Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Pseudo-Intellectual, Christopher Hitchens. True Humanitarian, Vaclav Havel


An intellectual to learn from and a fraud to recoil from

 
OVER the past fortnight two famous men died. One was a true intellectual, but above all a great and good man, who suffered persecution and imprisonment for the sake of the freedom of his people. The other, though an accomplished verbal conjurer and master of invective, was an intellectual dilettante much mistaken for the real thing by his media groupies.

The first was, of course, Vaclav Havel; the second was the journalist Christopher Hitchens. The reaction to Hitchens's demise tells us a lot about the modern media - none of it particularly good. In The Australian last week Tony Jones fulsomely lamented that the void left by Hitchens's death was " immense and unfillable ... because he was one of the great public intellectuals of modern times". Actually, he wasn't. Hitchens was just a journalistic commentator, and a professional contrarian who had some lucky breaks. I would describe him with the same scornful words he used to describe Malcolm Muggeridge, (a really good journalist whom, naturally, he hated) "a fraud and a mountebank".
 
It is an English thing, the Oxbridge talent for shock, fury and fulmination all delivered in the closed-mouthed plummy accent. On paper, Hitchens had a talent for insult: liars, cretins, hypocrites, despots, idiots looking for a village; and for festooning these entertainments with history and literature. To the dead earnestness of US public debates, where epigrams and puns are darkly suspected of betraying moral frivolity, he brought the exhilaration of wicked puns, the volcanic eruption of invectives, the excoriating similes, the savage reductio ad absurdum, the dismissive sneer. He was an entertaining writer, whose schtick was shock - and meanness. His campaign against Mother Teresa was the absolute epitome of that. It was not just Hitchens's proselytising atheism that infuriated his critics, but the sheer pointless nastiness of it. He called this woman, whose personal possessions amounted to a spare habit and pair of sandals, "a demagogue, an obscurantist and a servant of earthly powers". No one is above criticism, including Mother Teresa, but the documentary Hell's Angel was almost deranged; a bizarrely gothic concoction - complete with a backdrop caricature that looked like something our own Bill Leak would have thought up. It was character assassination of a good and simple person, who like St Francis took Our Lord's injunction to treat your neighbour as yourself literally. Tied as this is to the concept of grace and true Christian charity, Hitchens was defeated. In the words of Cristina Odone, he was spiritually illiterate. And he didn't want to know. There was irrationality in this rage, this fundamentalist atheism. To read the gush over Hitchens in the same week as the death of one of the truly great intellectual leaders of modern times is at one level absurd; on another, deeply depressing. Havel was someone who, though not a practising Christian (although he will be given a Catholic burial), would have understood Mother Teresa. Havel understood that, without the personal virtues we cannot have a virtuous society. He understood, and was deeply respectful of, the spiritual dimension of life, as he warned after the "velvet revolution" against one materialist fallacy being replaced by another. In his lecture at the Prague forum last year, he lamented "the swollen self-consciousness of this civilisation, whose basic attributes include the supercilious idea that we know everything and what we don't yet know we'll soon find out, because we know how to go about it. We are convinced this supposed omniscience of ours, which proclaims the staggering progress of science and technology and rational knowledge in general, permits us to serve anything that is demonstrably useful. With the cult of measurable profit, proven progress and visible usefulness, there disappears respect for mystery, and along with it humble reverence for everything we shall never measure and know, not to mention the vexed question of the infinite and eternal, which were until recently the most important horizons of our actions." In a recent article, online editor Michael Cook (of BioEdge and MercatorNet) said that although Havel, like Hitchens, was not a Christian, "he defended the achievements of Christendom because it appreciated that man is a mystery and because it had preserved a commitment to transcendent values. He had suffered under communism and he knew what the alternative was. Unlike Hitchens, he knew that without God, anything is possible. Anything terrible and depraved." So let Havel have the last word. "In today's multicultural world, the truly reliable path to co-existence, to peaceful co-existence and creative co-operation, must start from what is at the root of all cultures and what lies infinitely deeper in human hearts and minds than political opinion, convictions, antipathies, or sympathies - it must be rooted in self-transcendence. "Transcendence as a hand reached out to those close to us, to foreigners, to the human community, to all living creatures, to nature, to the universe. Transcendence as a deeply and joyously experienced need to be in harmony even with what we ourselves are not, what we do not understand, what seems distant from us in time and space, but with which we are nevertheless mysteriously linked because, together with us, all this constitutes a single world. Transcendence as the only real alternative to extinction. "The (American) Declaration of Independence states that the Creator gave man the right to liberty. It seems man can realise that liberty only if he does not forget the one who endowed him with it." 

Taken from: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/an-intellectual-to-learn-from-and-a-fraud-to-recoil-from/story-fn562txd-1226229597433

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

"True wisdom is a participation in the mind of God"




GENERAL AUDIENCE OF JOHN PAUL II


Wednesday

29 January 2003



Book of Wisdom (1-6.9-11)



True wisdom is a participation in the mind of God



1. The canticle we just heard now presents a great part of a long prayer placed on the lips of Solomon, who in the biblical tradition is considered the just and wise king par excellence. It is offered to us in the ninth chapter of the Book of Wisdom, an Old Testament work that was written in Greek, perhaps at Alexandria, Egypt, at the dawn of the Christian era. In it we can perceive tones of the lively, open Judaism of the Jewish Diaspora in the Hellenistic world. This Book offers us three currents of theological thought: blessed immortality as the final end of the life of the just (cf. cc. 1-5); wisdom as a divine gift and guide of life and of the decisions of the faithful (cf. cc. 6-9); the history of salvation, especially the fundamental event of the Exodus from Egyptian oppression, as a sign of that struggle between good and evil that leads to full salvation and redemption (cf. cc. 10-19). 2. Solomon lived about ten centuries before the inspired author of the Book of Wisdom, but has been considered the founder and ideal author of all later sapiential thought. The prayer in the form of a hymn placed on his lips is a solemn invocation addressed to "the God of my fathers, Lord of mercy" (9,1), that he would grant the precious gift of wisdom. In our text there is a clear allusion to the scene narrated in the First Book of Kings when Solomon, at the beginning of his reign, goes up on the heights of Gibeon where there was a sanctuary. After celebrating a grandiose sacrifice, he has a revelation in a dream at night. To the request of God himself, who invited him to ask for a gift, he replies: "Give your servant, therefore, an understanding heart to judge your people and to distinguish right from wrong" (I Kgs 3,9). 3. The starting point offered by Solomon's prayer is developed in our Canticle in a series of appeals to the Lord to grant the irreplaceable treasure of wisdom. In the passage presented by the Liturgy of Lauds we find these two prayers: "Give me Wisdom ... send her forth from your holy heavens and from your glorious throne" (Wis 9,4.10). Without this gift we are conscious that we lack a guide, as if we were without a polar star to direct us in the moral choices of life: "I am ... a man weak and short-lived and lacking in comprehension of judgement and of laws ... if Wisdom, which comes from you be not with [me] [I] shall be held in no esteem" (vv. 5-6). It is easy to intuit that this "wisdom" is not mere intelligence or practical ability, but rather a participation in the very mind of God who "with his wisdom [has] established man" (cf. v. 2). Thus it is the ability to penetrate the deep meaning of being, of life and of history, going beyond the surface of things and events to discover their ultimate meaning, willed by the Lord. 4. Wisdom is a lamp that enlightens the moral choices of daily life and leads us on the straight path "to understand what is pleasing in [the] eyes [of the Lord] and what is comformable with your commands" (cf. v. 9). For this reason the Liturgy makes us pray with the words of the Book of Wisdom at the beginning of the day, so that God may be close to us with his wisdom and "assist us and support us in our (daily) toil" (cf. v. 10), revealing to us the good and evil, the just and unjust. Taking the hand of divine Wisdom, we go forward confidently in the world. We cling to her loving her with a spousal love after the example of Solomon who, according to the Book of Wisdom, confessed: "I loved and sought after her from my youth; I sought to take her for my bride and was enamoured of her beauty" (Wis 8,2). The Fathers of the Church identified Christ as the Wisdom of God, following St Paul who defined Christ as "the power of God and the wisdom of God" (I Cor 1,24). Let us conclude with the prayer St Ambrose addresses to Christ: "Teach me words rich in wisdom for you are Wisdom! Open my heart, you who have opened the Book! Open the door that is in Heaven, for you are the Door! If we are introduced through you, we will possess the eternal Kingdom. Whoever enters through you will not be deceived, for he cannot err who enters the dwelling place of Truth" (Commento al Salmo 118/1 [Comment on Psalm 118]: SAEMO 9, p. 377). ***



....



