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National Bishops Correct Theologian
The theologian at Marquette University who was publicly corrected by the U.S. Bishops Committee on Doctrine showed no sign of changing his opinions. And the university didnât show any sign of disciplining him.
BY TIM DRAKE REGISTER SENIOR WRITER
April 8-14, 2007 Issue |
Posted 4/3/07 at 7:00 AM
MILWAUKEE â In a rare move, the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops has publicly corrected an American theologian on
his opinions regarding life and marriage issues.
The bishopsâ Committee on Doctrine
publicly declared that two pamphlets published by Marquette University moral
theology professor Daniel Maguire on contraception, abortion, and same-sex
unions âdo not present authentic Catholic teaching.â
Maguire told The New York
Times March 23 that he had sent his pamphlet on same-sex âmarriageâ
to members of Congress and state legislators in Wisconsin. One member of the
bishopsâ committee, Cardinal Avery Dulles, said Maguire wanted to convince
politicians that the Church has no unified position on these issues and that
that was a reason for the bishops to quickly issue a statement about his
writings.
In a statement and in an interview
with the Register, Maguire showed no sign of backing down. In addition,
Marquette University showed no indication of disciplining its professor of
theology.
The bishopsâ committee, which was
comprised of eight bishops and two cardinals, made its announcement March 22,
responding to a letter that Maguire had sent to the U.S. bishops last summer.
The Committee on Doctrine wrote the statement; it was approved for publication
by the U.S. bishopsâ administrative committee, which was made up of the bishops
who are present chairmen of the various committees.
Last June, Maguire said that the
U.S. Catholic bishops needed to âget off ⊠the pelvic issuesâ and address
issues of poverty, peace, justice and the environment. Maguire sent a letter to
all 270 U.S. bishops, including two pamphlets â The Moderate
Roman Catholic Position on Contraception and Abortion and A
Catholic Defense of Same-Sex Marriage.
âSince there is no infallibly
defined position on either abortion or same-sex unions, a similar modesty would
enhance episcopal teaching,â wrote Maguire in his letter. âThat teaching
ministry would best be conducted by recognizing that modesty is called for when
one teaches in areas where infallibility is not an issue, where the teachers
have no privileged expertise, and where good people from all faiths reasonably
disagree.â
Maguire told the Register that what
prompted his letter to the bishops was his belief that the bishops arenât open
to talking about the issues.
âItâs my belief that the bishops
arenât open to dialogue,â said Maguire. âTheologians have largely written off
the bishops.â
He argued that according to what he
called the Churchâs âcriteriology,â not everything is de Fide,
but that most issues are debatable. In his letter to Milwaukee Archbishop
Timothy Dolan, Maguire cited a condemnation by Pope Alexander VIII, saying,
âthis condemnation said that when there are good reasons supported by reputable
scholars, the most restrictive opinion should not be enforced.â
 âThe main point of my letter was not the
issues in the pamphlet, but that they are debatable,â said Maguire. âThe
bishops would be the most effective leaders in the world if they would go on
board with issues such as poverty, the unjust war, and the double basting of
the planet.â
Maguire said that his great regret
during his 40 years as a theologian is that 90% of the calls he receives from
politicians are questions on what he terms the âpelvic issues.â
âThey [the politicians] have judged
that those are the only issues on which the Church is serious,â said Maguire.
âMy friend Charles Curran once received a telephone call from Jimmy Carter. He
was being called on the issue of abortion.â
Used to Be Anti-Abortion
Maguire said that he used to be
against abortion.
âThe more I studied it, the more I
realized that it can be a proper choice,â he said. âVery few hold that itâs a
negative absolute. The majority of theologians agree.â
As examples, Maguire pointed to
cases where a bipolar woman who is on lithium becomes pregnant, or where a
woman who is pregnant has cancer and needs immediate chemotherapy.
âAs soon as you allow some cases, it
moves into the realm of the possible,â said Maguire. âI teach students that
both positions are perfectly defensible.â
On the issue of same-sex unions,
Maguire said, âItâs a harsh judgment to say that one should never express their
sexuality whatsoever.â
âI find the bishops guilty of
theological autism,â said Maguire. âThey are in a small universe and are not
communicating with others.â
But the bishops take a different
view.
