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57- The Church's
interest in philosophy

The Church's interest in philosophy
57. Yet the Magisterium does
more than point out the misperceptions and the mistakes
of philosophical theories. With no less concern it has
sought to stress the basic principles of a genuine
renewal of philosophical enquiry, indicating as well
particular paths to be taken. In this regard, Pope Leo
XIII with his Encyclical Letter Ćterni Patris took a
step of historic importance for the life of the Church,
since it remains to this day the one papal document of
such authority devoted entirely to philosophy. The great
Pope revisited and developed the First Vatican Council's
teaching on the relationship between faith and reason,
showing how philosophical thinking contributes in
fundamental ways to faith and theological learning.(78)
More than a century later, many of the insights of his
Encyclical Letter have lost none of their interest from
either a practical or pedagogical point of viewmost
particularly, his insistence upon the incomparable value
of the philosophy of Saint Thomas. A renewed insistence
upon the thought of the Angelic Doctor seemed to Pope Leo
XIII the best way to recover the practice of a philosophy
consonant with the demands of faith. Just when
Saint Thomas distinguishes perfectly between faith and
reason, the Pope writes, he unites them in
bonds of mutual friendship, conceding to each its
specific rights and to each its specific
dignity.(79)
58. The positive results of the
papal summons are well known. Studies of the thought of
Saint Thomas and other Scholastic writers received new
impetus. Historical studies flourished, resulting in a
rediscovery of the riches of Medieval thought, which
until then had been largely unknown; and there emerged
new Thomistic schools. With the use of historical method,
knowledge of the works of Saint Thomas increased greatly,
and many scholars had courage enough to introduce the
Thomistic tradition into the philosophical and
theological discussions of the day. The most influential
Catholic theologians of the present century, to whose
thinking and research the Second Vatican Council was much
indebted, were products of this revival of Thomistic
philosophy. Throughout the twentieth century, the Church
has been served by a powerful array of thinkers formed in
the school of the Angelic Doctor.
59. Yet the Thomistic and
neo-Thomistic revival was not the only sign of a
resurgence of philosophical thought in culture of
Christian inspiration. Earlier still, and parallel to
Pope Leo's call, there had emerged a number of Catholic
philosophers who, adopting more recent currents of
thought and according to a specific method, produced
philosophical works of great influence and lasting value.
Some devised syntheses so remarkable that they stood
comparison with the great systems of idealism. Others
established the epistemological foundations for a new
consideration of faith in the light of a renewed
understanding of moral consciousness; others again
produced a philosophy which, starting with an analysis of
immanence, opened the way to the transcendent; and there
were finally those who sought to combine the demands of
faith with the perspective of phenomenological method.
From different quarters, then, modes of philosophical
speculation have continued to emerge and have sought to
keep alive the great tradition of Christian thought which
unites faith and reason.