Taken from:



http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/audiences/2003/documents/hf_jp-ii_aud_20030129_en.html

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Pope hails potential of adult stem cell research



CITY — Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday spoke out in favour of adult stem cell research and called for any ensuing treatments to benefit all who need the care regardless of their financial means. "Illness is no respecter of persons, and justice demands that every effort be made to place the fruits of scientific research at the disposal of all who stand to benefit from them, irrespective of their means," Benedict told some 250 delegates who attended a Vatican conference on the research this week. The Vatican, which is opposed to embryonic stem cell therapy because it requires the destruction of a human embryo, hosted experts in adult stem cells, seen by the Roman Catholic Church as an alternative since no embryo is involved. In May 2010, the Holy See signed a deal with US biopharmaceutical company NeoStem that specialises in adult stem cells and the Vatican has already invested one million dollars (730,000 euros) in the company's work. "The potential benefits of adult stem cell research are very considerable," the pope told the experts Saturday, while also speaking of the ethical concerns. The fact that human embryonic stem cells (ESC) can potentially become any type of cell in the body has long held out the tantalising promise of diseased organs or tissue being repaired or replaced with healthy, lab-grown cells. "When the end in view is one so eminently desirable as the discovery of a cure for degenerative illnesses, it is tempting for scientists and policymakers to brush aside ethical objections...," Benedict said of embryonic stem cell research. But the discovery in 2007 that it is possible to coax certain adult cells back into their immature, pre-specialised state has fuelled renewed efforts to generate brand new muscle, heart or even brain cells, this time from raw material provided by the patient. And for the Church adult stem cells pose no ethical dilemma. "No such ethical problems arise when stem cells are taken from the tissues of an adult organism, from the blood of the umbilical cord at the moment of birth, or from fetuses who have died of natural causes," the pope said. The Vatican hailed its conference on adult stem cells as dispelling the widespread notion that the Catholic Church is at "loggerheads with science", said Ignacio Carrasco de Paula, head of the Pontifical Academy for Life.

....

Taken from:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i1VaV9JxfM1dq6igCeLR1C0UmibA?docId=CNG.cbc3ed79698bb9cab8ad6a92169ceb0c.31

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Book Review: The Philosophy of Jesus by Peter Kreeft


 
 
The Philosophy of Jesus by Peter Kreeft is a short, pocket-sized book of just 150 pages. From the title one might wonder what sort of philosophy book this might be. The author explains who this book is for on the first page:

“It is for both Christians and non-Christians. It’s designed to show Christians a new dimension of Jesus: Jesus the philosopher. And it’s designed to show non-Christians a new dimension of philosophy, a new philosophy and a new philosopher. It’s not designed to convert them.” (1)

Kreeft introduces the book further by answering the question Why is Jesus a philosopher? He states that on one level, of course Jesus was not a philosopher in the traditional sense. But he contends that Jesus was a philosopher in another sense that is more meaningful. But “...this book is not so much about Jesus’ philosophical style or method or ‘cast of mind’ but about his philosophical substance, his philosophical answers, his philosophy.” (5) As for the title: “The title of this book is appropriate because Jesus is more philosophical than any philosopher, not less.” (48)

The goal of the book is to look at how Jesus answers the four great philosophical questions. “They are the questions about being, truth, self, and goodness.” (6) These are questions of metaphysics, epistemology, philosophical anthropology, and ethics. But if these are the great philosophical questions throughout history, why haven’t we found adequate answers? Kreeft contends that the Christian answer is this: “because the only adequate answer to all four great philosophical questions is Christ.” (9) And so begins a book which is focused not on philosophy, but one that centers and focuses on the person of Jesus Christ, while showing how he is the answer to the great philosophical questions.

Kreeft first engages with Jesus’ metaphysics. In particular, he points out that Jesus’ metaphysic was undeniably Jewish. And this question of the nature of ultimate reality is answered in how God revealed Himself -- as the Ultimate Reality -- the “I AM.” But this metaphysic also is revealed in Jesus’ unique name for God as Father. Kreeft goes on to show how love and morality and everything flows from the ultimate reality of who God is.

The author then looks at the question of epistemology. Kreeft shows how Jesus answers this question:
Jesus’ answer to the first question, the question of being, was Himself. It was not to point but to be, to be ‘I AM.’ So His answer to the second question, the question of truth, is also not to point to anything else as the truth but simply to be Himself the truth: ‘I AM the truth.’ (47)
Again, the reader will find that this is not a book glorifying philosophy, but showing how all things point to Christ: “Everything in the universe and everything in the Bible is a finger pointing to Him. He is the end of epistemology.” (66)

Next Kreeft explores the anthropology of Jesus, noting that Christ is the key to anthropology. Jesus is the only way for man to really know himself. Even Kreeft’s writing style weaves word pictures together in such a way as to point to the beauty, artistry, and glory of Christ. In addition, the content itself encompasses both the philosophical questions and the scriptural answers.

In looking at Jesus’ ethics, Kreeft says “There are really three moral questions, three basic parts to morality: how should we relate to each other, to ourselves, and to God?” (95) Kreeft’s writing prowess shines through as he reflects on Christ as the answer to ethics:
“He is the world’s greatest moral teacher, but He is more than that. He is the world’s most perfect moral example, but He is more than that. He is the world’s greatest prophet, but He is more than that. He is more than one who taught goodness and lived goodness and demanded goodness. He is goodness.” (98)
What the reader finds in The Philosophy of Jesus is a powerful and even worshipful look at the person of Jesus Christ. The author, though academic, is not writing an academic book; though a philosopher, he has not written a philosophy book. This is a profound look at Christ as the answer to life’s great questions:
“Philosophers seek wisdom. Christ is wisdom. Therefore Christ is the fulfillment of philosophy. Moralists seek righteousness. Christ is righteousness. Therefore Christ is the fulfillment of morality.” (114-115)
The conclusion: “The answer is that there is only one hope, for societies as well as souls: ‘What must I do to be saved?’ ‘Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.’ (Acts 11:14)” (149)
 

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Vatican speaks out on global economy



Elisabetta Povoledo

October 26, 2011 .


"We should not be afraid to propose new ideas, even if they might destabilise pre-existing balances of power that prevail over the weakest" ... The Vatican.


....The Vatican has called for an overhaul of the world's financial systems and once again proposed the establishment of a supranational authority to oversee the global economy, saying it was needed to bring more democratic and ethical principles to a marketplace run amok. In a report issued by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, the Vatican said ''politics - which are responsible for the common good'' must be given primacy over the economy and finance, and existing institutions such as the International Monetary Fund have not been responding adequately to global economic problems. The document highlights the Catholic Church's concerns about economic instability and a worldwide widening inequality of income and wealth. Advertisement: Story continues below ''The time has come to conceive of institutions with universal competence, now that vital goods shared by the entire human family are at stake, goods which the individual states cannot promote and protect by themselves,'' Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, the president of the pontifical council, said as he presented the report on Monday. ''That is what pushed us.'' The document's language is distinctively strong. ''We should not be afraid to propose new ideas, even if they might destabilise pre-existing balances of power that prevail over the weakest,'' it says in its conclusions. The message prompted comparisons with the rallying cries of protest movements that have been challenging the financial world order, such as the Indignados in Madrid and the Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York City. Still, Vatican officials said the document was not a manifesto for disaffected dissidents.

