Off Center: Is the Catholic Church a Political Spectrum?
This is my 2003 article about the neo-conservative idea of the Church as a political spectrum. In the recently announced "Catholic Identity" conference we see the "spectrum" ecclesiology come to the fore again. "Right-wing" of the Church and "left-wing" of the Church are those in contention. The true language of the Church, believer or schismatic, heretic, or apostate figures no where in this Church of many theologies. Here is the article.  
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By: Dr. Peter Chojnowski                 
In the April 2003 issue of the neo-conservative               periodical First Things, Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, former               Lutheran minister and ordained Catholic priest, presented a               "spectrum" of "groups" in the contemporary Catholic               Church. On the extremes of this spectrum, unsurprisingly, you have               those of the right, the two mentioned being the "Lefebvrists"               of the Society of St. Pius X and the Sedevacantists, along with               those on the left, among whom Neuhaus includes Gary Wills, Hans               Kung, Karl Rahner, Fr. Richard McBrien, the former archbishop of               Milwaukee Rembert Weakland, and those who might fall into the New               Age, radical Feminist, and Liberation Theology camp. Also,               unsurprisingly, you have Fr. Neuhaus positioning himself in the               center of the spectrum. This positioning, Neuhaus assures us, is               in no way meant to identify the Center with those who are               "neither hot nor cold," but rather, it is meant to identify               them as those who "eschew" the extreme, those whose               position is "considered," "thoughtful," and "moderate."               1 Says Neuhaus, the "center" is "warm,"               "welcoming," and, yet, at the same time, "cool, as in               composed and unruffled." Le centre c’est moi!, states               Neuhaus, who, also, places in this "center ground" George               Weigel, Pope John Paul II, Vatican II, John Courtney Murray, Henri               de Lubac, Jacques Maritain, Yves Congar, Jean Danielou, the               juveniles attending World Youth Day, and "growing and vibrant               networks of young professionals excited about being Catholic."                2 These are part of the "vital center," which he               defends throughout the article.                               
               
Fr. Neuhaus himself acknowledges how peculiar               it is to place those taking theological positions on an obviously               ideological or political spectrum. He also points out that                 
 
When he, precisely, describes the history of               his own position, he states:                 
 
As a way of clarifying his own position, that               of the "Center," and to set off the "extremes" of               left and right, Neuhaus employs another, somewhat awkward               neologism, "discontinuants." The "discontinuants,"               of left and right, are those, unlike the continuants of the               center, who believe that the doctrines of Vatican II were a               "radical break with the tradition [of the pre-Vatican II]               Church, the difference being that the right deplores and the left               celebrates the putative break." 5 
According to               Neuhaus, these two "branches" of the "party of               discontinuity" 6 stand opposed to the center, which               understands there to be a "continuing community," which is               the Catholic Church, "from the Council of Jerusalem to Vatican               II, from Peter to John Paul II." 7 Here we               encounter, not only Neuhaus’s peculiar claim that only the               "center" recognizes that the Catholic Church has continued from               St. Peter to Pope John Paul II, but we also read of his               identification of "the center with the Magisterium. When               reading through his extensive criticism of "bishops and religious               superior," who "turned to the popularizers to implement the               Council, with the mostly sorry results still with us today in               theology, liturgy, catechesis, and much else" (Emphasis               mine) it is fairly clear, that the "Magisterium" with which               he wants to identify is Pope John Paul II and the Holy Father’s               interpretation of the "infallible" teaching of Vatican II.8                               
In order to grapple with this rather pedantic               and cursory summary of the various positions that have been taken               with regard to the situation of the post-Vatican II Church, we               might first emphasize something which Neuhaus himself states and               then passes over without comment:                 
 
