An excellent article by Joseph Clifford Fenton, "
The Teaching of the Theological Manuals" (CatholicCulture.org, March 13, 2014), showing how Fr. Gregory Baum completely misconstrued the significance of the teaching of the manuals with his assertion in
Commonweal 77 (Jan. 18, 1963), p. 436:
The conflict at the Council is not at all between men who try to introduce new insights and modern ways and those who seek to remain faithful to the great tradition of the past. It is rather between those who seek to renew the life of the Church by returning to the most authentic Catholic tradition of all ages and those who seek to consecrate as eternal Catholic wisdom the theology of the manuals of the turn of the century and the anti-modernist emphasis which penetrated them.
One of the most genuinely likeable personalities among the periti
at the first series of meetings at the Second Ecumenical Vatican
Council was the Canadian Augustinian priest, Father Gregory Baum. Those
who were fortunate enough to meet him came to admire him for his
admirable priestly character and for his exquisite courtesy. He is
definitely the sort of man who is listened to and who attracts
attention.
Recently he wrote an article for the magazine Commonweal, in
which he made a highly questionable statement about the status of the
theology of the scholastic manuals at the Second Vatican Council. The
teaching, which might have passed unnoticed if it had come from a less
able and distinguished man, naturally attracts attention because it is a
statement by Father Baum. And, unfortunately, it is a statement, which
could be seriously misleading if it should be taken seriously by our
Catholics, particularly by students in the field of sacred theology.
Father Baum concluded his article with this assertion:
The conflict at the Council is not at all between men who try to
introduce new insights and modern ways and those who seek to remain
faithful to the great tradition of the past. It is rather between those
who seek to renew the life of the Church by returning to the most
authentic Catholic tradition of all ages and those who seek to
consecrate as eternal Catholic wisdom the theology of the manuals of the
turn of the century and the anti-modernist emphasis which penetrated
them.1
In itself this is an alarming declaration. Despite the manifest
and outstanding amiability, knowledge, and sincerity of Father Baum, it
is definitely important that Catholics, especially Catholic priests,
look into the accuracy and the implications of what he has had to say
about the "conflict" at the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican.
This is definitely a subject on which we cannot afford to be
misinformed.
To be sure that we are making no mistake in this field, we must
examine the context of Father Baum's article itself. In this article the
only story that could be considered as in any way indicative of a
"conflict" is Father Baum's recountal of the fact that, after a vote of
the Fathers of the Council, and after a decision of the Sovereign
Pontiff, the schema on the Sources of Revelation (now known as the
schema on Revelation) was sent back to a mixed commission to be recast.
As the newspaper accounts have told us many times, on this occasion the
Fathers of the Council voted not to continue with the detailed
consideration of the schema prior to its recasting by the commission.
About sixty per cent of those present did not want to continue with the
consideration of the schema as it stood. About forty per cent signified
their willingness to proceed with the consideration of the schema as
they had received it from the Holy Father, who, in his turn, had
received it from the Central Preparatory Commission, which, in its turn,
had received it from the Theological Preparatory Commission itself.
As the newspapers have told us, this vote was not decisive. It
was only when the Holy Father had intervened personally that the schema
was sent to the mixed commission to be clarified and shortened.
Presumably the same material, in a new format, will be submitted again
to the council as a whole after the mixed commission and the new interim
central commission have finished with it.
In the event itself there was nothing that could in any way
justify the rather sensational language employed by Father Baum. There
was certainly no indication that the men who voted to proceed with the
examination of the schema as it stood were trying "to consecrate as
eternal Catholic wisdom the theology of the manuals of the turn of the
century." Neither was there the least indication that the men who wanted
to have the schema reworked before the council considered it in detail
were trying "to renew the life of the Church by returning to the most
authentic Catholic tradition of all ages." As far as one could make out
from their own statements as revealed in the official Vatican news
releases, these men were merely dissatisfied with the form in which the
teaching on the sources of revelation had been presented in the original
text of the schema.
Another individual, writing in the same issue of Commonweal, claims
that, "Even the participants in the Council admit . . . that the
opposition between the two major groups has been such that the next
session has had to be postponed to next September in order to allow the
factions to cool off."2 If Father
Baum's contention about the nature of "the conflict at the Council" were
at all justified, there would be definitely a need for a cooling off
period, and much more. But there is no evidence whatsoever that his
contention is true. Indeed, it would seem that this fine young priest
has not only been mistaken about what actually transpired in the
council, but that he has described a conflict or opposition which has
not and must not have a place within the Fathers of the Vatican Council.
