Friday, July 5, 2013

Review of Pope Benedict XVI’s Address to the Science Faculty at Regensburg University



In his address to the science faculty at Regensburg University Pope Benedict XVI stressed the importance of “broadening our concept of reason and its application”. In this review I will answer the question of why the Holy Father thinks a broadening is necessary and what form does this “broadening” take.
What the Holy Father proposes in his presentation is a blueprint for the re-evangelization of Europe. The Holy Father correctly identifies as a key element for this re-evangelization the Church’s need to engage and ultimately enlist academia in this task. This is one reason why there needs to be a broadening of our concept of reason. The universities have excluded the concept of faith in a Christian God as reasonable and the metaphysical sciences as legitimate science. In addition, Pope Benedict XVI recognizes the threat of the Muslim faith and its history of spreading faith by the sword. In this area a broadening is also necessary, but the type of broadening is more basic and fundamental in the case of Muslims. The primary form this broadening should take, however, is the reintroduction into the university setting theological reason and philosophical thought based on the idea of a Supreme Being as a science and the questions the Christian faith poses as reasonable.
Pope Benedict XVI wishes to stress that this reintegration of faith and reason has to occur, but it is not a return to a faith over reason in which a religious belief completely discounts scientific discovery if that discovery does not coincide with the current religious understanding. The pope proposes a new synthesis and interrelationship of the two. Science has the ability to inform religion precisely with the new discoveries it encounters. Each discovery has the potential to give us a deeper understanding of the nature of man, the universe, and God. Conversely religion will inform science about what their discovery can tell us as well as the proper use of the discovery. This is turn will lead to even greater scientific discovery.
Pope Benedict XVI anticipates several objections and has to overcome them in order to engage academia. He overcomes one objection and addresses another by the use of the dialogue between Manuel II Paleologus and an educated Persian. He effectively shows that the use of the sword is an unreasonable way to spread faith and rejects the use of violence as an acceptable way to enter into a discourse on faith and God. This effectively disavows not only the Muslim historical and current use of violence, but the violence used by some individual Christians in the past to force the Christian beliefs on others. By this denouncing it is made very clear that instead of fear and violence the pope challenges Muslims to lay aside their violent tendencies and engage the Church and the European cultures with the use of the reasonableness of their faith. This sets the “battlefield” of reason as the place where all who seek the Truth should engage each other on the questions of science, religion and our humanity, especially as they interrelate. He also challenges academia to meet the Catholic Christian faith and indeed all religious traditions on this same “battlefield” of reason. The pope goes so far as to say that not only is it contrary to religious faith not to act with reason, but it is contrary to human nature and the very nature of God! There are many leaders within the Muslim faith and some within Muslim academia who can influence the Muslim peoples to take a different stance in the way they spread their faith, especially as the general population in Muslim and Muslim dominated countries becomes more educated.
The next problem the pope has to deal with is the prevailing attitude in universities that in order for something to fall into the arena of science it must be measurable. The tendency in universities is to have science faculties that only include the empirical sciences and exclude the metaphysical sciences as true science. The Holy Father counters this thought with the idea that the metaphysical sciences are entirely reasonable and philosophy in particular is not dependent on positivistic reasoning for its validity. He does so in several different ways.
First he appeals to his past experience as a teacher at the university level. He recounted his time as a teacher at the University of Bonn and noted that even with some serious differences of opinion the different faculties nonetheless agreed that the right use of reason was the responsibility of all faculties. On this common ground the idea of asking about the reasonableness of the Christian faith and the existence and nature of God by the two theological faculties at the university was accepted as a part of scientific discipline which belongs properly in a university setting.
The Holy Father also appeals to history. There is an historical unity between faith and reason which began hundreds of years before the establishment of Christianity. Since the beginning of the modern era there has been a deliberate separation of faith and reason, first by the Reformers, then by liberal theologians, and currently by cultural pluralism. If, however, we peer into the Jewish roots of Christianity we understand that the uniting of faith and reason had been going on since the era of Alexander the Great during a time referred to as the Hellenistic period. The best of the Greek thought and the unique Jewish understanding of a transcendent uncreated God sparked new insights into the nature of God and of man. This unity of the two is evident in the Septuagint. This deeper understanding laid the groundwork necessary for the birth and spread of Christianity. He insists that the throughout the history of Christianity the use of reason existed as an indelible characteristic of the Christian faith and in particular Catholic Christianity. Far from being a simple adherence to a faith that has no intellectual merit the Christian faith and Europe owes its very existence to this unity which finds both its beginning and its culmination in the Logos or Word of God, Jesus. The very word Logos means reason and word. This Logos, the Second Person of the Trinity, is creative and capable of self communication precisely in the realm of reason. The pope wishes to stress to the faculty that Christianity is rooted in the intellectual pursuit of Truth and that this intellectual pursuit was and is the will of God. It is not merely a Greek inculturation of the Christian faith. He points directly to God as the Logos revealed in Scripture and Scripture itself as solid evidence that this is true. There is an indelible mark placed upon Greek thought by Christianity and Christianity has an indelible mark placed upon it by Greek thought. The stripping of Greek influences from the intellectual pursuit of faith has caused severe damage to faith and mankind. The stripping of Christian faith from Greek thought has done severe damage to science, human thought and mankind