....

Read more:
http://www.smh.com.au/world/vatican-speaks-out-on-global-economy-20111025-1mi2x.html#ixzz1bpv4tVkr

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Pope's "Masterpiece" Analysis of Logical Positivism

Three things we learned from Benedict's Germany trip

by John L Allen Jron Sep. 30, 2011
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Last Sunday Pope Benedict XVI wrapped up a four-day trip to Germany, which, depending upon whose word you take, either generated “widespread acclaim” (Italian commentator Sandro Magister) or a national yawn (the Munich daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung’s headline was, “He came, he spoke, he disappointed.”)
This was the German pope’s third homecoming, though his first state visit, and the 21st foreign trip of his papacy.
At one level, it’s tempting to say things were pretty much par for the course. As usual, expectations of massive protest didn’t pan out; while a few thousand demonstrators took to the streets in Berlin (brandishing “Donate a condom for the pope!” signs), most of Benedict’s opponents simply tuned him out, while the pope drew 320,000 over four days. Also as usual, intrepid Italian reporters created news when the pope didn’t supply it. Over-hyped accounts of an air gun being fired before a papal Mass in Erfurt got the juices flowing on Saturday, while Sunday was devoted to first floating, then debunking, a rumor that the pope would resign at 85.
There were precious few surprises, though we did get a reminder that Benedict has a sense of humor. During a speech to the federal parliament, the pope referenced a German intellectual who changed his mind on something while in his eighties, and added: “I find it comforting that rational thought is evidently still possible at the age of 84!”

NCR - September 30, 2011

Subscribe to NCR to get all the news and special features that aren't always available online. In this issue:

- Special Section: Religious Life
Sisters in Nigeria and Latin America; lay associates; more
- Playing it Safe
Memorial neglects daring, antiwar king
- Mission Management: A Parish Benefice
Catholic fashion with a conscience
 
Despite the generally familiar flavor of the trip, there were a few nuggets along the way with something to say about Benedict’s papacy and the direction of the church on his watch. Herewith, then, three things we learned from the pope’s trip to Germany.
1) A sensation as cultural critic
Pop quiz: What do the Collège des Bernardins in Paris, Westminster Hall in London, and now the Reichstag building in Berlin have in common? The answer, in papal terms, is that they have been the settings for arguably the most triumphant moments of Benedict’s papacy -- occasions when the cerebral pontiff dazzled secular audiences with an oratorical tour de force on faith, reason, and the foundations of democratic society.
Whatever one makes of Benedict as a religious leader, he’s a sensation as a cultural critic. True to form, his Sept. 22 speech to the Bundestag, the national parliament, quickly became the latest candidate for “best speech of his papacy.”
Addressing German lawmakers, but really speaking to Western culture generally, Benedict took on logical positivism -- the view that only empirical science counts as real knowledge, and that all moral claims are subjective. It’s a widespread conviction, the pope said, but inadequate as the basis of a just society. Without belief in some form of natural law, he argued, there’s no foundation for universal human rights. That means “humanity is threatened”, because the only thing left as the basis for law and politics is the raw will to power.
Germany’s Nazi past, Benedict XVI said, offers a harrowing reminder of what happens when “power becomes divorced from right.”
The role of religious groups in a democracy, the pope suggested, is not to “propose a revealed law to the state and to society,” but rather to hold up “nature and reason” as reliable sources for making moral choices about the social order -- including, he stressed, respect for pluralism and diversity.
On this terrain, Benedict XVI can be surprising, and even lyrical. Before the Bundestag, the surprise came in his praise of the environmental movement, which, he said, represents “a cry for fresh air,” a realization that nature does indeed contain a moral compass. (Ironically, several Greens were among 70 politicians who boycotted the speech). Benedict’s poetic streak, meanwhile, surfaced in likening positivism to a “concrete bunker with no windows”, which shuts out the natural light of moral and spiritual truth.
Secular media outlets, even those which were otherwise critical, raved about the speech. Der Spiegel called it “courageous” and “brilliant,” while Bild quoted a prominent lawmaker hailing it as a “masterpiece.” Even Die Welt grudgingly allowed that it was “not completely without cunning.” (In a further indication that Benedict got through, the left-wing London Guardian published a lengthy commentary on the speech, encouraging secular environmentalists to see past their stereotypes of the pope as “a prissy and repressed German professor”.)
In these venues, Benedict also wins points for style. He comes off as gracious and thoughtful, a contrast to the blowhards and ideologues who dominate public life. As George Weigel recently put it, he seems “the world’s premier adult.”
All this suggests a note of encouragement for Catholic movers and shakers everywhere. Controversy swirls around the church these days, a point Benedict acknowledged elsewhere in Germany by saying that sometimes the scandals of the sexual abuse crisis have overshadowed the “scandal” of the faith, meaning Christ’s death on the Cross, his resurrection, and eternal life. Yet despite that, when a Catholic leader has something incisive to say, and finds a way to say it that’s both timely and effective, it’s still possible to get people thinking.
2) The ecumenical future: Collaboration, but not communion
Benedict’s return to the Land of Luther was always destined to be scrutinized for its impact on ecumenical relations, especially with the Protestant churches of the Reformation. On that score, to put it politely, Benedict drew mixed reviews.
The pope clearly signaled his ecumenical commitment, presiding over a service with a Lutheran bishop in the Erfurt monastery were Martin Luther was ordained an Augustinian monk. The pontiff expressed admiration for Luther’s passionate quest to understand God’s mercy, and Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, president of the German bishops conference, even said that Benedict asked him to find a way for the Catholic church to participate in celebrations of the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation in 2017 -- by any standard, a remarkably irenic touch from a Roman Pontiff.
Yet Benedict didn’t offer any breakthroughs, or even signals of flexibility, on the contentious points in Catholic/Lutheran relations, such as inter-communion or mixed marriages. For those who believe such reforms are a prerequisite to progress, the performance therefore left much to be desired.
Pundit Klaus Krämer, for instance, wrote that Benedict still styles “the Catholic church as the ‘cruise ship,’ while the Protestant church is, at best, a ‘container ship’ that should follow the Vatican’s course.” The Frankfurter Rundschau was even more acerbic, calling the trip an “ecumenical disaster” and Benedict’s approach to Protestants “spectacularly half-hearted, patronizing, and callous.”
In a speech to Protestant leaders in Erfurt, Benedict identified two priorities for ecumenical relations in the 21st century:
  • The “new geography of Christianity,” by which the pope seemed to mean the dramatic growth of Pentecostal and Evangelical Christianity around the world, especially in the southern hemisphere. He called it “a form of Christianity with little institutional depth, little rationality and even less dogmatic content, and with little stability” -- implying that whatever their differences, Catholics and Lutherans still have more in common with one another than, say, the Brazilian Pentecostal “Church of Christ’s Spit.”
  • Secularism in the West, where “God is increasingly being driven out of our society” and the history of revelation recounted in Scripture is “locked into an ever more remote past.” Secularism puts all Christians in the same boat, the pope said, just as they once faced a common threat from the Nazis -- and just as the witness of the martyrs gave rise to the ecumenical movement of the 20th century, he said, today a common faith lived within the secular world is “the most powerful ecumenical force that brings us together.”
What seemed clear from the Germany trip is that Benedict XVI regards collaboration in responding to these external challenges as the near-term future of the ecumenical movement -- and not, therefore, structural unity that might lead to inter-communion. The ecumenical agenda on his watch, in other words, is more ad extra than ad intra.
3) Common Ground on Reform?
Though Benedict probably didn’t need it, his trip offered reminders that it isn’t just Protestants with an axe to grind; plenty of German Catholics are disgruntled too. For instance, the country’s president, a divorced and civilly remarried Catholic named Christian Wulff, pointedly told the pope on Friday, “Many ask themselves how mercifully the church treats people who have suffered break-ups in their lives,” and advised the church “to remain close to the people and not turn inward on itself.”
In Freiburg, tens of thousands of young Catholics held an overnight vigil on Saturday, awaiting the pontiff’s final Mass. As part of the warm-up act, organizers at one point passed out green and red inflatable sticks and asked the young people to use them to respond to an informal poll, holding up green for “yes” and red for “no.”
In response to the statement “I model my life after standards set in Rome,” a vast wave of red rolled through the crowd. For “Confession doesn’t play much of a role in my life,” however, as well as “Women carry too little responsibility in the church,” the dominant color was green. Red mounted a strong comeback when the question switched to, “Is the practice of homosexuality a sin?”
Against that backdrop, Benedict’s Sept. 25 address in the Freiburg Concert House, speaking before what was described as a cross-section of Catholics “involved in the church and in society,” was fairly unique in the annals of papal rhetoric.
For one thing, the pope didn’t mince words about the social realities: “For some decades now, we have been experiencing a decline in religious practice and we have been seeing substantial numbers of the baptized drifting away from church life,” he said. He then posed precisely the question most reformers ask: “Must the church not adapt her offices and structures to the present day, in order to reach the doubting and searching people of today?”
In response, Benedict XVI said that tinkering with ecclesial structures is not the answer.
Real reform, he implied, is interior and spiritual, not external and structural. He cited Mother Theresa, who was once asked what the first thing to change in the church would be. Her famous reply was, “You and me.”
That’s a familiar note, and could seem to suggest an unbridgeable gulf between two models of reform: structural and spiritual. (Benedict himself hinted at the divide, suggesting that a sincere agnostic is preferable to a lukewarm believer who sees the church in merely institutional terms.)
Despite that apparent impasse, there was a twist to Benedict’s vision of renewal, one which hints at a possible intersection between spiritual and structural reform: His enthusiasm for reducing the power and privilege of the church.
In the address in the Freiburg Concert House, Benedict called upon the church to embrace “worldly poverty,” so that her “missionary witness shines more brightly.” He even went so far as to suggest that historically, secularization has been an agent of reform, because it has liberated the church from “material and political burdens and privileges.”
As Sandro Magister noted, “Never before had [Benedict] given such prominence to the ideal of a church poor in structures, in possessions, in power.”
The Germany trip, in other words, may have uncovered a surprising zone of common ground between the pope and reform forces -- the press for a humbler church, one which speaks to the world more out of poverty than power. That, at least, seems a place where conversation is possible.
[John L. Allen Jr. is NCR senior correspondent. His e-mail address is jallen@ncronline.org.]
Taken from: http://ncronline.org/blogs/all-things-catholic/three-things-we-learned-benedicts-germany-trip