This point must be the first to be brought out,               although I believe Neuhaus misses the point when he brings up the               "pre-Vatican II" labels of "good" and "bad" Catholics. When men or               women were spoken of as "good" or "bad" Catholics, in the time               when there was no question of what it meant to be a Catholic, the               labelers were referring to whether or not the individual members               of the Catholic Church were living up to the norms and standards               of perfection, which were the practical part of being a baptized               believer in the Catholic Faith. You were "good" if you did, or at               least tried, and you were "bad" if you did not. The salient point,               which is seemingly missed by Neuhaus, is that no Catholic, "good"               or "bad," failed to understand what it meant to be a Catholic.               The reason is obvious. The Faith and the morality which went               with it was taught clearly and was universally the same. "Good" or               "bad," the faithful knew that they were associating themselves               with a Church whose doctrine did not change. Their faith did not               always translate into action, but they had the Faith. The question               that Fr. Neuhaus never poses to himself is, "Why now is everything               up for grabs?" Why are these now times in which we can, even               apparently, divide the Church up into "left," "right," and               "center?"                
The reason this "division" of the Church can               even be theoretically presented is on account of the fact that               Neuhaus never indicates that there is a necessary connection               between having the Faith of the Church as that Faith has always               been understood and held and being a member of the Church.               Throughout his discussion, "left" and "right" are separated, and               the "center" distinguished, not because of their respective               adherence to the traditional dogmatic, moral, and social teaching               of the pre-Vatican II magisterial teaching of the Church, but               rather, because of their particular stance on the current "moment"               in the history of the "continuing and identifiable community that               is the Catholic Church."10 By "current moment," we are               to understand, on the ecclesiastical level, the current               pontificate, and on the dogmatic level, we are to understand the               current pope’s interpretation of Vatican II. If you adhere to the               current pope’s interpretation of Vatican II, which, according to               Neuhaus, "set forth a millennia of tradition" and which he               identifies with "the Magisterium," you are a centrist. If               you believe that this teaching, and the practice which proceeds               from it, are at variance with what went before, you are one of the               discontinuants, "…the difference being that the right deplores and               the left celebrates the putative break."11                               
Neuhaus’s dismissal of the discontinuants of               the left is interesting only in so far as it further brings               forward Neuhaus’s own salient adherence to the "Church of today,"               which, he holds, is not, in any way, at variance with the Church               of "yesterday." The leftists, of the Rahner and Kung type, are               loyal to the "Church of Tomorrow." By this, Neuhaus means that               they are not loyal and faithful to this current pope and his               interpretation of Vatican II, but rather, are loyal to "Pope               Chelsea XII" and to the doctrinal and disciplinary innovations               that the leftists believe will be instituted by a pope, unlike the               present one, who is "liberated by the spirit of Vatican II from               past and present."12 According to Neuhaus, "discontinuants               of the left hold themselves rigorously accountable to a future of               their own desiring." Here he quotes Karl Rahner:                
 
The problem with the Left, according to Neuhaus,               is that it misinterprets the Second Vatican Council. If it               interpreted the Council as the current Holy Father interprets it,               it too would be in the "cool," "composed," "unruffled," and               non-contentious Catholic Center.                
There is nothing unusual in the "Center’s"               attack on the "Left," other than statements about the temporary               need for "power sharing" with them, along with a subtle threat               that "your day has come and gone," or, as Neuhaus states,               "the silly season is almost over." 14 This is               clearly a statement which indicates that Fr. Neuhaus believes the               "Center" to be the "party of power." The problem,               which comes to mind when reading his criticism of the "left,"               is that it is never mentioned that they are, clearly,               Neo-Modernists. In fact, the word "modernism" is never used               in Neuhaus’ attack on the "discontinuants of the left" at               all. His criticism is that they are not in accord with the present               "Catholic Moment" and, instead, are loyal to a future               Church of their own imagining.                
Neuhaus’s attack on the disloyalty and               "silliness" of the Left at least deals with concrete issues               and doctrines. When he speaks of the "discontinuants of the               right," he speaks only of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre labeling               Vatican II as "heretical," "the Lefebvre Land of schism," "the               left ear lobe of Giovanni Battista Montini," "Elvis sightings"               (when referring to links on Sedevacantist websites), and "Lefebvrists"               who "have their American headquarters in Kansas City."                15 At the end of the article, perhaps in tacit               recognition that he never offered a single doctrinal,               historical, or textual argument proving the continuity of the               documents of Vatican II, and their interpretation by Pope               John Paul II, with the traditional teaching of the pre-Vatican II               papal and conciliar Magisterium, he finally states, "Can anyone               really believe that the likes of Gary Wills or the Society of St.               Pius X are the future of the Catholic Church?" 16                               
There is a wrong tendency on the part of those               faithful Catholics who would be loyal to the traditional dogma and               religion of the Catholic Church to think according to the               "spectrum" paradigm presented to us by Fr. Neuhaus and others of               the "Center." According to this incapacitating and               obfuscating image, Neuhaus and the enthusiastic rockin’ youths of               World Youth Day, along with Ignatius Press and places of higher               education like Christendom College, can be identified as               "conservative" Catholics who attend "reverent" Masses and who are               attached, perhaps a little too closely, to a conservative pope who               is "trying to hold the line."                 
It has never been the case that one’s position               vis-à-vis the Catholic Church was indicated by the terms               left, right, and center. The question for Catholics has always               been whether a person or group of people agree or disagree with               one or more of the defined and perennial doctrines of the Catholic               Church. The question was one of doctrine. —Did one               adhere to the doctrinal teachings of the Church, in all the               particulars, or was there, at least, one deviation? When we               consider the position taken by Richard John Neuhaus, we must state               that there is a deep doctrinal divide between what he and               others of his "Center" advocate and what has been championed and               unreservedly upheld by those who follow the lead of the late               Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.                
When considering the exact nature of this               doctrinal disagreement, we must refer to a text, The Catholic               Moment: The Paradox of the Church in the Postmodern World               (1987), in which Neuhaus states his own position most               exactly. It is here that we can find the essence of his notion of               "Center." In this text, we find Neuhaus attacking the "monism"               that marked both "old Christendom" and the mentality of the               Catholic Church prior to the, supposedly, non-innovative Second               Vatican Council. By "monism," Neuhaus is referring to the               view that the truths of the Faith should be both manifested and               implemented through a union between Church and State. For a man               who states that his position upholds the idea that there is no               discontinuity between the doctrine and practice of the Church of               two millennia and the post-conciliar Church, Neuhaus makes a point               of emphasizing                
 
