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Why America Needs the Pope
BY Father Dwight Longenecker
April 20-26, 2008 Issue |
Posted 4/15/08 at 12:43 PM
The “three-legged stool” is the way Anglicans explain their
understanding of authority in the church. The three legs are Scripture,
Tradition and Human Reason.
At first, this sounds like a pretty good basis for making
decisions. The difficulty, however, is that without a trustworthy external
authority all three of the legs are shaky.
Scripture on its own can be used to prove most anything.
Both sides have an interpretative tradition that skews the Scripture toward
their pre-determined conclusions. The interpretation of Scripture is therefore
dependent on the prior assumptions.
If you are in favor of homosexuality you interpret the
Scripture one way. If opposed you interpret it another way.
The same is true of the other two legs of the Anglican
stool. Tradition and Human Reason should be external forces that shape the
minds and hearts of believers. Instead, the hearts are already determined and
the minds are already made up.
Subsequently, Tradition is mined for evidence to support
one’s case, and Human Reason is used as a tool to win debates, manipulate the
evidence, weight the argument and twist the truth.
The result is not a three-legged stool, but a theological
pogo stick.
This is why Anglicanism is in such disarray. Extend the
image: Think of every Anglican prelate, bishop, theologian and priest in a
desperate race each on his own pogo stick. Each one is desperately jumping
around trying to keep his balance, trying to stay on his pogo stick while at
the same time trying to make forward progress and fight the other fellows in
the race to the finish line.
Lest Catholics be accused of smug self-righteousness, we
have much of the same problem in the Catholic Church today.
Catholics of all stripes are devoted to causes of all kinds that
they put before the authority of the Church.
The “Rad Traddies” have a whole range of causes and beliefs
ranging from sedevacantism to enthusiasm for traditional devotions, right-wing
causes and the traditional Latin Mass.
“Rad Trendies” have a whole range of causes from homosexual
rights, women priests, Marxist theory and liturgical reform.
Both ends of the extreme (and lots of people in between) are
sincere people. They are prayerful people. They all believe they are led by the
Holy Spirit. They wholeheartedly believe that Scripture, Tradition and Reason
are on their side. But they have all fallen into the Anglican error of using
Scripture, Tradition and Human Reason as a resource for proof texts, precedents
from the past and sensible reasons for support of their particular cause.
So the proof texts fly. The examples from the past are
presented. The rationale is explained and the reasoning laid out, but no one is
convinced. All that happens is that both sides return to their corner, gather
their arguments and wait for the bell for the next round.
This is why the modern Church so desperately needs, not a
three-legged stool, but the Chair of Peter.
The Chair of Peter has four legs: Scripture, Tradition,
Human Reason and I would add, Facts — Common Sense. On top of these four legs
is the seat into which they all fit, and this — to extend the metaphor — is the
magisterium. The magisterium is the united, continuous, living, universal
teaching authority of the Catholic Church.
The magisterium keeps Tradition, Scripture, Human Reason and
Facts together and in balance. The magisterium prevents Scripture, Tradition
and Human Reason from becoming proof text mines for people with preset agendas.
To show that the Chair of Peter is not simply a museum
piece, someone sits on it: the pope, the successor of Peter. The reason the
pope is so important to modern Christianity is because he is one person who,
through depth of knowledge, breadth of vision, wealth of advice and expertise,
can see the big picture.
The pope’s authority transcends vagaries of individual
fashion, time and political expediency. The pope’s authority transcends local
pressures, intellectual trends, moral dilemmas and subjective social opinions.
There is simply no other authority system in the world that is universal in
such an expansive and objective way.
This is why, as the Holy Father leaves America after his
short visit, Americans need the Holy Father. We need him because he helps us
transcend America. He helps us realize that there is something bigger than
ourselves; something greater than our great nation.
He gives us a universal perspective — universal in time and
universal in place. The Holy Father’s authority transcends our isolated and
narrow-minded political correctness, our petty relevant religious agendas, our
private views of “how the Church should be,” our individualistic opinions on
Catholic morality and our private views on Church doctrine.
Submission to the bishop of Rome is not subservient
toadyism. Through submission to the pope we gain an expansive perspective. We
see history, and our place in it from a wide panorama.
Living in continuity and community with the pope is to build
our house upon a rock. It is to transcend our blinkered vision and glimpse the
larger world and the greater plan. In short, to submit to the authority of the
pope is not to place ourselves beneath the feet of a tyrant, but to sit on the
shoulders of a giant.
Father Dwight Longenecker
is chaplain to St Joseph’s Catholic School
in Greenville, South Carolina.
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