“Silencing” our way out of trouble: Shutting down reform by shutting up an Irish priest and American sisters
UNITED STATES
U.S. Catholic
Thursday, April 26, 2012
By Bryan Cones
It’s deja vu all over again: About 150 years ago the Vatican’s first response to the “modern world” of democratic reform and theological renewal was to silence and shame any Catholic who spoke positively about either. So we got the Syllabus of Errors in its various incarnations and the condemnation of “modernism” and anyone who espoused modern approaches to scriptural interpretation or the “new theology” of the early and mid 20th century. Big names there: Congar, DeLubac, Jungmann, Murray–all ordered to silence on this topic or that.
Until, of course, the Second Vatican Council undid all that nonsense and brought the church–at least theologically–into the late 19th century (still 100 years behind the rest of the world). All those silenced became heroes, the bright lights of the renewal.
Now here we are at the beginning of the 21st,…
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