Saturday, August 12, 2006

Intermission of Fragments VIII - Book Review: The Splendor of Faith

Some of you friends, know that in addition to this weblog, I also have a number of book reviews, lists and other writings at Amazon.com (Accessible here: http://www.amazon.com/gp/pdp/profile/A31FLL3YFP8TZL/102-4140495-6733765 for anyone who might be interested).

Now, back in Ireland, I also wrote a number of reviews, that never quite made it to Amazon. Here is one, slightly rejigged for this weblog:


An American friend of mine once remarked to me that most folks impression of John Paul II amounts to little more than ‘pro-life, anti-communist’.

Now if one counts oneself as a traditional Catholic, as I myself do, the above perception indicates nothing less than tragedy on an enormous scale.

Heartbreaking tragedy, I feel, as I consider all the implications involved in millions of people believing in John Paul as representing little else, than being against abortion and communism ...

I will use even stronger language. For me, it indicates not only tragedy, but the presence of supernatural evil – evil that works through disinformation and prejudice and ever seeks to OBSCURE ... evil that saturates our media and culture and would obscure the profound sense that we have just lived through one of the greatest, most overarching and far-reaching papacies of the past two thousand years.

One that can hardly be reduced to ‘pro-life, anti-communist’, but which over twenty- six years addressed and rejuvenated countless dimensions of the Catholic faith.

What is desperately needed then, is literature that testifies to the sweeping scope and enormity of John Paul’s mission.

To this task, Avery Dulles’ book makes a most admirable contribution. Clearly it focuses on John Paul’s thinking and teaching, rather than his vast legacy of decisive, pragmatic ACTION that has had such enormous geopolitical impact – including though not at all limited to, the Gandhi-like pacifist movement begun in 1950´s Poland by the future pope - then a simple priest - which would so alter the world.

(For as Gorbachev said, ´Without the Pope from Poland, the mighty changes in Eastern Europe would have been inconceivable.´ But for that story, one will need books like Weigel’s Catholic hagiography ‘Witness to Hope’ or Kwitney’s non-Catholic, non-hagiography ‘Man of the Century’, which reveals John Paul as a very ***human*** being, with both very human shadows and human greatness ...

But here in Dulles’ book, what we get is not a focus on John Paul’s vast legacy of direct action and initiative, but on his equally vast legacy of ideas.

As Dulles makes clear in highly accessible layperson’s language, the scope of what John Paul addressed was truly staggering.

Truly staggering then – once one gets beyond the media stereotypes - is not only John Paul’s profound and personalist meditation on the Christian Mystery, but also its implications for our contemporary culture in countless regards – from economics to human rights, from ecumenism to the world religions, from war and non-violence, to secularism and epistemology, from gender and the ‘Theology of the Body’ ... to how much else besides? The list goes on ...

(How many people, for example, would credit the man who became John Paul II, with radically arguing for the importance of the female orgasm in ***1950’s Poland***?!).

And running like a golden thread of love through all of his profound thought, there is the dignity, the dignity of the human being, human freedom, human rights and EMBODIED human existence ... the new dignity conferred to all of these through the Mystery of Christ.

There is so much more one can say about John Paul’s epic achievement. But this is a book review and not a book. I will simply leave the reader with a small sampling of the rich panorama, which Dulles’ book details in depth.

In the interest of integrity, I will also note that my very small selection is not without bias on my part.

I am, as I have said, deeply concerned with the inherent tragedy and evil I see in smearing John Paul’s legacy with an ultraconservative, reductionist caricature as ‘pro-life, anti-communist’.

The world deserves the truth and my own selection here is purposely made to balance the one-sided portrayal of the media. That said, here is a sampling of Dulles’ exegesis of John Paul´s thinking (clearly written during the late pontiff’s lifetime).

On matters of social order and economics, Dulles explores not only John Paul’s stringent critique of communism, but also of ‘capitalist neo-liberalism’ which as [John Paul] puts it ‘subordinates the human person to blind market forces and conditions the development of peoples on those forces. From its centres of power, such neo-liberalism often places unbearable burdens upon less favoured countries’.

In explicating John Paul´s social thinking, Dulles himself is worth quoting at length:

’John Paul describes the devastating effects of consumerism in many of his encyclicals ... In the consumerist culture, he says, the market is flooded with luxury goods that are acquired for purposes of amusement or as status symbols.

The rich are surfeited by a superabundance of possessions and ***enslaved*** by the tasks of managing and protecting their wealth. Meanwhile the poor are left in dire misery ...

In accordance with his personalist humanism, John Paul II insists on the priority of labor over capital...

Labor, while it should ideally redound to the benefit of the laborer as individual, has larger purposes.

It is intended also to benefit the family, the nation, and the universal human community.

Opposing the unbridled thirst for profits and power, John Paul II calls for a theology of development that takes account of the whole human person and every person.

Authentic development, he maintains, must respect the cultural, transcendent and religious dimensions of human life.

In light of these broadly humanistic goals, it is possible to correct some of the errors of what the pope calls "ECONOMISM" - a view that elevates enterprises only in terms of productivity and profits [Emphasis mine].’

To turn to another set of issues, there is John Paul´s rejection of authoritarianism in the Church. In this context, Dulles cites the entire legacy of John Paul´s work, including his contribution to Vatican II, made while he was still a bishop from Poland.

The book makes clear then, the future John Paul’s role in Vatican II’s thinking on religious freedom and how that has continued to be expressed in his teaching, quoting him as saying: ‘Religious freedom, an essential requirement of the dignity of every person, is a cornerstone of the structure of human rights …

The Church addresses people with full respect for their freedom. Her mission does not restrict freedom, but rather promotes it. THE CHURCH PROPOSES; SHE IMPOSES NOTHING [Emphasis in original]’.