Father Gregory has done a disservice to the cause of Catholic
truth by misrepresenting the motives, which influenced the Fathers of
the council to vote for or against the continuance of the detailed study
of the schema on the sources or the fonts of divine public revelation.
In point of fact the issue was the acceptability of the wording of the
schema, and particularly the acceptability of its style and length. Some
claimed that the council could act more effectively if a commission
recast the entire schema. Others believed that it would be better to
proceed with the consideration of the document as it stood, and to have
the changes made in individual sentences and paragraphs as a result of
the observations of the entire council. The stand of these latter was
weakened by the fact that all of the Fathers and the periti knew that
such a procedure would take a very long time indeed.
Father Baum can only be talking of the men who voted to continue
with the consideration of the schema as it stood when he spoke of those
"who seek to consecrate as eternal Catholic wisdom the theology of the
manuals of the turn of the century and the antimodernist emphasis which
penetrated them." And he must be describing those who voted not to
proceed with the detailed examination of this schema when he spoke of
those "who seek to renew the life of the Church by returning to the most
authentic Catholic tradition of all ages." In neither case is the
designation accurate or in any way acceptable.
If Father Baum's claim about the "conflict at the Council" was
written seriously (and there is no reason to suppose that it was not),
then he has implied very clearly that the theology of "the manuals of
the turn of the century" was and is to some extent, not only distinct
from, but even at odds with, "the most authentic Catholic tradition of
all ages." He obviously wishes us to infer that, in his judgment at
least, the life of the Catholic Church can be in some measure "renewed"
if the Church abandons the theological teachings, which were contained
in, or at least which were characteristic of, the great manuals in use
in Catholic universities and seminaries during the early years of the
twentieth century.
Moreover, it is quite obvious from his statements, which Father
Baum wishes to imply that the opposition to the heresy of Modernism
manifested in these manuals is in some way unacceptable to the Catholic
Church at the present day. At least he wants us to imagine that the
Church would be improved or "renewed" if the anti-Modernist teaching
that pervaded the best of the early twentieth-century manuals of sacred
theology were to be passed over or modified.
Furthermore Father Baum obviously wants his readers to believe
that, at the present moment, the doctrine imparted to our seminarians
within the Catholic Church is in some manner outside of "the most
authentic Catholic tradition of all ages." If we are to have the Church
"return" to such a tradition, then it would seem that this tradition
must have been in some measure lost, or at least obscured, during the
course of the twentieth century. Certainly Father Baum's statement
involves the implication that the tradition in which those priests who
studied the early twentieth-century theological manuals were educated
was definitely not the most authentic doctrinal tradition of the
Catholic Church.
These are implications, which we definitely must examine. There
is absolutely no proof, of course, that the men who voted in the council
on the acceptability of the schema about the sources or the fonts of
revelation, as it was delivered to the council, were in any way
concerned with the implications conveyed in Father Baum's declaration.
Yet it is a fact that, especially since the closing of the first portion
of the council on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception last year,
there have been many who have made statements in some way involving the
implications contained in Father Baum's statement. Most of the time
these implications have been made less forcefully than they were by
Father Baum. Yet it is definitely necessary to examine them, and to see,
once and for all time, whether or not these implications are
acceptable.
The Doctrine Of The Theological Manuals
Obviously,
if we are to examine Father Baum's claims seriously, we must first ask
ourselves about the identity of the theological manuals of the turn of
the twentieth century. The question with which the schema on which the
council voted was that of revelation and the sources of revelation.
Hence, we must suppose that, when Father Baum speaks of the offending
manuals, he is referring to those which deal with fundamental dogmatic
theology, and particularly with the sections De revelatione and De fontibus revelationis. It
so happens that, in this field, there have been a great many very
influential and well-written manuals produced during the early years of
this century.
We are speaking, of course, of the manuals in the field of
fundamental dogmatic theology, which were in use and were influential at
and after the turn of the twentieth century. Some of these were
originally written during the last years of the nineteenth century, but,
in editions published subsequent to the issuance of the Lamentabili sane exitu, the Pascendi dominici gregis, and the Sacrorum antistitum, these manuals acquired the anti-Modernist emphasis, which seems so displeasing to Father Baum.
