Showing posts with label Liturgy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liturgy. Show all posts
Sunday, April 01, 2018
Saturday, February 25, 2017
St. Thomas: We Catholics Do Adore Images
St. Thomas: We Catholics Do Adore Images
Adapted from Francisco J. Romero Carrasquillo, "Aquinas’ Reception of John of Damascus’ Philosophy of Religious Worship," (forthcoming).
You can download the original paper (draft) from my Academia.edu page.
Protestants have always accused Catholics of "worshipping images." The standard response of Catholic apologists is simply to deny the charge, and instead respond that we really just 'venerate' the images. This type of response is not only grossly insufficient, but actually runs afoul of the language of our tradition, as expressed in the writings of the saints. For example, a Protestant can easily search through St. Thomas and find him saying that we do adore images. When a Protestant brings this up to an untrained Catholic apologist, the apologist usually has nothing intelligent to say in reply.
In order to solve this puzzle, let's do what we do best: "Go to Thomas" (Ite ad Thomam).
In order to solve this puzzle, let's do what we do best: "Go to Thomas" (Ite ad Thomam).
According to St. Thomas, the first and most important of the exterior acts of religion (religio), i.e., of the virtue of worship (ST IIa-IIae, q. 81-100) is that of ‘adoration’ (adoratio). The terminology here can be misleading. We might be inclined to think of 'adoration' as simply being synonymous with ‘worship’, the kind of reverence that is reserved to God alone. But Aquinas, who in this regard simply follows the received tradition, together with its complex and sophisticated theological language, already has a particular Latin term for divine worship, namely, látria (from the Greek, λατρεία, latréia). Adoratio for Aquinas means concretely any kind of a physical humbling of the body, such as genuflections, prostrations, bowing down, etc., before something sacred or something that is worthy of respect or veneration. As such, adoratio signifies primarily a physical act comprising a set of bodily postures. Within the context of divine worship, these acts of adoratio are of course done as signs of an interior attitude of latria, but in themselves they are physical acts. This is how it can be explained why we find St. Thomas saying that Catholics can and should 'adore' images.
But the problem is deeper than that. We actually find him saying that we should offer latria to images. Yes, the worship due to God alone, should be given to images. Why?
One of the most important practical points that St. Thomas makes in Christology is that Christ’s humanity, though in itself created, is deserving of the ‘adoration of latria’ in virtue of its Hypostatic or Personal Union with the Second Person of the Trinity: “the adoration of latria is not given to Christ’s humanity by reason of itself, but by reason of divinity to which it is united.”[i] This is in contrast to the ‘adoration of dulia’, which is the kind of veneration given to the Saints and their relics, and that of hyperdulia, which is given to the Mother of God.
Yet, perhaps surprisingly, the humanity of Christ is not the only creature which is in some way deserving of latria. There are other created things that are formally associated with Christ's humanity and thus are themselves deserving of latria (without this entailing the sin of idolatry): these are the true Cross of Christ—the actual historical instrument of Christ’s passion—as well as any image or icon of Christ. By ‘icons’ or images we mean any pictorial representation of Christ, or of the Cross of Christ, whether in fresco form, or mosaics, “made of colors, pebbles, any other material that is fit, set in the holy churches of God, on holy utensils and vestments, on walls and boards, in houses and in streets,” in the words of the Second Council of Nicaea (AD 787), which addressed the issue of Iconoclasm, the anti-icon heresy that crept into the Church due to nascent Islam's hatred of religious imagery.[iv]
And interestingly, in another text, Aquinas relies again on St. John Damascene for a quote by St. Basil on this point. “Damascene quotes Basil as saying: ‘The honor given to an image reaches to the prototype,’ that is, the exemplar. But the exemplar itself, namely, Christ, is to be adored with the adoration of latria; therefore also His image.”[v] What follows this quote is a remarkable text, where Aquinas uses Aristotelian semiotics as a basic premise to address to the issue on his own terms:
As the Philosopher says in the book De Memoria et Reminiscentia, there is a twofold movement of the mind towards an image: one indeed towards the image itself as a certain thing; another, towards the image insofar as it is the image of something else. And between these movements there is this difference; that the former, by which one is moved towards an image as a certain thing, is different from the movement towards the thing: whereas the latter movement, which is towards the image as an image, is one and the same as that which is towards the thing. Thus therefore we must say that no reverence is shown to Christ’s image, as a thing, for instance, carved or painted wood: because reverence is not due save to a rational creature. It follows therefore that reverence should be shown to it only insofar as it is an image. Consequently the same reverence should be shown to Christ’s image as to Christ Himself. Since, therefore, Christ is adored with the adoration of latria, it follows that His image should be adored with the adoration of latria.[vi]
