The theology of revelation is a field of theology that encompasses many particular questions. It would be futile to attempt a broad survey of all the recent developments in this field. I wish only to address precisely the question of development itself in the theology of revelation, as it has been treated by a few key figures in the twentieth century. In other words, I want to address the following question: given the rise in consciousness concerning the fact of real developments in ecclesial doctrine and the increasingly complex discourse that seeks to understand the patterns of such development, how is it still possible to believe in the immutability of dogma (or is it)? To what degree does the contingent reality of development (or evolution) undermine the age-old view that Christian revelation conveys truths that are eternal and unchangeable (or does it)? With Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman's monumental work, An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, remaining in the background (as it belongs to the nineteenth century), I will quickly move from the early twentieth-century Thomist conceptions of doctrinal development through some of the pertinent reflections of two pivotal theologians at the Second Vatican Council. But my goal is not so much to summarize the contributions of these thinkers as to think through the issue at hand by critically and progressively engaging their respective proposals. I will argue that there is essentially no contradiction between the neo-scholastic “propositional” and “nouvelle theologie” approaches to divine revelation, particularly, when it comes to grappling with the reality of doctrinal development, even though there is certainly a difference of emphasis.Footnote 1 Yet, the transition from one mindset to the next needs justification.
Historical Context: Modernism and the Reactions
As what might be called the ‘evolution revolution’ infiltrated both Protestant and Catholic theology in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a movement known as the ‘modernist crisis,’ the initial reaction within both circles may be characterized as a shift toward fundamentalism.Footnote 2 ‘Fundamentalism’ was originally a brand of Protestant thought reacting to increasingly liberal tendencies among Protestant Christian scholars, and it is probably most known for its naïve defense of ‘creationism’ in opposition to ‘evolutionism.’ Today, both Protestants and Catholics are often divided up disingenuously either into the fundamentalist/conservative camp or the modernist/liberal camp, where the former resists all change and the latter favors “progress” at almost any cost. The label ‘fundamentalist’ is also often attached to the philosophical approach to theology of the Baroque period that continued through the neo-scholastic revivals.Footnote 3 Many Catholics today have inherited the simplistic view that the Second Vatican Council decided wholesale against this so-called fundamentalism, which held to the immutability of ecclesial doctrine, and in favor of a ‘new theology’ in which hope spurs us on to new and better things. What was termed la nouvelle theologie by “conservative” opponents of such change, leading up to the Council, won the day and a new era of Christian unity and world peace were prophesied. Pope St. John Paul II and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI have been seen by proponents of this view as setbacks and obstacles to the implementation of Vatican II. Karl Rahner, Edward Schillebeeckx, and Hans Kung saw their heyday and for those in the know, the Concilium school of the nouvelle theologie had triumphed early over the Communio school, which included Henri de Lubac, Joseph Ratzinger, and Hans Urs von Balthasar.Footnote 4 Both of these groups of theologians cooperated to forge common formulations at the Council, but the latter group will later charge that the former hijacked the Council.Footnote 5 John Paul II and Benedict XVI each aided the Communio school in their own ways and detracted from the Concilium school, bringing the former into its current state of prominence. Meanwhile, so-called traditionalists sat on the sidelines, some acting as if the gates of hell had prevailed against the Church at last and others just waiting for what they thought to be the latest fads to pass away. Schismatic groups arose in reaction to what was perceived to be real changes in the Church's perennial teaching, having accepted the progressivist mantra that the Church had simply adopted the “modernist errors” it had previously condemned.
