Hierarchy of Truths and Four Levels of Teaching
Hierarchy of Truths and Four Levels of Teaching
If a thing is not defined, is it just free mater, so Catholics can take or leave it? Strangely, not only people from the left, but also from the right often say it can be ignored. And in addition, some appeal to the hierarchy of truths spoken of by Vatican II, in the Decree on Ecumenism 11. For example, John P. Meier, Scripture Professor at Catholic University and author of A Marginal Jew, highly praised by Catholics, Protestants and Jews, gave a presidential address to the Catholic Biblical Association, which was printed in Catholic Biblical Quarterly in January 1992, in which he said that perpetual virginity of Our Lady is far from the center of the hierarchy. So we should be able to accept converts without asking them to believe it. On p. 28 of CBQ: ". . . If the criterion of the hierarchy of truths cannot be invoked in a dispute that is so marginal to the witness of Scripture. . . is there any dispute in which the criterion could be effectively applied? " Avery Dulles as reported in Origins of Dec. 26, 1974 suggested we should be able to accept converts without asking them to believe the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption ) cf. also his presidential address to the Catholic Theological Society of America in 1976) .
But all the truths mentioned are not free matter. We need to review all levels of the teachings of the Magisterium. For the sake of clarity, we will divide them into four levels:
a) Solemn definition. LG 25: No special formula of words is required in order to define. Wording should be something solemn, and should make clear that the teaching is definitive. Councils in the past often used the form: 'Si quis dixerit. . . anathema sit." That is: "If someone shall say. . . . let him be anathema." But sometimes they used the formula for disciplinary matters, so that form alone does not prove. Further, they also could define in the capitula, the chapters. Thus Pius XII, in Divino afflante Spiritu (EB 538) spoke of such a passage of Vatican I (DS 3006 -- saying God is the author of Scripture) as a solemn definition.
The Pope can define even without the Bishops. Of his definitions LG 25 said: "His definitions of themselves, and not from consent of the Church, are rightly called unchangeable, for they are pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, an assistance promised him in blessed Peter. So they need no approval from others, nor is there room for an appeal to any other judgment." So collegiality even in defining is not mandatory. Yet most definitions of the Popes have been taken in collegiality, that is, with consultation of the Bishops. Even the definitions of the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption were such, for the Popes did poll the Bishops by mail.
b) Second level: LG 25:"Although the individual bishops do not have the prerogative of infallibility, they can yet teach Christ's doctrine infallibly. This is true even when they are scattered around the world, provided that, while maintaining the bond of unity among themselves, and with the successor of Peter, they concur in one teaching as the one which must be definitively held." This means: (1) The day to day teaching of the Church throughout the world, when it gives things as definitively part of the faith, (2) If this can be done when scattered, all the more can it be done when assembled in Council. Thus Trent (DS 1520) after "strictly prohibiting anyone from hereafter believing or preaching or teaching differently than what is established and explained in the present decree, " went on to give infallible teaching even in the capitula, outside the canons.
To know whether the Church intends to teach infallibly on this second level, we notice both the language - no set form required - and the intention, which may be seen at times from the nature of the case, at times from the repetition of the doctrine on this second level.
c) Third Level: Pius XII, in Humani generis: "Nor must it be thought that the things contained in Encyclical Letters do not of themselves require assent on the plea that in them the Pontiffs do not exercise the supreme power of their Magisterium. For these things are taught with the ordinary Magisterium, about which it is also true to say, 'He who hears you, hears me.' [Lk 10. 16]. . . If the Supreme Pontiffs, in their acta expressly pass judgment on a matter debated until then, it is obvious to all that the matter, according to the mind and will of the same Pontiffs, cannot be considered any longer a question open for discussion among theologians."