In other words, we can think of an image in two ways: as a thing in itself, or as a sign. When we think of it as a thing in itself, we do not necessarily treat it as we treat the object of which it is a sign, but when we do think of it as a sign, we treat it in the same way as we treat the object of which it is a sign. For example, if I look at a picture of my wife, it is entirely reasonable for me to point to the picture and say “I love her.” No one would think that what I mean is that I love the picture itself, qua inanimate object. All of my affection in this case is directed at the person of my wife, almost as though the picture were not involved. I do not give the picture itself a different kind of love from the love I give my wife. To paraphrase Basil and Damascene, my attitude towards the image is directed at the exemplar. Hence, it matters not whether I point to the picture and say “I love her” or actually point to my wife and say “I love her”: it is the same love that is expressed in both cases. Aquinas is saying that similarly, in the case of religious worship, it matters not whether the latria given to Christ is given to Him directly or by means of an image or icon: it is latria all the same. The worship given is not directed at the image in itself as a thing, but to Christ through the image, the latter being only a sign that leads the mind to Christ.
Given this doctrine on the adoration of images, Aquinas has now the trouble of explaining why, even though in the Hebrew Scriptures the use of images was forbidden in worship, the prohibition nonetheless no longer applies since the coming of Christ. He cannot simply claim that the prohibition is only of adoring images, and that Christians only venerate them, as many contemporary Christians would argue. Rather, he is committed to the doctrine that images of Christ are deserving of latria. His response focuses instead on the doctrine of the twofold movement of the mind towards an image, affirming that whereas in the case of Old Testament idolatry, the adoration of images was adoration of the gods of the gentiles, where since the coming of Christ the adoration of images is of God Himself made man.
[B]ecause, as was said above, the movement towards the image is the same as the movement towards the thing, adoration of images is forbidden in the same way as adoration of the thing whose image it is. Therefore here we are to understand the prohibition to adore those images which the Gentiles made for the purpose of venerating their own gods.... But no corporeal image could be made of the true God Himself, since He is incorporeal; because, as Damascene says, “It is the highest absurdity and impiety to make a figure of what is Divine.” But because in the New Testament, God was made man, He can be adored in His corporeal image.[vii]
In other words, according to Aquinas, the great difference between the Judaism and Christianity in regards to the adoration of images is that in Judaism, God cannot be represented in imagery because God is strictly incorporeal, but in Christianity God is believed to have taken human flesh and it is therefore possible not only to represent Him, but also to worship him, through imagery.
A few points on the reception of this doctrine in later Catholic theology are in order here. This analysis of the use of images in worship, which Aquinas shares not only with Damascene, but also with other prominent 13th Century sources such as Albert, Bonaventure, and the Summa Fratris Alexandri, is not standard within modern Catholic theology. Later Catholic theologians such as Bellarmine, Bossuet, and Petavius taught that the proper attitude due to religious images is not that of latria, but a veneration along the lines of dulia.[viii] And this latter opinion has become a commonplace in contemporary Catholic theology, catechesis, and especially apologetics. And yet, rather inconsistently, John Damascene and Aquinas are still frequently used as reference points on the issue. For example, the Catechism of the Catholic Church (AD 1992) teaches that “[t]he honor paid to sacred images is a ‘respectful veneration’ (reverens veneratio), not the adoration (adoratio) due to God alone.”[ix] Rather astonishingly, right after making this statement, the Catechism immediately quotes Aquinas' words for support:
The cultus of religio is not rendered to images as considered in themselves, as things, but insofar as they are images leading to God incarnate. Now the movement directed to an image insofar as it is an image does not stop at the image itself, but tends towards that of which it is an image.[x]
Although the quote in the Catechism ends here, the text of St. Thomas continues: “Hence neither latria nor the virtue of religion is differentiated by the fact that religious worship is paid to the images of Christ.”[xi] Clearly, this text points to an account of the use of images in worship that is at odds with what the Catechism teaches in the preceding line, since the basic idea in this text of Aquinas is that the same latria is given to the image of Christ as to Christ Himself.
