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Class 27: Leo XIII and Late 19th C Catholicism

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Title: Class 27: Leo XIII and Late 19th C Catholicism


1
Class 27 Leo XIII and Late 19th C Catholicism
  • 29 March 2006

2
Introduction
  • German, American, English Romanticism
  • Henry Cardinal Newman
  • Pope Leo XIII
  • Catholic Modernism at end of 19th C
  • Protestant Biblical Scholarship

3
American Romanticism Second Great Awakening
  • Second Great Awakening
  • First half 19th C (pre-Civil War)
  • Effected all Protestant denominations
  • Specialty was revival camp meetings led by
    itinerant preachers
  • Blacks welcomed at most meetings, but not well
    treated afterwards
  • Founding of A.M.E. Church, 1815
  • Shakers 1800, Mormons 1830
  • Transcendentalism
  • The beauty of nature mans ability to appreciate
    the beauty of nature
  • Man in beautiful because he is part of nature
  • God in nature not as scientific truth but as
    beauty
  • Emerson, Thoreau, Alcott, Brownson, Dickinson (?)
  • Dissident voices Hawthorne, Melville

4
German Romanticism
  • Hegel (1770-1831)
  • Christianity moves man beyond the law
    Speculative Idealism
  • Jesus brings love that restores mankind to
    wholeness, a holy innocence The Spirit of
    Christianity
  • The Incarnation makes explicit the implicit unity
    of God and man Jesus not like Socrates
  • Christianity as revelation of Spirit
  • Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834)
  • Influenced by Pietism in early years
  • Religion not founded on calculating reason nor
    even so much on Scripture
  • Experience of piety is the key
  • Does not defend relation based on moral needs of
    society
  • Rejects Deists God of Intelligent Design
  • Jesus Christ as the arch-type for humanity
    importance of community is understanding and
    transmitting this spirit (truth)
  • Immanence of God in nature

5
English Romanticism
  • Poets
  • Keats (1795-1821) Shelley (1792-1822) Blake
    (1757-1827) Coleridge (1772-1834), Wordsworth
    (1770-1850)
  • Romantic view of nature and human history
  • Oxford Movement
  • Anglican rooted in a reaction to political and
    economic liberalism
  • Recognized the pretensions of science and reason
    to solve all problems
  • Opposed to Bentham and utilitarianism
  • Opposed to Latitudinarians
  • Opposed to Churchs increasing acceptance of
    secularism

6
John Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890)
  • Born into a family with Huguenot background
    taught to read Bible as a child, but no religious
    training otherwise
  • Went to Oxford in 186 as an undergraduate
  • Became the most important Tractarian for Oxford
    movement
  • Trip to Italy and North Africa put him in touch
    with the ancient Church which he felt must be
    restored in England
  • Lead, kindly light
  • Initially, Newman sees Church of England as
    middle way between Catholicism and Calvinism
  • Received into Catholic Church 1845, ordained 1847
  • Writes Apologia Pro Vita Sua to explain his
    conversion
  • Founds an Oratory of St. Philip Neri in England
  • Rector of Catholic University of Dublin, 1851
    (Idea of a University, 1873)
  • Made a Cardinal by Pope Leo XIII 1879

7
The Pillar of the Cloud, At Sea.June 16, 1833.
www.newmanreader.org/works/verses/verse90.html
  • LEAD, Kindly Light, amid the encircling
    gloom         
  • Lead Thou me on!
  • The night is dark, and I am far from home
  • Lead Thou me on!
  • Keep Thou my feet I do not ask to see
  • The distant sceneone step enough for me.
  • I was not ever thus, nor pray'd that
    Thou         
  • Shouldst lead me on.
  • I loved to choose and see my path, but
    now         
  • Lead Thou me on!
  • I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
  • Pride ruled my will remember not past years.
    So long Thy power hath blest me, sure it
    still         
  • Will lead me on,
  • O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent,
    till         
  • The night is gone
  • And with the morn those angel faces smile
  • Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.