We notice: (1) These things are protected by the promise of Christ in Lk 10. 16, and so are infallible, for His promise cannot fail. Though that promise was first given to the 72, it is certain that the Apostles were in the group, and as the trajectory advanced, it became clear that the full teaching authority was only for them - the mission given to the 72 was preliminary, and the full meaning was made clear later when the Apostles were given the authority to bind and to loose. This was part of the broader picture: Jesus wanted only a gradual self-revelation. Had He started by saying: "Before Abraham was, I am", He would have been stoned on the spot. (2) Not everything in Encyclicals, and similar documents, is on this level - this is true only when the Popes expressly pass judgment on a previously debated matter, (3) since the Church scattered throughout the world can make a teaching infallible without defining - as we saw on level 2 - then of course the Pope alone, who can speak for and reflect the faith of the whole Church, can do the same even in an Encyclical, under the conditions enumerated by Pius XII. Really, on any level, all that is required to make a thing infallible is that it be given definitively. When a Pope takes a stand on something debated in
theology and publishes it in his Acta, that suffices. The fact that as Pius XII said it is removed from debate alone shows it is meant as definitive.
In this connection, we note also that LG 12 says: "The entire body of the faithful, anointed as they are by the Holy One, cannot err in matters of belief." This means: If the whole Church, both people and authorities, have ever believed (accepted as revealed) an item, then that cannot be in error, is infallible. Of course this applies to the more basic items, not to very technical matters of theological debate. But we note this too: If this condition has once been fulfilled in the past, then if people in a later age come to doubt or deny it - that does not make noninfallible what was once established as infallible. Many things come under this , e.g. , the existence of angels.
This does not mean, however, that the Pope is to be only the echo of the faithful.
d) Level 4: LG 25:"Religious submission of mind and of will must be shown in a special way to the authentic magisterium of the Roman Pontiff even when he is not defining, in such a way, namely, that the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to according to his manifested mind and will, which is clear either from the nature of the documents, or from the repeated presentation of the same doctrine, or from the manner of speaking."
We note all the qualifications in the underlined part The key is the intention of the Pope. He may be repeating existing definitive teaching from Ordinary Magisterium level - then it is infallible, as on level 2. He may be giving a decision on a previously debated point - as on level 3, then it falls under the promise of Christ in Lk 10. 16, and so is also infallible. Or it may be a still lesser intention - then we have a case like that envisioned in Canon 752 of the New Code of Canon Law: "Not indeed an assent of faith, but yet a religious submission of mind and will must be given to the teaching which either the Supreme Pontiff, or the College of Bishops [of course, with the Pope] pronounce on faith or on morals when they exercise the authentic Magisterium even if they do not intend to proclaim it by a definitive act." If they do not mean to make it definitive, then it does not come under the virtue of faith, or the promise of Christ, "He who hears you hears me". Rather, it is a matter of what the Canon and LG 25 call "religious submission of mind and of will." What does this require? Definitely, it forbids public contradiction of the teaching. But it also requires something in the mind, as the wording indicates. This cannot be the absolute assent which faith calls for - for since this teaching is, by definition, not definitive, we gather that it is not absolutely finally certain.
How can anyone give any mental assent when there is not absolute certitude? In normal human affairs, we do it all the time. Suppose we are at table, and someone asks if a dish of food came
from a can, and if so, was it sent to a lab to check for Botulism. It is true, routine opening of a can would not detect that deadly poison. Yet it is too much to check every can, and the chances are very remote, so much so that normal people do not bother about it - yet their belief takes into account a real but tiny possibility of a mistake. Similarly with a doctrine on this fourth level. And further, the chances of error on this level are much smaller than they are with a can of food. Similarly, in a criminal trial, the judge will tell the jury they must find the evidence proves guilt beyond reasonable doubt. He does not demand that every tiny doubt be ruled out, even though it may mean life in prison or death.
If one should make a mistake by following the fourth level of Church teaching, when he comes before the Divine Judge, the Judge will not blame him, rather He will praise him. But if a person errs by breaking with the Church on the plea that he knew better - that will not be easily accepted.
So the Magisterium will steer us through the hierarchy of truths, and tell us that no teaching of the Magisterium may be simply ignored, that even those presented as not-definitive require internal assent, and hence prohibit taking to the press to contradict as C. Curran has done.
