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64- The knowledge
of faith and the demands of philosophical reason

The knowledge of faith and the demands of philosophical
reason
64. The word of God is addressed to all people, in every
age and in every part of the world; and the human being
is by nature a philosopher. As a reflective and
scientific elaboration of the understanding of God's word
in the light of faith, theology for its part must relate,
in some of its procedures and in the performance of its
specific tasks, to the philosophies which have been
developed through the ages. I have no wish to direct
theologians to particular methods, since that is not the
competence of the Magisterium. I wish instead to recall
some specific tasks of theology which, by the very nature
of the revealed word, demand recourse to philosophical
enquiry.
65. Theology is structured as an
understanding of faith in the light of a twofold
methodological principle: the auditus fidei and the
intellectus fidei. With the first, theology makes its own
the content of Revelation as this has been gradually
expounded in Sacred Tradition, Sacred Scripture and the
Church's living Magisterium.(88) With the second,
theology seeks to respond through speculative enquiry to
the specific demands of disciplined thought.
Philosophy contributes
specifically to theology in preparing for a correct
auditus fidei with its study of the structure of
knowledge and personal communication, especially the
various forms and functions of language. No less
important is philosophy's contribution to a more coherent
understanding of Church Tradition, the pronouncements of
the Magisterium and the teaching of the great masters of
theology, who often adopt concepts and thought-forms
drawn from a particular philosophical tradition. In this
case, the theologian is summoned not only to explain the
concepts and terms used by the Church in her thinking and
the development of her teaching, but also to know in
depth the philosophical systems which may have influenced
those concepts and terms, in order to formulate correct
and consistent interpretations of them.
66. With regard to the
intellectus fidei, a prime consideration must be that
divine Truth proposed to us in the Sacred
Scriptures and rightly interpreted by the Church's
teaching (89) enjoys an innate intelligibility, so
logically consistent that it stands as an authentic body
of knowledge. The intellectus fidei expounds this truth,
not only in grasping the logical and conceptual structure
of the propositions in which the Church's teaching is
framed, but also, indeed primarily, in bringing to light
the salvific meaning of these propositions for the
individual and for humanity. From the sum of these
propositions, the believer comes to know the history of
salvation, which culminates in the person of Jesus Christ
and in his Paschal Mystery. Believers then share in this
mystery by their assent of faith.
For its part, dogmatic theology
must be able to articulate the universal meaning of the
mystery of the One and Triune God and of the economy of
salvation, both as a narrative and, above all, in the
form of argument. It must do so, in other words, through
concepts formulated in a critical and universally
communicable way. Without philosophy's contribution, it
would in fact be impossible to discuss theological issues
such as, for example, the use of language to speak about
God, the personal relations within the Trinity, God's
creative activity in the world, the relationship between
God and man, or Christ's identity as true God and true
man. This is no less true of the different themes of
moral theology, which employ concepts such as the moral
law, conscience, freedom, personal responsibility and
guilt, which are in part defined by philosophical ethics.
It is necessary therefore that
the mind of the believer acquire a natural, consistent
and true knowledge of created realitiesthe world
and man himselfwhich are also the object of divine
Revelation. Still more, reason must be able to articulate
this knowledge in concept and argument. Speculative
dogmatic theology thus presupposes and implies a
philosophy of the human being, the world and, more
radically, of being, which has objective truth as its
foundation.
67. With its specific character
as a discipline charged with giving an account of faith
(cf. 1 Pet 3:15), the concern of fundamental theology
will be to justify and expound the relationship between
faith and philosophical thought. Recalling the teaching
of Saint Paul (cf. Rom 1:19-20), the First Vatican
Council pointed to the existence of truths which are
naturally, and thus philosophically, knowable; and an
acceptance of God's Revelation necessarily presupposes
knowledge of these truths. In studying Revelation and its
credibility, as well as the corresponding act of faith,
fundamental theology should show how, in the light of the
knowledge conferred by faith, there emerge certain truths
which reason, from its own independent enquiry, already
perceives. Revelation endows these truths with their
fullest meaning, directing them towards the richness of
the revealed mystery in which they find their ultimate
purpose. Consider, for example, the natural knowledge of
God, the possibility of distinguishing divine Revelation
from other phenomena or the recognition of its
credibility, the capacity of human language to speak in a
true and meaningful way even of things which transcend
all human experience. From all these truths, the mind is
led to acknowledge the existence of a truly propaedeutic
path to faith, one which can lead to the acceptance of
Revelation without in any way compromising the principles
and autonomy of the mind itself.(90)
Similarly, fundamental theology
should demonstrate the profound compatibility that exists
between faith and its need to find expression by way of
human reason fully free to give its assent. Faith will
thus be able to show fully the path to reason in a
sincere search for the truth. Although faith, a gift of
God, is not based on reason, it can certainly not
dispense with it. At the same time, it becomes apparent
that reason needs to be reinforced by faith, in order to
discover horizons it cannot reach on its own.(91)
68. Moral theology has perhaps
an even greater need of philosophy's contribution. In the
New Testament, human life is much less governed by
prescriptions than in the Old Testament. Life in the
Spirit leads believers to a freedom and responsibility
which surpass the Law. Yet the Gospel and the Apostolic
writings still set forth both general principles of
Christian conduct and specific teachings and precepts. In
order to apply these to the particular circumstances of
individual and communal life, Christians must be able
fully to engage their conscience and the power of their
reason. In other words, moral theology requires a sound
philosophical vision of human nature and society, as well
as of the general principles of ethical decision-making.