Probably the most important of these manuals were those of Louis
Billot, who will most certainly be counted among the very ablest of all
the theologians who labored for the Church during the early part of this
century. These books, most immediately concerned with the material in
the schema voted upon by the Fathers of the Second Ecumenical Vatican
Council, were published by the Gregorian University Press in Rome, and
were re-edited many times. One of them was the De inspiratione sacrae scripturae theologica disquisitio,3 and another was the magnificent De immutabilitate traditionis contra modernam haeresim evolutionismi.4
Even
more widely known than the works of Billot were those of the Sulpician
Adolphe Tanquerey. Many thousands of priests were introduced to the
study of sacred theology, and particularly of fundamental dogmatic
theology, by courses based on Tanquerey's De Religione: De Christo Legato: De Ecclesia: De Fontibus Revelationis, the first of the three volumes of his Synopsis theologiae dogmaticae ad mentem S. Thomas Aquinatis accommodata.5 This
particular volume had gone into its twenty-first edition in 1925. If
the theses taught by Tanquerey were opposed to those of "the most
authentic Catholic tradition of all ages," then thousands of priests,
educated during the first part of the twentieth century were being led
into error by the men whom Our Lord had constituted as the guardians of
His revealed message.
Likewise of prime importance in the early years of the twentieth
century were Van Noort's two works on the subject of fundamental
dogmatic theology, De vera religione6 and De ecclesia Christi.7
The influence of these two excellent works has been increased
tremendously as a result of the English translation and adaptation of
these works done by the Sulpician Fathers Castelot and Murphy. Another
enormously and deservedly popular manual translated into English was
Brunsmann's Fundamental Theology,8 made available to our scholars by the famed Arthur Preuss.
The first volume of Archbishop Zubizarreta's Theologia dogmatico-scholastica ad mentem S. Thomae Aquinatis likewise influenced many students for the priesthood in the earlier part of this century. This volume was entitled Theologia fundamentalis.9
It contained the same material found in the first volume of Tanquerey's
series. Like Tanquerey, Zubizarreta wrote a shorter treatise on
dogmatic theology, placing the matter covered in the four volumes of the
regular edition within the content of one volume. Tanquerey's was the Brevior synopsis theologiae dogmaticae.10Zubizarreta entitled his the Medulla theologiae dogmaticae.11
In
1930 the brilliant German Jesuit Herman Dieckmann continued the
tradition of the manuals of the turn of the century by publishing his De revelatione Christiana: Tractatus philosophico-historici.12 Previously he had published the two volumes of his De ecclesia: Tractatus historico-dogmatici.13
Contemporary with Dieckmann's manuals, and likewise of primary
importance in the history of twentieth-century theology was the
three-volume text of the Jesuit Father Emil Dorsch, Institutiones theologiae fundamentalis.14 In line with the teachings of Dorsch is the doctrine contained in a highly important American manual, The Theory of Revelation,15 by the great Rochester theologian, Monsignor Joseph J. Baierl.
The manual of Tanquerey was certainly the most widely distributed
among all those that appeared during the early part of this century. In
the perspective of history, it would seem that two authors must share
the prize for theological acumen. One, of course, was Billot, whose
text, De Ecclesia Christi: sive Continuatio theologiae de Verbo Incarnato,16
still remains the best theological treatment on the Church produced
during the course of the past hundred years. The other was the French
Dominican, Father Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, whose classical De Revelatione per ecclesiam catholicam proposita17 is still basically the best manual of scholastic apologetics available to the student today.
Later than the manual of Tanquerey, but like it destined for
tremendous success in the world of ecclesiastical studies, was the first
volume of Herve's Manuale theologiae dogmaticae, the one entitled De vera religione: De ecclesia Christi: De fontibus revelationis.18 The first volume of Bartmann's Precis de theologie dogmatique,19
a textbook very popular a quarter of a century ago, dealt with the
sources of revelation and other topics which entered into what Father
Baum calls the "conflict" at the Second Vatican Council.
