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The Search for Portable Truth Serving on a Cursillo weekend I was once struck by the attitude of a
priest sampling it for the first time. He was himself, he told us, a
trained Catechist, who had years of experience of putting on
courses. For various reasons he simply wouldn't do things this way.
He had thawed out by the Sunday, but his haughty negativity was a
severe challenge while it lasted.
I need to explain here, perhaps, that the Cursillo experience is
essentially one of Christian community. Its central message -
that each of us is equally and infinitely loved - is conveyed not so
much through a sophisticated verbal theology as through the manner
in which the largely lay Cursillo team welcome, show compassion for,
and entertain the first-timers, the 'candidates' - who are often
casualties of our intellectually meritocratic culture. The expert
priest's problem was that his greater intellectual sophistication
gave him a vantage point from which he felt obliged to be negative
about the unsophisticated doctrinal content of the course.
I remember the incident as an illustration of something that I
believe to be seriously blocking the development of the church at
present: the apparent belief of so many experts, and of much of the
hierarchy, that to move lay people into Christian commitment there
is a need for the delivery of a very substantial body of knowledge -
knowledge that only they can be trusted to determine, package and
deliver. As often as not it tends to be a substantial sampling of
the Catechism.
What is called Catholic 'adult education' tends as a consequence to
be a heavy, texty, affair, couched in a heavily Latinated
terminology - and costing so much to deliver that only a few people
can afford it. Furthermore, it is, in my experience, difficult to
see the positive results in terms of the buzzing parishes we would
all like to see. Those who receive this experience may know more -
but not what to do next.
Already, of course, I need to guard myself against the conclusion
that I am anti-intellectual. Quite the contrary: I have been a
teacher for most of my adult life, preparing adolescents for higher
education, and so have a considerable stake in raising the
intellectual horizons of lay people generally. But to do this we
need first of all to develop the confidence of the learner, and the
present content-heavy method of Catholic instruction very often has
the opposite effect. Too often it mistakenly implies that the more
that is known of the detailed minutiae of Catholic doctrine, the
closer one necessarily comes to a grasp of the whole : that
quantity equals quality.
I am now convinced that what the magisterium should do is what every
good teacher always does: decide on what belongs at the summit of
what it calls the hierarchy of truths, and teach that as a priority,
right from the start.
What is it that lies there? What is it above all we must not only
know, but keep present in mind at all times, as an encapsulation of
all that the Catechism, and the Gospels contain? Knowledge is a
diffuse, potentially limitless thing, which we cannot carry in toto
as we go through our day. While we think of one thing, a lot of
others 'slip out the back' - perhaps something vital. So wouldn't it
be useful to state, in the shortest form possible, the one vital
thing we must all never forget? Wouldn't this small burden of truth
be portable at all times, a summary of all that lies below it in the
hierarchy of truths?
I have thought about this for some considerable time over the past
decade, and propose the following: The most important thing for a Christian to know
Is that the most important thing for her/him to do
Is NOT to KNOW
But to LOVE.
To establish this, I feel I need only point out what Jesus said four
times in the Gospel of John, and what was repeated nine further
times in the new Testament. He never emphasised knowing as such -
'being right': the instruction is to love, first and always.
Knowledge is important, and especially knowledge of the basic story
related in the creeds and the Rosary, but it must never be given a
greater importance than the obligation to love, and must always be
interpreted in the light of that principle.
If quantitative knowledge is given primacy, love and relationship
are very likely to be lost - and mere intellectual ostentation to be
in the ascendant. The Crusaders, or at least their leaders, knew the
creeds, but their primary obligation of love had been tragically
left behind in the tabernacles of Europe. The Inquisition - the
source of so much continuing alienation from Christianity - was
grounded on the same sad foundation.
Further, the primacy given by Jesus to love is a call, not primarily
to endless study, but to relationship - especially, first of all (in
the teaching context), the relationship of teacher to student. The
light burden Jesus gave us - if we can remember it - will establish
from the start between student and teacher the great truth they both
share: because they are both equally and infinitely loved, they are
bound in love to one another - and therefore bound to respect one
another also. Knowing what lies at the summit of the hierarchy of
truths, the student has already completed the most important part of
the course.
Further, from that very first moment the student is called into
action also. There is no need to complete the course to discover
what its most important application should be - the 'bottom line'.
The primacy of the obligation to love can enlighten, and move, from
the first moment it is learnt and experienced.
Take the case of a highly qualified catechist tasked with the
delivery of one of those substantial courses we too often see. His
professional obligation - to 'complete the course' - is quite likely
to be oppressive from the very start. Furthermore these times, it is
likely that course members will have problems with an obscure
terminology - and even with some point of doctrine. Suppose an
argument develops, and the catechist stands firm to what he believes
the Catechism says . Or, more likely, frustration or boredom set in
soon after the initial enthusiasm. And course members walk away,
never to return.
Two things have happened here. First, the catechist has actually
lost sight of what lies at the summit of the hierarchy of truths. In
the pressures of the 'big course' the key truth has indeed 'dropped
out the back'. Second, some of his students may now never find it -
even though it was deliverable in the very first minutes of the
course. Nothing of any great importance has been taught, when
something vital could have been.