69. It might be objected that
the theologian should nowadays rely less on philosophy
than on the help of other kinds of human knowledge, such
as history and above all the sciences, the extraordinary
advances of which in recent times stir such admiration.
Others, more alert to the link between faith and culture,
claim that theology should look more to the wisdom
contained in peoples' traditions than to a philosophy of
Greek and Eurocentric provenance. Others still, prompted
by a mistaken notion of cultural pluralism, simply deny
the universal value of the Church's philosophical
heritage.
There is some truth in these
claims which are acknowledged in the teaching of the
Council.(92) Reference to the sciences is often helpful,
allowing as it does a more thorough knowledge of the
subject under study; but it should not mean the rejection
of a typically philosophical and critical thinking which
is concerned with the universal. Indeed, this kind of
thinking is required for a fruitful exchange between
cultures. What I wish to emphasize is the duty to go
beyond the particular and concrete, lest the prime task
of demonstrating the universality of faith's content be
abandoned. Nor should it be forgotten that the specific
contribution of philosophical enquiry enables us to
discern in different world-views and different cultures
not what people think but what the
objective truth is.(93) It is not an array of human
opinions but truth alone which can be of help to
theology.
70. Because of its implications
for both philosophy and theology, the question of the
relationship with cultures calls for particular
attention, which cannot however claim to be exhaustive.
From the time the Gospel was first preached, the Church
has known the process of encounter and engagement with
cultures. Christ's mandate to his disciples to go out
everywhere, even to the ends of the earth
(Acts 1:8), in order to pass on the truth which he had
revealed, led the Christian community to recognize from
the first the universality of its message and the
difficulties created by cultural differences. A passage
of Saint Paul's letter to the Christians of Ephesus helps
us to understand how the early community responded to the
problem. The Apostle writes: Now in Christ Jesus
you who once were far off have been brought near in the
blood of Christ. For he is our peace, who has made us
both one, and has broken down the wall of hostility
(2:13-14).
In the light of this text, we
reflect further to see how the Gentiles were transformed
once they had embraced the faith. With the richness of
the salvation wrought by Christ, the walls separating the
different cultures collapsed. God's promise in Christ now
became a universal offer: no longer limited to one
particular people, its language and its customs, but
extended to all as a heritage from which each might
freely draw. From their different locations and
traditions all are called in Christ to share in the unity
of the family of God's children. It is Christ who enables
the two peoples to become one. Those who were
far off have come near, thanks to
the newness brought by the Paschal Mystery. Jesus
destroys the walls of division and creates unity in a new
and unsurpassed way through our sharing in his mystery.
This unity is so deep that the Church can say with Saint
Paul: You are no longer strangers and sojourners,
but you are saints and members of the household of
God (Eph 2:19).
This simple statement contains a
great truth: faith's encounter with different cultures
has created something new. When they are deeply rooted in
experience, cultures show forth the human being's
characteristic openness to the universal and the
transcendent. Therefore they offer different paths to the
truth, which assuredly serve men and women well in
revealing values which can make their life ever more
human.(94) Insofar as cultures appeal to the values of
older traditions, they pointimplicitly but
authenticallyto the manifestation of God in nature,
as we saw earlier in considering the Wisdom literature
and the teaching of Saint Paul.
71. Inseparable as they are from
people and their history, cultures share the dynamics
which the human experience of life reveals. They change
and advance because people meet in new ways and share
with each other their ways of life. Cultures are fed by
the communication of values, and they survive and
flourish insofar as they remain open to assimilating new
experiences. How are we to explain these dynamics? All
people are part of a culture, depend upon it and shape
it. Human beings are both child and parent of the culture
in which they are immersed. To everything they do, they
bring something which sets them apart from the rest of
creation: their unfailing openness to mystery and their
boundless desire for knowledge. Lying deep in every
culture, there appears this impulse towards a fulfilment.
We may say, then, that culture itself has an intrinsic
capacity to receive divine Revelation.
Cultural context permeates the
living of Christian faith, which contributes in turn
little by little to shaping that context. To every
culture Christians bring the unchanging truth of God,
which he reveals in the history and culture of a people.
Time and again, therefore, in the course of the centuries
we have seen repeated the event witnessed by the pilgrims
in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost. Hearing the
Apostles, they asked one another: Are not all these
who are speaking Galileans? And how is it that we hear,
each of us in his own native language? Parthians and
Medes and Elamites and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea
and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia,
Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and
visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and
Arabians, we hear them telling in our own tongues the
mighty works of God (Acts 2:7-11). While it demands
of all who hear it the adherence of faith, the
proclamation of the Gospel in different cultures allows
people to preserve their own cultural identity. This in
no way creates division, because the community of the
baptized is marked by a universality which can embrace
every culture and help to foster whatever is implicit in
them to the point where it will be fully explicit in the
light of truth.