Tremendously influential in their own time were other manuals of
fundamental dogmatic theology, which are not in common use today. Among
these is the Elementa apologeticae sive theologiae fundamentalis 20 by the Austrian priest Anton Michelitsch. The Elementa theologiae fundamentalis,21 by the Italian Franciscan, Clemente Carmignani, is another of these texts. In this same class we must place Cardinal Vives's Compendium theologiae dogmaticae 22 the first volume of Mannens's Theologiae dogmaticae institutiones,23 which was entitled Theologia fundamentalis, and the first volume of MacGuiness's Commentarii theologici, a book containing the treatises De religione revelata ejusque fontibus and De ecclesia Christi.24
In the Spanish speaking world the Lecciones de apologetica 25 of Father
Nicolas Marin Negueruela were outstandingly popular. There is much
material on fundamental dogmatic theology in Father John Marengo's Institutiones theologiae fundamentalis and in Canon Marchini's Summula theologiae dogmaticae.26
The publication of these books in the last decade of the nineteenth
century marks them as genuinely "turn of the century," and they
incorporate the kind of theological teaching which seems to displease
Father Baum. Much more influential, however, was the treatise De theologia generali, in the first volume of Herrmann's Institutiones theologiae dogmaticae 27 a work which, incidentally, earned for its author a letter of thanks from St. Pius X himself.
The first volume of Monsignor Cesare Manzoni's Compendium theologiae dogmaticae 28 contains a typical "turn of the century" treatise on fundamental dogmatic theology. So too does Bishop Egger's Enchiridion theologiae dogmaticae generalis.29 The same type of doctrine can also be found in the Franciscan Gabriel Casanova's Theologia fundamentalis,30 in the Synthesis sive notae theologiae fundamentalis of Father Valentine Saiz Ruiz,31 and in the Theologia generalis seu tractatus de sacrae theologiae principiis32 by Father Michael Blanch.
The first volume of nearly every set of manuals of dogmatic
theology issued during the early part of this century and the last
decade of the nineteenth century carried a treatise on fundamental
dogma. Typical of such works were Tepe's Institutiones theologicae, Prevel's Theologiae dogmatica elementa,33 Lercher's Institutiones theologiae dogmaticae,34 and Christian Pesch's Praelectiones dogmaticae.35
The texts by Pesch and Lercher have been especially influential in the
training of seminarians throughout the first half of this century.
The two volumes of Hilarin Felder's Apologetica sive theologia fundamentalis 36 were widely used during the past few decades. And, in the historical part of apologetics, Felder's Christ and the Critics 37 was and continues to be almost uniquely valuable. Also outstanding in this field was the two-volume work, Jesus Christ: Sa Personne, Son Message, Ses Preuves,38 by Leonce de Grandmaison.
Father Berthier, the founder of the Missionaries of the Holy Family, wrote, during the reign of Pope Leo XIII, an Abrege de theologie dogmatique et morale,39
which contains a relatively complete and typically "turn of the
century" treatise on fundamental dogmatic theology. The brilliant Father
Bainvel published a treatise De vera religione et apologetica,40
which had a wide and powerful influence. And among the multitudinous
and now almost forgotten writings of Cardinal Lepicier were a Tractatus de sacra doctrina 41 and a Tractatus de ecclesia Christi.42
The American Jesuit Father Timothy Cotter published an eminently successful and accurate Theologia fundamentalis.43 Among the most recent of our twentieth-century manuals of fundamental dogmatic theology is the Theologia fundamentalis, the first volume in the text of Iragui and Abarzuza.44 The Capuchin Father Iragui is the author of this first volume.
Of primary importance among the ecclesiological manuals of our century is the two-volume Theologica de ecclesia,45 by the Jesuit Bishop Michel d'Herbigny. Other intensely influential texts in the same area are the De ecclesia Christi 46 by the Jesuit Father Timothy Zapelena and the De ecclesia Christi47 by the Franciscan Father Antonio Vellico.
Another excellent and widely used manual in this field is The Church of Christ: An Apologetic and Dogmatic Treatise,48
by the late Father E. Sylvester Berry of Mount Saint Mary's. And in
Canada we find an extraordinarily useful pair of manuals, the Apologetica authored by the Sulpician Fathers Yelle and Fournier and the De ecclesia et de locis theologicis,49 written by Father Yelle. From Spain comes one of the very best recent traditional manuals in this field, the Theologia fundamentalis by the Jesuit Fathers Salaverri and Nicolau.50 This is the first volume of the famed Sacrae theologiae summa.
Pegues's Propaedeutica thomistica ad sacram theologiam 51
contains an unusual statement of many of the central theses of the
traditional fundamental dogmatic theology. Another Dominican, Father
Joachim Berthier, wrote a Tractatus de locis theologicis,52
in which he deals accurately with the matter of the sources of
revelation and the Church. The Dominican tradition in the field of
ecclesiology was kept up in the "turn of the century" literature by,
among others, Father De Groot, who published his magnificently accurate Summa apologetica de ecclesia catholica ad mentem S. Thomae Aquinatis,53 by Father Gerard Paris, who followed the teaching of De Groot to a great extent in his Tractatus de ecclesia Christi,54 and by Father Reginald Schultes, whose De ecclesia catholica: Praelectiones apologeticae55 is still a classic in the field.