Some Thomists and commentators have used the language of ‘relative latria’, to describe the worship due to an image of Christ. This terminology should not lead us to think that the latria offered to the image is of a different sort from the latria given to Christ. The image is indeed being given latria in relation to Christ, Who is the terminus of the one movement of latria; but as Aquinas says, it is one movement of the mind that tends to both the image of Christ and to Christ Himself, one and the same latria being offered to both.
The take-home message is that we do adore images (i.e., we bow down to them, kneel before them, etc.). But 'adoring' in this sense refers to just an exterior religious act. The inner religious act that is expressed outwardly in adoration depends on what the image is of. If the image is of Christ, then, yes, we give latria to the image; or more precisely, to Christ in the image. We do not give latria to the image simply because it is an image, but because it is an image of Christ, the God-man. And if the image is of a saint, then we give dulia to the image, or rather to the saint in the image. And in the case of images of Our Lady, it is hyperdulia. There is nothing wrong with doing this: it is the same movement of the mind that is directed to the image and to the person in the image. Christ is thus deserving of the same latria, or worship, whether in person or in an image. To do otherwise would amount to a misuse of images.
So let us be traditional Catholics. Let us not feel pressured by un-Catholic (ultimately Protestant) cultural sensibilities to miss the importance and value of Catholic iconography, religious sculpture, and sacred art in general. Let us confidently adore Christ in our icons and statues. And venerate our Saints in our images. That is why these sacramentals fill our churches (or should fill them). They are there as a powerful religious resource, and not as a 'mere symbol' or decoration. The Church has so much confidence in them as powerful sacramentals, as "windows to heaven," that she dedicated a whole Ecumenical Council to defending them.
The Eastern Churches have the beautiful tradition of celebrating this council, "The Triumph of Orthodoxy" as they call it, in their liturgies every year on the first Sunday of Great Lent by processing around their churches holding icons up high. It is quite a spectacle to behold. Let us imitate them in defending the faith through these wonderful trophies of the Incarnation.
Notes:
[i] ST III.25.2 ad 1: “Adoratio latriae non exhibetur humanitati Christi ratione sui ipsius, sed ratione divinitatis cui unitur.”
[ii] Ibid. s.c.: “Adoratio latriae non exhibetur humanitati Christi ratione sui ipsius, sed ratione divinitatis cui unitur.”
[iii] Ibid., c.: “Sed quia, ut dicit Damascenus, si dividas subtilibus intelligentiis quod videtur ab eo quod intelligitur, inadorabilis est ut creatura, scilicet adoratione latriae. Et tunc sic intellectae ut separatae a Dei verbo, debetur sibi adoratio duliae, non cuiuscumque, puta quae communiter exhibetur aliis creaturis; sed quadam excellentiori, quam hyperduliam vocant.”
[iv] Second Council of Nicaea (Denzinger 302 [600]; Mansi 12, 377D): “tam quae de coloribus et tessellis, quam quae ex alia materia congruenter in sanctis Dei ecclesiis, et sacris vasis et vestibus, et in parietibus ac tabulis, domibus et viis....”
[v] ST III.25.3 s.c.: “Damascenus inducit Basilium dicentem, imaginis honor ad prototypum pervenit, idest exemplar. Sed ipsum exemplar, scilicet Christus, est adorandus adoratione latriae. Ergo et eius imago.”