The result of this dehellenization of Christianity is both a kind of anti-evangelization and de-humanization. When you take human reason out of faith it becomes very difficult to answer scientific questions that are posed challenging the assertions sola scriptura/sola-fides Christians make about science and of our humanity. In the face of evidence that is available to modern man from the different sciences, and especially prehistory, the Christian who holds to sola scriptura/sola fides is at a loss to explain how this evidence coincides with his Christian understanding of the universe and how this furthers our understanding of ourselves as human beings made in the image and likeness of God. The answers he resorts to are a rooted in legalistic view that the bible is a strict historical book in the modern western sense. Therefore if it says it in the bible then it is an historical fact. When the Scripture alone/faith alone Christian is asked about any scientific evidence that seems to contradict his position he is either at a loss to explain, refers to his unwavering faith that the Bible is an historical document not to be questioned, or purports that God deliberately deceived us in order to test our faith. This type of response is untenable to a reasonable person. For example: on the question of God testing us in this way, this would mean that God is a God of deception and if He is then how can we as mere human beings ever know when He is trying to deceive us and when He is not. This is contrary to the entirety of Scripture where God has shown that His desire is to reveal Himself to us. This is contrary to His nature as shown by Jesus’ (The Logos) humbling Himself by taking on human flesh so that He could teach us in a very public way about the Father and then dying on the Cross in order to enable us to live the life He had revealed to us. When the inquisitor hears the explanation given by the solo scriptura/solo fides Christian, which is really an avoidance of the question posed, he thus labels the Christian and Christianity as unreasonable and dismisses him, thus losing the opportunity to pass on an authentic understanding of the faith.
On the flip side of the coin an intellect poorly formed by faith or not informed at all reduces faith and religion to a practical matter. Most individuals, even atheists, can see the good that the religion has done for the world. Unfortunately there are a good number of Christians that do great work for their communities, but they do it because to them the practical social teachings of the Church is not connected to a relationship with God, their Church or their fellow man. They see it as more their civic duty rather than the work God has given them to do. This type of Christian is not interested in bringing their fellow man into relationship with God because they do not have a grasp of what that means and to them the works are what is important. Generally you will not see a reasonable conversation about faith entered into by this individual out of sheer ignorance, a denial of the Truth of faith, or out of his misplaced concern in offending anyone. Atheists will not discourage even the most faithful Christian (those Christians who do the work out of love of God and their fellow man) in their “civic” duty for the practical reasons that if the religions of the world will take care of the poor, for example, the poor will be less of a burden for the rest of society, especially since most of the work done is voluntary.  They also can see that Christians for the most part are non-violent, reasonably good neighbors, try to follow some kind of moral code, and generally are acceptable fellow citizens and neighbors. Therefore they can see logical and practical reasons for keeping religion around for the “uninformed”, but do not see any particular personal reason to believe in God. After all you do not need faith to do good works. This is one of the reasons why faith and reason must be reintroduced to each other in centers for higher leaning. This type of atheist primarily resides in the west; however in the east atheism has taken on an ominous nature.
Among the greatest tragedies that has arisen from this separation of faith and reason and subsequent de-humanization of mankind has come at the hands of the powerful who have established forms of government which are at best agnostic and at worst atheistic. After all who is to say what is true and what is not if truth is based on any number of ever changing variables. If the State becomes god, then the state determines truth and then has the “right’ to determine who will live and who will die. This has lead to the full scale slaughter of millions of human beings by atheistic forms of government and their founders. The communist in Russia and China have either massacred or starved hundreds of millions. These are the most prominent examples, but there are numerous others that are equally brutal in kind if not number. The continued separation of faith and reason will not only result in a continued reduction of mankind, but will continue to give rise to these forms of government hostile to humanity. With the rise of Muslim nations and their history of violence towards Christianity plus the increased Muslim population in Europe the possibility of a Muslim theocracy developing in Europe has become a reality. A theocracy that is devoid of a deep understanding of God and a deep understanding that all human beings are made in the image and likeness of God could be catastrophic to Europe and the entire world.
This is why faith and reason must come together again in the dialogue between nations. The only possible way to dialogue with every culture and every individual in the world whether that culture has a strong faith in God or has no faith in any god is through the use of right reason infused with an understanding of the revealed God. From this foundation you can speak intelligently to the man who has a faith in God and be accepted as a man of faith while guiding him to a deeper understanding of God based on reason. In this way it is also possible to be able speak to the man who has no faith in any god and by showing the reasonableness of the idea of a Supreme Being you will be accepted as a man of integrity because of the reasonableness of your position.
The modern age has come up with some wonderful advancements for mankind, but these advancements have come up against questions where science based on positivistic reasoning cannot answer or even thinks to ask such as: If a thing can be done should it be done (i.e. human cloning) What role does a Divine Being have in teaching us about the psychological nature of man? There are an unlimited amount of questions that need to be posed to humankind in these areas, but the “why” questions about our existence are the most fundamental and the most basic question of these questions is “why are we here?” The answer to these questions will bring modern science to new and exciting discoveries.
The lecture Pope Benedict XVI gives adroitly addresses many issues that face Europe. What the pope is proposing is an invitation and a challenge to the universities to explore new horizons in reason by turning themselves over to the great insights and understanding of the world’s religions and in particular Catholic Christianity. Europe desperately needs to rediscover its Christian roots and do so without fear. Modern science must take up this challenge. If it does so it will take the limited intellectual pursuits of the human mind and bring them into the exciting realm of a fully lived human experience. The very survival of Europe as we know it depends upon the universities rediscovering her Christian roots and bringing the Logos to Europe.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Pope and Apostolic Authority