Forty years ago the outstanding controversy among theologians was
the debate about the definability of the theological conclusion. In the
discussion Schultes and Father Francis Marin-Sola were the most
prominent spokesmen for the two sides. Schultes's teaching was set forth
in his Introductio in historiam dogmatum.56 Marin-Sola presented his teachings in his L'Evolution homogene du dogme catholique.57 Both authors, however, were "penetrated" by what Father Baum has called "anti-modernist emphasis." And the
material in these books definitely influenced the content of subsequent
manuals in the field of fundamental dogmatic theology.
There has been considerable writing in the field of fundamental
dogmatic theology, in line with the "turn of the century" tradition of
Catholic and anti-Modernist theology, among English-speaking priests.
Immensely popular some years ago was Devivier's Christian Apologetics,58
a translation edited and arranged by Bishop Messmer, one of the first
faculty members at The Catholic University of America. In line with the
teachings of Father Garrigou-Lagrange were Father Walshe's The Principles of Catholic Apologetics 59 and my own We Stand With Christ.60
The Jesuit Father John T. Langan wrote a fine Apologetica,61 which has been too little used by his fellow Americans. Another Jesuit, Father Joseph de Guibert, published a De ecclesia,62 which is recognized as one of the finest texts in this field produced during the course of our century.
During the past twenty years we have had many more texts which
have kept up the teachings and the spirit of the manuals of the turn of
the century, and which have certainly continued their anti-Modernist
emphasis. Among these we may mention in passing the Theologia fundamentalis of the Jesuit Father Francis X. Calcagno,63 the Theologia fundamentalis64 of Archbishop Parente, the present Assessor of the Holy Office, and the Theologia fundamentalis65 of the Franciscan Father Maurus Heinrichs, as well as the magnificent treatise De revelatione christiana66 by Father Sebastian Tromp. There are also the very complete and accurate Theologia fundamentalis 67of the Jesuit Father Joseph Mors, the first volume of Conrad Baisi's Elementa theologiae scholasticae,68 and the first volume of the Theologiae dogmaticae theses 69of Canon Joseph Lahitton.
The "turn of the century" spirit, and the anti-Modernist emphasis
so deplored by Father Baum are also quite manifest in the articles
published in the Dictionnaire de theologie catholique and the Dictionnaire apologetique de la foi catholique.
Father Baum’s Position
Now
it must be noted that there is no complete agreement among the works we
have mentioned (and we have mentioned only a small part of the
literature which might be called twentieth century manuals of
fundamental dogmatic theology), with reference to theological opinions.
Certainly there are theses in the book by Christian Pesch, which are
impugned in the work of Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange. And not everything
that is taught by Tanquerey is approved in the manuals of Louis Billot.
Yet, if we examine the matter closely, the opposition of Father
Baum is directed, not towards any individual opinion or group of
opinions within the field of fundamental dogmatic theology, but against
the common teaching of all these texts. It is Father Baum's contention
that one of the contending groups at the Second Vatican Council is
seeking "to consecrate as eternal Catholic wisdom the theology of the
manuals of the turn of the century and the antimodernist emphasis which
penetrated them." If his words have any meaning at all, he must be
convinced that what is the common teaching of all these manuals of the
turn of the century, and the common teaching of the manuals which
followed them throughout the course of the twentieth century, is
definitely not Catholic wisdom, and that this teaching must be abandoned
if the life of the Church is to be renewed, and if we are to return to
what he calls "the most authentic Catholic tradition of all ages."
Now it is quite obvious that the common teaching of the manuals
of fundamental dogmatic theology since the turn of the twentieth century
has been the doctrine, which has been taught to the candidates for the
priesthood within the Catholic Church, at least up until the past few
months. We are dealing with books, which have been employed in teaching
in seminaries and universities. If these books all contain common teaching opposed to or even distinct from genuine Catholic doctrine, then the ordinary and universal magisterium of the Catholic Church has been very much at fault during the course of the twentieth century.
It must be noted that we are speaking of the common
teaching of these texts or manuals of fundamental dogmatic theology.