Furthermore, this approach would address the problem that lies at
the heart of the issue of 'non reception' - such a vital issue these
days. Lay people tend to feel talked down to - and the sheer
heaviness of what is proposed is often very intimidating to them.
This is a very bad start to the teacher-student relationship - the
so obvious inequality between teacher and student. It is a recipe
for trouble, tedium, group shrinkage, even total failure, right from
the start.
But if both teacher and student share from the start, and never
allow to drop out of sight, what lies at the summit of the hierarchy
of truths, there is a continuing basic equality between them. The
student has understood the most vital thing a Christian must know,
and must not forget, and so has succeeded in establishing his/her
competence and intelligence.
I would argue strongly that the failure to lighten and organise
Catholic instruction as radically as this lies at the heart of its
current problems. We are so worried by the task of 'passing on the
faith', and so concerned to leave nothing out, that we have often
actually dropped that beautiful burden - disguised it, concealed it,
lost it - and many children and adults now never receive it. Taking
exception to some rebuff or scandal or frustration - or an endless
diet of doctrine that seems never to 'cut to the chase' - they leave
the church and proclaim that it is a tyrannical institution that
indoctrinates people.
And so it does if it puts knowledge - especially large quantities of
it - before love itself.
I fear that this is precisely what the magisterium has too often
unwittingly done. Proclaiming the Catechism as the best answer to
all our problems, and failing to privilege love over knowledge, it
has privileged quantitative knowledge over love - failing to deliver
what lies at the summit of the hierarchy of truths.
Binding itself also, apparently, to non-accountability and secrecy
it has failed to learn that these are the only two parents that
scandal needs - severely damaging the bond of love and trust that
binds the whole church together. Although scandal after scandal has
revealed that the secular implementation of the Christian principle
of accountability has given more protection and vindication to
injured Catholic children and their families than the hierarchy's
own (still non-accountable) apparatus, it refuses to learn from that
experience.
One must ask: if the magisterium has forgotten what lies at the
summit of the hierarchy of truths, and refuses to learn from every
lesson it receives on its own apparent inability to love - and on
how it might love better - by what argument can it justify its
authority to teach? Doesn't, for example, the Cursillo, which, at
its best, prioritises love, compassion and relationship over
knowledge, teach better?
I ask this question especially on behalf of those theologians who
have been silenced for supposed heterodoxy - and also on behalf of
those committed supporters of orthodoxy who often fear that they are
considered merely 'company men' because they have not been silenced.
The excuse given for this coercion - that 'the faithful' would be
endangered by the ideas of powerful intellectuals - is entirely
misconceived, even, I suspect, bogus. Those without an interest in
fine theological distinctions, but with no shortage of spiritual
intelligence, very quickly lose interest in those distinctions - so
long as the basic truths of the creeds are not in dispute. Knowing
the church of their own local community as a loving institution,
they are content to know what the worriers apparently do not: that
loving is more important than knowing. Those who love and pray do
not give primacy to knowledge or 'big ideas' - but to love. And if
they suspect that any thinker is challenging their faith in that
principle, they typically lose interest also in what he, or she, may
have to teach.
Furthermore, such people are now, in parts of Northern Ireland,
finding that the same small but beautiful burden is carried by many
Christians of the reformed traditions. Knowing and sharing the
principle of equal respect they meet and discuss what is shared with
surprise and joy. Feeling comfortable they even explore differences
with curiosity rather than fear, and often with mutual enrichment.
And this raises another question. Why should relationships between
Catholics and other Christian traditions be troubled by the supposed
problem of merging and reconciling vast theologies, vast bodies of
knowledge? If trust and love are given precedence, what the
different church's theologians may disagree about is relatively
insignificant in both relational and 'truth' terms. That is a matter
for experts - but not for those whose primary goal is friendship and
cordiality - the essence of their faith.
Why then is priority given to knowledge over love? I suggest that
this has to do with a totally mistaken historical conception of what
Christianity is all about. It is not about 'my truth', but the
obligation to love even those whose truth is different.
My truth is, of course, where I stand - and Christians must know
where to stand: but if that place does not include the primary
obligation of love even of those who stand elsewhere, it lacks
something essential to Christianity. It is not the very best place
to stand. Early disputes, and the sad history of Christianity's
connection with the state, misled us all into what can be called
'competitive knowing': my truth is greater than your truth, and must
therefore prevail. Jesus never said so - he simply lived and died
for the beautiful truth - that love cannot coerce anyone - and is
the primary obligation of a Christian.
That beautiful truth is now increasingly shared by Christians of
other denominations. (I heard Steve Chalke, a Baptist minister,
proclaim it movingly in Limavady in early January.) It is now highly
desirable that the Catholic magisterium should receive it also -
before it embarrasses itself, and the wider church, still further.
If knowledge continues to be prioritised over love and
accountability, it will be clear that this can only be for reasons
of power, not love. It will be revealed beyond question that the
magisterium imitates rather than challenges our meritocratic
culture, by deploying knowledge to avoid relinquishing status.
And the most beautiful truth, the summit of the hierarchy of truths,
the truth any child can carry - that in God's eyes we all enjoy the
same high status - will have been obscured and lost by those who
tell us their primary obligation and intention is to teach and to
preserve it.
(©
The Furrow, September 2005)
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