VATICAN CITY, JUNE 16, 2010 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation
of the second of five questions from the question-and-answer session
Benedict XVI held with priests Friday evening at the prayer
vigil in St. Peter´s Square. The session was part of
the International Meeting of Priests that marked the end of
the Year for Priests.
* * *
Africa
Q: Holiness, I am Mathias Agnero and I come from
Africa, specifically from the Ivory Coast. You are a theologian-Pope,
while we, when we succeed, barely read some book of
theology for formation. It seems to us, however, that a
break has been created between theology and doctrine and, even
more so, between theology and spirituality. One feels the need
that study not be wholly academic, but that it nourish
our spirituality. We feel the need of it in the
pastoral ministry itself.
At times, theology does not seem to
have God at the center and Jesus Christ in the
first "theological place," but there are instead diffuse tastes and
tendencies; and the consequence is the proliferation of suggestive opinions
that allow the introduction in the Church of non-Catholic thought.
How can we not be disoriented in our life and
in our ministry, when it is the world that judges
the faith and not vice versa? We feel ourselves disoriented!
Benedict XVI: Thank you. You touch upon a very
difficult and painful problem. There really is a theology that
above all seeks to be academic, to appear scientific and
forgets the vital reality, the presence of God, his presence
among us, his speaking today, not only in the past.
St. Bonaventure already distinguished two forms of theology in his
time; he said: "There is a theology that comes from
the arrogance of reason, which seeks to dominate everything, makes
God pass from subject to object that we study, while
he should be subject that speaks to us and guides
us."
It is really this abuse of theology, which is
arrogance of reason and does not nourish faith, but obscures
the presence of God in the world. Then, there is
a theology that seeks to know more out of love
for the beloved, it is stimulated by love and guided
by love, it seeks to know the loved one more.
And this is true theology, which comes from love of
God, of Christ, and seeks to enter more profoundly in
communion with Christ. In reality, the temptations are great today;
imposed above all is the so-called "modern vision of the
world" (Bultmann, "moderns Weltbild"), which becomes the criterion of all
that is possible or impossible. And thus, it is precisely
with this criterion that everything is as always, that all
historical events are of the same sort, excluded in fact
is the novelty of the Gospel, the eruption of God
is excluded, the true novelty which is the joy of
our faith.
What should be done? I would say first
of all to theologians: Have courage! And I would like
to say a big thank you also to so many
theologians who do a good job. There are abuses, we
know it, but in all parts of the world there
are so many theologians who truly live by the Word
of God, nourish themselves by meditation, live the faith of
the Church and wish to help so that the faith
is present in our day. To these theologians I would
like to say a big "thank you."
And I would
say to theologians in general: "do not be afraid of
this specter of scientific nature!" I follow the theology of
´46; I began to study theology in January of ´46
and hence I have seen almost three generations of theologians,
and I can say: the theories that at that time,
and then in the ´60s and ´80s, were the newest,
absolutely scientific, absolutely almost dogmatic, in the meantime have grown
old and are not longer of any value! Many of
them seem almost ridiculous. Hence, one must have the courage
to resist what is apparently of a scientific nature, not
subject oneself to all the theories of the moment, but
to really think from the great faith of the Church,
which is present in all times and opens to us
access to truth.
Above all, also, we must not think
that positivist reason, which excludes the transcendent -- which cannot
be accessible -- is true reason! This weak reason, which
presents only things that can be experienced, is really an
insufficient reason. We theologians must use the great reason, which
is open to the grandeur of God. We must have
the courage to go beyond positivism to the question of
the roots of being. This seems to me to be
of great importance. Hence, one must have the courage of
the great, ample reason, have the humility not to subject
oneself to all the theories of the moment, to live
from the great faith of the Church of all times.
There is no majority against the majority of the saints:
the true majority are the saints of the Church and
we must be oriented to the saints!
Then, to seminarians
and priests I say the same thing: think that sacred
Scripture is not an isolated book: it is living in
the living community of the Church, which is the same
subject in all centuries and guarantees the presence of the
Word of God. The Lord has given us the Church
as living subject, with the structure of bishops in communion
with the Pope, and this great reality of bishops of
the world in communion with the Pope guarantees to us
the testimony of the permanent truth. Let us have trust
in this permanent magisterium of the communion of bishops with
the Pope, which represents for us the presence of the
Word. And then, let us also have trust in the
life of the Church and, above all, we must be
critical.
Certainly theological formation -- I would like to say
this to seminarians -- is very important. In our time
we must know sacred Scripture well, also, in fact, against
the attacks of sects; we must be really friends of
the Word. We must also know the currents of our
time to be able to respond reasonably, to be able
to give -- as St. Peter says -- "reason of
our faith." Formation is very important. But we must also
be critical: the criterion of the faith is also the
criterion with which to see theologians and theologies. Pope John
Paul II gave an absolutely sure criterion in the Catechism
of the Catholic Church: Here we see the synthesis of
our faith, and this Catechism is truly the criterion to
see where there is an acceptable or not acceptable theology.
Hence, I recommend reading, the study of this text, and
thus we can go forward with a critical theology in
the positive sense, that is, criticism against the tendencies in
vogue and open to the true novelties, with the inexhaustible
profundity of the Word of God, which reveals itself new
in all times, also in our time.