Father Baum charges that one of the two conflicting groups at the Second
Vatican Council was trying "to consecrate as eternal Catholic wisdom
the theology of the manuals of the turn of the century." Of course this
is the language of Madison Avenue rather than of the university lecture
hall. It is calculated to make his readers imagine that many of the
Fathers of the council were attempting to give to the teaching of the
manuals in fundamental dogmatic theology a status, which that teaching
had not previously enjoyed.
What seems to displease Father Baum is the fact that the
unanimous teaching of the scholastic theologians in any area relating to
faith or morals is the teaching of the ordinary and universal magisterium
of the Church. The manuals, like those to which we have referred, are
books actually used in the instruction of candidates for the priesthood.
They are written by men who actually teach in the Church's own approved
schools, under the direction of the Catholic hierarchy, and ultimately,
through the activity of the Congregation of Seminaries and
Universities, under the direction of the Sovereign Pontiff himself. The
common or morally unanimous teaching of the manuals in this field is
definitely a part of Catholic doctrine.
It is quite obvious that the individual opinions of individual
authors do not constitute Catholic doctrine, and could not be set forth
as such. But there is a fund of common teaching (like that which tells
us that there are truths which the Church proposes to us as revealed by
God, and which are not contained in any way within the inspired books of
Holy Scripture), which is the unanimous doctrine of the manuals, and
which is the doctrine of the Catholic Church. The unanimous teaching of
the scholastic theologians has always been recognized as a norm of
Catholic doctrine. It is unfortunate that today there should be some
attempt to mislead people into imagining that it has ceased to be such a
norm in the twentieth century.
Father Baum tries to make it appear that there was a considerable
group among the Fathers of the council who thought that the life of the
Church could be renewed and that we could return "to the most authentic
Catholic tradition of all ages" by setting aside the common and
unanimous teaching of the scholastic theologians of our time. On the
other hand, it is the teaching of Sylvius, who follows Melchior Cano
here almost verbatim, that: "concordem omnium theologorurn sententiam in
rebus fidei aut morum rejicere, si non est haeresis, est tamen haeresi
proximum."70 Especially since there is
absolutely no evidence that there was any party in the council with
aims like those described by Father Baum, it would seem wiser to follow
the basic Catholic teaching expressed by Cano and Sylvius.
Anti-Modernist Emphasis
It
was most unfortunate that the distinguished Canadian priest should have
spoken out on the subject of Modernism in this particular context. In
his article it is apparent that he considers the anti-Modernist
"emphasis" of the theological manuals of the turn of the century, and by
inference of those manuals, which have followed in the same traditional
path during the course of the twentieth century, as something, which
can and should be abandoned. The original Modernists frequently
attempted to delude people into imagining that the opposition to their
erroneous teachings constituted a sort of theological excess, and that a
proper doctrinal balance would be struck only when a sort of halfway
house between Modernism and anti-Modernism was reached. Perhaps
unintentionally Father Baum seems to be promoting the same message.
Actually Modernism was a heresy, or, to put it more accurately, a
cluster of heresies. If one wants to know what the condemned teachings
of the Modernists really were, he has only to read the propositions
condemned in the Lamentabili sane exitu 71 and see the content of the Oath against the Errors of Modernism.72
If he makes this study, he will find that the Catholic dogmas denied by
the Modernists are the fundamental teachings that God has revealed to
us about His Church and about His message. Since there was a campaign
aimed at bringing Catholics to reject these teachings, it was and it
remains necessary for any accurate and competent treatise in the field
of fundamental dogmatic theology to state, or, if Father Baum prefers
the word, to emphasize, these teachings which were denied by the
Modernists, and which were proclaimed as authentic and basic Catholic
doctrine by the infallible magisterium of the Catholic Church.
The Catholic priest knows perfectly well that there is never
going to be, and that there never could be, any "return" to a more
authentic Catholic doctrinal tradition through the abandonment of the
common teaching of all the twentieth-century manuals of fundamental
dogmatic theology. The living and infallible magisterium of the
Catholic Church never abandons the most authentic Catholic tradition.
That tradition is manifest in the common teaching of the
twentieth-century manuals, and in the condemnations of the various
Modernistic propositions.
The abandonment of the dogmas attacked or called into question by
the original Modernists or by their successors would be an abandonment
of the divine teaching within the Catholic Church. We may thank God that
there is no evidence that any group of Fathers of the Vatican Council
in any way wanted to abandon this doctrine.