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Pope Tells of Deep Problems Facing Society




Tuesday, 27 Sep 2011 04:57 PM


By Edward Pentin

Pope Benedict XVI ended an official visit to Germany Sunday, confounding many sceptics who foresaw protests and acrimony during the intense four-day trip. Despite criticism ahead of the visit from sections of German society and parts of the Church who generally oppose the Church's teaching, the Pope received a far warmer reception than expected, although it stopped short of his triumphant visit to Britain last year which all but silenced his critics. From the outset, he set out "to meet people and to speak about God," delving into what he sees as the deep problems facing German (and Western) society: its "growing indifference to religion"; relativism which fragments relationships, causing an "exaggerated individualism"; and what he said was a failure to recognize that true freedom and responsibility come from God. "We see that in our affluent western world much is lacking," the Pope told a group of German lay Catholics. "Many no longer seem capable of any form of self-denial or of making a sacrifice for others." He said the Church needed to find new ways of reaching out to these people to tackle what he sees as "a crisis of faith." In other addresses, the Pope said lukewarm Christians are more damaging to the Church than nonbelievers outside it, and that some agnostics might be closer to God than believers who go to Church out of a sense of "routine." As has become customary on many papal visits, Benedict XVI met a group of five victims of clerical sex abuse, an encounter that left him "moved and deeply shaken." In a later address, he suggested that the scandal could be blamed on a worldliness that has entered the Church. The Church is not like an association, he said, and he urged Catholics to "resolutely set aside worldliness" so her missionary witness "shines more brightly." In short, this was vintage Joseph Ratzinger: the discourses, clearly originated from his own hand, were filled with appeals to return to the fundamentals of the faith, "to the heart of the Good News of Christ." Benedict XVI's historic address to the German parliament, the Bundestag, in Berlin Sept. 22 stunned even some of his ideological opponents. He said politics is above all about "a striving for justice" and argued that it was the Christian faith that helped the West to develop the rule of law, human rights, and belief in social justice. But he warned against an overemphasis on scientific enquiry, or "positivist reason," which threatens to banish religion from the public sphere. Without reference to God, he warned, the state risks becoming "a highly organized band of robbers, capable of threatening the whole world and driving it to the edge of the abyss" — a precedent shown by the Nazis. Over 50 legislators boycotted the speech, but it was described by some of those present as "brilliant" and a "masterpiece." His sincere emphasis on having a "listening heart," and his genuinely held view that the Green movement (often the most vocally opposed to the Church) is actually a chief witness to the failures produced by a purely positivist approach to the world, were masterstrokes. "Not completely without cunning," commented Die Welt newspaper, "the Pope has given notice to the members of the Bundestag of their responsibility to freedom." Many papal observers believe it will go down as one of the best — if not the best — address of this pontificate. Other high points included the Pope's meeting with Muslim leaders, in which he appealed to them to come together with the Church to defend life from birth to death. He suggested to them a model, based on Germany's federal constitution, which could uphold religious freedom for minorities in Muslim-majority states. To Jewish leaders, he recalled that Nazism showed what people are capable of when they deny God. The seemingly "almighty " Adolf Hitler was a pagan idol, he said, "who wanted to take the place of the biblical God, the creator and father of all men." In Erfurt, a city in the former East Germany, he praised those who stood fast to the faith in the face of Nazism and Communism that "acted on the Christian faith like acid rain." Also while there, the Pope made history when he became the first Pontiff to pray at the Augustinian monastery of the 16th century Church reformer, Martin Luther. Although Church officials and many Catholics reacted warmly to the visit (around 300,000 came from all over Germany to see him), reactions from the German press were generally mixed. The popular Bild newspaper was one of the few brazenly positive, saying that "never before has the "Wir Sind Papst" [we are Pope] feeling been more real in his homeland." The Suddeutsche Zeitung joined others in criticizing the Pope for not specifically mentioning contentious issues in the German Church such as priestly celibacy, homosexuality, and the role of women. Nor, they pointed out, did he mention the Church's own internal injustices. But in a Sept. 26 editorial, the German daily Die Zeit said it believed that this visit went far beyond such debates, and tried to tackle more serious and profound questions, namely: "Where do we come from and where do we want to go?" "That's a lot" to ponder, it said, adding that it is "basically everything." Yet these were evidently questions many Germans had been asking themselves — a fact partly given away by the warm reception. "The visit showed that the Christian faith is something that relates to today's society," Fr. Hans Langendorfer, chief coordinator of the trip, tells Newsmax. "This was evident in some of the speeches of the Holy Father, in the people he met, and overall in the emotional presence of the flock. This was wonderful, and it made the Pope feel good. He's very content."


Read more on Newsmax.com: Pope Confounds Skeptics on Successful German Trip Important. ....


Taken from:

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Jesus as a Jewish Philosopher



Why didn’t anyone think of this before?