Introduction

            In any organization, whether Divine or human in origin, there is the need for an authoritative individual or group of individuals to make decisions to ensure the organization runs smoothly and stays on task for its mission. In business this usually is the Chief Executive Officer and the Board of Directors. In non-Catholic Christian communities this is usually the pastor and the elders. In the Catholic Church, it is the Pope and the Bishops. As we look at the Church's hierarchical and authoritative structure it is necessary to define some terms before we engage in a discussion on how those structures came about. Papal Authority refers to the level of authority given solely to the pope. "By virtue of his office, the Supreme Pontiff possesses infallibility in teaching when as the supreme pastor and teacher of all the Christian faithful, who strengthens his brothers and sisters in the faith, he proclaims by definitive act that a doctrine of faith or morals is to be held." (Can. 749 §1) Apostolic Authority refers to the authority Jesus gave all the Apostles, whose successors are the bishops, to preach, teach, and govern His Church. Apostolic Succession is the way Apostolic Authority has been passed down from the Apostles to their successors, the bishops, to today. Apostolic Tradition is the teachings of Jesus Christ handed down through time. Magisterium is the teaching office of the Church. This office is exercised in several ways: The Ordinary Magisterium, which is permanent and ongoing and refers to authoritative Church teaching which has been consistently taught and handed down through history and universally taught as infallible by the bishops in union with the pope. It is not a definitive act that makes this teaching infallible. Extraordinary Magisterium, which is exercised in the calling of special councils of the Church. It is all the bishops in the world in union with the pope coming together to pray and discuss the problems (such as refuting heretical teaching) the Church faces or needs to define and the Papal Extraordinary Magisterium where the pope exercises his supreme authority and his charism of infallibility to definitively define a dogma or doctrine of the Church by a definitive act (ex Cathedra). These papal pronouncements can come in a variety of forms, such as encyclicals or apostolic exhortations, although not all of these types of documents are intended to be infallible pronouncements. It is important to note that priests and deacons have an obligation to teach only what the Church teaches, but do not possess any magisterial authority and that theologians have no authority to pronounce Church teaching on any level.

The Hierarchy

            There are important differences in how the Church operates in comparison to any other organization. The first important difference is that Jesus, who is God, founded the Catholic Church. We see in the book of Matthew in the New Testament of the Bible. [Jesus is speaking] "And I tell you, you are Peter (which means Rock), and on this rock I will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." (Matt.16:18-19) The Church's hierarchical structure comes out of the Jewish hierarchical structures found in the Old Testament. Following the Davidic [King David] Jewish tradition (Jesus and all the Apostles were Jewish) in the Jewish kingdom, the king had a second-in-command (or first officer for Star Trek fans). His job is to carry out the king's orders and in the absence of the king he is in charge of the kingdom. We see this in the Jewish Scriptures (Old Testament) in Isaiah 22:21-22. [The Jewish King Hezekiah is speaking] "In that day I will call my servant Eli'akim the son of Hilki'ah, and I…will commit your authority (authority of the second-in-command) to his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and to the house of Judah. And I will place on his shoulder the key of the house of David; he shall open, and none shall shut; and he shall shut, and none shall open." There are several connections to be made here. One of the connections is between Eliakim [the second in command] being a "father" to the Jewish people and the word "Pope" which means father; Jesus made Peter the first Pope. Other connections are the issue of authority and the keys, which are the symbol of the supreme authority. David was the King of the Jews appointed by God in the Old Testament and Jesus, being descended from David, is King of the Jews. In addition, since Jesus is the Son of God He is also the King of heaven and earth. As King, God the Father gave Jesus "all authority on heaven and earth" (Matt. 28:18) and it is clear that Jesus passed His authority to Peter. This is Papal Authority, which is reserved for the Pope alone. This means that Jesus, through the action of the Holy Spirit, guarantees that the Pope, while exercising his teaching office, cannot err on issues of faith and morals and that he can make definitive pronouncements that are binding on the whole Church. He is the supreme authority on earth and he is in charge of all aspects of the Church.