Joseph Clifford Fenton
The Catholic University of America
Washington, D.C.
Endnotes
1 Commonweal, LXXVII, 17 (Jan. 18, 1963), 436.
2 Ibid. The author of this second article is Gunnar D. Kumlien.
3 A fourth edition of this work was published at Rome by the Gregorian University in 1929.
4 The Gregorian University also brought out a fourth edition of
this brilliantly anti-Modernist work in 1929, shortly after Billot had
resigned from the College of Cardinals.
5 This set was published by Desclee and Co., of Paris, Tournai,
and Rome. Later editions of these manuals were prepared by the Sulpician
Father J. B. Bord.
6 The third edition of this work was prepared by Father E. P.
Rengs, and was published at Amsterdam by C. L. Van Langenhuijsen in
1917.
7 Van Langenhuijsen published the third edition of this work in
1913. The English translations were published by the Newman Press in
1955 and 1957.
8 A Handbook of Fundamental Theology, by The Rev. John
Brunsmann, S.V.D. Freely adapted and edited by Arthur Preuss. Four
Volumes. St. Louis: B. Herder Book Co., 1928, 1929, 1931, 1932.
9 The firm of Elexpuru in Bilbao, Spain, published a third edition of this Theologia fundamentalis in 1937.
10 Desclee published a seventh edition of this work, produced with the co-operation of J. B. Bord, in 1931.
11 A second edition of the Medulla theologiae dogmaticae was published by Elexpuru in 1947.
12 Freiburg-im-Breisgau: Herder, 1930.
13 Freiburg-im-Breisgau: Herder, 1925.
14 This work was published by Rauch in Innsbruck, Austria. A
second and third edition of the first volume appeared in 1930, a second
edition of the second volume in 1928, and a second edition of the third
volume in 1927.
15 This book was published by The Seminary Press, in Rochester,
N. Y. The first volume appeared in 1927, and the second in 1933.
16 A fifth edition of the first volume of this work was published
by the Gregorian University in Rome in 1927. A third edition of the
much smaller, but still immensely important second volume appeared in
1929. The De ecclesia is generally recognized to be the finest of
all the theological writings of Cardinal Billot. It must not be
forgotten that the late Pope Pius XII, in an address to the students of
the Gregorian, named Billot as a theologian who should be a model for
all of the teachers of sacred doctrine in our time.
17 The publishing house of Ferrari in Rome published a third edition of the complete De revelatione
(in two volumes), in 1929 and 1931. The original edition appeared in
two volumes and the preface is dated on the feast of the Holy Rosary in
1917. Afterwards there was a one-volume edition, which was not
successful. Ferrari published a fourth edition of the two-volume work in
1945.
18 This first volume was published in Paris by Berche et Pagis in 1929.
19 The translation of this work into French was made by Father
Marcel Gautier. A second edition of the first volume, translated from
the eighth edition of the German original, was published in Mulhouse,
France, by Les Editions Salvator in 1935.
20 A third edition of this book was published by the firm of Styria at Graz and Vienna in 1925.
21 Carmigiani's Elementa theologiae fundameiitalis was published in Florence by the Libreria Editrice Fiorentina in 1911.
22 The firm of Pustet published a fourth edition of this work in 1903.
23 The first volume of Mannens's Theologiae dogmaticae institutiones, the Theologia fundamentalis, was published by J. J. Romen and Sons in Roermond, in Holland, in 1910.
24 The third edition of the first volume was brought out in Paris by Lethielleux and in Dublin by Gill in 1930.
25 The Libreria Internacional, in San Sebastian, Spain, brought out a fifth edition of this two-volume work in 1939.
26 The Salesian Press in Turin published a third edition of Marengo's two-volume work in 1894. Marchini's Summula was published at Vigevano in 1898.
27 The publisher Emmanuel Vitte brought out a seventh edition of Herrmann's Institutiones in Lyons and Paris in 1937.
28 The fourth edition of Monsignor Manzoni's first volume was
published in Turin in 1928 by Lege Italiana Cattolica Editrice.
29 The publisher Weger of Brescia brought out the sixth edition of Bishop Egger's work in 1932.
30 This work was published in Rome by the Typographia Sallustiani in 1899.
31 The Press and the Bookshop of the Centro Catolico published this work in Burgos, Spain, in 1906.
32 Father Blanch's book was published by the Montserrat Press of Barcelona in 1901.
33 Tepe's book was published by Lethielleux in Paris in
1894. In 1912 the same publisher brought out a third edition of Prevel's
first volume. It was edited by Father Miquel, SS.CC.