Nevertheless, anyone who reads the documents without an iso-getical intention to oppose the letter and the spirit of the Council, a hermeneutic that ends up privileging a spirit devoid of literal content, recognizes that the Church did not simply adopt evolutionism or modernism and squash the scholastic proclivity to objectivism – no, the Church makes a much more subtle move than that. Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P., is commonly held up by traditionalists as the champion among Thomists defending what many thought to be peculiarly Catholic, that is, the unchanging character of Christian doctrine.Footnote 6 In the twenty years leading up to the Council, the conclusion of which he did not live to see, his prime target was, in fact, the nouvelle theologie, above all, precisely on the point of its apparent denial of the immutability of dogma.Footnote 7 It is forgotten that not all his fellow traditional Thomist colleagues agreed completely with his approach to the question. Marie-Michel Labourdette, O.P., rejected an article of Garrigou's submitted to the Revue Thomiste for its prematurely authoritarian and excessively polemical tone. Labourdette still had some strong reservations regarding the nouvelle theologie, but he expressed them in a more nuanced and moderate fashion.Footnote 8 Both of them, however, focused principally on a few statements of Henri Bouillard, S.J.,Footnote 9 and Jean Daniélou, S.J.Footnote 10 Perhaps more significantly, the esteemed Dominican professor at Fribourg, Francisco Marin-Sola, O.P., wrote a series of articles in which he develops a more sophisticated hermeneutic with regard to the tradition concerning doctrinal development than is evident in Garrigou-Lagrange's insistence on the rigidity of doctrinal propositions.Footnote 11 These articles were later collected and published as a book under the title, The Homogeneous Evolution of Catholic Dogma, provocative phraseology for a Thomist of that time.Footnote 12
The Traditional Thomistic Approach: Moving Toward Development
Therefore, rather than enter into an exegesis of the Council texts, a task that many have already belabored, it is opportune to turn briefly toward Marin-Sola's principal contribution to the theology of doctrinal development. He approaches the issue from the perspective of a Thomist in the commentator tradition, which nowadays would be dubbed a propositional view of revelation,Footnote 13 that is, a view of the depositum fidei as a set of propositions that reveal saving truths about God, man, and their relationship to one another. Yet, he manages to face head on the reality of doctrinal development within that framework rather than undermine its significance.Footnote 14 His primary goal is to argue that doctrinal development, rather than contradicting the immutability of revealed truth, is a legitimate form of evolution in the Church's understanding of divine revelation; in other words, developments in doctrinal formulation evolve in a homogeneous rather than heterogeneous manner.Footnote 15 One of his preoccupations is to rid the discourse on doctrinal development of Francisco Suarez’ influence, who in his attempt to find a tertia via between Thomas and Scotus manages to muddy the waters regarding the parameters of possibility for the evolution of doctrine (or genesis of new dogma).Footnote 16
Perhaps the most significant move made in Marin-Sola's manual on the problem is to distinguish two ways in which the Church's understanding of divine revelation may evolve, namely, by means of speculative reason (i.e., theology) and by means of a connatural-affective sensus fidei (exemplified in the saints).Footnote 17 Although he is preoccupied with explaining the ways in which new conclusions may be drawn from perennial premises, he does spend some time coming to terms with the relatively recent developments in Catholic doctrine, namely, the elevation of Mary's immaculate conception to the level of dogma and the definition of papal infallibility. He manifests a delicate balance between the views on opposite extremes, which claim either (1) that all saving truths must have been proposed in apostolic times or (2) that all doctrines are subject to mutation according to the present needs of God's people,Footnote 18 although he does not state the dichotomy in precisely these terms. While he does not quite arrive at Newman's fourfold division of development into logical, historical, moral, and metaphysical modes,Footnote 19 he does decidedly defend Newman on the organicity of ecclesial life against the lack of distinction-making and historical attunement involved in the emphatic resistance of some to any notion that in time the Church may propose doctrines that were not previously discerned to belong to divine revelation.Footnote 20
According to Marin-Sola, new doctrines can emerge not only from the power of speculative reason explicating what is already contained in aboriginal propositions, but perhaps even principally, they arise out of the Spirit's influence over the spiritual sentiments of the faithful.Footnote 21 While he vigorously defends the immutability of dogmatic truths, at the same time, he recognizes the historical reality that new doctrinal formulations do arise and demand more than “ecclesiastical faith.”Footnote 22 This puts him in unique relationship to the nouvelle movement.Footnote 23 Among the latter are ressourcement Thomists, who seek to go behind Suarez and other commentators to Thomas himself and his own sources, especially Augustine, in order to bring the modern world more effectively into contact with the gospel.
Two Nouvelle Theologians
Arguably the greatest of the ressourcement thomists is Yves Congar, whom some acclaim as the principal founder of what became known as the nouvelle theologie,Footnote 24 and who certainly straddled the Concilium-Communio divide, although he technically belonged to the former (for reasons unknown to this author). Congar utilizes insights of Maurice Blondel concerning history and dogma to describe better the complex reality of tradition as a conduit of divine revelation, and he ties this ecclesial reality not merely to the Magisterium, but principally to the Holy Spirit as both the divine subject of tradition and the “co-instituting principle of the Church.”Footnote 25 Supplementing the logical approach of traditional Thomists like Marin-Sola with “the more historical manner of proceeding which relies on documentation for establishing the homogeneity of development,” he appeals as well to the “faith-awareness of the Church” and concludes that “the Church is the only subject capable of grasping adequately the internal homogeneity of the revealed ‘given’ in its self-expression through time. With the assistance of the Holy Spirit, perception of the homogeneity between the apostolic deposit and its later explication can be found in the ‘sense of the Church’, the judges of which are the bearers of the apostolic ministry.”Footnote 26 Ecclesiological questions enter here, such as the precise ways in which the faithful and the hierarchy relate to one another in the constitution of “the Church.” In any case, Congar's inheritance of the propositional view of revelation, which he does not entirely disavow (at least, at the time of the Council), is complemented by that phrase in Dei Verbum (which he certainly had a hand in crafting), “[Tradition] comes from the intimate sense of spiritual realities which [believers] experience” (no. 8).
