In the wake of scores of bishops rejecting Fiducia Supplicans globally, popesplainers have resorted to comparing Fiducia Supplicans to Humanae Vitae as a way to deflect criticism of the document. The hyperpapalist website Where Peter Is has said that critics of Fiducia Supplicans "need to be reminded of the reception of Humanae Vitae...before asserting that the public reactions to magisterial documents are markers of its "failure.'" Then there is this little gem, which was followed by a piece from the same influencer on all of the similarities between Fiducia Supplicans and Humanae Vitae.
The line of argumentation seems to be that it is irrelevant how many bishops reject Fiducia Supplicans, because Humanae Vitae was broadly rejected as well, and yet we all acknowledge the authority of this document. Therefore, Fiducia Supplicans cannot be judged based on its reception or rejection by the global episcopate.
Four Reasons Fiducia Supplicans Should Not be Compared to Humanae Vitae
This line of reasoning is erroneous for several reasons:
In the first place, Humanae Vitae was rejected by the heterodox while it was embraced by the orthodox. Fiducia Supplicans, on the other hand, is being rejected by the orthodox while it is embraced by the heterodox. This little detail kind of matters.
Second, the bishops who rejected Humanae Vitae did so because it reaffirmed Church praxis, whereas the bishops rejecting Fiducia Supplicans are doing so because it appears to depart from Church praxis.
Third, Humanae Vitae and Fiducia Supplicans are two completely different types of documents. Humanae Vitae was a papal encyclical that some theologians consider infallible, while Fiducia Supplicans is a Declaration of the DDF. While both are authoritative, we would be wrong to attribute the same level of authority to each. This contrast becomes more stark when we recall Pope Francis's statements that he wishes the DDF to be understood not as a body whose purpose is to guarantee orthodoxy, but to "promote thought and theological reflection in dialogue." These two documents are clearly not equivalent in terms of their doctrinal weight.
Fourth, while it is true that favorable reception of a document is not a reliable indicator of whether it contains true or false propositions, reception certainly does matter when we are talking about a legislative document that requests the clergy to positively do something. Humanae Vitae is a doctrinal document reaffirming something the Church believes; Fiducia Supplicans is a pastoral document asking the clergy to perform certain specific actions. In the latter case, reception of the text does matter, because a legislative act cannot be properly executed if it is rejected—and if it cannot be implemented, it is not a good legislative act. Anyone who has ever studied law knows that one of the fundamental characteristics of a good law is that it is capable of being enforced. In the Church, a law that a substantial number of bishops will not implement is not capable of being enforced and hence not a good law.
The great Dominican theologian Tommaso de Cajetan commented on this aspect of law in his 1514 Apologia de comparata auctoritatis papae et concilii ("Apology Concerning the Power of the Pope Compared With That of a Council"). While admitting that the pope had the autority to promulgate any law he wished, Cajetan distinguishes between promulgation of law and the stability of law. The former comes from its being issued by an authoritative lawgiver (the pope, Church, etc.), the latter from its peaceable reception by those to whom it is meant to bind. Cajetan is here discussing the place of consent in ecclesiastical law and opines that consent applies to stability but not to promulgation:
If laws are instituted when they are promulgated, the pope, promulgating the law to the whole Church, institutes it without its consent. Therefore he alone can institute a law over it. Stability, however, depends on the consent of those observing it, on account not of authority, but execution. This is proved from the fact that even a decree of an entire ecumenical council is confirmed by the consent of those observing it, such that it does not bind when it is weakened by the dissent of those not observing it...Instability of laws arises from the dissent of those not observing them, even from the legislators themselves negatively, insomuch as they dissimulate by tolerating [practices contrary to them] and implicitly revoke what they have done. Rightly so, because law, it is said, in Erit. [Dec. 4, c. 2], should be suitable to the country, the place, and the time. [1]
It is granted, therefore, that the pope can, on the basis of the authority of his power, exercise an act of jurisdiction even over the rest of the Church against its will, but it would not be expedient if it did not edify. [2]
The Thing Must Be Championed!
Unlike Humanae Vitae, Fiducia Supplicans is being resisted because of its novelty, not its orthodoxy. Unlike Humanae Vitae, it is being championed by the progressives, not the orthodox. It lacks the authoritative weight of Humanae Vitae and is a different kind of document altogether. Fernandez himself has admitted that bishops may exercise discernment in whether to apply it, a leeway Paul VI never offered with Humanae Vitae. And, unlike the doctrinal affirmations of Humanae Vitae, Fiducia Supplicans makes very practical demands on the clergy.
I have not attempted with this article to argue any specific take on Fiducia Supplicans, much less advocate for any course of action. I merely insist that it is not comparable to Humanae Vitae, and that insisting otherwise focuses an undue emphasis on raw obedience, recklessly detached from any kind of discernment or theological context.
* * * * *
[2] Ibid.
Let us not forget to bless the Sixties Synod which gave us new blessings and now those new blessings can be newly reimagined or rethought or reconsidered according the needs of the day and because the 1929 New Catholic Dictionary defines "Blessing" in part as "praise" one knows that praising perversion has long been the goal of modernists.
ReplyDeleteanything that "where Peter is" says is suspect
ReplyDeleteIts above me to argue the demerits and intricate details- I just want to know...is it possible to shout out "BLasphemy!" if I ever see a priest bless in these instances.
ReplyDeleteI know the custom is for the laity to be silent and listen and take things in- there is a limit to this. Some things are intolerable.
Good reflection, Boniface.
ReplyDeleteA question: "In the Church, a law that a substantial number of bishops will not implement is not capable of being enforced and hence not a good law." I wonder if we can't say that Ex Corde Ecclesiae failed this test, too?
@Richard,
ReplyDeletePerhaps so. To a certain extent, all Church laws presume the cooperation and good will of bishops to enforce. If they are not capable of such enforcement, that does not absolve us from the necessity of at least *trying* to obey them to the best of our ability, but it does make them bad laws.
I thought it would take a few years to see a congregation in the pews that resembled the counter cultural values - not a matter of weeks.
ReplyDeleteSee: Rorate Caeli recent report of St Patrick Cathedral, the place needs an exorcism now.