Professor Peter Kreeft, a teacher of philosophy at the University of Boston, wrote in 2007 what we consider to be a very necessary book, The Philosophy of Jesus. With discussions abounding today about Thomism and neo-Thomism, and “how to situate the work of Josef Ratzinger—is he a Thomist? an Augustinian? a reactionary? a liberal?” (Fr. James Schall, S.J., Ratzinger’s Faith and Reason, http://www.ignatiusinsight.com/features2008/schall_trowlandbk_may08.asp) - a more biblical foundation for philosophy (though not the customary approach) is fully in accord with the trend now to get back to the basics, to the early Church, to authenticity and a ‘deeper understanding of the Sacred Liturgy’. It does also fit right in with the neo-Thomistic trend today towards a ‘biblical Thomism’, such as pioneered in the journal, Nova et Vetera, for example, and found in the works of the Belgian Dominican, Fr. Servais Pinckaers. [For a useful treatment of this latter subject, see Tracey Rowland’s Ratzinger's Faith: The Theology of Pope Benedict XVI, OUP, 2008, pp. 26-28, 149].
It also accords with the belief of some of the Fathers that pagan Greek philosophy (upon which much of St. Thomas’ own work was built) was influenced by the Bible: Saint Clement quoting Numenius: “What is Plato but Moses speaking Attic Greek?” (Stromata 1.22.150), and even, according to Saint Ambrose, Plato personally being influenced by the prophet Jeremiah in Egypt.
More precisely, in relation to Jesus and the New Testament, we have often referred to the view of Saint Bonaventure (in his treatise on the Good), so favoured by the Pope, that Jesus Christ himself was the metaphysician par excellence. Bonaventure had rightly argued that Jesus Christ raised metaphysics to a new level. See “Metaphysics Of The Good” by Ilia Delio, http://brightmorningstar.blog.com/2011/07/20/5206219/
So, whilst a philosophy of Jesus Christ has apparently been considered before, it does not appear to have ever been properly developed before. Why? We think because of a false western cultural predisposition (based on a faulty history and chronology) that philosophy, as we know it, arose from (and commenced only with) the Greeks.
The AMAIC has customarily traced back the very roots of Thomism, of the perennial philosophy of being, to the Old Testament Book of Exodus, the ‘I AM WHO I AM’ incident of the burning bush – a Thomism based on the Bible. Thus Frits Albers wrote about Moses in The Foundations of Our Catholic Faith (Neptune, 1981, pp. 98-99):
…. But just as Abraham a few centuries earlier had turned his back on this 'secret knowledge of Babylon' in preference to the submission to the Supernatural Light of Revelation and of True Faith in the one true God, thereby becoming 'the blessing of the Old Testament', so here Moses, by killing the Egyptian and taking up the case of the [Hebrew], showed that he too had turned his back on the mysteries of Osiris and the secret brotherhood of knowledge, in preference to the Faith of his Fathers, the Patriarchs. ….
The rejection [of Moses] by the two fighting Israelites profoundly shook Moses. Was it possible that here, in his own race, he detected ever so faintly the traces of the same thinking he had rejected himself so completely? He needed time to think, and sort himself out in a profound and prolonged meditation. 'What was wrong with the thinking of the Israelites?'
And God, who knew that in the next 40 years Moses would get an answer to this fundamental question, allowed him to come to grips with the problem. … On what Human Thinking was this towering tree of natural and supernatural beauty going to be implanted? What Philosophy was going to be the substratum … of this all-time record? A continuation of the 'right reason' that made him reject Satan's thinking encountered in the transient power of the Egyptian 'illuminati'. The day of the burning bramble bush was drawing near. And with it the day that Moses entered God's University to do a course, in what? In theology? No, in Philosophy. In the same philosophy that some 3000 years later, would take the human mind to the edge of its potential, on the testimony of later Popes.
And what is at the centre of this course? … The Existence of Absolutes. When God revealed His Name to Moses, He did not give it in the theological definition and Revelation of the Blessed Trinity, but in the philosophical definition, the one, clear human thinking can come to, without the Supernatural Light of Revelation of the New Testament. In stating His Name as "I am: 'I am'", God revealed to Moses that He is 'Being'. He is all there is. He is perpetual 'to be'. He is Absolute Existence. 'Tell the sons of Israel 'I am' sends you',' He tells Moses. And on that foundation, the knowledge of Absolute Existence, Absolute Holiness, Absolute Truth, and Absolute Goodness and Forgiveness Moses sets out on the great adventure of his life … and all the world's future destiny. The same as Satan, and his seed, have embarked on their own destiny of ruin by denying the Absolute Existence, and with the shallow knowledge of secret societies and the so­called 'illuminati', have made themselves out as rulers of this world. And we can safely say that, if this is the thinking that God required in the man who was to lead His people out of slavery into the Promised Land, and if this is the thinking God wanted passed on to every Jew in preparation of the full Revelation in His Son, then this thinking will always lie at the foundation not only of human greatness, but also at the foundation of human sanctity. ….
[End of quote]
But some have even discerned in this Sinai revelation of God’s Name a hint also of the Trinity, as we are going to read. For faith and reason are necessary together. Thus, according to John Paul II: “Faith and reason are like two wings on which the human spirit rises to the contemplation of truth; and God has placed in the human heart a desire to know the truth—in a word, to know himself—so that, by knowing and loving God, men and women may also come to the fullness of truth about themselves” (cf. Ex 33:18; Ps 27:8-9; 63:2-3; Jn 14:8; 1 Jn 3:2) (Fides et ratio. Opening words). Faith and reason together: there ought not to be the one without the other. According to Tracey Rowland, Pope Benedict XVI believes that: ‘Faith without reason ends in fideism, but reason without faith ends in nihilism'. (Op. cit., Intro., p. 5). So, both ‘wings’ - both engines if you like - are necessary if the reality is to remain aloft. It reminds one of the story of the two-engined airplane after one of its engines had failed. “What are we going to do if the other engine fails”?, asked the co-pilot. “If the other engine fails”, said the captain, “we’ll be up here forever”.
Now that’s getting a bit too airborne! Fr. Peter Little (S.J.) used to say the very same thing (‘you’re getting a bit airborne’) if he thought that one’s speculation was beginning to lose touch with reality. 
And so in the Exodus account of Moses and the Burning Bush some have discerned, apart from a philosophical basis (reason), a veiled reference also to the Holy Trinity (Faith). Regarding this, we read in an article, “The Trinity in the Old Testament” (http://godcares4u.org/Word.htm), this interesting observation (bold print added):
.... A few years ago a Christian TV show had a Rabbi on discussing issues regarding modern day Israel. At the end of the show, the Christian host suddenly turned to the Rabbi and asked him what was the primary reason for Jews not accepting Jesus. Without hesitation, the Rabbi replied, "The Trinity." To this Rabbi and other faithful Jews, the Trinity equates to be more than one God. Add to this the general confusion of most Christians on this subject and you have a major stumbling block for witnessing to Jews. So does the Trinity exist in the Old Testament? To Christians, the obvious answer is: it must since God does not change. The Shema [‘Hear, [O] Israel’] is not evidence against the Trinity, but support for It. The word translated 'one' in Deuteronomy 6:4 is the same word used in Genesis 2:24 to indicate that a man shall leave his parents and become 'one' flesh with his wife. Obviously a man and a woman are two persons who become one by becoming unified. And there are other proofs of this unique aspect of God, the most obvious of which is the plural word Elohim, translated Us, in the creation story of Genesis 1:26: "Let Us make man in Our image."
But is there a more direct reference to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit?
Before the advent of Christ, God was referred to as the God of 'Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.' The Lord Himself specified this designation when He addressed Moses from the burning bush. Why did He not just say the 'Father, Son, and Holy Spirit'? If He had, Moses might have replied - who?