 âWe ⊠concur that, despite his claims to
authority as a Catholic theologian, the views of Professor Maguire on
contraception, abortion, and same-sex âmarriageâ are not those of the Catholic
Church and indeed are contrary to the Churchâs faith,â said the bishopsâ
committee. âWe deplore as irresponsible his public advocacy of his views as
authentic Catholic teaching.â
The committeeâs statement went on to
explain why Maguireâs positions were wrong.
âPope Paul VI entered into a
thorough study of this issue precisely in order to produce a definitive
judgment that would bring to an end the disputes among theologians,â said the
bishopsâ statement. âIn the end, he upheld the teaching, consistently taught
within the Christian tradition that contraception is intrinsically wrong, for
it is not in accord with the purposes of marital sexual intercourse, that is,
to express and foster love in a manner that is open to new life.â
Likewise, the bishops wrote,
âCatholic tradition has never supported abortion. The Second Vatican Council
clearly stated that âlife must be protected with the utmost care from the
moment of conception: Abortion and infanticide are abominable crimes.â
Finally, on the subject of same-sex
unions, the bishops wrote: âGod created men and women for one another, that, in
marriage, they might sexually give themselves to one another for the
procreation of children.â Because homosexual acts do not result in the loving
union of a man and a woman nor are they ordered to the procreation of children,
they are intrinsically disordered, they wrote. âIt is this intrinsically
disordered nature of homosexual acts that prevents a âsame-sexâ union from
expressing an authentic Christian understanding of marriage.â
In response, Maguire said that it
was arrogant of the bishops to âclaim a monopoly on insight in the Catholic
community.â
âGood people from all the worldâs
religions (including Catholics) differ on the sexual and reproductive issues on
which the bishops seem impaled,â said Maguire in a March 23 statement he
e-mailed the Register following the bishopsâ statement. âThe bishops treat them
as defined dogmas, and they are not. When I speak, I speak as one theologian.
When the bishops (who are not theologians; they are pastors and administrators)
speak on moral issues, they pretend to speak for the whole Church.â
Among Theologians
Maguire
is not without support.
âWhat
is ⊠interesting to me about this interchange is the different way the USCCB
think of what is âCatholicâ vs. what Dan Maguire is thinking,â said Vincent
Smiles, professor of theology at the College of St. Benedict and St. Johnâs
University in Collegeville, Minn. âThey define âCatholicâ strictly in terms of
recent Vatican pronouncements on the matters in question; Dan Maguire
implicitly defines âCatholicâ in terms of a much broader and more ancient set
of criteria.â
Smiles
cited specific examples.
âHe
[Maguire] appeals to Acts 10 (âDo not call unclean what God has made cleanâ),
to pre-modern same-sex Church âmarriageâ rites, and to critical principles of
biblical interpretation â all in a manner and quite contrary to anything the
USCCB or the Vatican is likely to accept,â said Smiles. âIf the USCCB were to
try to answer Dan Maguire in detail, it would not be easy for them to do so.
âThe magisterium, as in this case,
satisfies itself with making pronouncements based on its own perspective, but
refuses to engage the more complex questions of the criteria on the basis of
which such matters are disputed,â added Smiles.
Others disagree.
âMaguire and his cohorts believe
that the Church can teach infallibly on a general plane, but not on specific
issues,â said Janet Smith, professor of moral theology at Sacred Heart Major
Seminary in Detroit. âThe Ten Commandments are quite specific. There really is
a long, unbroken tradition in the Church against these issues. This is what has
always been taught.
âMaguire wants to focus on the last
30 years, as if the dissent outweighs all the unanimity of the past,â added
Smith. âCertain teachings have been intensely debated at particular times, but
that debate does not define the status of the question.â
Cardinal Dulles
In Maguireâs letters, he quotes
theologian Cardinal Avery Dulles to support his own points â saying that there
are multiple magisteria within the Church, and that dissent can be of service
to the Church.
Cardinal Dulles, who served on the
bishopsâ committee, disagreed with Maguireâs use of his own quotations. He
described them as being taken âout of context.â
âMy
position has distinguished between the magisterium of the official Church and
the teaching office of the theologian. They donât have the same emphasis or
function in the Church,â the cardinal told the Register. âMaguire overlooks
that distinction and makes them out to be parallel magisteria. On that point we
sharply differ.â
On
the role of dissent within the Church, Cardinal Dulles agreed that dissent can
be justifiable in cases where the magisterium has not clearly resolved an
issue.
