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THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION IN CATHOLIC APOLOGETICS
MEDITATION AS A PREPARATION FOR THE SOLEMNITY OF THE ANNUNCIATION OF THE B.V.M., March 25, 2004
A lecture by Robert Stackpole, STD Director of the John Paul II Institute of Divine Mercy
Imagine that we could go back in time
to the greatest of all the apostles - St. Peter, St. John, and St. Paul
- and refer to them all our doctrinal questions and disputes. Suppose we
had all three apostles on the same "Doctrinal Commission;" each one would
bring to that commission their own specific concerns.
First, there would be St. Peter, the one whom
Christ named the "rock," of His Church: the only one to whom Jesus gave
the "keys" of the Kingdom, and whom He appointed to be shepherd of His
whole flock. The continuing ministry of Peter in the Church in the See
of Rome is seen by Catholics the world over as the rock of the Church's
unity and the trustworthy reference point of the authentic Catholic
faith.
Secondly, there would be St. John, the "beloved
disciple," the one who reclined on our Lord's breast at the Last Supper,
and who alone among the apostles stood at the foot of His cross. The profound
insights of St. John into the deepest mysteries of the Christian
Faith have always been seen as the principle reference point for the theology
of the Orthodox Churches of the East.
Third in our tribunal would be St. Paul: the
apostle of the heart set free by divine grace. St. Paul is the one who taught
us that all the Scriptures are "God-breathed" (that is, inspired by the Spirit),
and St. Paul is the one who emphasized the absolute gratuity of
God's saving grace, bringing that gospel message throughout the world as
the great apostle to the Gentiles. As a result, the Protestant Evangelical
churches have always looked to St. Paul as their principle guide.
So, there is our triumvirate - St. Peter, St. John, and St. Paul -
as the ultimate doctrinal commission: an apostolic ecumenical council!
Now, suppose we were to travel back in time to
this tribunal, carrying in our hands a coy of the papal Bull "Ineffabilis
Deus" of Bl. Pope Pius IX, the papal document of 1854 which defined
as binding upon all Catholics the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception.
Suppose we read the main section of that document to our tribunal, in order
to seek their comments and approval. The document states:
We declare, pronounce and define: the
doctrine which holds that the most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the first
moment of her conception, by the singular grace and privilege of almighty
God and in view of the merits of Christ Jesus the Savior of the human
race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin, is revealed by
God, and therefore, firmly and constantly to be believed by all the faithful.
1
My best guess is that after reading this to our
apostolic tribunal, there would be a lengthy and uncomfortable silence,
finally broken by St. Peter with the words: "what in the world are you
talking about?" It would not be the references to Mary that would baffle
them at first; St. John would simply want to know what we meant by phrases
such as "the merits" of Jesus Christ, or "original sin." And then we might
try to explain by saying: "Well, by merits we mean that, since Jesus is
the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity who assumed human nature in His
incarnation, all His acts and sufferings in the flesh are of infinite value
to His eternal Father...," etc. And then, of course, St. Paul would want
to know what in the world we meant by Christ's "incarnation," and by phrases
such as "the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity."
You see at once the problem. All of these phrases
(the "merits" of Christ, "original sin," "incarnation," and "Blessed Trinity"
) do not occur in the apostolic writings. To be sure, the "ideas" were
there from the beginning, and so it would not be too difficult to show
how each of these doctrines is contained, at least implicitly if not explicitly,
in the teachings of these same apostles. In short, the doctrine of Mary's
Immaculate Conception presupposes a long history of the unfolding and clarification
of these central doctrines of the apostolic Faith, and it is only after
all of these other doctrines were fully developed that the Church could
even begin to consider clearly the question of how God prepared Mary for
her special vocation as Mother of the Savior.
The doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, therefore,
is a classic case of what the Church calls the "development of doctrine"
- indeed, it is a legitimate development based on other developments. This
means that unless your audience already understands and accepts the Catholic
doctrine of "development," it is going to be very hard to lead them to
the truth of Mary's Immaculate Conception.
The Development of Doctrine
In its "Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation" (section 8), the
Second Vatican Council states:
[The doctrinal] tradition, which comes
from the apostles, develops in the Church, with the help of the Holy Spirit.