Some object to the translation given above of canon 752, saying that the Canon Law Society of America uses respect instead of submission. Not everyone in the Church follows the Church today. The whole German hierarchy publicly contradicted the Pope on contraception. And there are numerous other examples. So it is not strange if the Canon Law Society is one to try to back dissent. But the Society did not seem to notice the quote we gave from LG 25 above. Not only does the most generally used translation, that of Flannery, use the word submission, but the rest of the sentence in LG 25 makes fully clear by saying "in such a way, namely, that the judgments made by him are sincerely adhered to according to his manifested mind and will, which is clear either from the nature of the documents, or from the repeated presentation of the same doctrine, or from the manner of speaking."
Also, the new Catechism in 892 says , quoting Vatican II, LG 25: "To this ordinary teaching the faithful 'are to adhere to it with religious assent' which though distinct from the assent of faith, is nonetheless an extension of it."
Really even Martin Luther did better than some Catholics. He wrote ( Works 22. 23) : "Christ our Savior was the real and natural fruit of Mary's virginal womb. . . . This was without the cooperation of a man, and she remained a virgin after that." And as to the so-called translation, "highly favored" cf. the same Luther (Works 43. 40:"She is full of grace, proclaimed to be entirely without sin. . . .
God's grace fills her with everything good and makes her devoid of all evil. . . . God is with her, meaning that all she did or left undone is divine and the action of God in her. Moreover, God guarded and protected her from all that might be hurtful to her.
There are some who appeal to Canon 212. 2 & 3 which says: The faithful "are at liberty to make known their needs, especially their spiritual needs, and their wishes to the pastors of the church." 3 adds that they "have the right, indeed at times the duty, in keeping with their knowledge, competence and position, to manifest to the sacred pastors their views on matters which concern the good of the Church."-- Does this give blanket permission to contradict on doctrine, in spite of the teaching of the of four levels given above? Of course not. It speaks of needs, having in mind chiefly things practical things, things other than contradicting doctrine. And for certain, where "religious submission of mind and of will" is required, the faithful emphatically do not have the right to publicly , even in the press, contradict the teachings of the Church.
What of the fact that Canon 748. 1 says "All are bound to seek the truth in the matters which concern God and his Church; when they have found it, then by divine law they are bound, and they have the right to embrace and keep it."-- We reply: One must never do what conscience forbids, or omit what it says must be done. However, before we reach that point, all have the obligation to align their conscience with the teachings of the Church, as we have just explained, on the four levels.
Suppose for example a tribesman thinks his gods require him to go headhunting - some have thought that - are they obliged by divine law to chop off heads? Or if someone thinks his religion requires him to kill "infidels" he may be subjectively excused. He may even have a subjective obligation, yet objectively he is wrong, very wrong. And if someone does something that is objectively wrong and against the law of God, God requires that when he finds out, he must offer a sacrifice to make up, as we learn from all of chapter 4 of the Book of Leviticus. Our Lord Himself also required this. In Luke 12:47-48: "The slave who knew his master's wishes but did not prepare to fulfill them, will get a severe beating. But the one who did not know them, but did what deserves blows, will get off with fewer blows."
So someone who breaks with the Church, proudly thinking he knows more than the Church, will get at least a some beating from the Lord, even if he was in good faith.
We must also keep in mind the distinction of three things: 1) doctrine; 2) laws; 3) prudence. The doctrine is protected by the promise of Christ, as above. Laws, not from the Holy See, but from
Bishops, could contradict the Church, e. g. , by ordering bad textbooks for Catholic schools. But as to the third item, prudence or good judgement: there is no promise of Christ, no claim by the Church, to protection in prudence. Hence it is not wrong to think or even say some things are not done prudently. And if a Pope gives a practical decision on something in which morality is concerned, that is not the same as giving a teaching on a given matter.
The words come from the Rev. John. P. Meier, Professor of Scripture at the Catholic University of America. He gave them in his address as president of the Catholic Biblical Association in August 1991. His address was printed in Catholic Biblical Quarterly of January 1992. The topic: the perpetual virginity of Mary, or, the Brothers and Sisters of Jesus. In his more recent book, A Marginal Jew -- guess who it is - Meier devotes many pages to trying to show that Jesus had four blood brothers and at least two sisters besides. This book has been praised lavishly by Jews, Protestants and Catholics. Joseph Fitzmyer S. J. , Professor Emeritus of Catholic University said that Meier asks all the right questions, and gets all the right answers.