(Now given the Church’s often-tragic history with human rights, many, of course, will find such a statement all too ironic. I would suggest rather that they take it as evidence of John Paul’s sincere, sustained-over-decades determination to place the post-Vatican II Church firmly on the course of freedom.

Controversies notwithstanding, Dulles´ book can serve to clarify John Paul’s huge role in consolidating that course of freedom.

Had the late Pope been simply the ultraconservative caricature, so often presented by the media, the Vatican II trajectory of freedom would have been negated … rather reinforced.

But as Dulles makes clear to the unprejudiced reader, John Paul´s papacy worked to extend Vatican II´s commitment to human rights and freedom, again certain controversies not withstanding.)

Clearly related to the issue of religious freedom, is the matter of the salvific value of other religions. For it must be admitted that for many centuries, the Catholic Church can be seen as intimidating non-Catholics with fear of hellfire ...

But a radical new thrust has been born in Catholicism, and Dulles documents how much, how very much, the Pope from Poland has had to do with this.

This revolutionary thrust emerged clearly at the Second Vatican Council, where major positive statements about other religions, were made for the first time.

As Dulles makes clear, John Paul continually re-emphasised the new approach of Vatican II in innumerable ways.

At this point, I find myself disagreeing with Dulles somewhat, when he writes that in his treatment of other religions, ’John Paul II ... makes no doctrinal moves that clearly go beyond the council, but he does give an interpretation of the council that, at least in emphasis, is original.’

In other words, John Paul cannot be said to have definitively gone beyond the council - except in his emphasis, his emphatic call that is, to value other religions.

But my own feeling is that John Paul´s teaching on the other religions is definitely more radical than anything offered by Vatican II.

For example, previously in this weblog (on 14 November 2005) I have quoted John Paul to the effect that:

’Normally, it will be in the sincere practice of what is good in their own religious traditions and by following the dictates of their own conscience, that the members of other religions respond positively to God’s invitation and receive salvation in Jesus Christ, even while they do not recognise or acknowledge him as their saviour.’

And as I also wrote before:

’Now here John Paul defends the Glory at the heart of the Church – the Glory that transformed the cosmos on Calvary, since which time, that Glory has become the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

At the same time, the head of 60% of global Christianity, decisively sheds the usual interpretation of Extra Ecclesiam Nullus Sallus (‘Outside the Church, there is no salvation’) by arguing that the **normal** way for non-Christians is through their own religion. And in my view, this is more decisive than anything said by Vatican II.’

In regards to the matter of salvation, Dulles also draws attention to the controversy surrounding what may yet amount to one of the most radical, groundbreaking positions ever held by any Pope, ever.

For although it is not at all clear, there is evidence, that late in his life John Paul may have joined with Origen, John Henry Newman and Hans Urs von Balthasar in questioning eternal hell …

That is, though it is not clear-cut, John Paul may have said: “Eternal damnation remains a real possibility, but we are not granted, without special divine revelation, the knowledge of WHETHER or which human beings are effectively involved in it(Emphasis mine).’

Yes, if John Paul did write these words, it would consolidate the view that may increasingly emerge of John Paul II in future years … a faithful traditionalist, faithful in this case, to the traditional Christian teaching of Hell, yet unwilling to condemn anyone to perdition or even to admit that human beings must necessarily be involved with it.

Coming from a modern secular perspective, this last quote may seem of small moment. Yet coming from a Pope dedicated to tradition, especially a Pope as beloved as John Paul, it could yet prove a momentous and evolutionary point in Catholic teaching …

Finally in speaking of John Paul and universalism, we should not ignore his transcendent Christology, which Dulles details admirably saying:

‘John Paul II takes every opportunity to quote Vatican II to the effect that Christ by his incarnation united himself … with ***every*** human being and in so doing elevated human nature to an incomparable dignity [and] points out ‘the incarnation of God the Son signifies the taking up into unity with God, not only human nature but in this human nature … the ***whole*** of humanity … The incarnation then, has also a cosmic significance [Emphasis mine]’.

Oh, John Paul. My review here is written partly to honour this worthy tome of your Cardinal, Avery Dulles.

He has written an invaluable, clear, accessible and necessary, most necessary book, that I profitably return to again and again.

But I confess that I also write this review to make a contribution to the veneration of your memory.

A world increasingly enthralled in ever more brutal social conditions, needs the unshuttered memory of your passionate, comprehensive and overarching vision of all that humanity ... humanity forever and irrevocably infused by the Christ ... can be and needs to be, if we are not to sink further into the abyss ...

Yes, if we are not to sink further into the social abyss generated by brutal, cold materialism, we need books like that of Dulles, which can open one´s eyes - and above all, one´s HEART - to all you tried to do, our dear and venerated John Paul the Great ...

And to how our Church and World have forever been enriched beyond measure ...

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hello Roger;I am thrilled to find your web site.As you my path has led me to Catholic Mysticism.I needed to be humbled on my journey.Yes the joy's the trial's the work of being a follower are truly worth the effort.As I prepare myself to once again emerse myself into the Mystical Body I look with anticipation for the Blessed Eucharist that will nourish and give me a deeper appreciation for That most precious gift.I have asked and I have seeked and soon I will knock..I have just started to read your blogs and I know I will be the better for it.May the Lord inspire us all through your works.

Roger Buck said...

Thank you so much, anonymous.

I regret how little I am able to be active at this weblog at present - but wanted to say I appreciate your words - as I do those of others, I have yet to reply to.

And your joy in the Blessed Sacrament ... thank you ... we need far more testimony I feel, to the sheer joy, wonder, nourishment that is to be experienced in the Mystical Body.

But as you say, the joy of this way, involves effort and trial ... though how deeply "worth the effort" it is!

Again, thank you for your moving words, unknown friend ...

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