For there is growth in the understanding of the realities and the words
that have been handed down. This happens through contemplation and study
made by believers, who treasure these things in their hearts (cf. Luke 2:19,
51), through the intimate understanding of spiritual things they experience,
and through the preaching of those who have received through episcopal
succession the sure gift of truth. For, as the centuries succeed one another,
the church constantly moves forward toward the fullness of divine truth
until the words of God reach their complete fulfillment in her. 2
What the Vatican Council meant, of course, is
that doctrine properly develops in the Church by the drawing out of what
was contained in the apostolic tradition from the beginning. A legitimate
doctrinal development, therefore, cannot be an utterly novel addition
to the apostolic Faith, nor can it contradict anything in the original
apostolic Faith. Thus, what St. Jude calls the truth "once and for all
delivered to the saints" (Jude 3) was certainly present in the Church,
at least in "seed" form, right from the time of the apostles. The essence
or substance of the apostolic Faith remains unchanged. It is only the conscious,
subjective grasp of the mysteries of the Faith that can grow and develop
over time. In short, there is an increase in understanding of the
apostolic Faith down through the centuries, as the Holy Spirit guides the
prayers, meditations, and cumulative reflections of the whole Body of Christ,
and especially of the saints and the magisterium.
Doctrinal understanding properly can be said
to "develop" in the Church in two ways: first by clarification of expression,
and second, by elaboration of content.
Simple clarification of expression occurred,
for example, when the early Church fashioned the distinction between "person" (hypostasis) and nature (physis) so that she articulate more clearly the
doctrines of the Incarnation (that Jesus is one person in two natures)
and the Trinity (that God is three persons sharing one nature).
By elaboration of content," on the other hand,
is meant the drawing out of the implications of what was substantially
present from the beginning. Such "elaboration" can take place in at least
two ways. First, logically (that is, when the Church draws out the
logical implications of apostolic teaching). For example, the full doctrine
of original sin may be said to be logically implicit in the story of the
Fall in Genesis, and in St. Paul's epistle to the Romans. Another example:
the doctrine of the "just war" elaborated in the 17th century by Suarez
may be said to be logically implicit in the attitude of Christ to soldiers,
of St. Paul to the use of the "sword" by rulers - and also in the prior
elaboration of the doctrine of original sin.
Secondly, elaboration can happen mystically (that is, by the Church discerning, and coming to a consensus about, the
deeper ramifications of covenanted images, metaphors, even visions and
prophecies, passed down to us from the apostles). For example, the doctrine
of the Eucharistic Sacrifice may be said to be prophetically foreshadowed
in the words of Malachi (1:11) about the "pure" offering to the Lord that
will one day be offered all over the world. Or another example: the basic
principles of the monastic life may be said to involve the bringing together
of several elements of Christ's teaching, and the example of Mary in consecrated
virginity.
In short, whether the Church is merely clarifying
its verbal expression of apostolic teaching, or unfolding logical and
mystical implications of the content of that teaching, either way, the
Church grows in her understanding of the original, apostolic witness,
and of its wider ramifications for living out the Christian faith in the
world.
Unfortunately, the Catholic view of the "development
of doctrine," outlined above, has been partially rejected by our Eastern
Orthodox brethren. Here is a portion of "The Reply of the Synod of Constantinople
to Pope Leo XIII" in 1895, just after the Pope had called for the return
of the Eastern Churches to full communion with the Apostolic See:
It is manifest that the universal Church
of God, which holds fast in its bosom unique, unadulterated and entire
this salutary faith as a divine deposit, just as of old it was delivered
and unfolded by the God-bearing Fathers moved by the Spirit,
and formulated by them during the first nine centuries, is one and the same
forever, and not manifold and varying with the process of time: because
the gospel truths are never susceptible to alteration or progress in the
course of time, like the various philosophical systems; 'for Jesus Christ
is the same yesterday, and today, and forever.' Wherefore also the holy Vincent
[of Lerins] who was brought up on the milk of piety received from the Fathers
in the monastery of Lerins in Gaul, and flourished about the middle of the
fifth century, with great wisdom and orthodoxy characterizes the true catholicity
of the Faith and of the Church saying 'In the Catholic Church we must especially
take heed to hold that which has been believed everywhere, at all times,
and by all. For this is truly and properly catholic, as the very force and
meaning of the word signifies, which moreover comprehends almost everything
universally. And this we shall do, if we walk following universality, antiquity,
and content.' But as has been said before, the western Church, from the
tenth century onwards, has privily brought into herself through the papacy
various and strange and heretical doctrines and innovations, and so she
has been torn away and removed far from the true and orthodox Church of Christ.
How necessary it is, then, for you to come back and return to the ancient
and universal doctrines of the Church..." 3
Presumably the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception
is one of those "strange innovations" fostered by the papacy that the
Synod of Constantinople would find objectionable.