He says that this truth of Our Lady's perpetual virginity is not a central truth, and so if the hierarchy of truths lets us do anything at all, we should be able to drop it in accepting Protestants into the Church.
Of course, Fr. Meier is not alone. Avery Dulles S. J. is a distinguished voice to say the same sort of thing. In his presidential address to the Catholic Theological Society of America in 1976 he said: "The Council worked powerfully to undermine the authoritarian theory and to legitimate dissent." In 1974 at a convocation in honor of a retiring Episcopalian bishop he suggested that the Church need not insist that converts accept the definitions of the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption." (Origens Dec. 26, 1974).
So we do need to find a way out of this mess. Where will we find it?. The new catechism will help. It did mention this hierarchy of truths, but it nowhere hinted at what Meier and Dulles proposed. Rather, it insisted that there is more than one level of Church teaching.
There was an actual plot in the Theological Commission at Vatican II to cut down the power of the Pope. For that purpose, the plotters had designed several lines to work into chapter 3 of Lumen gentium. Naturally, one of the plotters had written out what he wanted to do. But not naturally - it was the Holy Spirit protecting the Church - the plotter lost the paper, and it was picked up by a sound Bishop, who took it to Pope Paul VI. He literally wept when he read it. As a result, we now have what is marked "Preliminary Explanatory Note" at the end, rather than at the start of Lumen gentium. It carefully counters, point by point, the very things the plotters had tried to put over.
At times we hear screams today saying that the Pope has gone against Vatican II by not consulting the Bishops on something. Normally he does consult. But even if he does not, the new catechism, in 880, says: "The Roman Pontiff, in virtue of his role as Vicar of Christ and Pastor of the whole Church, has full power, supreme and universal, which he can always exercise freely." That is without consulting anyone. It applies both to teaching and to commands. He could even issue a solemn definition entirely on his own. Actually, He does consult. The last two definitions, which Dulles wanted to be able to set aside for Protestants, in spite of appearances , were done in a collegial way. Before giving the definition of the Immaculate Conception in 1854, and of the Assumption in 1950, the Popes in each case consulted the bishops by mail. But even if he had omitted that, the definitions would be fully valid.
Sadly, not a few Catholics who consider themselves orthodox, fall into the error of saying that if a thing is not defined, it is free matter: we can take it or leave it as we will. Not so, says the new catechism, echoing Vatican II. in 891 we read: "The Roman Pontiff chief of the college [of Bishops] actually enjoys this infallibility when, as supreme shepherd and teacher of all the faithful, in charge of confirming his brothers in the faith, proclaims by a definitive act, a point of doctrine on faith or morals."
Before continuing, let us note that word definitive. It means a teaching that is presented as final, with no change possible. But there is nothing in Scripture or Tradition that specifies what wording the Pope must use in order to make a teaching definitive. All that is needed is that in some way, whatever way he may choose, he makes clear that a teaching is definitive. So this section of the new catechism does not add the words "ex cathedra". Rather, it refers to LG 25.
Now Vatican II in that 25 provides us with a very large example of when things can be infallible without the use of the special form of a definition: "Although individual bishops do not have the prerogative of infallibility, they can yet teach Christ's doctrine infallibly. This is true even when they are scattered around the world, provided that, while maintaining the bond of unity among
themselves and with the successor of Peter, they concur in a teaching as the one which must be definitively held." Again the key word is definitive. No special way need be chosen to make that clear, provided that in some way it is made clear.
Hence the catechism adds, repeating the same thought: "The infallibility promised to the Church resides also in the body of Bishops when it exercises its supreme Magisterium in union with the successor of Peter, especially during a general Council." We note the word "especially." For even things not done in a general council can be infallible, under the conditions we have just seen in the quotations above, namely, when the Bishops remain united with each other and with the Pope and then, even when scattered around the world, they present to the people truths as definitive, that is, flatly, as part of the belief of the Church.