This means that no one culture
can ever become the criterion of judgment, much less the
ultimate criterion of truth with regard to God's
Revelation. The Gospel is not opposed to any culture, as
if in engaging a culture the Gospel would seek to strip
it of its native riches and force it to adopt forms which
are alien to it. On the contrary, the message which
believers bring to the world and to cultures is a genuine
liberation from all the disorders caused by sin and is,
at the same time, a call to the fullness of truth.
Cultures are not only not diminished by this encounter;
rather, they are prompted to open themselves to the
newness of the Gospel's truth and to be stirred by this
truth to develop in new ways.
72. In preaching the Gospel,
Christianity first encountered Greek philosophy; but this
does not mean at all that other approaches are precluded.
Today, as the Gospel gradually comes into contact with
cultural worlds which once lay beyond Christian
influence, there are new tasks of inculturation, which
mean that our generation faces problems not unlike those
faced by the Church in the first centuries.
My thoughts turn immediately to
the lands of the East, so rich in religious and
philosophical traditions of great antiquity. Among these
lands, India has a special place. A great spiritual
impulse leads Indian thought to seek an experience which
would liberate the spirit from the shackles of time and
space and would therefore acquire absolute value. The
dynamic of this quest for liberation provides the context
for great metaphysical systems.
In India particularly, it is the
duty of Christians now to draw from this rich heritage
the elements compatible with their faith, in order to
enrich Christian thought. In this work of discernment,
which finds its inspiration in the Council's Declaration
Nostra Aetate, certain criteria will have to be kept in
mind. The first of these is the universality of the human
spirit, whose basic needs are the same in the most
disparate cultures. The second, which derives from the
first, is this: in engaging great cultures for the first
time, the Church cannot abandon what she has gained from
her inculturation in the world of Greco-Latin thought. To
reject this heritage would be to deny the providential
plan of God who guides his Church down the paths of time
and history. This criterion is valid for the Church in
every age, even for the Church of the future, who will
judge herself enriched by all that comes from today's
engagement with Eastern cultures and will find in this
inheritance fresh cues for fruitful dialogue with the
cultures which will emerge as humanity moves into the
future. Thirdly, care will need to be taken lest,
contrary to the very nature of the human spirit, the
legitimate defense of the uniqueness and originality of
Indian thought be confused with the idea that a
particular cultural tradition should remain closed in its
difference and affirm itself by opposing other
traditions.
What has been said here of India
is no less true for the heritage of the great cultures of
China, Japan and the other countries of Asia, as also for
the riches of the traditional cultures of Africa, which
are for the most part orally transmitted.
73. In the light of these
considerations, the relationship between theology and
philosophy is best construed as a circle. Theology's
source and starting-point must always be the word of God
revealed in history, while its final goal will be an
understanding of that word which increases with each
passing generation. Yet, since God's word is Truth (cf.
Jn 17:17), the human search for truthphilosophy,
pursued in keeping with its own rulescan only help
to understand God's word better. It is not just a
question of theological discourse using this or that
concept or element of a philosophical construct; what
matters most is that the believer's reason use its powers
of reflection in the search for truth which moves from
the word of God towards a better understanding of it. It
is as if, moving between the twin poles of God's word and
a better understanding of it, reason is offered guidance
and is warned against paths which would lead it to stray
from revealed Truth and to stray in the end from the
truth pure and simple. Instead, reason is stirred to
explore paths which of itself it would not even have
suspected it could take. This circular relationship with
the word of God leaves philosophy enriched, because
reason discovers new and unsuspected horizons.
74. The fruitfulness of this
relationship is confirmed by the experience of great
Christian theologians who also distinguished themselves
as great philosophers, bequeathing to us writings of such
high speculative value as to warrant comparison with the
masters of ancient philosophy. This is true of both the
Fathers of the Church, among whom at least Saint Gregory
of Nazianzus and Saint Augustine should be mentioned, and
the Medieval Doctors with the great triad of Saint
Anselm, Saint Bonaventure and Saint Thomas Aquinas. We
see the same fruitful relationship between philosophy and
the word of God in the courageous research pursued by
more recent thinkers, among whom I gladly mention, in a
Western context, figures such as John Henry Newman,
Antonio Rosmini, Jacques Maritain, Étienne Gilson and
Edith Stein and, in an Eastern context, eminent scholars
such as Vladimir S. Soloviev, Pavel A. Florensky, Petr
Chaadaev and Vladimir N. Lossky. Obviously other names
could be cited; and in referring to these I intend not to
endorse every aspect of their thought, but simply to
offer significant examples of a process of philosophical
enquiry which was enriched by engaging the data of faith.
One thing is certain: attention to the spiritual journey
of these masters can only give greater momentum to both
the search for truth and the effort to apply the results
of that search to the service of humanity. It is to be
hoped that now and in the future there will be those who
continue to cultivate this great philosophical and
theological tradition for the good of both the Church and
humanity.

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