The Succession

            There is a difference between the Jewish tradition and Apostolic Tradition in the area of the second-in-command. In the Jewish tradition, when the king dies, the new king has the right to appoint his own second-in-charge, so the old second-in-command ceases to have the authority of the king who has died. However, since Jesus is still alive and reigns for all time as King of heaven and earth as well as His Church, it instead becomes necessary to appoint a new second-in-command or Pope when the pope dies. The new second-in-command, or pope, is appointed by Jesus and the Holy Spirit, who is also God, through the action of the apostles and their successors. This appointing of a successor to an Apostle is demonstrated in Scripture in Acts 1:24-26 "And they prayed and said, 'Lord, who knowest the hearts of all men, show which one of these two thou hast chosen to take the place in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside, to go to his own place.' And they cast lots for them, and the lot fell on Matthi'as; and he was enrolled with the eleven apostles." This replacing of Judas was initiated by Peter exercising his Papal Authority, given to him by Jesus as the first Pope, when he quotes the Old Testament Psalms `His office let another take.'" The term "office" is a Greek term for bishopric or office of the bishop. Today, 2000 years later the normal way the successor of Peter is chosen is from among the College of Cardinals who pray for the Holy Spirit to reveal His choice to them and then they cast their votes accordingly.
            Jesus also passed on some of His authority to the other Apostles which we see in Matthew 18:18 "Truly, I say to you, whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" So, Peter and the Apostles have received Jesus' authority to build His Church on earth. This is called Apostolic Authority. The way that Apostolic Authority is passed down through time to today is through Apostolic Succession. The bishops of the Catholic Church are considered the direct descendants of the Apostles and each bishop exercises supreme authority in the diocese to which he is assigned and those in his diocese have an obligation to follow their bishop's authentic magisterial teaching. However, the bishop does not have the authority to define dogma or doctrine on his own.
            Scripture shows us another way that Apostolic Authority is passed on. Paul, whom Scripture tells us became an Apostle, traveled throughout the Mediterranean world spreading the Gospel to Jews and non-Jews alike. On these journeys, Paul would find faithful men to accompany him, and one of these men was Timothy. Timothy travelled with Paul and was sent by Paul on his own missionary ventures as well. Church history tells us that Paul made Timothy the Bishop of Ephesus and in his second letter to Timothy, Paul encourages Timothy to find faithful men to teach and pass on the authority he received from Paul and the Apostles in 2 Timothy 2:2: “and what you have heard from me before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” This demonstrates the first four generations of Apostolic Succession: Paul, then Timothy, then the men Timothy ordains, and then the men they ordain.

The Reception


            The process in which the Pope and bishops have been chosen has changed over the centuries as the Church has grown, but the way in which they have received their authority from the Holy Spirit and those who have appointed them has always had one key element to it. The passing on of Apostolic Authority has been through the laying on of hands. This passing on of authority in this manner comes from the Jewish Tradition and is carried into the Catholic Church by the first Christians, all of whom are Jews. This is demonstrated in the Old Testament with the passing on of authority from Moses to Joshua. Moses said to the LORD, "Let the LORD, the God of the spirits of all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation, who shall go out before them and come in before them, who shall lead them out and bring them in; that the congregation of the LORD may not be as sheep which have no shepherd." And the LORD said to Moses, "Take Joshua the son of Nun, a man in whom is the spirit, and lay your hand upon him; cause him to stand before Elea'zar the priest and all the congregation, and you shall commission him in their sight. You shall invest him with some of your authority, that all the congregation of the people of Israel may obey." This is in the New Testament in Acts 6:5-6 "And what they said pleased the whole multitude, and they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and of the Holy Spirit, and Philip, and Proch'orus, and Nica'nor, and Ti'mon, and Par'menas, and Nicola'us, a proselyte of Antioch.
These they set before the apostles, and they prayed and laid their hands upon them." Paul also refers to Timothy receiving this imposition of hands in 1 Timothy 4:14. So, Apostolic Authority, from the Apostles down through history to the bishops of today have received their authority through laying on of hands.

The Application

            In addition to having received authority to make decisions on how to run the Church, the Holy Spirit also guides the successors of the apostles and gives them the authority to make definitive pronouncements on behalf of God on the issues of faith and morals. This key element of Apostolic Authority and Succession has to do with what is passed down: The teachings of Jesus, which were given daily to the Apostles over a three year period and Jesus' promise to send the Holy Spirit who would ensure they remembered all that Jesus taught. "These things I have spoken to you, while I am still with you. But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you." (John 14:25-26) The teachings that Jesus handed onto the Apostles are called the Apostolic Tradition or the deposit of faith and some of these teachings were written down and eventually became the Bible. So, the Church has two sources of Apostolic Tradition: The Apostolic Oral Tradition and Scripture, which was written down during the first century during the lifetime of the Apostles. It took the Church over 300 years to discern which writings were to become a part of Scripture. This list of Holy Spirit inspired books in the Bible is called the Canon of Scripture, and for the New Testament there were over 100 writings from various sources that were considered. Twenty-seven of those books became a part of the Word of God. The Old Testament canon was much less of an issue because it was already in use for hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus by the Jewish faith as well as the early Christians. The Old Testament has forty-six books. This is a demonstration of how the local councils under the guidance of the local bishops of Hippo in 393, and Carthage in 397 and 417 A.D came together to decide issues for their diocese. Each of these local councils wished to define the canon of Scripture for their diocese and sent their finding to Rome for papal approval, which he gave. The Catholic Church universally accepted this as an authoritative list of books as Scripture under the ordinary magisterium, bit it wasn't until the extraordinary magisterium exercising its infallible authority through the ecumenical (or universal) Council of Trent (1545-1563) that the issue of the canon of Scripture was further addressed in a definitive way for the entire Church. This was because the canon, which was already considered infallible, was challenged for the first time, thus, for the sake of clarity the Church chose to define it as formally revealed by God by a definitive act.
            Here we see one way that Apostolic Authority is exercised throughout history, where the bishops, in union with the pope, come together to pray about, discuss, and debate the issues facing the Church. These are called Ecumenical Councils and there have been twenty-one in the 2000 years history of the Church. When an Ecumenical Council is called the bishops of the world in union with the pope exercise their Apostolic Authority. At the end of the council there is usually a statement issued to all the Church defining and clarifying what the Church believes or other statements about the Church herself. These statements are authoritative and binding on the whole Church. Examples of these councils are the Council of Nicaea (325 AD), which was called to respond to the Arian heresy and the Third Lateran Council (1179 AD) which is where we get the modern day process whereby we elect a Pope. The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) in paragraph 88 states: "The Church's Magisterium exercises the authority it holds from Christ to the fullest extent when it defines dogmas, that is, when it proposes, in a form obliging the Christian people to an irrevocable adherence of faith, truths contained in divine Revelation or also when it proposes, in a definitive way, truths having a necessary connection with these."

