Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Matthias Scheeben (RC) on the Progress of Dogma and Formation of Doctrine in Catholicism

  

{597} I. In the communication of divine truth to mankind, a substantial growth took place down to the apostles through new revelations that completed the earlier ones. This progress stopped as soon as the Church was founded and revelation, concluded once and for all, was entrusted to her as a deposit. Consequently in the future any completely new growth [Neubildung] of a doctrine of faith is ruled out, and the infallibility of the Church that preserves the deposit also guarantees that a transformation [Umbildung] or modification of an earlier dogma will never take place. For this reason, however, room still remains not only for the later ecclesiastical determination of truths belonging indirectly to the doctrine of the faith, but also for further growth [Fortbildung] and further development of the doctrine of the faith itself, or of Church dogma in the narrower sense as the public presentation of the divine-apostolic deposit, caused by the clarification, renewal and elaboration [Ausbildung] of the apostolic deposit. For just as in the post-apostolic period, for all the faithful except the apostles themselves, the subjective assimilation of divine truth and the understanding thereof is mediated through natural human activity and therefore is more or less subject to the peculiar conditions of this activity: so too the authoritative presentation on the part of the post-apostolic teaching body, without ever positively falsifying the deposit or adding foreign elements, is likewise capable of a progressive development up to a certain degree, with respect to its decisiveness and definiteness, thoroughness and clarity, even more so since an occasional partial retrogression can take place in it. (Cf. above §22 the doctrine about the laws of ecclesiastical tradition.)

{598} The Vatican Council acknowledges the possibility and appropriateness of such progress in general by adopting as its own (De fide catholica, c. 4) the following words of Saint Vincent of Lerins (n. 23): “Crescat igitur et multum vehementerque proficiat, tam singulorum, quam omnium, tam unius hominis, quam totius ecclesiae, aetatum ac saeculorum gradibus, intelligentia, scientia, sapientia, sed in suo dumtaxat genere, in eodem scilicet dogmate, eodem sensu, eademque sententia.” [“Therefore, let there be growth and abundant progress in understanding, knowledge, and wisdom, in each and all, in individuals and in the whole Church, at all times and in the progress of ages, but only within the proper limits, i.e., within the same dogma, the same meaning, the same judgment” (DH 3020)]. Explicitly there is no talk here about progress in the dogmatic presentation, but merely in knowledge; but the understanding and knowledge of the whole Church is interdependent with her dogmatic presentation. Because this citation by the Vatican Council contains Saint Vincent’s main thesis, we may probably also regard the more detailed discussion that follows in his work as being approved in its entirety by the Vatican Council. This discussion revolves around the image of the growth of the human body or of the blade of wheat, which is applied very ingeniously. (Matthias Scheeben, Handbook of Catholic Dogmatics, Book 1, Part 1 [trans. Michael J. Miler; Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Academic, 2019], §36 nos. 597-98)

 

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