In any case, there are three major problems with
this Orthodox rejection of any true "development" or "progress" of doctrine.
1). First of all, this statement by the Synod
of Constantinople is self-contradictory: all doctrinal "progress" is rejected,
and yet the ancient Fathers are said to have "unfolded" the truths of
the Faith under the guidance of the Spirit. If we are to say that the
Spirit guided the patristic Church to "unfold" many of the mysteries of
the Faith, why do we not allow that the Holy Spirit can continue that "unfolding"
process in the Middle Ages, the early modern era, and even today? And
did not that patristic labor of "unfolding" of the Faith result in some
"progress" in the Church's apprehension of it?
2). Secondly, in order to reject all doctrinal "progress," you have to hold that all the beliefs definitively professed
by the ancient Church of the early centuries were explicitly held by ecumenical
consensus right from the beginning, that is, from the very time of the
apostles onward. There may have been clarification of the language in which
the Faith was expressed, improved articulation, but there was no elaboration
of content, no drawing out over time of the logical/mystical implications
of the original deposit of Faith. Now, this is surely an exceedingly difficult
position to hold in the light of historical research. For example, do we
have any evidence at all for the direct invocation of the saints by the
apostolic or sub-apostolic churches (i.e., the first and second generations
of Christians)? Does the Church of the first two centuries clearly and explicitly
confess the entire sinlessness of the Blessed Virgin Mary? Or the Eucharist
as a propitiatory sacrifice? These doctrines may be logically/mystically
implicit in the apostolic scriptures and teaching tradition, but it surely
took the Church some time - in some cases centuries - to discern and fully
appreciate those implications. Again, did the ancient Fathers arrive at
any clarity or consensus as to what our Lord and His apostles really meant
by His death as a "ransom" for many (Mk. 10:45, I Peter 1:18-19)? Or take
two doctrines dear to the hearts of our Orthodox brethren: what evidence
is there to show that the apostles and the earliest Christians explicitly
believed in an eternal progress of the redeemed soul after death, or in
a distinction between the unknowable "essence" and "energies" of God? An
Orthodox theologian may want to defend both of these doctrines, but it is
surely only possible to do so if one can show that these doctrines were at
first hidden, logically/mystically implicit in scripture and apostolic tradition,
and only later drawn out into the clear daylight of conscious understanding
through the meditations and reflections of the saints and the fathers.
In his essay, "Doing Theology in an Eastern Orthodox
Perspective," John Meyendorff explained that the Orthodox "would be reluctant
to accept unreservedly the predominant Roman Catholic view about doctrinal
development, as found, for instance, in John Henry Newman. "In the Orthodox
Church," he claims, "formal doctrinal definitions are concerned only with essentials, without which the whole New Testament vision
of salvation would not stand. This was certainly the case for the dogmas
of the seven ecumenical councils, including the decree of Nicea II (787),
on the veneration of icons, which in fact is not so much a decree on religious
art as an affirmation of the reality of the incarnation; that is to say,
it is a statement that Christ was an historical person - visible, depictable,
representable." 4
A Catholic following in the footsteps of Newman,
however, would say that the decree of Nicea II concerning holy icons is
a clear instance of proper doctrinal "development." Nicea II did not define
one of the "essentials" of the Faith; rather, it settled a disputed implication of those essentials: namely, the propriety of making and venerating holy
images. It is exceedingly doubtful that Christians in the apostolic era
venerated icons, although in the sub-apostolic era they began to paint
them on the walls of the catacombs. This shows that by the Holy Spirit the
earliest generations of Christians had an initial, intuitive appreciation
of the connection between their incarnational faith and sacred art long
before that connection was theologically articulated and defended by St.
John Damascene, and applied to the actual veneration of icons. What Nicea
II did was to reaffirm and ratify this proper "development." Thus, the implications
of the incarnational faith of the apostles with regard to sacred art were
gradually drawn out and lived by later generations of Christians, and finally
defined and secured by the magisterium in ecumenical council.
3). Finally, the rejection of all "progress"
or "development" of doctrine by the Synod of Constantinople was really somewhat
disingenuous. The synod appealed to the teachings of St. Vincent of Lerins
to bolster its case. In the same work that they quote by St. Vincent,
however, the saint goes on to say while the ancient Catholic Faith is
certainly unchangeable in its essence, this does not preclude "progress"
in "understanding" of the Faith (Commonitory, 23, 28):
But perhaps someone is saying: 'will
there, then, be no progress of religion in the Church of Christ?' Certainly
there is, and the greatest. For who is there so envious toward men and
exceedingly hateful toward God that he would try to prohibit progress?