A very special case of definitive teaching was pointed out by Pius XII in his Encyclical Humani generis of 1950: "Nor should one think that the things taught in encyclical letters do not demand assent, on the plea that in them the Popes do not use the supreme teaching authority. These things are taught with the ordinary teaching authority, in regard to which it is also correct to say: "He who hears you, hears me." Now of course, that promise of Christ cannot fail. So such things are infallible, even when not given in the solemn ceremony of a definition. Such things can be found even in Encyclicals . Of course, not everything in an Encyclical meets these requirements. Hence Pius XII went on to clarify: "If the supreme pontiffs in their acta expressly pass judgment on a matter debated until then, it is obvious to all that the matter, according to the mind and will of the same pontiffs, cannot any longer be considered a matter open for discussion among theologians." If it is not open to discussion, it is of course definitive, and then it falls under the promise of Christ,"He who hears you hears me."
Someone will ask: How can this be? The answer is that all that is required for something to be infallible is that it be taught definitively. But the things described by Pius XII are taught definitively. So what he said was not any new teaching; it was a repetition of what the Church has always done and believed.
Some have thought that a Council would have to use the formula: "Si quis dixerit... anathema sit", in order to make something infallible. The same persons thought then that only things in the Canons, the Si quis dixerit sections would be infallible, while the capitula, the bordering sections could not be. But Pius XII in his great Scriptural Encyclical, Divino afflante Spiritu, of 1943, spoke of a statement from Vatican I as a solemn definition, even though not given in a Canon: "In our day Vatican Council I... declared that these same books of Scripture must be considered 'as sacred and
canonical' by the Church' not only because they contain revelation without error, but because... they have God as their author. ' But when Catholic authors, contrary to this solemn definition of Catholic doctrine... had dared to restrict the truth of Holy Scripture to matters of faith and morals... our predecessor... Leo XIII... rightly and properly refuted those errors" (EB 538. Cf. DS 3006).
What emerges here? Vatican I had taught that God is the Author of Scripture, and that hence all of Scripture is free of error. Pius XII told us that this teaching of Vatican I was a solemn definition, even though not put in the usual wording for such a definition. All that was needed was what we have been speaking of, namely, that it make clear that a teaching is presented as definitive. So any wording that will make that fact clear, that a teaching is definitive, suffices for an infallible teaching. Incidentally, when something is taught repeatedly on the ordinary magisterium level, that very repetition makes clear that it is intended as definitive.
In passing, let us notice the remarkable error of the New Jerome Biblical Commentary on p. 1169, which thinks that the Church had as it were turned the corner at Vatican II, so as to let us think that Scripture could contain errors of all kinds: in science, in history, even in religion. Only things necessary for salvation would be infallible The writer of that passage was strangely dull. He did not see that Vatican II itself in the very passage to which he appealed, that is DV 11, had given a footnote sending us to that solemn definition of Vatican I. The same author insisted elsewhere that Job 14:13 ff. raised the possibility of an afterlife, then denied it. He even added that for someone to try to explain away his claim would be an "unmitigated disaster."
To sum up what we have achieved thus far. The Pope can even define acting all alone. He can do it also with a Council. What is required is no set form of wording - all that is required is that in some way he makes clear that the teaching is definitive. Then it is infallible.
But there is still more: The catechism explains in 889: "To maintain the Church in the purity of the faith transmitted by the Apostles, Christ willed to confer on His Church a participation in His own infallibility, that of Him who is the Truth. By the 'supernatural sense of the faith' the People of God, adheres indefectibly to the faith under the guidance of the living Magisterium of the Church." This repeats what Vatican II said in LG 12: "The entire body of the faithful, anointed as they are by the Holy One, cannot err in matters of belief." In other words, if the whole Church, people as well as Pastors, has ever accepted something as revealed, that cannot be in error. This is often called passive infallibility. Imagine how many things it covers, e.g., the whole Church from the start has believed there are angels. So those who deny or doubt their existence, deny not just some ordinary teaching, but one that is infallible.
Could we then deny the perpetual virginity of Mary as Meier proposes? Of course not. Besides more solemn things, the Church has taught and believed it for centuries, already in some of the earliest creeds, which speak of her as "ever Virgin" aei parthenos.
