NotWorthy:
Once again, I reiterate, you need to come down to the Bible Belt and see.
No I don’t. I grew up in the Bible Belt. But you didn’t say “Bible Belt Fundamentalists.” You said “non-Catholic religions.” (Actually, “non-Catholic religions” would mean Hindus, Muslims, etc., but I didn’t take you
that literally!). The world is a whole lot bigger than the Bible Belt, and there may be stuff even in the Bible Belt that you haven’t run into. You were making blanket statements not just about all Protestants but all non-Catholics. If you want to know why
fundamentalists don’t study the Fathers I’d be happy to discuss that. But there are far more varieties of Christianity than Catholicism and fundamentalism. If there is one thing I am on this board to say, it’s that. And I take delight in saying that precisely because I
did grow up in the Bible Belt, and I know exactly where you guys are coming from. I can imagine how hard it is to be a Catholic in the Bible Belt. I was one of the folks giving you guys a hard time (back when I was an obnoxious brat), and when I considered becoming Catholic I was put through it myself from friends and family. But I discovered, both to my confusion and my delight, that the options available in Carter County Tennessee are not the only ones existing in the Christian world!
NotWorthy:
The Protestants around here , mostly Fundamentalist, think that studying the Early Church Fathers is to study the Reformation.
If you can get fundamentalists to pay real attention to the Reformation other than trying to find anti-Catholic sound-bites, you’re doing well . . . .
Some fundamentalists do pay attention to the Ante-Nicene Fathers. But generally history isn’t their strong suit.
NotWorthy:
There are several Methodist Churches around, but I’ve mostly gotten blank stares if I ask about these writers.
I’m sure you have!
NotWorthy:
It’s especially interesting to note that a lot of “Apostolic” Churches are springing up around here, and they haven’t a clue about the early church.
I presume by “Apostolic” you mean Pentecostal (many of whom use this term)? Are they Trinitarian or “Oneness”? Where do you live?
One thing you need to bear in mind is that fundamentalist Protestantism (I’m using “fundamentalist” broadly–Pentecostals are a different breed in many ways but share a lot of traits) is steeped in American populism and the accompanying disdain for history (or anything else that gets between the individual and raw experience). Many of their pastors may not have gone to seminary at all.
Among Pentecostals, for instance, one of the intellectual centers these days is Regent University (Pat Robertson’s place in Virginia). I was hired a couple of years ago to grade papers for a seminar there which looked at church history from a “pneumatological perspective.” This of course tended to mean reading it through a Pentecostal lens. But while I didn’t attend the class (yes, it was weird to grade papers without having been to the class, and this didn’t raise my confidence in the quality of the school; but that was what they hired me to do), it was clear that they had looked at quite a few patristic and medieval texts. One of the papers, I remember, was on Symeon the New Theologian (granted, not an Early Church Father exactly, but close).
My point is simply that these guys definitely had some acquaintance (however slanted) with the ECF’s. But how many Pentecostal pastors have had that kind of training? Very few, no doubt. There’s a huge gap between what seminaries teach and what people hear in the pews. And the fact that many of the fundamentalist churches don’t like seminaries only makes that gap wider.
NotWorthy:
If there is a difference between our Tradition of NFP, and that being heretical by ECF standards, how is that closer to Protestantism, where most (I emphasize most) have given up on the struggle of contraception and/or remain silent?
NFP isn’t much of a Tradition. It’s a relaxation of the Tradition. An entirely correct one in my opinion, of course. But as far as I can tell it’s a relatively recent position. Certainly Augustine speaks of it with horror (granted, he was talking about Manichean practices, but he seemed to think that the practice discredited the theology rather than the other way round).
More to the point, I wasn’t claiming that the Protestants are closer to the Fathers on this point (though some fundamentalists/evangelicals do reject all birth control, including NFP). I was simply pointing out ways in which modern Catholicism differs from the Fathers. Some of those, in my opinion, are good changes, some are bad, some are indifferent. On some points Protestants are closer to the Fathers, on others (more numerous, I grant) we’re farther away, on others there isn’t much to choose between us.
Edwin