Clarifying the Confusion on the Levels of Church Teaching

            What are the different levels of Church teaching? This is an important question to have answered and be clear in your mind. Cardinal Ratzinger's commentary on the changes to the Code of Canon Law (can. 750-752) made by Blessed John Paul II help us to gain an understanding of different levels of Church teaching. The three levels of Church teaching are: Dogma, Doctrine and Church Teaching.
Dogma - is a doctrine that has been set forth by the Magisterium either extraordinary or ordinary as being divinely and formally revealed. It is to be accepted with firm faith. "With firm faith, I also believe everything contained in the word of God, whether written or handed down in tradition, which the Church, either by solemn judgment or by the ordinary and universal Magisterium, sets forth to be believed as divinely revealed" Examples of this are the Dogma of the Eucharist, the institution of the all the Sacraments by Christ, and the doctrine on the primacy and infallibility of the Roman pontiff. Those who deny these teachings are referred to as heretics and are no longer in communion with the Catholic Church.
Doctrine - The Church guided by the Holy Spirit declares a teaching to be held definitively: "I also firmly accept and hold each and everything definitively proposed by the Church regarding teaching on faith and morals". The object taught by this formula includes all those teachings belonging to the dogmatic or moral area which are necessary for faithfully keeping and expounding on the deposit of faith, even if they have not been proposed by the Magisterium of the Church as formally revealed. Examples of this level of teaching are euthanasia and fornication. Those who deny this level of teaching are considered dissenters and can have a just penalty levied against them.
Church Teaching - Church teaching that has not yet been formally defined, but still require us to accept them as true or at least sure. "Moreover, I adhere with religious submission of will and intellect to the teachings which either the Roman pontiff or the college of bishops enunciates when they exercise their authentic Magisterium, even if they do not intend to proclaim these teachings by a definitive act". An example of this teaching is the Theology of the Body, where Blessed John Paul II delved into the Church teaching on human sexuality and anthropology.
            With regard to Dogma and Doctrine it is important to emphasize that there is no difference with respect to the full and irrevocable character of the assent which is owed to these teachings. This means we are not free to deny these truths of the Church as they are considered infallible.

When the Pope Exercises His Infallible Authority

            How can we know if a pope is using papal extraordinary magisterium? One way we can know if a pope is speaking ex cathedra is by the specific language used in a document. This language can be seen in Blessed John Paul II's pronouncement on the ordination of women. (Ordinatio Sacerdotalis)

"Wherefore, in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance, a matter which pertains to the Church's divine constitution itself, in virtue of my ministry of confirming the brethren (cf. Lk 22:32) I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church's faithful."

            In this statement, it is clear he wishes to speak infallibly as pope. This is a statement of Doctrine or the second level of teaching. The word that tips us off to the pope's intention is "definitively or firmly held". If he had written "firmly believed with a divine faith" instead it would have raised this to the level of dogmatic teaching. The wording is not always exactly these, but substantially similar.
            So, Jesus founded His Church of the rock of Peter as the first pope and the Apostles and imbued them with the authority to set up and run His Church. The Apostles passed their authority down to the men chosen to be their successors. Over the centuries, as questions about the nature of Christ or the nature of the Church, or the everyday business of running the different local Churches throughout the world the successors of Peter and the Apostles exercised their authority, led by the Holy Spirit down to the present day.

Chip Awalt has a Masters Degree in Theological Studies from Ave Maria University's Institute for Pastoral Theology and has been evangelizing the Catholic faith since 1999

Short Answers to Common Catholic Questions



Scandal in the Church
The Catholic Church has always had scandal, starting with Judas’ betrayal and the other Apostles abandoning Christ during His passion and death. From a few bad popes to lay members committing evil acts, there are always some members of the Church who have been engaging in scandalous behavior for her entire 2000 year history. Scripture speaks about some of this scandalous behavior. Some of the Thessalonians refused to work, living idle lives, and being overly concerned with other peoples business. The scandalous behavior of individuals in the Church extends down to today’s priest sex scandal. This is a tragic chapter in the history of the Church, but does this prove that the Church is not the Church founded by and upon Christ? Of course not!
The Church has been full of sinners and saints from the beginning and Jesus never promised to protect the Church from sinners. In fact, He prepared us for it in Matt. 13:24-28 with the parable of the weeds and the wheat. In it, He showed us that in the Church (the Kingdom of God), the Devil would sow evil seeds that would grow with the wheat until the end of time, where the weeds will be separated from the wheat and thrown into the fire. It had to be done this way, because the sinners of today are the saints of tomorrow and only God knows who will end up where.
God gave each of us free will, because He desires our true love. In order for there to be true love one has to freely choose it and in order for it to be a free choice there has to be a choice for rational creatures to choose something other than love. God could have made us into obedient biological robots, as brute animals are, but this would not be love.
So do not despair, the Church has great sinners and great saints in it and always will, but Christ will preserve her from error, for she is His bride. She will never fail to bring us Christ, even if we fail to receive Him.