God identified Himself in a way Moses could understand, as the God of his fathers, the covenant God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. But was there a message in this designation that speaks of the Trinity?  In the Bible, prophecy is not limited to the utterings of God's prophets. Prophecy is woven into the events and lives of the people of the Bible as 'types' of things to come. This designation of the Lord as the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob was completely accurate, but it was also a type, a clue, of the yet to be revealed true nature of God. As we examine these names person by person, the Trinity in the Old Testament becomes clear.
Abraham was the great father of the Israelites. Of all the descendants of Noah, Abraham was chosen by God to be the one through whom the Messiah would come. His children would become the chosen people of God. God's covenant with him promised to make him the 'father of many nations' - this is the meaning of the name Abraham. .... Whenever you think of Abraham, you think of 'father,' like the children's song "Father Abraham." Abraham represented the 'Father' of the Trinity.  
Next is Isaac, the son of promise. The Lord showed Abraham the stars of heaven and told him "So shall your descendants be" (Gen. 15:5). These descendants would come through the promised son even though Abraham and Sarah were well beyond the years of childbearing. It was Isaac, beloved by his parents even more because of his miraculous birth, that the Lord instructed Abraham to slay in the ultimate test of faith (Gen. 22:2). Genesis Chapter 22 is filled with prophetic references to the crucifixion of Jesus. For these reasons, and many more, we conclude that Isaac's name was a type of the Son in the Trinity.
In the Old Testament name of God, Jacob's name takes the position of the Holy Spirit. Jacob's life demonstrates the new birth and the transforming power of the Holy Spirit. His birth name, Jacob, means 'supplanter' or literally 'heel-catcher'. Before his birth, he wrestles with his brother in the womb. Born second, holding his brother's heel, he later deceives both his brother and his father to receive the first-born blessing. In one of the strangest accounts in the Bible, the night before a reunion with his brother, Jacob wrestles again, this time with God. In a type of reenactment of his experience in the womb, once again, Jacob holds on, this time to God rather than a man. He asks nGod for a blessing, but before it can be given, Jacob must be changed. This is represented by a name change, from Jacob whose name indicates deception, to Israel, a name that means 'God rules'. Jacob is blessed, and in Genesis 32:30 most translations quote Jacob as saying, "my life is preserved" - a better interpretation would be "my soul is delivered." Jacob's life pictures the new birth, when we are born of the Spirit (John - Chapter 3). This explains Jacob's position as the third person named in the Old Testament name of God, the position of the Holy Spirit. ....
[End of quote]
So it may well be that both the theological and the philosophical definitions of God were represented at Sinai.
In the last two decades the AMAIC has - basing itself on Church Fathers such as Clement and Ambrose - advanced Frits Albers’ correct line of thought of tracing philosophical foundations back to the Bible by shifting Thomism’s perceived pagan Greek (mainly Aristotelian) sources right back to Israel, to the Bible. We have boldly taken further the intuitions of some of the Church Fathers about the biblical basis of ‘Greek’ philosophy by arguing that the most famous of the supposedly ‘Ionian Greek’ and ‘mainland Greek’ philosophers and sages (like Thales, Solon, Socrates and Plato) were in fact Greek appropriations of famous biblical sages and holy men.
In short, we have proposed that the name ‘Thales’, belonging to the very ‘Father of Philosophy’ (as Thales is known), is actually an Egyptian name, from Ptah, and that Thales himself - who is said to have absent-mindedly fallen into a well and who measured one of the pyramids - was in fact the sage and genius of Egypt’s Old Kingdom, Ptah-hotep and Imhotep, who was in turn the patriarch Joseph in Egypt. Joseph did not actually fall into a well, but was thrown into one (Genesis 37:24). Indeed, he measured and built a pyramid, the Step Pyramid of Saqqara, a material icon of his father Jacob’s vision of a staircase to heaven. And the wise ruler Solon, a supposed Athenian, whose laws have been found to be strikingly Jewish (biblical) [Edwin M. Yamauchi, "Two reformers compared: Solon of Athens and Nehemiah of Jerusalem," Bible world. New York: KTAV, 1980. pp. 269-292], was simply a Greek appropriation of King Solomon. Archaeology shows no sophisticated Athenian culture for the time of Solon (c. 600 BC). “The first incontrovertible ‘fixed point’ in Greek [archaeological] chronology is the Parthenon, begun in 447 [BC, conventional dating]” (James, P., Centuries of Darkness, Jonathan Cape, 1991, p. 97). And Plato, we have argued, was based on the prophet Daniel in his guise as Balatu (an abbreviation of Belteshazzar) in Babylon. The realisation of this, the Israelite origins of human wisdom and philosophy (for ‘salvation is of the Jews’, John 4:22), we urge, must inevitably lead to a complete re-writing of the history of ancient philosophy.
The Hebrew wisdom would have filtered through to the Greeks last, only after having passed through pagan Canaanite-Phoenicia (entrepôts such as Ugarit, Byblos and Tyre) in the west, or Babylon in the east, then on to the Ionian Greeks in the north, or south, to Alexandria, and lastly to the mainland Greeks. It later evolved into the more systematised form of philosophy that we know today, though not necessarily even then at the hands of Greeks. For example, the Maccabean Jewish priest, Aristobulus (2 Maccabees 1:10), was supposed to have written a book on philosophy, arguing, for the benefit of the Macedonian ‘Greeks’ - most notably king Ptolemy himself – “that the essentials of Greek philosophy and metaphysics were derived from Jewish sources. Aristobulus maintained that not only the oldest [supposedly] Grecian poets, Homer, Hesiod, Orpheus, etc., but also the most celebrated Greek thinkers, especially Plato [sic], had acquired most of their wisdom from Jewish sages and ancient Hebrew texts”.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aristobulus_of_Paneas Aristobulus is one possible candidate for ‘Aristotle’ (another being Plato himself, under his name Aristocles): properly identifying ‘Aristotle’ being essential for Thomism.
Now Professor Peter Kreeft has added an exciting new dimension to all of this, the philosophy of Jesus. Without our yet having read his book, however, we would anticipate that, before such a project can be undertaken satisfactorily, the biblical basis of BC philosophy will need to be properly grasped. For any satisfactory study of Jesus Christ requires a familiarity with the Old Testament, without which Jesus himself cannot be understood – though He, in turn, makes the Old Testament at last fully intelligible, “giving it a new interpretation” (Jesus of Nazareth, p. 136).     
A philosophy of Jesus is also right in line with our efforts to write Jesus Christ into history, as The Alpha and the Omega (another of those I AM’s. Revelation 22:13). We have commenced a revised history of the world, entitled:
THE CHRONOLOGY OF THE ALPHA AND THE OMEGA. A Revision of BC and AD TimeThis ambitious project got off to a flying start with our quickly completing a basic history from Adam to, say, the beginning of Nebuchednezzar II (a sweep of some 3500 years), with an underlying revised archaeology. The only real ‘hole’ in the project was historically finding the four kings of Mesopotamia (Amraphel, Chedorlaomer and company – Amraphel has often been wrongly identified with the great Hammurabi of Babylon, but it is in fact in the latter’s records that we find historical reference to Chedorlaomer as a pilferer of a bygone era) whom Abram encountered and defeated (Genesis 14:1-17), and whom we had previously mis-identified. That problem has since apparently been solved. We envisage an extra volume now to deal with the era of Jesus Christ, then a third volume (which was formerly to be Volume Two) for a reconstruction of AD time, if it ever gets written.
Perhaps someone will also eventually attempt a Science of Jesus Christ. Something along these lines was most earnestly desired by Saint Maximilian Kolbe (it is 70 years since his death), who had hoped himself to have been the author of it. (Surely a focal point of such a Science would be the Shroud of Turin, that has baffled the combined efforts of scientists of every expertise and so demands a new science). St. Maximilian would have been the first to have appreciated that anything pertaining to a true representation of Jesus Christ must needs be reflected in and through Mary, the ‘Mirror of Justice’ (Speculum Justitiae). [For a brilliant Kolbean article on the necessary transformation into Mary, written by Fr. Peter Damian Fehlner, see: http://www.motherofallpeoples.com/Articles/General_Mariology/consecration-and-transubstantiation-into-the-immaculate.html
  