34 The second edition of Lercher's first volume appeared in 1934,
published at Innsbruck by Rauch. Father Schlagenhaufen, S.J., edited a
very useful fifth edition of this volume, which was published by Herder
in Barcelona in 1951.
35 Herder, in Freiburg-im-Breisgau brought out a sixth and seventh edition of this work in 1924.
36 A second edition of the two volumes of Felder's Apologetica was published in Paderborn in 1923 by Schoeningh.
37 The English translation was made by the famous John L.
Stoddard and was published in London in 1924 by Burns, Oates, and
Washbourne, Ltd.
38 The brilliant French original, one of the most powerful works
in the field of Catholic apologetics, was published by Beauchesne in
Paris. A seventeenth edition appeared in 1931. One of the sad phenomena
in English Catholic letters was the appearance, two years ago, of a
small and relatively unimportant section of this work set forth as a
complete book. This radically bowdlerized edition is published as Jesus Christ,
by Leonce de Grandmaison, S.J., with a preface by Jean Danielou, S.J.,
and has been brought out by Sheed and Ward in New York.
39 A fifth edition was published by Vitte at Lyons and Paris in 1928.
40 Beauchesne of Paris published this work in 1914.
41 Rome: The Buona Stampa Press, 1927. Basically this work is a commentary on the first question in the Pars Prima of the Summa theologica. It takes in, however, a good deal of anti-Modernist teaching.
42 Rome: The Buona Stampa Press, 1935.
43 The book was published by Weston College, in Weston, Massachusetts, in 1940.
44 The Theologia fundamentalis of Father Serapius de Iragui, O.F.M. Cap., was published by the Ediciones Studium in Madrid in 1959.
45 Beauchesne published third editions of the two volumes in 1927
and 1928 in Paris. D'Herbigny's manual is outstanding for its use of
oriental Christian theological literature.
46 The fourth edition of the first volume of this fine work was
published in Rome by the Gregorian University in 1946. The first public
edition of the second volume did not appear until 1954. Previous
editions, like that of 1940, were "ad usum auditorum."
47 Rome: Arnodo, 1940. Vellico's text is extraordinarily valuable.
48 Herder of St. Louis published a second edition of this book in 1927.
49 Both of these highly useful volumes were published by the Grand Seminary, in Montreal, in 1945.
50 The Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos published a fifth edition of this Theologia fundamentalis in Madrid in 1955.
51 This was published by the Libreria del S. Cuore in Turin in 1931.
52 A second edition of this was published by Marietti in Turin in 1900.
53 The publishing house of Manz in Ratisbon brought out a second edition of this in 1892.
54 The full title of this work is Ad mentem S. Thomae Aquinatis tractatus de ecclesia Christi ad usum studentium theologie fundamentalis. Marietti published it in Turin in 1929.
55 A later edition of this work, edited by Father Edmund Prantner, O.P., was published in Paris by Lethielleux in 1930.
56 Lethielleux also published this work, which appeared in 1922.
57 A second edition of this two-volume work was published in
Fribourg in Switzerland in 1924 by the Imprimerie et Librairie de
l'Oeuvre de Saint Paul.
58 This translation was published in 1903 by Benziger Brothers of New York.
59 Longmans, Green and Company published this in 1919.
60 Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1942.
61 Chicago: The Loyola University Press, 1921.
62 A second edition of this work "in auditorum usu," was published in Rome by the Gregorian University Press in 1928.
63 Naples: D'Auria, 1948.
64 Turin: Marietti, 1946.
65 The Studium Biblicum Franciscanum of Tokyo bought out a second edition of this work in 1958.
66 Fifth edition, Rome: The Gregorian University Press, 1945.
67 This is a two-volume text, the second edition of which was
published in Buenos Aires by the Editorial Guadalupe in 1954 and 1955.
68 Milan: Editrice Ancora, 1948.
69 Paris: Beauchesne. 1922.
70 Controversies, Bk, 6, q. 2, art. 4, concl. 3. The passage in the works of Melchior Cano is to be found in the De locis theologicis, Bk. 8, cap. 4, concl. 3.
71 Denz., 2001-65.
72 Denz., 2145 ff.
[Hat tip to JM]
No comments:
Post a Comment