Why Do Catholics Worship/Pray to Mary and the Saints?
The short answer is we do not, we worship only the Trinitarian God. One confusion on this is how Catholics use the word "pray." In non-Catholic Christian circles the word pray means to worship, for Catholics it simply means to ask. When we pray to the saints in heaven we are asking for their intercession, just as Paul exhorts the saints here on earth to do in 1 Tim 2:1 (RSV): "First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all men"
Since the saints in heaven are not separated from Christ by their death (Rom. 8:38), they stand in the presence of God and therefore are perfect in righteousness. Scripture tells us that "The prayer of a righteous man has great power in its effects." (Jas 5:16 RSV) So when Catholics pray to the saints in heaven we are asking for their powerful intercessory prayers in the direct presence of God.

As for Mary, she is the greatest of all the saints, because God chose her to be the mother of God Incarnate, Jesus. "Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and she exclaimed with a loud cry, 'Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb! And why is this granted me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?'" (Lk 1:41-43 RSV)

I Have Seen Catholics Kneeling Before and Even Kissing Statues (Graven Images). How is This Not Worship?
When you see a Catholic kneeling before a statue is not the statue that we have in mind, but the loved on in heaven whom that statue represents. It is similar to carrying picture of a loved one in your wallet. Sometimes we take the picture out and just look at it adoringly. We pray to God to watch over the loved one and then kiss it before we put it back in our purse or wallet. We all understand what is happening and no one would accuse you of worshiping the picture. It is the same concept with the statues. We are simply asking the loved one in heaven for their prayers and intercession and sometimes we express our love for this person by kissing the statue, most especially if it is a Crucifix or some other depiction of Christ.
The Old Testament prohibition against graven images is a prohibition against the worship of other gods, such as the golden calf. (Exodus 20:3-5 RSV) "You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself a graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them or serve them; for I the LORD your God am a jealous God…" The image of the calf itself was worshiped as a god, in contrast the Crucifix is a representation of the Second Person of the Trinity and used only as a reminder of how much the True God loves us. In addition, God commanded Moses in Ex 25:18-20 to create the graven images of two cherubim of gold on top of the Ark of the Covenant. The Ark was so holy that if a man touch it he would die, which happened to Uzzah in 2 Sam 6:6-7. So the commandment was not a prohibition against all graven images, but against the graven images of the false gods worshiped at the time.

The Bible says that we are saved by faith alone, so why do you Catholics think you are saved by your works?
The Catholic Church has never taught that we are saved by our works alone. That is a misconception that, unfortunately, even some Catholics have. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that "it is by grace that we are saved" (CCC 1667) and that "Faith is a gift of God…and before this faith can be exercised, man must have the grace of God to move and assist him" (CCC 153) and "faith is necessary for salvation." (CCC 183) The Catechism also teaches that works do play a role in our salvation, "and again it is by grace that our works can bear fruit for eternal life." (CCC 1667) So the Catholic Church teaches that it is by grace alone that we are saved and grace shows itself by both faith and works. Faith and works are gifts of grace from God.
When the Bible speaks about works it is talking about works of the Mosaic law (Rom. 3:20 and 28, Gal. 2:16, Gal. 3:2) In addition, James is adamant about the role that the works, given to us by God, play in our salvation (Jas 2:14-22.) The only place in Scripture where the words "faith" and "alone" are together are in James 2:24 (RSV) "You see that a man is justified by works and not by faith alone."
Scripture is clear that it is not by faith alone that we are saved, but by our response to the grace God gives us by our faith in Him as well as the works, which complete our faith. (Jas 2:22)

Why don't Catholic believe that the Bible alone is the sole authority for Christians?
In the early Church the only Scripture written down was the Old Testament or Hebrew Scriptures. The New Testament was not yet written, so the early Church relied on Apostolic Oral Tradition, which was the predominant way that information was passed on in that time, as few people could read or write. After a number of years had passed some of the Apostolic Oral Tradition was written down in what became the first books of the New Testament, so the Bible came out of the Apostolic Oral Tradition (The earliest book may have been written in 42 A.D.) By this time the Church had already spread throughout many parts of the Roman Empire and by the time John wrote his Gospel (Around the year 100) the Church had spread throughout the entire Roman Empire, all before there was a complete New Testament. The final twenty seven books of the Bible (The New Testament) were not put together into one canon (List of books) until around the year 400.
So what does the Bible say about it being the sole authority for Christians? A diligent search will turn up 2 Tim. 3:16-17, but this passage only says that Scripture is profitable, not that it is the sole authority. As Catholics we do believe that all Scripture is inspired by God, but we also hold that the Apostolic Oral Tradition is also the Word of God. As alluded to above this Oral Tradition was handed down from the Apostles to their successors. We see this in Scripture in 2 Thess. 2:15 (RSV) "So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter."
So what is the sole authority? Scripture tells us that it is the Church. 1 Tim 3:15 (NAB) "But if I should be delayed, you should know how to behave in the household of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of truth."