Obviously any early efforts towards a philosophy, or a history, or a science, of Jesus Christ, cannot be taken as the last word on so daunting an enterprise. And that brings us back to Professor Kreeft’s book which has been both applauded as an idea and criticised for its apparent inadequacies. Again, that such a first effort might have its shortcomings is quite to be expected. Anyway, on pp. 40-41 we are going to take a look at one such critique of the professor’s book.
But let us conclude here by saying that a Philosophy of Jesus Christ can in no way diminish Thomism, since Jesus Christ, the Logos, is the very source of wisdom, including the Thomistic wisdom.
 Or perhaps, now, paraphrasing the prophet Zechariah (9:13), we should begin to exalt the words of the Hebrews over the words of Greece, by substituting Logos 
with the Hebrew word and concept, DABAR
דברof arguably fuller meaning and presumably as would have been used by the Galilean Saint John himself.[For more on this, see our article “‘Western Logic’ and the Logos’” (pp. 42-44)].Thus we read in a Net article:

 

Logos, Rema & Dabar


By Andre Rabe On October 20, 2010
.... The Hebrew word dabar referred to the ‘hinterground’ or background. For instance the back-side of the tabernacle, the holy of holies was called the debir.
Moving from the Hebrew language to Greek, John had two words he could use to convey the meaning of dabar. The word has a twofold significance. When it speaks of the inner reality or meaning of a thing, it is translated as logos. But it can also refer to a thing, an event or a piece, and this is then translated as rema. The word history in Greek is remata. Dabar speaks about an event with a background of meaning! There is a Hebrew saying: where word and event coincide, there is truth. Can you see where this is going!
The event of Christ made known the inner reality, the mystery, the authentic thought of God. The concept of the tabernacle, the meeting place in which God and man met, was realised in the event of Christ. “The Word became flesh and tabernacled in us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.” The holy of holies, the Word that was in the bosom of the Father, has become a living event and in so doing has made known the inner reality of the Father. The meaning of God’s being, coincided with the event of Christ and truth was displayed in all its glory. …. http://hearhim.net/wordpress/2010/10/20/logos-rema-dabar/
Here now is a critical review of Professor Kreeft’s book, The Philosophy of Jesus (St. Augustine's Press, 2007), by Dr Matthew Del Nevo, Senior Lecturer in Theology and Christian Spirituality Broken Bay Institute, Pennant Hills, New South Wales (Australia). Whilst Dr. Nevo considers that Kreeft’s is a highly interesting idea, he does not necessarily think that the author has fully done justice to the subject - quite possible since it is only a beginning. This is very much a new field of scholarly enquiry, at least in today’s climate:     

Jesus as a Jewish Philosopher

by Matthew Del Nevo

This is a popularly written book about the philosophy of Jesus rather than the Jesus of philosophy — at least that is the intention. The book scopes the philosophy of Jesus in terms of the primary questions of ontology, epistemology, anthropology and ethics, respectively: What is being? What can I know? Who is man? What ought I to do?
The style is very direct, and what is lost in subtlety is gained in clarity. The book gets off to a good start but increasingly confuses the philosophy of Jesus with the theology of the Catholic Church as represented by recent official documentation. The book is divided into four sections aligned with the four prime questions. There is a subject index and a scriptural index.
So what does Kreeft make of Jesus' philosophy?
First of all Kreeft makes it clear that he does not occupy that ostensibly neutral or supposedly objective position struck up by many in philosophy of religions discourse. Kreeft's presumption in writing about Jesus' philosophy from a Christian point of view is not apologetic or polemical, rather he understands, rightly in this reader's view, that Jesus' teaching and person (like Socrates') present matters of intellectual substance that have to be engaged philosophically if they are to be engaged properly. He believes that Jesus' philosophy is not only of historical philosophical importance in the history of ideas, but still has a critical relevancy today. As a Christian he is in a good position to expound this, just as someone who knows the Greek is in a better position to expound Plato.
On Jesus' metaphysics or ontology in Chapter 1 Kreeft rightly accentuates its Jewishness and in this regard the uniqueness of the Jewish take on reality in which God, world and humankind are seen as ontologically other and not merged, submerged or seen as intrinsic to one another. It is a philosophy of otherness and difference. Kreeft could have been more definite about this point. The threefold difference of God, world and humankind demarcates Jewish reality from pagan reality which does not mark the ontological otherness of these three so absolutely, if at all. The Jewish take on reality is different from that of other religions and non-religions (pantheism, panentheism, henotheism, ontologism, atheism, prophetism etc.), and Kreeft touches on this.
Kreeft tends to describe Jesus' metaphysics theologically rather than out of the Jewish world of Jesus.
Kreeft speaks of a metaphysics of love, but this does not capture the links back, in rabbinic thought, between God, world and humankind which can be encapsulated by naming Creation, Revelation and Redemption, as Rosenzweig has famously put it: Jesus has both a teaching on these links back and a personal stance that is re-creative, redemptive and revelatory. It is in this kind of metaphysical context that Jesus speaks of love. Kreeft argues his case for Jesus' metaphysics of love from the Name of God, but he is incorrect in saying that Jesus calling God 'abba' (father, papa) was revolutionary. It is not in the Hebrew Scriptures as such, although the Fatherhood of God is, but speaking to God familiarly as abba was common in rabbinic tradition.
What is revolutionary about Jesus' philosophy is that he said you did not have to be Jewish to speak to God like this, or even religious!
Kreeft rightly asserts that everything else follows from Jesus' metaphysics. In epistemology, what we must know is ourselves, the world and God. There are degrees of knowledge and the key is wisdom. Again Jesus not only taught in the Jewish wisdom tradition but personified it. As Kierkegaard wrote in Practice in Christianity, 'the only explanation of truth is to be it.' Jesus' philosophy is in that sense 'existential'. Our knowledge will increase with our sanctification of the Name of God, and of the world and of ourselves. Kreeft rightly refers to prayer as an important key to knowledge, allowing us to draw close and relate to that which we need to know, rather than just to 'know about'.
Jesus' anthropology revolves around the imago Dei, the instruction that we are made in the image and likeness of God. Each person is infinitely other than God, but bears God's image and likeness in one major respect: each human person is absolutely one and only. Upon this is founded human dignity. Jesus' anthropology is one which seeks to serve human dignity and increase it upon the face of the earth, for God's glory.
Jesus' ethics revolves around the imitatio Dei, the imitation of God, which in Christianity becomes the imitation of Christ. Kreeft argues that we have to be 'little Christs', which I take it has to do with becoming all that God has called us to be, individually and as a people of God. The idea is that we each need to be personally responsible for our share in collective destiny, which is with God, to 'mend the world' (tikkun olam). Jesus' own philosophy was to do the Father's will, which he did, and which he enjoined us to do, and in which prayer and personal wholeness is the key to knowledge and true freedom.
In the second half of the book, in these chapters on anthropology and ethics, Kreeft's tendency to move from the philosophy of Jesus to the theology of the Church, becomes more pronounced. This shift will lose many readers not predisposed in like manner to Kreeft. The problem goes back to Chapter 1 on metaphysics which gets a little lost in a Thomistic interpretation of the Creed, which is an anachronistic discussion. But this kind of anachronism is stepped up in Chapter 3 on Jesus' anthropology. This chapter starts with the idea of Jesus as perfect Man and perfect God, which is Greek philosophy, not Jesus' philosophy. Kreeft then takes up the anthropological question in terms of the Socratic dictum, 'know thyself'.
This chapter shifts into apologetics with a justification of Mary as the Mother of God, Catholic dogma rather than Jesus' philosophy. Chapter 4 on Jesus' ethics also shifts over into apologetics with an argument that ends with the assertion that, 'we are to worship the Eucharist'; again, Catholic dogma, rather than Jesus' philosophy.
Traditionally Catholic Christians have taught that philosophy is a 'handmaid' to philosophy. This is preferable to the Protestant response which was to try and expunge philosophy from theology, which gave them ideology. ….
© Matthew Del Nevo 2007
E-mail: mdelnevo@bbi.catholic.edu.au

