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H e r e s y o f t h e M o n t h
MODERNISM
By James Akin


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This Rock
Volume 5, Number 11
November 1994
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Founders:
Fr. Alfred Loisy, Fr. George Tyrrell, and others
Dates:
1900-1910, 1966-present
Principal Errors:
(1) God cannot be known and proved to exist by natural
reason;(2) external signs of revelation, such as miracles and prophecies,
do not prove the divine origin of the Christian religion and are not
suited to the intellect of modern man; (3) Christ did not found a
Church; (4) and the essential structure of the Church can change;
(5) the Church's dogmas continually evolve over time so that they
can change from meaning one thing to meaning another; (6) faith is
a blind religious feeling that wells up from the subconscious under
the impulse of a heart and a will trained to morality, not a real
assent of the intellect to divine truth learned by hearing it from
an external source.
Background:
The heresy of Modernism was inspired by tendencies
prevalent in liberal Protestantism and secular philosophy. It was
influenced by nineteenth-century studies by Kant and Hegel, by liberal
Protestant theologians and biblical critics (such as Schleiermacher
and von Harnack), by the evolutionary theories of Darwin, and by certain
liberal political movements in Europe.
The centers of Modernism were in France, England, Italy, and Germany.
Two of its leading figures were Fr. Alfred Loisy, a French theologian
and Scripture scholar, and Fr. George Tyrrell, an Irish-born Protestant
who became a Catholic and a Jesuit, though he was dismissed from the
Jesuits in 1906.
The heresy:
Pope Piux X dubbed Modernism "the synthesis
of all heresies." Modernists viewed doctrine not as a means of
obtaining supernatural knowledge, but as a symbol of an unknowable
ultimate reality or as a symbol of human religious expression. Because
they do not contain genuine knowledge of the supernatural, theological
dogmas are relative and may adopted or rejected based on whether they
exercise power over people's imaginations. Those dogmas which are
found productive to people's religious sentiments are to be accepted,
then abandoned when they are no longer found satisfying. Dogmas may
thus change over time, either being completely rejected or re-interpreted
and given a meaning different than what they originally had.
Since dogmas do not give us knowledge of the supernatural and religion
is best viewed as an expression of human religious.aspirations, no
real, objective knowledge of God is possible. Intellectual arguments
in favor of his existence are useless, as are arguments based on miracles
or fulfilled prophecies. In the Modernist view, the only knowledge
we can have of God is subjective, found in individual religious experiences
(which are binding on only those who receive them).
Since God is found primarily or exclusively in the human heart--in
subjective experience--he is profoundly immanent in the world.
Modernism has a tendency toward pantheism (the doctrine that God is
identical with the world or a part of it), emphasizing his immanence
at the expense of his transcendence.
Because theology does not give us knowledge of the supernatural, Scripture
is best viewed as an expression of profound religious experiences
had by its authors, but not as a sure guide to a knowledge of God
and his ways. Scripture is not free from human error and contains
much symbol and myth. Since it is historically unreliable and based
on human religious sentiment, there is a gap between what it records
and what actually took place.
This gap means that there is a great difference between the glorious
Christ the Church proclaims (the Christ of faith) and the human Jesus
who walked the hills of Israel (the Jesus of history). Jesus did not
know (at least for certain) that he was the Messiah or God Incarnate.
He did not intend to found a Church. He did not bestow the earthly
leadership of this Church upon Peter. Except for baptism and the Lord's
Supper, Christ did not institute any sacraments, and even these have
been heavily colored by Christian theological reflection.
In view of the fact that theological dogmas are relative, all Christian
denominations are equal with the Catholic Church. Even non-Christian
religions are valid expressions of man's religious yearnings. It follows
that the Church should have no special relationship with the state
and that the state has no duty to uphold and promote the true religion.
Instead of openly acknowledging that the state's power comes from
God (Rom. 13:1) through Jesus Christ (Matt. 28:18), the state should
be indifferent to all religions and to those with no religion.
Orthodox response:
Although key Modernist claims had already been censured
by Pius IX's Syllabus of Errors (1864) or infallibly condemned
by the First Vatican Council (1870), whose status as an ecumenical
council was challenged by many Modernists, it was necessary for the
magisterium to take new action.
In December 1903, Pope Pius X approved a decree of the Holy Office
that placed five of Loisy's works on the Index of Forbidden Books.
Works by other Modernist authors were placed on the Index as well.
In June 1907 the Holy Office published a decree titled Lamentabili,
which condemned 65 Modernist propositions. Pope Pius X added his censure
to this document, declaring each and all of the errors to be condemned
and proscribed.
In September the Pope published the encyclical Pascendi Dominici
Gregis, which further condemned Modernism. In November he published
a motu proprio titled Praestantia Scripturae, which
bound Catholics in conscience to embrace the decisions of the Pontifical
Biblical Commission and imposed the penalty of excommunication on
those who contradicted Lamentabili or Pascendi.
Modernist leaders began to be excommunicated. Tyrrell was excommunicated
in 1907 and Loisy in 1908.
In September 1910 Pius X published an oath against Modernism which
all clerics before the sub-diaconate, confessors, preachers, pastors,
canons, benifice-holders, seminary professors, officials in Roman
congregations and episcopal curias, and religious superiors were required
to take.
This oath required one to reject the six principal errors listed above,
to affirm and assent to Lamentabili and Pascendi,
and to reject a variety of other errors, especially those opposing
doctrine and history (such as the difference between the Christ of
faith and the Jesus of history). Only 40 priests in the entire world
refused to take the anti-Modernist oath, which effectively ended the
Modernist crisis for the short term.
Tyrrell died in 1909, depriving the movement of one of its central
pillars. As he lay dying he was given a conditional absolution (conditional
on his mentally retracting his errors; he was too ill to speak) and
extreme unction. His friend and supporter, Miss Maude Petre, who cared
for his as he died, refused to take the anti-Modernist oath and was
barred from the sacraments, though not formally excommunicated. Loisy
died in 1940.
In the middle of the century, a strand of Modernism erupted through
the writings of Fr. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, leading to Pope Pius
XII's 1950 encyclical Humanae Generis.
Modern Parallels:
Following Vatican II, the Index and the anti-Modernist
oath were abolished (in 1966 and 1967, respectively). Modernism reappeared
under the influence of theologians and writers such as Hans Kung,
Edward Schillebeeckx, and Charles Curran. These clerics challenged
papal and scriptural infallibility, rejected Catholic moral teachings
(such as on contraception), and began to promote ideas such as women's
ordination to the priesthood. Over time, these individuals were censured
by the Church and prohibited from presenting themselves as Catholic
theologians.
In response to the neo-Modernist crisis, Pope John Paul II issued
in 1992 the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the first Church-wide
catechism in four hundred years. In 1993 he released the encyclical
Veritatis Splendor to correct errors in Catholic moral teaching.
In 1994 he issued Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, definitively rejecting
the idea of women's ordination. He is said to be readying an encyclical
on sexual morality that is expected to reaffirm the teaching given
in Humanae Vitae.
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