âOn
matters where they are definitive, there is not room for dissent,â said
Cardinal Dulles. âEven in cases where the magisterium has not spoken
infallibly, dissent should be rare, reluctant and respectful. I think his
[Maguireâs] dissent is rather brash. Whereas it may be occasionally justified,
he takes it to mean that itâs always justified.
âI would think that the positions
[taken by the Church on abortion, contraception and same-sex unions] are
definitive,â the cardinal said. âThey have been called that by organs of the
Holy See.â
Prior to the bishopsâ statement,
Archbishop Dolan responded to Maguire with a personal letter, as well as with a
column in the archdiocesan newspaper, the Milwaukee Catholic Herald.
According to Capuchin Father Thomas Weinandy, executive director for the
bishopsâ Secretariat of Doctrine and Pastoral Practices, the committee wanted
to support Archbishop Dolan.
The actions of the bishops, to some,
seem unusual without collaboration of the Vaticanâs Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith, but those involved in the action say that it seems
unusual only because itâs so rare. Yet, itâs not unprecedented.
âThere are very few precedents for
things like this being done,â said Father Weinandy. He alluded to previous
statements issued by the committee regarding work by theologians Richard
McBrien and Roger Haight. âThe bishops felt that they needed to say something
because of the widespread distribution of these pamphlets. They were most
concerned with him stating that there is no one magisterium â that the bishops
are just one voice out there amidst other voices. They wanted to make it clear
that the bishops are the authentic proclaimers, interpreters, and defenders of
the Gospel.â
âIt was felt that it couldnât be
delayed indefinitely,â said Cardinal Dulles. âHe was sending these pamphlets to
a lot of politicians to try to convince them that the Catholic Church has no
unified position on these issues. It was important to state that the Catholic
Church has unified positions.â
âThe encouraging thing is the
statement from the bishops,â said Smith. âIt makes one euphoric. They didnât
set up a commission to look into this; they did it on their own. They got the
pamphlets and said they were junk.
âThis
process of looking at these pamphlets says nothing about his status as a
theologian, but by implication it does,â Smith added. âIt should tell people
that heâs not reliable.â
âAside from the obvious scandal of
Daniel Maguireâs false presentation of Catholic doctrine, it seems that the
greater scandal is that a Catholic university would hold him out as a Catholic
theologian,â said Patrick Reilly, president of the Cardinal Newman Society.
âThat fact continues to be absent from the bishopsâ chastisement of Maguire.
Marquette University, perhaps, deserves the greater censure for giving him the
platform to spread misinformation.â
Maguire said that he isnât planning
on taking a next step.
âI have no plan to reengage the
bishops. This didnât turn out to be very fruitful,â said Maguire. âI just plan
on continuing my career as a Catholic theologian.â
Marquette University issued a
statement March 26 saying it agrees with the bishopsâ statement âthat the views
outlined by Daniel Maguire in pamphlets he circulated to the hierarchy earlier
this year do not represent the teachings of the Catholic Church.
âDr. Maguire circulated the
pamphlets as an individual theologian, not in any way representing the views of
the university,â Marquetteâs statement said. âAs a citizen, Dr. Maguire has a
right to express his views on the issues of the day. As a tenured professor, he
also has rights related to his academic discipline.â
Tim Drake writes from
St. Joseph, Minnesota.
âBlatantly Erroneousâ
In an Aug. 24, 2006, column in the Milwaukee
Catholic Herald, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee,
Archbishop Timothy Dolan said he had sought advice about what to do about
dissenting theologian Daniel Maguire. He explained how he finally came to a
decision to write about it publicly:
âHe has dramatically dissented from
clear Church teaching for decades. After my arrival here four years ago, I
sought counsel as to whether or not I should publicly warn the faithful about
his erroneous opinions. Voices I considered wise advised me that this was not
necessary, since the great majority of our people already recognize his views
as clearly inconsistent with legitimate Catholic teaching.
      âRegrettably, he recently has
widely distributed two pamphlets claiming that, as preposterous as I know it
sounds, abortion and same-sex âmarriageâ are consistent with Catholic
teachings. Because of the response generated among shocked and thoughtful
people in the archdiocese, I feel obliged to exercise my teaching responsibilities
and say such positions are blatantly erroneous and contrary to the clear
teaching of the Church. To claim the acceptability of such opinions is simply
wrong and disingenuous.â
â Tim Drake
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