“Are you Catholic or Christian?” It’s one of those questions
that grate on my conscience like nails on a chalkboard. I know what they’re getting
at. What they mean to say is, “Are you Catholic or Protestant?” But what if
those classic dividing lines aren’t so clear anymore? Particularly in light of
such ecumenical advances as the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of
Justification, many in the Church are suggesting that Luther’s protests are
over.[1]
At a recent conference on “The Future of Protestantism,”
Peter Leithart cast a bold and provocative vision: “The Reformation isn’t over.
But Protestantism is, or should be. . . It’s time to envision a new way of
being.”[2]
Leithart, a committed Presbyterian pastor and theologian who holds a PhD from the
University of Cambridge, isn’t conceding all
Protestant protests – he still rejects papal claims, demands that all
tradition must be judged by Scripture, doesn’t venerate the Host or ask for the
intersession of Mary – but he is suggesting a "new way of being heirs of the Reformation", both embracing and reforming the entire body of Christ.
What does he call this new way?
Reformational
Catholicism.
So what’s the difference between classical Protestants and
Reformational Catholics? Let’s look at some of the key features (according to Leithart):
Differences vs.
Common Ground
·
Classical Protestants are primarily defined by their
rejection of Catholic claims and practices. “Protestantism is a negative
theology,” Leithart says. “A Protestant is a not-Catholic.” They focus on historical
differences such as purgatory, devotion to Mary, the veneration of the
Eucharist, intercession of the saints, and the authority of the Pope.
·
Reformational Catholics are largely defined by their
celebration of common ground with the Roman Catholic Church – the creedal
formulations of the early church, the Scriptures, the Trinity, the centrality
of Jesus Christ (Solus Christus), salvation by grace alone (sola gratis) and the urgent priority of evangelization.
Continuity vs. Reform
·
Classical Protestants focus on outdated Roman
Catholic claims about changelessness and rigid stability.
·
Reformational Catholics understand that
Catholicism is constantly reforming – Ecclesia
semper reformanda – “The Church is always to be reformed.” Without changing
its essential foundations, the Church (and the gospel it proclaims), must
necessarily change in form and expression to engage the constantly changing
contexts of culture and history. In order to remain the same, the Church must
constantly change.
Either/Or vs.
Both/And
·
Classical Protestants don’t regard Catholics as
Christians.
·
Reformational Catholics acknowledge Catholics as
brothers and sisters and strive to proclaim the overwhelming unity of the faith
shared by Protestant and Catholic traditions.
Individual vs.
Communal
·
Classical Protestants emphasize individual
salvation and the Church as an instrument to that end.
·
Reformational Catholics understand salvation as
an inherently social and communal process and understand the Church as a constitutive
element of redemptive history.
Heroes and Heroines
·
Classical Protestants champion Martin Luther,
John Calvin, and Huldrych Zwingli. If any church history is acknowledged before
the Reformation, it is largely for the purpose of highlighting Catholic folly
or justifying contemporary Protestant views as extant fact.
·
Reformational Catholics warmly receive the
history of the entire Church – from Jesus to John Paul II, from Basil to
Bonhoeffer. “A Reformational Catholic
knows some of his ancestors were deeply flawed but won’t delete them from the
family tree,” Leithart states.[3]
Institutional Church
vs. Spiritual Church
·
Classical Protestants are wary of the concrete,
structural and public dimensions of Church (often decrying the
“post-Constantinian fall”).
·
Reformational Catholics recognize the fallenness
of institution but also maintain the necessity of public witness for the
Church’s mission to proclaim Christ to all peoples.
Biblical
Interpretation: Private vs. Corporate
·
Classical Protestants revel in historical-critical
methodologies while placing the interpretive center of gravity on individual
interpretation.
·
Reformational Catholics celebrate the rich
treasure of biblical interpretation through the ages, honoring what G.K.
Chesterton referred to as “the democracy of the dead”.[4]
Liturgy and the
Sacraments: Yeah or Nay
·
Classical Protestants are suspect or even
hostile to liturgical rites and sacramental forms. A sacrament is only a
catalyst for memory.
·
Reformational Catholics embrace the physical,
sensate world as a natural (although not exclusive) avenue by which God’s
presence is revealed to us. A sacrament is a special occasion for experiencing
God’s saving presence.