These "habits of monism" were most               perfectly expressed in "Franco Spain" from 1939-75. We are left               wondering if Neuhaus intends to attack more than the traditional               Church teaching on the Social Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ,               when we read,                 
 
So here we have the "continuant" and,               therefore, "centrist" Neuhaus speaking of the new understanding of               the Church that was initiated with Vatican II. We can discern the               dim outline of what he means by this "new understanding" when we               read more about the divergence between the "pluralistic mentality"               of the new "centrist" Catholic and the "monistic mentality" of               those who adhere to the teaching and practice of the "bad old               days" (as Neuhaus often refers to the pre-Vatican II period). In               this regard, he says,                
 
What our neo-conservative Catholic Whig is               saying is that it might not be better if everyone were a               Catholic. In his rejection of the Social Kingship of Our Lord               Jesus Christ he is also advancing the idea that there is a totally               different view of the Church, salvation, justification, and even a               new anthropology at work in the Church of the "Center," the Church               of Vatican II and Pope John Paul II. Surely, this "continuant,"               who pours such scorn on the "discontinuants of the right" for               understanding there to be an opposition between the new teachings               of Vatican II and the traditional doctrinal content, understands               that there is not one Catholic prior to Vatican II who               would assert that it would not be better if everyone in the               world were Catholic, "agreed on the truth," "articulated it in the               same way," agreed upon the right ordering of the world," and were               part of the "same community of Faith." Surely, there would not be               one. Surely, even to the majority of Council Fathers at Vatican               II, the Neuhaus thesis would have been unrecognizable. Based upon               these statements of this spokesman for the "Center," it is clear               that Fr. Neuhaus cannot believe that it is necessary to be a               member of the Church in order to be saved.                
It is Fr. Neuhaus’s opinion that the "paradox"               of the Christian life, which he identifies as the Christian’s               living "in a world that is not yet what it is to be [N.B.:               "Is" and "Is not" are contradictions and, hence, can be part of a               paradox. But "Is" and "Is not yet" are not at all               contradictories and, hence, have no role in a paradox]," results               in our need to live as "alien citizens" in the world, "to be a               people experienced in the sometimes painful paradox of living               between the times in the ‘now’ and the ‘not yet.’" According to               Neuhaus, the "paradox" of the Christian’s life is "the result of               the pluralistic character of reality itself." Citing his               inspiration, John Courtney Murray, he states that, "‘every tongue               [shall] confess that Jesus Christ is Lord’; but that time is               not yet." (Emphasis mine) If any one should be weak enough in               spirit to seek after a temporal manifestation of the Reign of               Jesus Christ, like the Catholic State, or should believe that one               belongs to the Only True Church, that, in this world is the               Kingdom of God, one is bringing about a "premature closure," and,               hence, falsification of the proper Christian experience. Neuhaus               is more than a little condescending and falsely sympathetic when               he states,                
 
