M
mgrfin
Guest
Charles Curran is a special case. He strongly believes in intellectual freedom in Catholicism, and never veers from ‘de fide definita’ statements of the Church. On others, he has expressed his own judgments.I am quite certain that SFD is correct. All of the above were banned by Pius XII from teaching.
Schillebeeckx is a favorite of yours?
"During the Second Vatican Council, Schillebeeckx’s articles influenced some of the major proposals for constitutions, articles which were distributed to all participants. In this way his influence was far greater than that of a formal peritus, a status the Dutch bishops had not granted to him. In 1965, together with Chenu, Cardinal Congar, Karl Rahner, and Hans Küng he founded the new theological journal Concilium, which promoted reformist thought.
Schillebeeckx’s books on Jesus gained a wide readership. His orthodoxy was called into question by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and he had to go to Rome to explain his views. Schillebeeckx was accused of denying the resurrection of Christ as an objective fact of faith."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Schillebeeckx
What about Curran and Kung? Your favorites also?
I have no problems with Kung, Schillebeeckx, Congar, deChardin, duLabac.
Conservative catholics in the Vatican have no problem attacking Jesuits like Murray, duLabac, Thomas Reese (editor of ‘America’) because as Jesuits they take a special vow of obedience to the Holy Father, and they are prime targets, who will yield, not on intellectual grounds, but because of their vow.
Curran was a peritus at Vat 2. So was Murray. There’s a lot of jealousy among intellectuals, yes, even Roman Catholic priests.
The Catholic Church has done well intellectually in the 20th Century, and Vatican 2 speaks to that.
We should always be allowed to question, for that is what we do as humans. In the end, obedience to the Holy Father is what matters, after all the discussions have been heard.
peace