Catholic Theologians Condemn Ross Douthat's Recent Piece on the Pope
Jim McDermott | Oct 27 2015
Depending on who you have on your Facebook feed, you might have seen a post from University of St. Thomas theologian Massimo Faggioli yesterday about the letter he and a number of other theologians have sent to The New York Times in response to columnist Ross Douthats Oct. 18 piece, The Plot to Change Catholicism.
Here is that letter in full:
On Sunday, October 18, the Times published Ross Douthats piece The Plot to Change Catholicism. Aside from the fact that Mr. Douthat has no professional qualifications for writing on the subject, the problem with his article and other recent statements is his view of Catholicism as unapologetically subject to a politically partisan narrative that has very little to do with what Catholicism really is. Moreover, accusing other members of the Catholic church of heresy, sometimes subtly, sometimes openly, is serious business that can have serious consequences for those so accused. This is not what we expect of The New York Times.
October 26, 2015
John OMalley SJ (Georgetown University)
Massimo Faggioli (University of St. Thomas, Minnesota)
Nicholas P. Cafardi (Duquesne University)
Gerard Mannion (Georgetown University)
Stephen Schloesser SJ (Loyola University Chicago)
Katarina Schuth OSF (University of St. Thomas, Minnesota)
Leslie Tentler (Catholic University of America, emerita)
If you havent read Mr. Douthats piece, its worth a lookjust keep a nitroglycerin pill handy, because it is a shocker, depicting the pope as a figure of ostentatious humility (naughty pope, rubbing his simplicity in our overfed faces) who is attempting to change that which Mr. Douthat says the pope is supposed to have no power to change, namely Catholic doctrine.
Now, if you find yourself wondering, since when is the pope (or a synod, for that matter) unable to call for a change in church doctrine, well, that's a good question. The pope and the synod can in fact change doctrine, but not dogma.
Put simply, dogma is the stuff you have to accept if youre going to call yourself Catholic. It's the Creed we recite every Sundaythings like the incarnation, the Trinity and the communion of the saints that we hold as undeniable tenets of our faithplus any pronouncements that popes have invoked infallibly, which has happened almost never. The Assumption of Mary was such a pronouncement; so is the Immaculate Conception.
http://americamagazine.org/content/dispatches/catholic-theologians-condemn-ross-douthats-recent-piece-pope