But it is truly progress, and not a change of faith. What is meant by
progress is that something is brought to an advancement within itself;
by change, something is transformed from one thing into another. It is
necessary, therefore, that understanding, knowledge, and wisdom grow and
advance strongly and mightily as much in individuals as in a group, as much
in one man as in the whole Church, and this gradually according to age and
the times; and this must take place precisely within its own kind, that is,
in the same teaching, in the same meaning, and in the same opinion. The
progress of religion in souls is like the growth of bodies, which, in the
course of years, evolve and develop, but still remain what they were...
For example: our fathers of old sowed the seeds of the wheat of
faith in this field which is the Church. Certainly it were unjust and
incongruous if we, their descendants, were to gather instead of the genuine
truth of wheat, the noxious error of weeds. On the contrary, it is right
and logically proper that there be no discrepancy between what is first and
what is last, what we sow and what we reap, and that we reap from the wheat
of instruction the fruit also of dogma. And thus, although in the course
of time something evolved from those first seeds, and has now expanded
under careful cultivation, nothing of the characteristics of the seeds
is changed. Granted that appearance, beauty, and distinction have been
added, still the same nature of each kind remains. 5
Consider also the witness of St. Augustine, who
taught that the Catholic Church truly progresses in its understanding
of the Faith, especially under the threat posed by heresy (City of God,
bk. XVI, c.2, n.1):
When astutely attacked by heretics,
many truths concerning the Catholic Faith are considered by Catholics with
greater diligence in order to protect them from such attacks, and they are
likewise understood more clearly and preached with greater urgency, so that
the question raised by the enemy becomes a means of progress in knowledge
of the faith.
In this lecture, therefore, I am going to argue
that the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception is a true and legitimate
development of doctrine: an unfolding of things hidden and implicit in
the apostolic faith. In this sense, the doctrine (as finally defined by
the See of Peter) represents genuine "progress" in the Church in the "understanding"
of that deposit of faith. I shall argue that the doctrine has its "seeds" in Scripture, and in an intuitive appreciation by the ancient saints and
Fathers of the mystery of the Lord's dealings with the Blessed Virgin Mary.
The solemn definition 150 years ago by Pius IX was merely the culmination
of centuries of meditation, theological debate, and verbal refinement, a
slow and gradual drawing up of this mystery from the deep well-springs of
Scripture and ancient Tradition into the full light of day.
Finally, I will try to show how the characteristic
concerns of Pauline and Johannine Christianity (discussed above), manifest
in the Evangelical and Orthodox traditions respectively, are already implicit
in this beautiful doctrine. The Immaculate Conception is not just an isolated "privilege" given to Mary; rather, it tells us something about the Church
dear to the heart of the Orthodox East, and something about divine grace
dear to the heart of the Evangelical West. Far from being an obstacle to
ecumenism, therefore, I believe that Mary's Immaculate Conception, properly
understood, will one day become a point of convergence. Indeed, as our Lord
from His Cross entrusted all His beloved disciples to the motherly care
of Mary (Jn. 19:25-27) how could she have any other role and office than
to bring the family of her Son together again, in one heart and mind?
Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, 491.
Second Vatican Council, "Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation," Section 8, in Walter Abbott, S.J., Editor, The Documents of Vatican II (London: Geoffrey Chapman, 1967), p. 116.
The Reply of the Orthodox Church to Roman Catholic overtures on Reunion: Being the Answer of the Great Church of Constantinople To A Papal Encyclical on Reunion, section 24 (New York: Orthodox Christian Movement of St. John the Baptist, 1958), p. 25-27.
John Meyendorff, "Doing Theology in an Eastern Orthodox Perspective" in Daniel Clendenin, ed., Eastern Orthodox Theology: A Contemporary Reader (Grand Rapids: Paternoster Press, 2003), p. 90.
St. Vincent of Lerins, "The Notebooks," 23.28, in William A. Jurgens, ed. The Faith of the Early Fathers, vol. III (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 1979), p. 265.
This is the first in a series of meditations
on the Immaculate Conception for the Marian feasts of The Annunciation,
Assumption, and Immaculate Conception, 2004.
In honor of the 150th anniversary of the proclamation of the dogma,
soon to be published by Marian Press in a book on the Immaculate Conception.
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