Why do Catholics have to go to Confession with a priest rather than directly to God?
The short answer is that it is how Jesus set up His Church. The Catholic Church was established by Christ himself and He also instituted the Church's Sacramental system. The reason He did this was to give mankind the greatest possible way to salvation by establishing stable conduits of God's Grace. God gives every human being sufficient Grace to be saved, but He wanted to provide a way to receive superabundant Grace and this is what the Sacraments are. In the Church there are seven Sacraments, each established by Jesus himself.

To understand Confession (also called Reconciliation or Penance) it is necessary to speak a little bit on the Sacrament of Holy Orders. At the Last Supper Jesus instituted the priesthood. When a man becomes a priest he is changed internally to become "another Christ." This does not mean that the man is "preserved from all human weaknesses, the spirit of domination, error, [or] even sin." (CCC 1550) Holy Orders means that it is Christ himself that is working through the priest when the priest is administering the Sacraments, such as celebrating the Eucharist and Confession. So in the Sacrament of Confession it is Christ who is forgiving the sins of the person through the action of the priest. The institution of this Sacrament can be seen in John 20:21-23: "Jesus said to them again, 'Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, even so I send you.' And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.'" (RSV)

For the sake of clarity there is nothing to prevent us from asking God directly for forgiveness of our sins. In fact this is a highly laudable practice which Catholics are encouraged to do every day in what is called the examination of conscience. However, since the power of God is associated with all the Sacraments, in Confession we are guaranteed forgiveness of our sins as long as we are truly sorry before God, hold nothing back that we are aware of that offends God, and promise to try our best not to commit the same sin again and, in addition to this guarantee, God also give us the Grace to help us to keep our promise not to offend Him again.

Chip Awalt is a graduate of Ave Maria University's Institute for Pastoral Theology where he earned a Masters Degree in Theological Studies. He has also been evangelizing the Catholic faith since 1999.

An Introduction to The Truth, Goodness and Beauty of Holy Sex



An Introduction to The Truth, Goodness and Beauty of Holy Sex
The Battle

The battle for sexual purity is one of the toughest battles in both the physical and the spiritual realm. This is especially true in modern times because the culture of the sexual revolution has made sex into a false god that is to be worshiped at the expense of the human being and of love. However, the Catholic Church gives us a view of sex and human sexuality which elevates it to a plane infinitely more dignified than the cultural "uplifting" of human sexuality which has degenerated not only sex, but made the human person into an object to be used rather than a person to be loved.

Love and the Sexual Revolution (or Bloody Civil War)

Love is wanting and doing what is best for the other person at all times. Truly loving another person will always require self sacrifice. When the sexual revolution swept through Western Civilization the idea that a human being, especially the woman, is a person to be loved was replaced by a false concept of freedom and love. Sex was equated to love. So, with this false and destructive idea of love, the sexual revolution put forth the idea that we are "free" to use a person to satisfy our sexual desires. However, our freedom to do as we wish ends where the other person's right to be loved is violated. It is easy to see the results of the sexual revolution have not been good for mankind and especially have not been kind to women. It has pitted men against women, wives against their husbands, mothers against their unborn babies, and society against both the family and children, which are the foundation of any civilized society. Since the sexual revolution started in earnest with the invention of the birth control pill, the divorce rate doubled in the first ten years, fathers have become absent from families in society which has resulted in more violent crime, much of it against women (at least 80% of prisoners incarcerated for violent crime grew up fatherless), pornography (which overwhelmingly shows women as objects to be used and discarded as soon as the man is satisfied and done with them) is now hard to avoid in our daily lives. In addition, STD's are at epidemic rates and AIDS has killed more than 30 million. Abortion has become the deadliest and most horrific result of the sexual revolution with 50+ million human beings brutally massacred in the womb of the mother. Mothers who have had abortions are victims of abortion as well and deserve our compassion. (If you are a woman who is a victim of abortion please contact Project Rachael for counseling and healing.) It has been nearly fifty years since the sexual revolution engulfed Western Civilization and the world. With the great division this evil belief system has caused and the bloody brutality on all levels of human existence the "revolution" has become the bloodiest civil war in human history!

The Foundation of Church and God's Teaching

Two thirds of all that has been written by the Church on human sexuality was written by Blessed John Paul II. The underlying truth that supports the Church's teaching in all areas of sexuality, including the beauty of the marital embrace and the immorality of any stimulation of the sexual organs outside of the marital covenant, is that each human being is person to be loved and to use that person in a way that violates human dignity is a sin against the high nobility of man; man made in the image and likeness of God. Blessed John Paul II wrote that "Man becomes the image of God not so much in the moment of solitude as in the moment of communion. Right "from the beginning," he is… essentially, an image of an inscrutable divine communion of persons." It is not easy to understand the mystery and nature of the eternal spiritual union of the Father and the Son, which has as its eternal fruit the Third Person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit, however the union of husband and wife, which sometimes has as its fruit children, dimly reflects this union of love within the Trinity. This dim reflection should give us a glimpse of the marital union as sacred, precisely because of what it reflects. It is sacred because its original design was to show the "image and likeness" of the Trinitarian God, even though, through the fall of man, we have disfigured and obscured the original truth, goodness, and beauty of God's design. It is in this sacred character of the marital embrace that reflects the unwavering love that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit have for each other. The love of the husband, wife, and the children is intended to be a sign of the permanent character of the love within the Trinitarian God. This is why there are few exceptions for divorce in Catholicism; the whole family is meant to be a visible sign of the permanent internal unseen love of God.

