R
rasbat
Guest
This is a bit of a convoluted question. I am of ever increasingly traditional leanings myself so I intend no disrespect to anyone. I have been having a hard time understanding the issues surrounding the controversies between pre vatican II neoscholastics and those theologians commonly associated with nouvelle theologie with regard to the study of history. It seems as though many looked back in time to the patristic period and middle ages and drew on some things there only to be attacked by neoscholastics. Today’s traditionalists seem very enthusiastic about neoscholastic theology. the way it seems is that this type of thought was less than a century old at the time of vatican II and had become completely entrenched. It appears to be almost influenced by the enlightenment in its outlook wolfianism and suarezianism are words thrown about in books on the subject. I have a poor understanding of all of this. It would seem as though traditionalists would want to look back into the distant past trying to rediscover the good stuff there. Basically from where I am sitting it looks as though some people looked far into the past and were for some reason labeled as modernists and still are by some. I find this confusing. I simply want to know why theologians who study history have been labeled modernists by others who adhered to a system of thought which had only become entrenched quite recently in the greater scale of things.
Attempting an answer the only two things I can think of are these. 1. that the ideas of thologians such as St. Thomas Aquinas and others are timeless and should be divorced from their historical setting as it is ultimately irrelevant. as a result of this anyone looking too deeply at history will make claims that these ideas came out of a particular historical context and are not universally objectively true. This could lead in the direction of relativism which is in the realm of modernism. 2. That these theologians harvested select bits from the past and intermixed them with extremely new ideas to form a synthesis which was not in keeping with the true tradition of the church and laden with radical ideas supposedly taken from the past but tainted by the lens of the viewer. are either of these things the reason? are there any traditionalists out there these days who espouse a kind of medievalism harkening back to before the enlightenment? sorry for the disjointed question I have been in too many theology classes lately and wondering about things I cannot clearly articulate.
Attempting an answer the only two things I can think of are these. 1. that the ideas of thologians such as St. Thomas Aquinas and others are timeless and should be divorced from their historical setting as it is ultimately irrelevant. as a result of this anyone looking too deeply at history will make claims that these ideas came out of a particular historical context and are not universally objectively true. This could lead in the direction of relativism which is in the realm of modernism. 2. That these theologians harvested select bits from the past and intermixed them with extremely new ideas to form a synthesis which was not in keeping with the true tradition of the church and laden with radical ideas supposedly taken from the past but tainted by the lens of the viewer. are either of these things the reason? are there any traditionalists out there these days who espouse a kind of medievalism harkening back to before the enlightenment? sorry for the disjointed question I have been in too many theology classes lately and wondering about things I cannot clearly articulate.