For both Marin-Sola and Congar, the Catholic Church represents a ‘middle way’ on the question of doctrinal development between the static approach of the Eastern Orthodox, according to which only what the Fathers explicitly and unanimously taught is admissible as dogma, and the ‘dynamic’ approach common to much of Protestant Christianity, according to which doctrinal truth is completely and utterly subject to the arbitrary whims of the Spirit operative in each believer.Footnote 27 Congar argues: “The fact of a progress in the understanding of the faith finds its foundation in the very nature of revelation as in the proper character of the ‘time of the Church’, the latter being a community of human beings en marche.”Footnote 28 Aidan Nichols comments on this passage:
Like the Neo-Scholastics of the earlier part of the century, above all the Spanish Dominican Neo-Thomist Francisco Marin-Sola (1873-1932), Congar initially describes such doctrinal development as an explicitation of what is still implicit in the normative donné or ‘given’ of the apostolic teaching. . . . With the Neo-Scholastics, Congar holds that the process of separating out one truth from the original reality may be thoroughly intellectual, and even strictly logical in character: an implicit truth, formally contained in another explicit truth, can be teased out by (deductive) ‘explicitative’ reasoning. If, by contrast, the implicit truth concern is only virtually contained in the truth established earlier, the reasoning process involved will require more finesse, what Newman called, in relation to the act of assent, the ‘illative sense’. However, Congar, with his more acute feeling for history than the Neo-Thomists, proposes that, in addition, this kind of relationship of implicit to explicit also exists in the practical order. The dogmatically implicit can be enveloped in, for example, a liturgical practice. . . . Yet Congar is sufficiently Thomist in his fundamental allegiance to add that what is thus implicit in action only becomes consciously explicit through the work of intelligence, of mind in act. He insists that this business of the implicit element in revelation . . . fits in well with revelation's own nature as the ‘unveiling of a free and gracious design’.Footnote 29
Although not entirely accurate with regard to Marin-Sola, Nichols correctly emphasizes Congar's thomistic inheritance, which did not prevent him from contributing to the developing theology of revelation. His discussion in Tradition and Traditions of the different species and subjects of tradition and their relationship to the “monuments” of patristic writing and liturgical practice, for example, is invaluable.
Early in his career, Congar took a somewhat ambivalent stance toward Newman, apparently because of his influence among modernists,Footnote 30 and yet he argued at the time of the Council for a controversial thesis regarding the relationship between scripture and tradition, known as the “material sufficiency” of Scripture.Footnote 31 In fact, in an article defending the theory, he aligns anyone who opposes the theory with those who view tradition as simply oracularFootnote 32 and doctrine as “above all a list of propositions,” which he opposes to the view that doctrine (or tradition) is “first the preaching of the Christian mystery.”Footnote 33 Looking at these two objective components (not “sources”)Footnote 34 of divine revelation through a hylemorphic lens, he proposed what he took to be the patristic view, that all the truths of Christianity are in some way contained in scripture, even if only implicitly, meanwhile tradition stands alone as the living interpretation of the text. At the same time, he affirms that “the Church is tradition!”Footnote 35 After all, even scripture itself developed out of communal reflection upon events in salvation history.
Joseph Ratzinger,Footnote 36 surely a collaborator at the Council with Congar on the theme of tradition and scripture, criticizes the theory of material sufficiency, arguing that the form-matter schematic it employs is an inadequate framework for understanding the complex relationship between these two components of the one divine revelation in Christ.Footnote 37 Indeed, his view of revelation is less cognitivist and more personalistic than Congar's. In his habilitationsschrift on Bonaventure's theology of history, he approaches revelation in terms of event rather than proposition, that is, he understands God's self-communication to mankind in Christ through the prism of relationship, a reality that inevitably involves not only agent, but also recipient. In fact, part of his original text was rejected by the Thomist faculty on his dissertation board at Tubingen and still has not been translated into English.Footnote 38 Hence, Newman's distinctly non-propositional view of revelation did not find a home among non-modernists until Joseph Ratzinger had recourse to Bonaventure instead of Thomas, who are both distinctly Augustinian. Indeed, the now oft-repeated phrases in the context of doctrinal progress, “organic development” and “hermeneutic of continuity,” extrapolated from Pope Benedict's writings,Footnote 39 have their origins in Newman's seven “tests” or “notes” for discerning whether a proposed development in doctrine is authentic or not.Footnote 40 The English convert, whom Marin-Sola esteems more as a psychologist than a theologian, had great influence on the thought of Joseph Ratzinger, who as Pope had the pleasure of beatifying him.Footnote 41
During the Second Vatican Council, Ratzinger will reject (as untrue to the evidence) Geiselmann's ecumenical interpretation (or rather, interpolation) of the Tridentine decrees, which yields a false dichotomy between two-source theory and material sufficiency. But early on in his career, before entering into the question of tradition as a constituent of revelation, he speaks of revelation as “the spiritual understanding of Scripture,”Footnote 42 which he therefore denominates a “process”:
[T]he understanding of Scripture which arises in theology can be called revelation at least indirectly. We can easily understand this in view of the process of revelation itself; for in this process, ‘revelation’ is understood to consist precisely in the understanding of the spiritual sense. . . . the process of inspiration includes a penetration through the mundus sensibilis to the mundus intelligibilis. It is precisely in this penetration that inspiration lays claim to its special status as revelation (revelatio = = unveiling!).Footnote 43
With Bonaventure and Pseudo-Dionysius before him, Ratzinger conceives understanding (with respect to eternal truths) not so much in terms of Aristotelian syllogism as in terms of the affective-mystical experience of the saints:
[T]here is also a development of knowledge to the highest form of super-intellectual affective-mystical contact with God. The historical ascent of the Church from the Patriarchs at the beginning to the People of God of the final days is simultaneously a growth of the revelation of God. In other words, it is not only the hierarchical thought-pattern that is transformed in terms of history, but mysticism as well. Mysticism is not a grace given in isolation and independently of time; it is, rather, conditioned by the historical development of the divine revelation. . . . [The revelation of the final age] will be the true fulfillment of the New Testament revelation which has been understood only imperfectly up till now.Footnote 44
He will later speak of the gospel in terms similar to Congar's, emphasizing the primacy of the Spirit, operative in the hearts of believers, in the New Covenant.Footnote 45 Without the living tradition of the Church, the written word would be formless and void.Footnote 46 But he adds: “Revelation goes beyond Scripture . . . to the same extent as reality goes beyond information about it.”Footnote 47
Conclusion
If there is more to reality than information (or cognitive content), then certainly there is more to eternal truth than propositions. But this implicit critique of the neo-scholastic approach to revelation does not lead to the liberal Protestant or modernist view of doctrine as ever-changing and essentially human. If there is religious truth that transcends historical conditioning (or contingency), then religious doctrine cannot be without propositional content, supposing the existence of divine self-communication in history. In other words, even though (1) (contingent) realities change, (2) concepts are linguistically determined (to a certain extent), and (3) language is constantly evolving; there must be something immutable about the concepts involved in propositional truth precisely because (1) there must exist a constant reality beyond all contingency, (2) the human mind has some access (however historically conditioned) to the essence of being as such (ens commune), and (3) human language is capable of making stable predications (however imperfect) about reality. Otherwise, the truths of divine revelation are perpetually subject to change (i.e., not immutable in themselves) and subjectivism must reign with respect to religious doctrine.Footnote 48 If the logic of the Church's own development in self-understanding is predominately connatural-affective, as Marin-Sola admits, then certainly the deposit of faith is not simply an object that may be cognized with increasing precision, but principally an event of self-communication on the part of God as incarnate Word, whose Spirit animates His body, the faithful, as they progress in their encounter with the world He created. Hence, the Newman-inspired approach of the so-called nouvelle theologie to divine revelation, particularly, as tradition, does not contradict the neo-thomistic perspective, at least, as represented by the Dominican commentator, Francisco Marin-Sola.
Since the Encyclical of Pope Paul VI, Mysterium Fidei, and the subsequent CDF document, Mysterium Ecclesiae, the commensurability of immutable truths concerning God's own self-disclosure and the historical conditioning of every linguistic proposition intended to convey such truths ought to be relatively clear to Catholic theologians,Footnote 49 thanks in part to the theological debates before and during the Second Vatican Council. Keeping the hierarchy of truths in mind, the Council Fathers worked with a distinction between immutable truth and contingent application of principles, which is nevertheless always imperfectly articulated and thus capable of being explicated more fully since there is the revealed given and then there is the growing understanding of such.Footnote 50 Due to the limitations of the human mind (in receptivity to divine revelation)Footnote 51 and of the cultural-linguistic matrix within which men must formulate the saving truths inherent to such revelation (albeit empowered by the Spirit), even teachings regarded as infallible are inevitably articulated in a manner that is always susceptible to further improvement.Footnote 52
It seems, therefore, that the Church has merely applied to her own doctrinal authority the scholastic maxim: Quidquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur. Revelation is a divine act of communication, a communication that must involve both agent and recipient – the Church is the recipient and the triune God, the agent. The agent does not change. The recipient does change. In the event of revelation, the two are united and what results is a communion of what is necessary and what is contingent, that is, a continually developing grasp of the ungraspable, the incommunicable communicated, the Word made flesh.