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Joseph Ratzinger's Theology of Political Ethics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

Cardinal Ratzinger has brought out an essay collection whose third and most substantial part is devoted to what can be called the theological foundation of political ethics. These essays are worth examining, not only for their own conceptual merits, but also for the light they throw on the criticism of liberation theology which has come from the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith under his leadership, as indeed on the interventions in favour of human rights made by Rome during the time of John Paul II.

What emerges from the analytic summary which is offered in this article is, I believe, a twofold conclusion. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is headed by a powerful and original theological mind. That mind is, however, alien to the philosophical and theological tradition which has provided the customary idiom for the magisterial interventions of the popes in both dogmatic and ethical issues for the last hundred years. Almost no trace of Christian Scholasticism in its Thomist-Aristotelian form can be found in these writings. Rather do they draw for their inspiration on a variety of sources rarely tapped by figures in the Cardinal’s position: Christian Platonism in its various historic manifestations; the Catholic Tubingen school of the early nineteenth century, which worked out an account of the relation between revelation and reason in the light of Kant’s critique of human understanding; and, not least, the voices of European literature.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1987 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 Ratzinger, J., Kirche, Ökumene und Politik (Einsiedeln 1987)Google Scholar: cited henceforth as KÖP.

2 Gibellini, R., II dibattito sulla teologia delta liberazione (Brescia 1986)Google Scholar is perhaps the best account of these documents in context.

3 Walsh, M. and Davies, B., Proclaiming Justice and Peace. Documents from John XXIII to John Paul II (London 1984)Google Scholar; Biffi, F., ‘Diritti umani da Leone XIII a Giovanni Paolo II’, in Concetti, G. (ed.), I diretti umani. Dottrina eprassi (Rome 1982), pp. 199243Google Scholar.

4 KÖP p. 142.

5 Adorno's, Notably T.W. Negative Dialektik (Frankfurt 1966)Google Scholar.

6 Ratzinger, J., Introduction to Christianity (ET London 1969), pp. 3039Google Scholar.

7 KÖP p. 145: the term I have paraphrased as ‘irrelevance’ is Fachidiotie:‘specialisation lunacy’.

8 KÖP p. 148.

9 Ibid. p. 151.

10 Ibid. p. 224.

11 Cyril of Scythopolis, Vita Sabae c. 15, cited KÖP, p. 222.

12 Schieder, T., Hermann Rauschnings ‘Gespräche mit Hitler’ als Geschichtsquelle (Opladen 1972), p. 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar, cited KÖP, p. 153.

13 On Schneider, whose writing was banned under the Third Reich, see von, H.U. Balthasar's study, Reinhold Schneider. Sein Weg und sein Werk (Cologne 1953Google Scholar).

14 Las Casas vor Karl V. Szenen aus der Konquistadorenzeit (1938).

15 KÖP p. 195.

16 Cited after the (simultaneously published) Italian version, Chiesa, ecumenismo e politico (Milan 1987), p. 180Google Scholar.

17 cf. Libertatis conscientia 23.