Monday, September 12, 2011

Pope marks 9/11, says no violence in God's name




By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press – 1 day ago 

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI insisted Saturday that violence must never be carried out in God's name as he marked the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks with a message to the United States.
In a letter to New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan, head of the U.S. bishops' conference, Benedict said he was praying for the thousands of innocent victims of the "brutal assault" and said he hoped their families find some consolation.
He said the tragedy of 9/11 was compounded by the attackers' claim to be acting in God's name. "Once again, it must be unequivocally stated that no circumstances can ever justify acts of terrorism," Benedict wrote.
He called for a greater commitment to justice and a "global culture of solidarity" to rid the world of the types of grievances that spark such acts of violence.
Both Benedict and Pope John Paul II before him voiced such themes frequently in the months and years following Sept. 11, 2001. Benedict himself prayed at ground zero during his 2008 visit to New York and asked God to "bring your peace to our violent world."
Benedict, however, riled the Muslim world soon after he became pope with a now-infamous speech in Regensburg, Germany, in which he quoted a Medieval text that characterized some of Muhammad's teachings as "evil and inhuman," particularly "his command to spread by the sword the faith."
Benedict later said he regretted that the comments offended Muslims and he has sought to mend ties with moderate Islam ever since.
In that vein, representatives of a major Indonesian Muslim student association visited the Vatican on Saturday and were received by the Holy See's top official in charge of interreligious dialogue, Cardinal Jean Louis Tauran.
The students of the Muslim Student Association invited Benedict to speak at an international conference on dialogue and peace in Bali in October 2012, according to Fides, the Vatican's missionary news agency.
Benedict, meanwhile, met Friday with the founder of the Sant'Egidio Community, a Catholic lay group which starting Sunday will co-host, alongside the Munich archdiocese, a three-day conference on interreligious dialogue to mark the Sept. 11 anniversary. Cardinals, rabbis, Orthodox patriarchs, Muslim imams, Buddhist academics, and Christian ministers as well as the German chancellor are due to participate.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

‘Western Logic’ and the ‘Logos’




Of relevance is Ch. 3 of Tracey Rowland’s book, Ratzinger’s Faith, this chapter being entitled “Revelation, Scripture and Tradition”.

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“I will arouse your sons, O Zion, against your sons, O Greece ...”.
Zechariah 9:13
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Introduction

Josef Ratzinger is an original thinker and, though very much in the mould of a western thinker - which is the theme we want to develop further here, west (Logos) against east (Dabar) - and the German west at that, from which has come a lot of problematical biblical exegesis relating to JEDP, he can frequently surprise the reader with his wholly new insights. His books are replete with references to German scholars, understandably, given that he himself is German. Rudolf Bultmann gets a lot of ‘airplay’. And one wonders at times if more orthodox exegetes could have been sourced instead. However, Ratzinger is a good enough writer not to get dragged in by his sources. He can consider another writer’s point of view at some length and then dismiss it in favour of a view that he prefers (as Father Harrison had noted back on p. 8).
As the following section shows (taken from pp. 62-64 of Rowland’s Chapter 3), Ratzinger is very much in the western mould of thinking.

…. ­Ratzinger frequently reminds academic audiences that the Church fathers found the 'seeds of the Word, not in the religions of the ­world, but rather in philosophy, that is, in the process of critical reason ­directed against the [pagan] religions'. …. He notes that the habit of ­thinking about Christianity as a 'religion' among many religions, all of roughly the same intellectual merit, is a modern development. A­t its very origins Christianity sides with reason and considers this ally to be ­its principal forerunner. …. Moreover:
Ultimately it [a decision to believe in God] is a decision in favor of reason and a decision about whether good and evil, truth and untruth, are merely subjective categories or reality. In this sense, in the beginning there is faith, ­but a faith that first acknowledges the dignity and scope of reason. The decision for God is simultaneously an intellectual and an existential decision - each determines the other reciprocally. ….
Ratzinger therefore does not follow the trend of thinking of Athens ­and Jerusalem as short-hand terms for two fundamentally different ­ways of approaching religious matters: one fideistic and one philo­sophical. The great University of Chicago philosophy professor Leo Strauss (1889 -1973) popularized this dichotomy to such a degree that now two generations later there are almost as many subcategories of Straussians as there are Thomists, according to which side of this ­apparently unbridgeable divide they find themselves most at home.

However, Ratzinger's approach is to argue that there are quite amazing parallels in chronology and content between the philosopher’s criticism of the myths in Greece and the prophets' criticism of the gods in Israel. While he concedes that the two movements start from com­pletely different assumptions and have completely different aims, he none the less concludes: the movement of the logos against the myth, as it evolved in the Greek mind in the philosophical enlightenment, so that in the end it necessarily led to the fall of the gods, has an inner parallelism with the enlightenment that the prophetic Wisdom literature cultivated in its demythologization of the divine powers in favour of the one and only God. ….

Comment: Our view is that much Greek mythology is an appropriation and distortion of Hebrew and Near Eastern writings, hence the “amazing parallels”. The pope favours the modern tendency according to which the Book of Wisdom, customarily attributed to King Solomon, was a late compilation influenced by Greek thought. (We might say, according to what we discussed on p. 18, Solon over Solomon, a view that we reject). In Jesus of Nazareth¸ Part Two, p. 210, he writes:

… the author of the Book of Wisdom could have been familiar with Plato’s speculations from his work on statecraft, in which he asks what would become of a perfectly just person in this world, and he comes to the conclusion that such a person would be crucified (The RepublicII, 361e-362a). The Book of Wisdom may have taken up this idea from the philosopher and introduced it into the Old Testament, so that it now points directly to Jesus.

Quite on the contrary we would propose that, as according to tradition, King Solomon substantially wrote the Book of Wisdom. This later influenced Plato, who we think himself was, too, in his original form, a prophet of Israel. This thought (already diminished through pagan ‘Ionia’), came to Greece only later, where it received further transformations and transmutations. The stunningly Jesus like references (“be crucified”) could not, we submit, have preceded the Gospels – just as the biographies of Mohammed, originally an Old Testament prophet of Israel, later acquired Christian era references.
There is plenty of Solomonic-like literature already in the ancient Near East, long before Greece, with Hammurabi for instance, our Solomon ruling Babylon.
In our context, we would be largely sympathetic with what Del Nevo has further written in his review of Professor Kreeft’s book (op. cit., our emphasis):

… Traditionally Christian thought, that is, Christian interpretation, has depended on Greek philosophy, more precisely on combinations of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy. Jesus' philosophy — whatever it was — was Jewish, rabbinic, in the sense we read about in the Talmud, which reflects the oral tradition of Jesus' Jewish world. Jesus' philosophy was not Platonic or Aristotelian.
The problem for Kreeft, which his book bears out, is that philosophy for him is by definition non-Jewish.

There is a long quotation from C. S. Lewis in the Preface to show that Jesus' style followed broadly along Aristotelian lines as found in the Poetics and the Analytics. But Jesus' style was halakhic andaggadic. ….
[End of quote]

By no means could we accept the view of Josef Ratzinger about Islam, in his Regensburg address, that, in Rowland’s words (op. cit., p. 121), “… as a tradition, Islam needs to engage with the intellectual heritage of Greece”. Rather, we think, Islam needs to rediscover its roots in Old Testament Israel. More reasonable, we believe, is Ratzinger’s other view given here that: “… the attempt to graft on to Islamic societies what are termed western standards cut loose from their Christian foundations misunderstands the internal logic of Islam as well as the historical logic to which these western standards belong”.

In light of all of this we find it encouraging that the Church is involving Jews in biblical discussions, for example, Chief Rabbi Cohen addressing the Synod. Blessed Edith Stein, a Jew and a skilled philosopher, becomes an important factor in considerations of Jesus as a Jewish philosopher. Beatified in Cologne on 1 May 1987, the Church has honoured her as "a daughter of Israel" (Pope John Paul II), who, as a Catholic during Nazi persecution, remained faithful to the crucified Lord Jesus Christ and, as a Jew, to her people in loving faithfulness."
http://www.vatican.va/news_services/liturgy/saints/ns_lit_doc_19981011_edith_stein_en.html