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Genesis315
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I didn’t find his speech there, but I found other articles by him on this topic–I’m assuming he made the same argument at the conference. Here are two:I’m trying to understand this, but I am having a hard time tbh.
Firstly: Where did you read Fr. Harrison’s speech at the colloquium? I would love to read it.
rtforum.org/lt/lt151.html
catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=8775
Pink is right that the Church does have a borad coercive authority over the faithful and that it can even inflict temporal penalties as well as spiritual (see Canons 1311 and 1312 of the 1983 Code).Secondly: Let’s see if we can break it down. From my understanding, Dr. Pink’s argument was adopted from the Thomistic principle that the government does not have the right to coerce in Religion, as DH states. Yet, he argues, the Church does. The Church can extend the authority to act as the “arm” of the Church to the government, or can choose not too. While the government once acted in this role, and it was licit, the government does not any longer as the Church no longer wished it. That could change down the road and be licit. If that is wrong, please correct me.
From what I understand Pink is also right that the Church can delegate this power to her members, including those with temporal authority. So Pink gets the Church’s power right.
While the Church’s authority to coerce her offending members in religious matters is much broader and less limited than the state’s, I think Pink errs by giving too narrow a scope to the state’s non-delegated power by saying the state has no innate power at all to place restrictions on religious activity without the Church’s delegation. To be fair to Pink, his position has had its supporters over history (e,g, Suarez), but it seems to not have been adopted by the Magisterium. I don’t think it is found in the 18th and 19th century papal documents on the topic, DH, or the Catechism. If I remember correctly, in one of his essays, Pink even says his jurisdictional approach was neglected during that period. Also, Murray argued a somewhat similar point concerning the state’s incompetence in this area at the Council, but his position was opposed by others and ultimately not adopted.
In a nutshell: Pink says the state’s innate authority is merely with regard to matters of natural reason. The Church has taught, instead, that the state’s innate power exists with reference to its role of advancing and defending the common good–and the common good includes supernatural considerations as well as those of natural reason. That’s the main difference.
This is why CCC 2109 (which cites DH 7 and Quanta Cura 3) is incompatible with Pink’s position: it specifically says the limits the state can and should place on religious liberty cannot be “naturalist” (ie taking account only the realm of natural reason).
My take, and what I see as Harrison’s also, is that the Church’s doctrine on religious liberty is as follows:So, what is Fr. Harrison’s argument on this, super-simplified? From what I know of Fr. Harrison, I know he would not fall into the camp that diminishes the teaching authority of the DH document itself, as some other theologians did at the colloquiem. So I assume he is trying to argue for the continuity of the document, but I am having a hard time understanding the continuity- even what is stated in the Catechism.
From the perspective of man: Man has a right to be free from coercion by the state in religious matters within the limits of the common good (understood as the Church defines it). From the perspective of the state: the state has the right and duty to restrict false religious activity when it is necessary to defend or advance the common good. The variations in praxis over time are accounted for by the differences in circumstances that affect the needs of the common good and the prudential judgments applied by different people to those circumstances (the Catechism specifically says they are matters of political prudence).
The point of discontinuity is usually alleged to be between certain 18th and 19th century documents apparently condemning religious liberty and DH which apparently affirms it. However, the condemnations of religious liberty we see in the past were condemning an absolute, unlimited liberty, or a liberty limited only by a naturalistic conception of the public peace that is religiously indifferent. These conceptions were founded on the rationalist error that man has a moral right to disregard the obligation of faith.
The affirmation of religious liberty in DH (and as interpreted by the Church afterward), rather than falling under those condemnations, is the exact opposite of what was condemned. Instead, it provides the positive formulation that complements the negative condemnations. The liberty affirmed by the Church is founded on man’s obligation of faith toward revealed truth and is limited by a conception of the common good that takes into account both the natural and supernatural good of a society.
I hope that helps!