[vi] ST III.25.3c: “Respondeo dicendum quod, sicut philosophus dicit, in libro de Mem. et Remin., duplex est motus animae in imaginem, unus quidem in imaginem ipsam secundum quod est res quaedam; alio modo, in imaginem inquantum est imago alterius. Et inter hos motus est haec differentia, quia primus motus, quo quis movetur in imaginem prout est res quaedam, est alius a motu qui est in rem, secundus autem motus, qui est in imaginem inquantum est imago, est unus et idem cum illo qui est in rem. Sic igitur dicendum est quod imagini Christi inquantum est res quaedam, puta lignum sculptum vel pictum, nulla reverentia exhibetur, quia reverentia debetur non nisi rationali naturae. Relinquitur ergo quod exhibeatur ei reverentia solum inquantum est imago. Et sic sequitur quod eadem reverentia exhibeatur imagini Christi et ipsi Christo. Cum igitur Christus adoretur adoratione latriae, consequens est quod eius imago sit adoratione latriae adoranda.”
[vii] ST III.25.3 ad 1: “Et quia, sicut dictum est, idem est motus in imaginem et in rem, eo modo prohibetur adoratio quo prohibetur adoratio rei cuius est imago. Unde ibi intelligitur prohiberi adoratio imaginum quas gentiles faciebant in venerationem deorum suorum.... Ipsi autem Deo vero, cum sit incorporeus, nulla imago corporalis poterat poni, quia, ut Damascenus dicit, insipientiae summae est et impietatis figurare quod est divinum. Sed quia in novo testamento Deus factus est homo, potest in sua imagine corporali adorari.”
[viii] Cf. F. Cabrol, “The True Cross,” in The Catholic Encyclopedia, New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908.
[ix] Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 2132: “Honor sanctis imaginibus tributus est reverens veneratio, non adoratio quae soli Deo convenit.”
[x] ST II-II.81.3 ad 3: “Imaginibus non exhibetur religionis cultus secundum quod in seipsis considerantur, quasi res quaedam: sed secundum quod sunt imagines ducentes in Deum incarnatum. Motus autem qui est in imaginem prout est imago, non sistit in ipsa, sed tendit in id cuius est imago.”
[xi] Ibid.: “Et ideo ex hoc quod imaginibus Christi exhibetur religionis cultus, non diversificatur ratio latriae, nec virtus religionis.”
Thursday, February 23, 2017
Christianize your Greek Pronunciation: Say Your Greek Prayers the Traditional Way
Christianize your Greek Pronunciation: Say Your Greek Prayers the Traditional Way
As is well known, Ecclesiastical Latin has its own pronunciation--or family of pronunciations, if we include regional variants, the prevailing one being the italianate pronunciation. This pronunciation is notably different from what scholars since Erasmus' De recta latini graecique sermonis pronutiatione (1528) have been telling us would have been the original, historical pre-Christian pronunciation of Latin (of the weni-widi-wiki variety). Of course, we have no certainty about the way Latin was really spoken in classical times, simply because we have no audio recordings of it. And the written clues the ancients left us only go so far. The reconstruction is inevitably somewhat artificial.
Moreover, although few scholars would acknowledge it, the matter is significantly aggravated by the fact that English-speaking scholars are particularly bad at capturing the phonetic nuances of Mediterranean languages. (You can make a Mexican laugh by asking one of these professors to sing "La Cucaracha" as best they can.) Most native English speakers, no matter how smart, have no business trying to reconstruct what Latin would really have sounded like around the First Century AD. The way their brain-tongue neurons connect is dramatically un-Mediterranean.
Most people in the Church are aware of these differences and have sensibly embraced the ecclesiastical pronunciation of Latin as being just the way Latin is realistically pronounced. We speak Latin with the pronunciation we have gratefully received from our ancestors in the Faith. It may not be historically rooted in Cicero, Virgil, or Ovid, but it is certainly what we have been handed down. This is so much the case that, for Catholics who encounter Latin in the liturgy on a daily basis, using a 'classical' Latin pronunciation in Church would be laughable. And of course in academic circles, these same Catholics use the ecclesiastical pronunciation, even when they are reading classical texts. The revival of Latin that we have been witnessing in the Church is happily based on the received traditional pronunciation.
Yet what few Catholics, scholars or otherwise, realize is that Greek, too, is an ecclesiastical language. Yes, there are Greek Catholics, Greek liturgies, with Greek prayers, and even Greek chant. And no, it's not just the Eastern Orthodox who use these things. It is all originally Catholic, and continues to be essentially Catholic.
