What do the Dissenters in & around the Catholic Church Really Want? — Three Views
ON CURRAN, KUNG, THE LEFEBVRITE SCHISMATICS, ET AL.
Considering Dissent from the Perspective of History
Historians whose research centers on the origins of Christianity constantly rediscover that the religious experience which Jesus of Nazareth had is the source from which the Christian movement sprang. So potent was that experience that Jesus’ followers believed him to be God’s final and personal self-disclosure to the human race. The inner structure of Jesus’ religious experience radically altered what had been the traditional Jewish insights of monotheism and Yahweh’s covenant with his people. Followers of Jesus believed that the one God must be triune and that Jesus himself, when all was said and done, had to be the Logos or Word, the second person of the Trinity. Those who accepted God’s self-disclosure in Jesus to be normative for their own religious experience did so because they had received the gift of faith through the action of the Holy Spirit and thought of themselves as members of a new people covenanted to the Triune God in Jesus.
Specialists in historical theology agree that it is not by chance that the first great theological debates to trouble the Christian movement were the Trinitarian and Christological controversies which convulsed the Christian communities of the first five centuries of our era. What was at issue ultimately in these controversies was the very nature of God’s self-disclosure of what he was really like and what those to whom he was revealing himself might become. In the initial centuries of its existence, the Christian movement explained its own identity by proclaiming an understanding both of God and humankind in Jesus. Yet the Christian Church could not have articulated its identity against Arius, Macedonius, Nestorius, and Eutyches in the first four Ecumenical Councils had it not even earlier in its history developed criteria for doctrinal discernment and a process to judge doctrinal dissent.
As Christianity arises from profound personal religious experience, so is it meant to deepen that experience for each Christian. Christianity’s clarity of vision of the triune God’s offer of a New Covenant in Jesus to all human beings depends on the prayerful and disciplined reflection of Christians on their communal faith experience. Christians realize that in accepting the Holy Spirit’s gift of faith, in responding to the revelation in Jesus, they join a community whose religious experience is in historic continuity with that of Jesus of Nazareth. Christians know that they ought willingly to share their religious experience with their faith community and anticipate that the community will deepen, nuance, and develop their faith experience in the light of the religious experience the community has had from Jesus’ time to their own.
By dialogue and discernment during the first 150 years of its existence, the Christian movement established criteria and found the personnel and processes for maintaining continuity with Jesus’ religious experience. That continuity required Christianity to separate from Judaism. Though distinct from Judaism, Christianity affirmed its Jewish roots against Marcion’s morally rigorist gnosticism which held that Jesus’ God was not the God of the Old Covenant. Justin Martyr and Irenaeus unabashedly borrowed from Greek philosophy in arguing against the Gnostics’ position that an evil God made the material universe and a good God made whatever is spiritual. Yet the Apologists’ very arguments directed against the Gnostics forced Christians to modify the Greek philosophical understanding of God’s transcendence. A God covenanted to his people could not be unmoved by or indifferent to his creation.
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