J
JaMc
Guest
Right. I think those who read DH to say that “religious liberty” = a moral right not to follow the Church, are already going into it with a bias, i.e., “I don’t like Vatican II, so what can I find in the VII Documents that seems to contradict traditional Church Teaching?” However, with regard to a civil right, it is certainly prudential - for example, the authority of a Catholic state’s, or the Vatican’s, criticism of an Islamic state’s treatment of Christians is significantly diminished if they are treating non-Catholics in the same manner.Are we talking moral right or civil right? They are different. I really don’t see the big deal. The distinction is pretty apparent to me.
Now you could try to claim that the changes concerning the obligations of the state in this regard are somehow irreconcilable. However, I’m of the opinion that the civil application of moral law, i.e., how should the civil government react, is a matter of prudence. In that light it’s not a difficult matter at all.
Look, Pius IX gave us the infamous Mortara case in his abysmal application of moral law to that poor child and family. He royally screwed up, IMHO, the civil application of moral law in that matter. Well, he was human. The Church has no particular authority in civil law. Sorry, it’s a fact. The Church’s authority is in the Deposit of the Faith and morality. Specific civil actions, or applications of civil law, do not fall within that ambit beyond the fact that the civil authority must do what it best believes supports the moral law within the facts and powers at issue.
So, DH is simply using “right” within the civil context, not the moral context. It’s an application of prudence, then.
Also, the earlier documents must be taken in their context - the Popes who made the strongest declarations against “religious liberty” were Europeans who were, by and large, writing for a European audience. When they wrote about the evils of “religious liberty,” they weren’t thinking about the First Amendment, they were looking at movements like the French Revolution, where “religious liberty” was more or less just code-speak for “anti-clericalism.”
Today, if the Pope said “religious liberty and freedom are wrong,” just think of the headlines: “Pope, former head of the Inquisition [as the CDF used to be called] condemns religious liberty.” It would make the previous controversies over the Regensburg address and Williamson look like child’s play.
I do think DH is perfectly compatible with tradition - hopefully the SSPX Bishops will come to realize that as well.