8
Newmans Thought
  • Ecclesiology
  • Augustines arguments against Donatists
    importance of Catholic Church
  • Tract 90 (1841) on Thirty Nine Articles It is
    our duty to the Catholic Church and our own to
    take our reformed confession in the most Catholic
    sense. We have no duties toward their framers
  • Papal Infallibility
  • Acknowledged and accepted primacy of Pope and
    unwritten tradition of infallibility
  • Had some concerns about written definition
  • History and Dogma, Essay on the Development of
    Christian Doctrine
  • Opposed to liberal belief in progress and that
    there are no permanent supernatural truths
  • Importance of apostolic Church as vessel of
    revealed truth
  • Time is necessary for human mind to fully grasp
    the Truth but Truth itself does not change
  • Develops criteria for changed perspective in
    grasping truth opposed to heterodox developments
  • Science

9
Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903)
  • Countered Bismarcks anti-Catholic movement,
    Kulturkampf
  • Known as the encyclical pontiff
  • Rerum Novarum
  • Providentissimus Deus
  • Created Pontifical Biblical Commission

10
Bismarck and Kulturkampf (War of Civilization)
  • Bismarck (1815-1898)
  • Believed in Prussian monarchy and unification of
    German Confederation under Prussia
  • Franco-Prussian War impetus for strong
    confederated Germany
  • Bismarck made Chancellor of Germany un 1870
    agenda to unify in laws, customs and national
    spirit Germany
  • Kulturkampf
  • Concern about a country within a country
  • Relations with Papacy broken in 1870
  • German state passes laws against Church
    education expels Jesuits seizes Church property
  • All clergy had to be German educated in Germany
  • End of Kulturkampf
  • Formation of German Catholic political party
  • Bismarck wanted to impose tariffs on grain and
    industrial goods entering Germany in this he was
    opposed by economic liberals needed Catholic
    support to pass economic agenda

11
Rerum Novarum, 1891
  • Uphold rights of laborers to a fair wage, but
    also upholds right to private property
  • Concern about poor
  • Emphasis on common good
  • State has the right to intervene in economy on
    behalf of individual and society
  • Cornerstone of modern Catholic social teaching

12
19th C Biblical Scholarship
  • Beginning of Historical Critical Method roots in
    the Enlightenment
  • Reimarus (1694-1768) Deist, roots of historical
    Jesus resurrection a fraud failure of eschaton
    led to Christian theology opposed to Jewish
    Jesus as an apocalyptic Jewish prophet
  • Lessing (1729-1781) Published Reimaruss work
    tries to reconcile Reimarus with Christian faith
    teachings not true because book is sacred book
    is sacred because teachings are true
  • David Strauss (1808-1874)
  • Life of Jesus
  • Test historical accuracy of New Testament claims
    about Jesus
  • Much mythical material in New Testament
  • Developed rules of historical critical method
  • Albert Schweitzer Quest for Historical Jesus 1906

13
Catholic Modernist Controversy
  • Late 19th C controversy focused on relation of
    Biblical criticism to Catholic theology
  • Alfred Loisy (1857-1940) The Gospel and the
    Church (1902)
  • Very influential biblical Scholar
  • Questioned authorship of Old and New Testament
    works
  • Jesus as a radical eschatological Jewish prophet
    part of 1st C apocalypticism
  • Christian dogma develops to meet new challenges
    in each age dogmatic definitions are always
    relative and variable
  • Eventually Loisy became very skeptical about
    Church as bearer of truth
  • Ecclesial Reaction
  • Pope Leo XIII, Providentissimus Deus, 1893,
    admitted some value to historical critical
    method, but not if weakened authority of Bible or
    Church
  • Pope Pius X, Pascendi Dominici Gregis, 1907,
    condemned historical method altogether
  • Alfred Loisy excommunicated 1907

14
Assignments
  • Bokenkotter, Chapter 28 (skim only)
  • First Vatican Council, First Dogmatic
    Constitution on Church of Christ, available at
  • www.ewtn.com/library/COUNCILS/V1.HTM
  • Leo XIII, Rerum Novarum, www.vatican.va/holy_fathe
    r/leo_xiii/encyclicals/documents/hf_l-xiii_enc_150
    51891_rerum-novarum_en.html
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