The jury is still out on whether Leithart’s dialectics will
find traction in the wider Church. I certainly know that there are more than two camps here and I'm not versed enough in the phenomenon to make a judgment myself. But the concept of Reformational Catholicism seems to tip its hat to the growing
frustration with intra-ecclesial squabbles and the dawning intuition that in
order to reach the world with the gospel of Jesus Christ, his body (the “whole
Christ” as Augustine used to put it) needs to do it together.[5]
[1] See
my February 21, 2014 post, “History is Made (And I’m Speechless),” at: http://ylcatholic.blogspot.com/2014/02/history-is-made-and-im-speechless.html.
[2] See
R.R. Reno’s article, “The Future of Catholicism,” at: http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2014/05/the-future-of-catholicism?utm_source=First+Things+Subscribers&utm_campaign=98dca3bd0b-5_20_20145_20_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_28bf775c26-98dca3bd0b-172542413.
[3] Peter
Leithart, “The End of Protestantism,” First
Things (November 8, 2013) accessed May 21, 2014 at: http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2013/11/the-end-of-protestantism.
[4] In
his classic text, Orthodoxy,
Chesterton quipped, “Tradition means giving votes to the most obscure of all
classes – our ancestors. It is the democracy of the dead. Tradition refuses to
submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely happen to be
walking about.”
[5] Emile
Mersch, The Whole Christ: The Historical
Development of the Doctrine of the Mystical Body in Scripture and Tradition
(Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 1938/2011).
Those classic dividing lines are crystal clear in Upstate South Carolina, which I'd say is preferable to a notion of Reformational Catholicism which includes: rejection of papal claims, veneration of the Host, the intercession of Mary, and demands that all tradition must be judged by Scripture. Down here that's just plain old Protestantism.
ReplyDeleteI think there's also an interesting divide that Leithart hasn't given due to in the First Things discussion and that's the divide between emergent churches and confessional protestants. I regularly listen to sermons from Mars Hill in Grand Rapids, MI [no, it's not the Driscoll one], a large emergent church, and Catholic theologians, saints, and priests are quoted almost every week! Yet at the same time, Mars Hill is an example of a church stepping away from the "confessional Protestantism" that has closer creedal and liturgical ties to Catholicism. I can't make any bold predictions, but I find it fascinating to watch. And, can even see the generations in my extended family shifting from the confessional Protestant denominations to an emergent outlook.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for this comment. My wife and I experienced the same thing in Madison, WI. Many Sundays we would go to Mass and then drop in on a service at a large non-denominational church in town. We always appreciated the high caliber preaching - certainly not "entertainment" but solid, thoughtful, engaging, reflective teaching from a Christian perspective. And not even a hint of anti-Catholic sentiment. Matter of fact, literally every time I walked out of there I would marvel to my wife, "They just articulated the Catholic position on _____ perfectly!" I'm not certain if they would self-identify as an emergent church. Don't know what they feel about "Reformational Catholicism" but I did get the distinct impression that their message was more decidedly "for" something than "against" something. Perhaps in many ways they are embodying the spirit of Reformational Catholicism in that they are not primarily protesting any perceived shortcomings in another religious tradition but rather proclaiming the evocative message of Jesus Christ as it engages contemporary culture. I believe this is an important step toward realizing the vision of "that they may be one".
Delete~Michael
Protestants aren't "not Catholics" any more. If you think they are, you don't know very many Protestants. However, a great many Catholics are "not Protestants." I'm Catholic and unfortunately, I know this.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Yes, you're so right. This tendency cuts both ways. While there are certainly Protestants whose emphasis is being "not Catholic," there are Catholics out there who ground their identity in being "not Protestant". For these Catholics, the entirety of what it means to be Catholic can be found in all the things that set it apart from the Protestant tradition. Merton addressed this beautifully when he said, "I will be a better Catholic, not if I can refute every shade of Protestantism, but if I can affirm the truth in it and still go further. . . If I affirm myself as a Catholic merely by denying all that is Muslim, Jewish, Protestant, Hindu, Buddhist, etc., in the end I will find that there is not much left for me to affirm as a Catholic: and certainly no breath of the Spirit with which to affirm it"(Conjectures, 140-141). Merton embraced the same spirit as the great Doctor of the Church, St. Thomas Aquinas who said, "We must love them both, those whose opinions we share and those whose opinions we reject. For both have labored in the search for truth and both have helped us in the finding of it."
DeleteAnd yes, happily, I have the great privilege of working with thousands of Protestant brothers and sisters in the mission of Young Life who do not define themselves primarily as "not Catholic." There is an overarching unity that they can sense, a deep appreciation for the Catholic liturgical, sacramental, devotional and intellectual tradition, and a growing sense that reaching a world of kids means Catholics and Protestants working together. I'm so grateful for that.
~Michael