60. The Second Vatican Council,
for its part, offers a rich and fruitful teaching
concerning philosophy. I cannot fail to note, especially
in the context of this Encyclical Letter, that one
chapter of the Constitution Gaudium et Spes amounts to a
virtual compendium of the biblical anthropology from
which philosophy too can draw inspiration. The chapter
deals with the value of the human person created in the
image of God, explains the dignity and superiority of the
human being over the rest of creation, and declares the
transcendent capacity of human reason.(80) The problem of
atheism is also dealt with in Gaudium et Spes, and the
flaws of its philosophical vision are identified,
especially in relation to the dignity and freedom of the
human person.(81) There is no doubt that the climactic
section of the chapter is profoundly significant for
philosophy; and it was this which I took up in my first
Encyclical Letter Redemptor Hominis and which serves as
one of the constant reference-points of my teaching:
The truth is that only in the mystery of the
Incarnate Word does the mystery of man take on light. For
Adam, the first man, was a type of him who was to come,
Christ the Lord. Christ, the new Adam, in the very
revelation of the mystery of the Father and of his love,
fully reveals man to himself and brings to light his most
high calling.(82)
The Council also dealt with the
study of philosophy required of candidates for the
priesthood; and its recommendations have implications for
Christian education as a whole. These are the Council's
words: The philosophical disciplines should be
taught in such a way that students acquire in the first
place a solid and harmonious knowledge of the human
being, of the world and of God, based upon the
philosophical heritage which is enduringly valid, yet
taking into account currents of modern
philosophy.(83)
These directives have been
reiterated and developed in a number of other magisterial
documents in order to guarantee a solid philosophical
formation, especially for those preparing for theological
studies. I have myself emphasized several times the
importance of this philosophical formation for those who
one day, in their pastoral life, will have to address the
aspirations of the contemporary world and understand the
causes of certain behaviour in order to respond in
appropriate ways.(84)
61. If it has been necessary
from time to time to intervene on this question, to
reiterate the value of the Angelic Doctor's insights and
insist on the study of his thought, this has been because
the Magisterium's directives have not always been
followed with the readiness one would wish. In the years
after the Second Vatican Council, many Catholic faculties
were in some ways impoverished by a diminished sense of
the importance of the study not just of Scholastic
philosophy but more generally of the study of philosophy
itself. I cannot fail to note with surprise and
displeasure that this lack of interest in the study of
philosophy is shared by not a few theologians.
There are various reasons for
this disenchantment. First, there is the distrust of
reason found in much contemporary philosophy, which has
largely abandoned metaphysical study of the ultimate
human questions in order to concentrate upon problems
which are more detailed and restricted, at times even
purely formal. Another reason, it should be said, is the
misunderstanding which has arisen especially with regard
to the human sciences. On a number of
occasions, the Second Vatican Council stressed the
positive value of scientific research for a deeper
knowledge of the mystery of the human being.(85) But the
invitation addressed to theologians to engage the human
sciences and apply them properly in their enquiries
should not be interpreted as an implicit
authorization to marginalize philosophy or to put
something else in its place in pastoral formation and in
the praeparatio fidei. A further factor is the renewed
interest in the inculturation of faith. The life of the
young Churches in particular has brought to light,
together with sophisticated modes of thinking, an array
of expressions of popular wisdom; and this constitutes a
genuine cultural wealth of traditions. Yet the study of
traditional ways must go hand in hand with philosophical
enquiry, an enquiry which will allow the positive traits
of popular wisdom to emerge and forge the necessary link
with the proclamation of the Gospel.(86)
62. I wish to repeat clearly
that the study of philosophy is fundamental and
indispensable to the structure of theological studies and
to the formation of candidates for the priesthood. It is
not by chance that the curriculum of theological studies
is preceded by a time of special study of philosophy.
This decision, confirmed by the Fifth Lateran
Council,(87) is rooted in the experience which matured
through the Middle Ages, when the importance of a
constructive harmony of philosophical and theological
learning emerged. This ordering of studies influenced,
promoted and enabled much of the development of modern
philosophy, albeit indirectly. One telling example of
this is the influence of the Disputationes Metaphysicae
of Francisco Suárez, which found its way even into the
Lutheran universities of Germany. Conversely, the
dismantling of this arrangement has created serious gaps
in both priestly formation and theological research.
Consider, for instance, the disregard of modern thought
and culture which has led either to a refusal of any kind
of dialogue or to an indiscriminate acceptance of any
kind of philosophy.
I trust most sincerely that
these difficulties will be overcome by an intelligent
philosophical and theological formation, which must never
be lacking in the Church.
63. For the reasons suggested
here, it has seemed to me urgent to re-emphasize with
this Encyclical Letter the Church's intense interest in
philosophyindeed the intimate bond which ties
theological work to the philosophical search for truth.
From this comes the Magisterium's duty to discern and
promote philosophical thinking which is not at odds with
faith. It is my task to state principles and criteria
which in my judgement are necessary in order to restore a
harmonious and creative relationship between theology and
philosophy. In the light of these principles and
criteria, it will be possible to discern with greater
clarity what link, if any, theology should forge with the
different philosophical opinions or systems which the
world of today presents.

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