In passing, Meier shows strange dullness. The Acts of the Apostles in chapter 15 shows that James "the brother of the Lord" was still alive and taking part in the council of Apostles held in 49 A.D. That was about 20 years after the death of Jesus. Why then did Jesus not entrust His Mother to the care of this living son, if he were such? And the ancient Rabbis had a strong tradition, starting with Philo, that Moses, after his first encounter with God, never again had sex with his wife. Would they then say that she who had carried God in her womb for 9 months would be less than Moses? Or that Joseph the just man would be less? Meier seems happy to say that even though Hebrew ah, which we translate brother, covered many kinds of relatives, since Hebrew was very poor in such words, yet Greek in which the New Testament is written, does have the words. Therefore, says Meier: Greek Adelphos must mean blood brother. But Meier has missed so many things. So often various parts of the NT cannot be understood unless we ask what is the Hebrew in the mind of the writer. Thus when Jesus tells us we must hate our parents (Lk 14:26; contrast wording of Mt 10:37), we have to think of the Hebrew usage - which, lacking degrees of comparison, would speak of hate vs love instead of loving more or less. St. Paul often uses the Greek word for justice or righteousness, but it never has the pagan Greek meaning of the virtue that gets one to give all what is coming, no more or less - no, it has the meaning of the Hebrew sedaqah - and even that requires further study of the OT Hebrew usage to avoid the sad mistake of Luther about its meaning.
We have been speaking of things that are definitive. Even more surprising, in a way, is this statement from the 892 in the new catechism - which really is not new, just echoing things from previous teaching, such as LG 25: "Divine assistance is still given to the successors of the Apostles, teaching in communion with the successor of Peter when, without arriving at an infallible definition, and without pronouncing in a definitive manner, it [the council] proposes in the exercise of the ordinary magisterium a teaching which helps to better understand revelation on faith and morals. The faithful are obliged to 'give a religious assent of their spirit' which, while different from the assent of faith, yet extends it."
We hope Charles Curran is listening. Not only things taught as definitive, but even things not taught that way require even internal assent of the mind. With infallible statements, the assent is based on the virtue of faith; with noninfallible things it is based on the virtue of religion. But how can one be required to give any kind of internal assent to something that is explicitly noninfallible? Very simply. Human life is necessarily structured that way. Suppose we come to the table for the next meal, and
note some food which came from a can. Someone asks: Did they send that food to a lab to have it checked for Botulism, a very deadly form of food poisoning? Someone says No. Then: Do you expect me to stake my life on the noninfallible assurance that this is safe to eat? He would be right, but a bit odd, to say the least. We cannot send every can at each meal to a lab. Or again, in a criminal court, the judge usually gives the jury final instructions that include this: To find the defendant guilty, you must see that that is proved beyond reasonable doubt. - But it need not exclude every tiny doubt. Historically, to adhere to nondefinitive statements of the Church will result in less errors per lifetime than will be found in cans of food or in a criminal court.
Another most basic statement also comes from the new catechism, which shows us the very basis for believing the magisterium. It tell us as early as 108 that Catholicism is not a "religion of the book." Protestantism is: they claim to depend on Scripture alone, with the incomprehensible weakness that they have no means at all of proving which books are inspired and part of Scripture. Therefore, logically, although they want to be a religion of the book, they cannot be sure what things belong to the book!. Even less solid is Islam, which also depends on a book. But they say Mohammed went into a cave, had revelations, wrote them down -- including some contradictions. But there is no checking at all on whether he really did have revelations. And for certain, he never even claimed to work any miracle at all.
But Catholicism, in contrast, is not a religion of the book. Why? Because we depend not on the Bible alone, but more basically, on the ongoing teaching of the Church. Protestantism logically would presuppose that Jesus told His Apostles: Write some books - get copies made - pass them out - tell people to figure them out for themselves. Of course that was unworkable. And they have to claim that Scripture is entirely clear -- a belief that contradicts Scripture, for the Second Epistle of St. Peter, in 3: 16, speaking of the Epistles of St. Paul, the very place Luther claimed to find his doctrine, are "hard to understand, which the unlearned and the unstable twist to their own destruction". Anyone who has wrestled with St. Paul knows how true that is. Some of the major commentators on St. Paul simply admit they cannot make sense of some things in Paul. Others try to make sense, but actually fail.
