[Geoff explained difficulties trusting some of the teaching and implementation of Vatican II. I respond at length. Mid conversation ...]
Geoff: the Assisi incident made an impact on you. Truth is, I don’t know anything about it, at all. If you want to send a link or something, I’ll read about it. But off the top of my head, I can’t respond intelligently, although the incident was important to you.
Geoff: the Assisi incident made an impact on you. Truth is, I don’t know anything about it, at all. If you want to send a link or something, I’ll read about it. But off the top of my head, I can’t respond intelligently, although the incident was important to you.
I’d like to describe three incidents, and I’d be interested
in your reactions.
The first was decades ago, and involved a gradual change
over a couple of years. I read Evelyn Waugh’s biography of Edmund Campion, and
was deeply impressed. A detail: when he left his 15-year stint teaching
philosophy and rode toward his new assignment in England, the average life
expectancy of Catholic priests in England was six weeks. He rode from Prague
happily, and was a delight to travel with, his companions said. But also, they
said, he dropped back from the group to ride alone to pray the Office with
great care. His tranquility and his prayer were linked.
Well, I loved that, and I set out to learn to pray as he
prayed. I learned my way around in the old breviary, and brushed up my Latin so
I could make my way through the psalms, and visited a monastery to learn psalm
tones. But after a year or so, I came to the conclusion that the Latin and the
Gregorian chant were eye-opening and glorious, but were nonetheless a
distraction. I wanted to focus on the psalms. So I switched to English, with
Latin as a backup when I wanted additional insight or clarity. English was my
own language, and I wanted to get at the meaning without distraction.
When I switched to English, I read a lot faster, and then
read a lot more, and then read the whole Bible … and then made friends with
many Protestants who also loved Scripture.
I’ve skipped a lot. But the point is, what brought me into a
relationship of love and respect with many Protestants began with a serious
effort to follow the path of Edmund Campion, a Counter-Reformation martyr. On
the surface, it might seem that where I started and where I ended were
diametrically opposed. But I think that times have changed, and the Spirit
blows. I am pretty confident that Campion would (did, does) understand and
approve. I think he led, and I followed. Catholics and Protestants belong
together, not at each other’s throats. The war is over. I am a Catholic, not a
Protestant; but the war is over. We have disagreements, but we are brothers and
sisters, and the war is over. We are still arguing, like siblings, but we are
keenly aware that we agree far more than we disagree. The war is over.
Second. I learned a great deal from a Reformed Presbyterian
minister, a genuine Calvinist, who admired Cotton Mather. We had a wonderful
discussion one afternoon about idolatry, struggling to understand each other’s
views on Mary and on the Bible. He worried that I was worshipping Mary. I said
that I thought my relationship with Mary was very much like his relationship
with the Bible. Did he worship the Bible? From the outside, it certainly
appeared that he was he was confused about the fullness of revelation: is “the
Word” Jesus, or is “the Word” a fat book with a black cover? From the outside,
he seemed confused; but having gotten to know him, I understood tranquilly that
Scripture led him directly to Jesus, and he wasn’t confused or idolatrous.
Could he see that a relationship with Mary did the same for me? I’m not
confused; I know who she is and who she isn’t; and she has led me to know her
son. I do see and understand that from the outside, a relationship on Mary can
sometimes look confusing, but let me explain … [extended conversation].
The conversation was enormously fruitful. Because we trusted
each other, we got past superficial errors, and got to the heart of the two
questions. And we ended convinced: I was not involved in Mariolatry, and he was
not involved in bibliolatry.
Third. Much tougher. I attended a conference on bioethics
one year. It was a prestigious international conference, with lots of big
names. Both major strands of bioethics were represented: (1) bioethics as an
ethical system designed to protect the interests of the bios, of Mother Nature
(that is, population control); and (2) bioethics as a secular approach to
ethical questions about life issues (that is, a search for “neutral” language
about abortion and euthanasia and cloning and such). I came as a fierce critic,
an outsider, ready to argue. I thought then (and think now) that bioethics
often functions as the priesthood of eugenics.
One conferee was a long-haired gentleman who worked in
India. He brought four women from Indian villages (who were dressed in saris,
and the four of them increased the color and beauty of the conference
dramatically). I spoke with them a bit, and at one point I expressed a worry
and a caution. I said (approximately, condensing) that the conference was full
of intelligent leaders, but I hoped they would not be too impressed; I hoped
they would not equate intelligence and sophistication with atheism. One of them
lit up, and hastened to re-assure me. Yes, she said, we understand your
concern! That’s why we brought our gods with us. Then she reached in her bag
and pulled out a small jade elephant. I was totally unprepared for that. Not
many of my friends have their gods in their pockets. We laughed and laughed.
Nothing inside me rose up in worry, crying out against
paganism and idolatry. At the time, and since, I thought her response was precisely
on target (almost precisely). But wait: wasn’t she openly explicitly obviously
manifestly idolatrous? No alarm bells went off inside me; why not? Am I stupid,
jaded, careless, privately idolatrous? I think not. (But of course, if I were
idolatrous, I wouldn’t think so, would I?)
We didn’t settle down to talk about theology, so I don’t
really know what that was all about; and I don’t expect I will ever know (this
side of the grave). But I am pretty sure that the way she used a word had
nothing whatsoever to do with the way I use the same word. I don’t think that
she was confused about the power and majesty of her toy elephant, any more than
Catholics are confused about the power of relics and statues. I don’t think she
thought she was holding God in her hand; I think she showed me an outward
manifestation of a belief, that the Creator knows us and responds to us, and
that we should turn our minds toward heaven regardless of what others say.
I think idolatry is real. But I don’t think I saw it there.
I think idolatry is real. I know a man who lives in a gold
temple, a shrine. The shrine doesn’t seem to have a clear focus at first; there
aren’t any altars or icons or indications of who the god is that the temple was
built for. Was it a temple to worship gold, to bow down to money? I think not; I
think the gold points – as gold should – toward something else, something or
someone worthy of golden worship. After a few disoriented moments, I think, it
gets clear that the shrine is built for the exaltation of the owner himself. He
is the god in the shrine. I don’t think he worships Mammon, although some
people who are smarter than I think he does. He would never claim to be a deity,
but I think the temple is an expression of self-worship. I could be wrong, but
that was my impression.
Sometimes words communicate ideas, and sometimes they are
just in the way. Sometimes you have to shut your ears and open your eyes to
understand what’s happening. I don’t think the Indian women were idolaters,
despite their words; I do suspect that the rich man was an idolater, despite
his silence on the subject.
*******
It seems to me that this periodic weakness of words is key
to understanding a fundamental teaching of the Lord. In his description of the
Last Judgment, Jesus did not talk about creeds or beliefs; he talked about
acts. It seems to me that acts reveal the heart much more clearly and reliably
than words, and it seems to me that the Lord said the same. It seems to me that
Jesus said: if you serve your neighbor with love, it’s because I prompted you
to do so, and you heard my voice inside you and you responded to me. You may or
may not know me by name, but you know my voice, and you respond to it. And by
contrast: if you know my name, but refuse to respond to my words that I speak in
the quiet of your heart, then you won’t serve my people with love; and when you
say you know me, you are lying.