Does a Catholic, left, right, or center, speak               this way? —"Their church"?!                
In perfect accord with the New Liturgical               Calendar’s repositioning of the Feast of Christ the King to the               end of the Liturgical Year, during which the Apocalypse is               emphasized, Neuhaus would identify the "kingdom of God"               —the only one for which Catholics have the right to hope —with the               New Jerusalem which shall come after this tired world is rolled               up. To desire any kind of "transformation of the world in               Christ," one thinks of Pope St. Pius X’s motto, "Instaurare               omnia in Christo," is to seek a consolation and a "prop" where               there should not be one. Apparently, Fr. Neuhaus would not even               allow us the consolation of considering ourselves to be part of               the one true Church. All of this arid "spirituality" fits very               well with the generally "cerebralist" nature of the               Neo-Conservative movement within the Church, cut off, as it is,               from the normal "props" of traditional Catholic piety and               devotion. Even anthropologically speaking, how can we imagine a               life in which we would not strive to realize in the world that we               currently dwell in the ideals which are given to us by Holy Mother               Church and the manly civilization that She fashioned? Can we, any               longer, look up to the martyrs who did nothing if they did not               give their lives for what they publicly stated was the one true               Church? Do even papal social encyclicals make any sense for the               mentality of the "paradox"?                
The only way Fr. Neuhaus and his "cool"               centrists can truly argue that their view of Catholic doctrine and               life is in accord (i.e., continuant) with what was               universally practiced and believed in the Catholic Church prior to               Vatican II is by adopting Pope John Paul II’s theological ideas of               the "enrichment of faith" that the entire body of Catholic dogma               underwent as a result of the "teaching of the Council" (i.e.,               Vatican II). The Holy Father has held that the apparently               disparate teachings of the pre- and post-Vatican II Church can be               reconciled by recourse to the theological concept of               "reciprocal integration of the faith." According to the German               scholar Fr. Johannes Dörmann, this principle, which is a creation               of the former Cardinal Wojtyla, holds that "a relationship of               reciprocity …exists between the deposit of revealed truth and the               conciliar awareness of the Church." In the newly translated               and published Dörmann text, he states                
 
Fr. Dörmann’s series of books [available from               Angelus Press —Ed.] must be read in order for the               deceptively conservative "center" to be theologically understood.               We "discontinuants of the right" are not looking for Elvis,               but if we were, at least we know that he has definitely left the               building!                
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I wish I had been aware of Dr Chojnowski in 2003 and read his article. It would have saved me from 12 additional years of being in the neo-con fog. Dr. Chojnowski teased out Neuhaus's rationalizations; rationalizations born from the Vatican II heresies and leading to a whole new political outlook on the church's relationship with the world . I still think it is important to avoid missing the forest for the trees----that is, we can sometimes trade one fog for another. Hence my unfortunate penchant for straying from the specific topic.
ReplyDeleteThis new "political" outlook of members of the conciliar church (like Neuhaus) and their "new" relationship with the "world" was only made possible (and is a logical extension of) the three principle heresies of Vatican II:
(1) profession of a formally divided Church of Christ (that is, the Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church but subsumes a larger set of churches or even cultures);
(2) profession of false ecumenism;
(3) profession of a right to religious liberty.
One cannot highlight these grave, anti-Catholic errors and heresies enough. They should be the basis of every argument about the error of conciliarism and any strategy against it.
These three heresies have been the guiding principles of the Conciliar Church since the Vatican II Constitutions were promulgated by Montini (Paul VI) in November 1964. These heresies were preceded by a plan to radically alter the "Pius V" Mass with changes occuring in 1955, 1962 and 1970. The final death blow to the Pius V Mass occured with the institution of the Novus Ordo in 1970----"Lex orandi, lex credendi" was a critical element in overcoming the masses. My mother and father went from recognizing the danger in 1970, to getting used to the changes, to fully accepting them and, finally, not even remembering what preceded them. And yet there is a growing body of reasoned, detailed, academic analysis from which one can hold serious doubts about the validity of the Novus Ordo. All of this terrifies me.
So long as we fail to point out these heresies and fail to label them for what they are----heresies----"Pius V" Catholics will be relegated to isolated remnants and ignored as anachronisms. Archbishop Lefebvre who (in my opinion) had the greatest of courage could never bring himself to call the heretical guidance in Vatican II, "heresy." It never occurred to him that his strategy, popularly labeled as "recognize and resist," was contradictory, anti-catholic and therefore confusing to the masses, and was simply bypassed by the Conciliar Church. The Editor and contributors of the Remnant (and their followers) have carried on this confused and useless strategy.