The new technique of Form and Redaction Criticism helps us to see that we are not a religion of the book. It builds on the belief - a true one - that the Gospels developed in three stages: 1) the words and actions of Jesus - which He would of course adapt to the current audience; 2) the way the Apostles and others at first preached what He did and said - again, we would expect them to adapt the wording, while being entirely faithful to the ideas; 3) some individuals within the Church, moved by the Holy Spirit, wrote down not all, but some part of this original preaching. That became the
Gospels. It is evident, the Church has something more basic than the Gospels, namely, its own ongoing teaching. So we see why we are not a religion of the book.
Even radical critics will admit nearly all of what we have just said. The place they will balk is at step two. They do not like to speak of the Apostles. They rather dream of a headless community, and further, one that cares little for the truth. R. Bultmann, that prince of eisegesis, said that what he called the Controversy Dialogues were creations of the Church. That is, one group in the Church wanted to hold a position, but had no text of Jesus to support it. Another had a different position, and they too had no text to support it. But no problem: each side just made up something. So they were firing imaginary bullets at each other.
John P. Meier over and over again in his book, A Marginal Jew, insists that the first community was "creative", just made things up. Although he is meticulous in his demand for evidence for things in general, when he came to this point, all care went to the winds: never once does he offer a shred of evidence for that alleged creativity.
The easiest answer to him is to get a copy of the Letter of St. Ignatius of Antioch to the Romans. He was the third Bishop of Antioch, Peter the first. Ignatius was shipped to Rome to be eaten by the animals - he was eaten, around 107 A.D. In that letter he tells the Christians in Rome: in case some of you might have influence with the authorities and could get me off - please do not. I want to die for Christ. - So now, let us get a xerox of that letter and head for the zoo and go to the lions' den, and read it there, asking ourselves: How much is this man just making up?
We not only are not a religion of the book, we are not a religion that rests firmly on Cloud 9. Bultmann boasted that St. Paul had taken away all security from us by teaching justification by faith, without any merits. Bultmann wanted to go Paul one better: he said we should have no support at all for our faith. We just decide to believe, and then leap up onto Cloud 9.
No, the same St. Peter who warned us about the difficulty of the Epistles of St. Paul also told us in I Peter 3:15: "Always be ready to give an account of the faith that is in you.
That is something no other church or sect, whether or not it be a religion of the book, can do. We can do it, but sadly, most Catholics do not know how to do it.
To explain it fully would take a semester's course. But let us spend about 10 minutes on a thumbnail sketch of the process.
We begin with the Gospels. Of course, we do not yet think of them as sacred or inspired. They are, but that still needs to be proved. So for the present, we look on them simply as documents from ancient times. No one could doubt that.
We need to know only three things about the writers of the Gospels. We need not know their names, though we think we do. But only three things matter: 1) Whoever they were, they were highly intent on getting the truth about Jesus - for the obvious reason they knew their eternal fate depended on it. 2) They had ample chance to get the facts. It will not do so say that Matthew and John were eyewitnesses. Perhaps they were. But there was an unfortunate habit in vogue then: a man might write a book and for a pen-name choose the name of some famous person. So they might have chosen Matthew or John, less likely they would pick Mark or Luke.
John P. Meier, again, insists that the first Gospel, which he thinks was Mark, was written about 40 years after the death of Jesus. He implies that we cannot be sure the writer could get the facts at so late a date. But Meier did not do his homework. There were plenty of sources around. First, Pope Clement I, elected probably either in 88 or 92 - though some would push the date even earlier wrote a letter to Corinth c. 95, which we have. In it, he says that Peter and Paul were of our own generation. Now if we do our numbers, this is obvious. Clement as we said, was elected in 88 or 92. Peter and Paul probably died in 66 or 67. So Clement must have heard Peter and Paul preach. What prime sources for information about Jesus!.
We already mentioned St. Ignatius of Antioch. As we said, he came from Antioch where Peter had been Bishop not long before, where Paul returned so many times in between his mission expeditions. Traditions about Christ were plentiful and strong in Antioch. And we get a lot of data about Jesus from the seven letters of Ignatius.
We might mention, among others, also Quadratus, the first Greek apologist. He wrote his apology around 123. In it he said that in his day there were still some alive who had been cured or raised from the dead by Jesus. Now we would not have to push the time to 123. But it would easily cover the period 80-90, the years in which most leftists think Matthew and Luke wrote.
