Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T16:42:44.942Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cajetan's Biblical Commentaries: Motive and Method by Michael O'Connor, Brill, Leiden, 2017, pp. xvi + 302, £145.00, hbk

Review products

Cajetan's Biblical Commentaries: Motive and Method by Michael O'Connor, Brill, Leiden, 2017, pp. xvi + 302, £145.00, hbk

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © 2018 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

In 1524 the famous Dominican Tommaso de Vio Gaetani (Cajetan) began a massive study of sacred scripture. He decided to revise the text of the Vulgate, book by book, in the light of Hebrew and Greek sources and to comment on the sense of the revised text. Such massive undertakings were by no means unfamiliar to Cajetan; he had already written a multivolume commentary on Aquinas's Summa Theologiae (1507‐1522) and he had also enjoyed a brilliant and successful career: Master of Theology and Professor of Metaphysics at the University of Padua (1494), Master of the Order of Preachers (1508‐1518), Cardinal (1517), Bishop of Gaeta and Papal Legate tasked with investigating Luther (1518). Yet this scriptural project, begun at the age of 55 only a few years after investigating Luther, would occupy Cajetan until his death in 1534 and provoke controversy in subsequent years.

Much of the controversy stemmed from the character of the commentaries and their connection to the events of the Reformation. Cajetan was content to revise the text of the Vulgate according to the best scholarship available to him and to expound that text with less reliance on patristic sources than was usual at the time. He rarely referred to the Reformers directly and for the most part seems to have regarded them as merely in error rather than formally heretical. Indeed it was not until 1533 near the end of his life that he recognised their schismatic tendencies and criticised them more forcefully. Such an irenical approach did not prove congenial to the Dominicans Ambrosius Catharinus and Melchior Cano or the theologians of the University of Paris. The Reformers remained largely unmoved by Cajetan's work but were happy to attack his Parisian critics. The Council of Trent placed greater weight on patristic consensus than the singular prestige of St. Jerome and thus took a different view of the Canon to Cajetan. More than a century later the French Oratorian Richard Simon would praise elements of Cajetan's approach and later still a popular view would emerge that these commentaries were written just to attack the biblical exegesis and theology of the Protestant Reformers. It is into these deep waters that Michael O'Connor leaps with his fascinating book. He argues that Cajetan's Commentaries were written for ‘the reform of the Church’ (p. 1) and that therefore they were ‘more a work of ‘Catholic Reform’ than ‘Counter‐Reformation’’ (ibid.), that Cajetan's method was ‘heavily inflected by Renaissance humanism’ (ibid.), and that Cajetan's approach fell ‘somewhere between’ (p. 196) St John Fisher's traditionally Catholic exegesis and Luther's Protestant approach.

O'Connor divides the structure of the book into three sections. The first contains two chapters that examine Cajetan's life and career. It aims to show that Cajetan was generally committed to reform, both in the Dominican order and in the Church, and that the bible was the tool Cajetan would use to achieve that end (chapters 1–2). The second section also consists of two chapters. It shifts the focus to the commentaries themselves and highlights the need for reform among priests, bishops, the papacy, the faithful (chapter 3), and the Reformers (chapter 4). The third section is the longest. In four chapters it examines Cajetan's method of scriptural study by focusing successively on Cajetan's revision (correction as O'Connor prefers) of the Vulgate's text (chapter 5), Cajetan's commentary on the literal sense of the text (chapter 6), Cajetan's use of scripture to interpret scripture (chapter 7), and it finishes with a discussion of the major reactions to the commentaries (chapter 8). The conclusion locates Cajetan's work both in the 16th Century and in the history of biblical exegesis.

So what should we make of O'Connor's book? Well generally it is very good and very interesting and it is certainly well worth reading. There are a few caveats, however. First, O'Connor's view of ‘reform’ is problematic. The evidence offered as indicative of Cajetan's desire for reform is subject to alternative explanation. Thus one can readily agree that Dominicans should attend to common life and study (p. 33), that moral corruption and spiritual ignorance in the Church (p. 51) are matters of concern, that a lack of peace among Christian princes (ibid.) is troublesome, and that priests should not love and abuse money (p. 81) without also regarding oneself as a reformer in any significant sense of the term. The concept of ‘reform’ used is too broad: at p. 211 we learn the bishops at Vatican II were ‘reformers’, so O'Connor is committed to a view of ‘reform’ that applies to Cajetan, Luther, and the bishops at Vatican II equally. How can such a concept be analytically useful in the scholarly assessment of a thinker whose work will need to be distinguished in some way from that of Protestant Reformers?

Secondly, whilst O'Connor recognises irenical quality of Cajetan's approach he fails to appreciate the full implications of this. It is reasonable to think prior to 1533 Cajetan had viewed Luther and his followers as erring Catholics who could yet return to a correct understanding of the faith. As such in Cajetan's view they were still part of the Church in some sense and therefore given O'Connor's contention these commentaries were written for Catholic Reform, then Lutherans turn out to be very much a part of Cajetan's intended audience.

Thirdly, once we recognise this Cajetan's emphasis on the literal sense of scripture makes sense; it was the only way to communicate with some of his hoped for readers because it was the only way Lutherans read scripture. An analogous point could be made for the other part of Cajetan's intended audience, Catholics without Lutheran tendencies. After all, it would be a brave Dominican who expected his audience to have mastered both the Summa Theologiae and his even longer Commentary on the Summa in order to understand his points. Doubtless much more could be said. Still it is a measure of the richness of O'Connor's book that we can now better appreciate the nuances of Cajetan's position.