the totalitarian regimes it rejects a systematic undermining of reason s capacity for the whole, doing so through an ideology that holds that experimental science alone provides the valid measure of truth. By evacuating metaphysical claims of rational significance, our civilization suppresses a sense for transcendence, above all the desire for God, and absolutizes political power and action as the domain of human meaning. As Lancelloti notes, the most potent refutation of totalitarianism is the rediscovery that human freedom is founded on the recognition of the transcendent. D. C. Schindler, in Love and Beauty, the Forgotten Transcendental, in Thomas Aquinas, addresses the hidden centrality of beauty in the Angelic Doctor s metaphysics of love. Unlike the more directly Platonic masters of the Patristic era, for whom beauty has a manifest primacy, Aquinas speaks of love mainly in relation to goodness. Unfolding Thomas s own principles, however, Schindler illustrates how the disposition to the good depends on the prior reception of another being s selfshowing. In this regard, the soul s joyful rest in the experience of beauty presents the foundation both for his rational apprehension of truth and for his voluntary desire to embrace the good. If love is a response to beauty, Schindler concludes, this means that at the core of everything we do, even if we are unconscious of it, lies some experience of beauty, a glimpse of the gratuity

222 INTRODUCTION and wonderfulness of reality that displays itself before us and invites us in. In his Behold the Pierced One, Ratzinger describes the Incarnation as follows: the Logos so humbles himself that he adopts a man s will as his own and addresses the Father with the I of this human being; he transfers his own I to this man and thus transforms human speech into the eternal Word, into his blessed Yes, Father. In harmony with this claim, Roch Kereszty, in The Ontological and Psychological Notion of Person in Trinitarian Theology and Christology, confronts the accusation that the Church s doctrinal Christology, particularly the Chalcedonian confession that Jesus is a divine person in two natures, does not sufficiently esteem the complete humanity assumed by the Word. Kereszty responds that the Son s human nature is wholly personalized by the hypostatic union, and that this is precisely why Jesus can perfectly reveal God in the flesh. He accordingly speaks of Christ s human consciousness in term of his personal development as man, the growth through which Jesus appropriates and reveals his divine I through dialogue with the Father. Jesus is the one man who carries out the absolute, perfect gift of self to the Father, but he can do so only because he is the incarnate Son who, as man, surrenders himself to the Father. In Retrieving the Tradition, we publish an essay and an address given by Joseph Ratzinger prior to his election to the papacy. First, in Sources Chrétiennes and the One Unique Source, Fr. Ratzinger, still a professor at the University of Regensburg, looks back on an important series of Patristic writings published by Henri de Lubac and Jean Daniélou in the mid-twentieth century. Ratzinger remarks that, in the post-conciliar context, it was pivotal for theologians to see new doctrinal developments as abiding in the Church s theological roots, and indeed to recognize the whole of her tradition as having its single origin in Jesus Christ. Sources, in this sense, are those writings that make known the original Christian event, and so serve Christian unity, while confirming and deepening Christian life. Where this conception of source prevails, there is no archaeologism, but a living and fruitful relationship to history. In The New Evangelization, Ratzinger, now a cardinal and Prefect of the CDF, ponders the present form in which the Church is called to carry out her perennial mission of bringing mankind to the fullness

JOSEPH RATZINGER: IN HONOR OF HIS 90TH BIRTHDAY 223 of life given with membership in Christ. He urges us to see that the fundamental need of our own time, characterized as it is by a loss of what is essentially human, is the recovery of God. Evangelization can only lead others to a fully human existence in God by imitating Christ s own way of making the Father visible, a work Christ performs above all through the fruitfulness of his death. To follow Christ is to share in his Cross, to unite ourselves to his love, so that our life might be transformed in giving birth to the new man, created according to God (Eph 4:24). Whoever omits the Cross, omits the heart of Christianity (1 Cor 2:2). Finally, we print David L. Schindler s In Memoriam: Kenneth L. Schmitz. Professor Schmitz, who served Communio from the beginning as a member of the original board, passed away on August 25. Requiescat in Pace. The Editors