But even without the sources we have just mentioned, consider this: we think of teenagers who were present at the public preaching of Jesus. Give them another 50 years, and they will be age 65. Not so many lived to that age then as now, yet a good number did. At age 65 they would be at the year 80, the very time the leftists think Matthew and Luke wrote.
So we have seen two of the three things needed in the Evangelists, namely, a desire to get the truth about Jesus, for the sake of their eternal fate, and the many places they could find the truth. The third need is objectivity. There is a saying: There is no such a thing as an uninterpreted report. There is much truth in this, it is true in many cases. But it does not apply to everything. There are some things so simple in their structure that there is simply no room for subjectivity to enter in. For example, we think of the time a leper stood before Jesus asking to be healed. He said: I will it. Be healed. - Now the structure of this event, as we said, leaves no room for subjectivity or distortion.
These are then the chief points needed to show us that it is possible to get from the Gospels at least a few very simple truths about Jesus.
With this basis, we go to phase two, in which we look for and find just six very simple facts about Jesus.
First, there was a man named Jesus. It is evident all over the Gospels. We get it also from the pagan historian Tacitus, who in his Annals says Jesus was executed under Pontius Pilate in the time of Emperor Tiberius.
Second, we see -- it is obvious all over the Gospels - that He claimed to be sent from God. We did not use the word prophet , for that is a complex word in Scripture. But in any culture people will understand if we speak of someone sent from God.
Thirdly, He did enough to prove He was that, by way of miracles. But miracles alone are not enough: there needs to be a tie between a miracle and the claim, such as there was when the paralytic was let down through the roof, and Jesus forgave the man's sins. The Scribes growled, saying only God can forgive sins. Jesus read their minds, and called them on it: What is easier to say: Sins are forgiven, or: Take up your bed and go. He cured the man to prove He had forgiven sins. This requirement of faith in Him for a miracle shows all over the Gospels. Yes, some foolish writers such as the NJBC say He consistently refused to appeal to a miracle to prove His claims. But then they give 6 references. Many will look at the list and think they have it proved. But we need to go through the list and see for ourselves. They are all vain and foolish. For example He refused to work a miracle to amuse Herod; He refused to come down from the cross. They other passages referred to are equally empty. So if that is the best the opposition can do, it is not worth a look.
Fourth and fifth are things we would naturally expect, namely, in the crowds He had a smaller group, namely the Twelve. He spoke to them more, and told them to continue His teaching. Obviously a messenger from God would do that, and the Gospels describe Him doing it.
Sixth and finally, He promised God would protect their teaching, e.g., He said: "He who hears you hears me". He said the same thing several times in various words. This is not hard to suppose, once we know what sort of person He was, a messenger from God with such credentials that He could even forgive sins and work countless miracles.
So now, after seeing these six simple facts, what have we before us? We see a group or church, commissioned to teach by a man God sent, and promised protection on their teaching. Then it is not only intellectually possible, but inescapable to believe what they tell us, even if later recipients of the commission might not be all they should be.
This group or church can tell us that the documents we used are inspired - this is the only possible way to know that. It can tell us that this messenger is divine. To find it this way is easier than fighting our way through the maze of texts which both sides threw at each other in the 50 years of the Arian debates.
We still did not mention a Pope. We could argue our way through Matthew 16, and would even find Protestant allies in doing so. But it is much easier to just ask this group or Church: Is there a Pope? Yes. What powers does he have? They can tell us. Early church history is replete with cases where this authority was recognized.
In addition, with our simple process, we have a bypass around the quibbles of the leftists, who put their finger down on so many spots in Scripture and ask how we can prove it really happened. We need only the 6 very simple things to establish the teaching commission of the Church. Then we have a means of getting the answers we need.
So we have proved there is a magisterium. And that Magisterium can tell us so many things. Among others, it can tell us that even though some truths are closer to the center of the hierarchy of truths than others, yet all those presented to us by a divinely protected Magisterium must be believed.
So yes, there is a hierarchy of truths -- but it can never lead us to go against the hierarchy of the Church.