True Love

In order for love to be true it must have a permanent character. When a person we truly love dies, like a parent or a brother or sister, we do not simply stop loving them because they have gone on to their eternal reward, the love we have for them continues. It is because of this permanent character that true love cannot be tied only to our temporary emotions and certainly not to our temporary physical urges. If you say you "love" someone today and six hours, or six weeks, or six months, or six years later you no longer "love" them how can you say you truly loved them in the first place. For sure, true love will have times of deep emotion and deep physical attraction and times when they don't, but within a lifelong committed marriage, when emotions and physical affection are at lull it does not jeopardize the relationship in any way. Love is based on the lifelong commitment you have to someone, whether that is a friend or most especially a spouse. You choose definitively to "do what is best for the other person at all times." This will mean that at some point you will have to lay aside your wants or desires to fulfill someone else's need or want. That is true love. Certainly there are different levels of love, but the more personal the relationship, the more permanent the character of love is. So, the love we have for our parents is greater and has a more permanent nature than the love we have for a co-worker. The love we have for a co-worker is greater and more permanent than the love we have for an acquaintance. The love we have for our spouse, being the most intimate love we can have, is the greatest and has should have the most permanent nature of all other loves here on earth. Our model for this sacrificial spousal love is Jesus. We should be willing to lay down our lives for our spouse just as Jesus laid down His life for His love. That is you and me.

The Problems

Once again we return to the definition: Love is wanting and doing what is best for the other person at all times. Implied in the definition of love is that there is another person to love. So when we engage in masturbation we have to ask the question: Who is it that you are loving? You are not loving another human being, for there is no one there but you. What you are "loving" is a fantasy and you cannot have a lifelong committed relationship with fantasy. This is one of the problems with pornography: it does not depict reality, but a fantasy. This hurts the individual who is learning that the woman in the fantasy, whether on the screen or in the mind, will do whatever you want them to do. If you do not like the woman on the screen or what she is doing you simply discard her for another fantasy. This is not a good way to learn self-sacrificing true love. If we take any situation where sex outside the committed marriage, we run into a host of problems. If you are talking a one night stand, just hooking up, or having friends with benefits, this obviously is using the other person for you own gratification. This is a blatant sin against human dignity, for God created human sexuality with a much greater purpose in mind. What about if you are really feel love for each other? There are millions of brokenhearted men and women who were "in love" and later found out something about that person that was a deal killer (such as infidelity.) When two people engage in sexual activity the body releases hormones which act as a bonding agent. In the safe confines of marriage, where you have already seen enough of your spouses faults with a clear head, this bonding chemical the body releases will help the couple to overlook and forgive each others faults more easily. However, during the dating phase of the relationship, where you are "interviewing" each other as potential spouse it is important to keep a clear head and see the faults the other person has and then decide if they are deal killers or not. Sex works against this intelligent way of dating. Children also enter into this definition of love. Children have a right to have both parents living together as husband and wife, so when two people who are not married, engage in intercourse they are not loving the children that may result from this illicit union. There are now millions of children who are deprived of this fundamental right, because of their parents' inability to truly love each other and their future children.

The Reason for Hope

“Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh.” (RSV Gen. 2:24) The institution of Marriage was given to mankind by God. The fall of man disrupted the original intent, but God provided a way for men and women to learn, with much difficulty, how to love each other again. It is no coincidence that Jesus performed His first public miracle at a wedding where He turned the water into wine. The wine signifies the merciful love of God and Jesus transformed between and 120-180 gallons of water into wine for just one wedding! Jesus wants to pour out His superabundant Love on all of humanity, but most especially He wishes to bless the one flesh union of husband and wife! This is one of the reasons Jesus founded the Catholic Church: to provide stable means of receiving His grace through the Sacraments and Jesus Himself raised the institution of Marriage to the level of a Sacrament. This means that Sacramental Marriage itself is a source of grace for those who can receive it. Sex outside of marriage does not have this grace and can truly be destructive. The battle for sexual purity is a difficult one, but through the Sacrament of the Eucharist and Reconciliation, God enables us to live the life He desires for us and when we do fall He restores us to relationship with Him.

Answering the Call

The call to sexual purity is not a call to follow a laundry list of do's and don'ts, but a call to discover how to love your fellow human being as a person made in the image and likeness of God, most especially our spouse. The call to true love is a call to strive to love as Jesus loves. Jesus Himself said to us "This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you." (RSV JN. 15:12) Our merciful loving Lord would not command us to do this if it were impossible.

Chip Awalt has been evangelizing since 1999 and graduated Cum Laude with a Masters in Theological Studies from Ave Maria University's Institute for Pastoral Theology.