And just like in Latin, in Greek there is a huge difference between the way it is pronounced in actual practice in the Church and the way Erasmus and his modern followers suppose it was spoken in classical and early Christian times. One of the most notable differences has to do with the issue of iotacism (in ecclesiastical Greek ι, η, υ, ει, οι, ηι, υι are all pronounced |i|, like a iota, so you hear that sound a lot). The phonetic details lie outside of the scope of this post, but the main point is that if you are exclusively familiar with one way of doing it, hearing the other way of doing it can be highly distracting, funny, and even annoying or simply unintelligible.
But if you call the Latin rites your liturgical home, and are blessed to have studied Greek (or at least the rudiments of it), chances are you are unaware of the ecclesiastical pronunciation. You probably learned the "Erasmian" pronunciation; you pronouce Greek with the (purportedly) 'classical', bookish pronunciation of secular academics. Even if you took courses in Biblical Greek, you were taught to use this half-made-up, half-historical, wholly-dead pronunciation. If you are a philosopher, you habitually talk about episteme, not realizing Greek philosophers actually pronounce it "eh-pis-tee-mee." And perhaps most embarrasing of all, you were taught to pronounce Κύριε ελέησον (Kýrie eléison), as "Koo-ri-eh eh-leh-eh-son," despite your liturgical instincts telling you otherwise. Something is clearly wrong.
So if the above paragraph describes you, then I have a challenge for you. Christianize your Greek pronunciation. Make it more Catholic. Make it traditional. Not historically accurate, or authentically ancient (or whatever). But authentically Byzantine, the way it was handed down within the Byzantine Empire and up to our own day. In a word: traditional.
As is the case with the purportedly classical pronunciation of Latin, the 'classical', or rather Erasmian, pronunciation of Greek, is an artificial reconstruction and has no native speakers on the whole Earth who use it. Much of it is still a matter of debate. Modern Greeks speak modern Greek, which is grammatically distinct from Ancient, Koine, and liturgical Greek, and even when they pronounce their liturgical Greek prayers, they use the received pronunciation. Yes, indeed, "there’s an entire country of people who speak Greek and can’t bear to listen to the awful linguistic barbarity known as Erasmian." Just as no Catholic in their right mind would ever bear to hear chanted "Sal-way Re-gi-na" (even though supposedly that is the correct pronunciation, according to most Latin instructors) so a Greek, no matter how scholarly, would consider it an insult to God's ears to pronounce His revealed Word, originally penned in Greek, in this reconstructed, Erasmian invention. The Catholic spirit is to embrace what one has reverently received. So we sing Κύριε ελέησον (Kýrie eléison).
A good way to start Christianizing your Greek is by learning the Our Father, the Πάτερ ἡμῶν (Páter imón). Below is the text, and an audio recording of an entire Byzantine Divine Liturgy (Holy Mass). Skip to 1:00:44 to hear the recitation of the Πάτερ ἡμῶν. Repeat until you've memorized the text, understood the words, and internalized the beauty of the sounds of Ecclesiastical Greek.
Πάτερ ἡμῶν ὁ ἐν τοῖς οὐρανοῖς,
ἁγιασθήτω το ὄνομά σου,
ἐλθέτω ἡ βασιλεία σου,
γενηθήτω το θέλημά σου,
ὡς ἐν οὐρανῷ και ἐπι τῆς γῆς.
Τον ἄρτον ἡμῶν τον ἐπιούσιον
δος ἡμῖν σήμερον·
και ἄφες ἡμῖν τα ὀφειλήματα ἡμῶν,
ὡς και ἡμεῖς ἀφίεμεν τοῖς ὀφειλέταις ἡμῶν·
και μη εἰσενέγκῃς ἡμᾶς εἰς πειρασμόν,
ἀλλα ῥῦσαι ἡμᾶς ἀπο τοῦ πονηροῦ.
Here are other decent examples, both recited and sung:
And if you try and just cannot get yourself to pronounce it that way, it's ok. Just, whatever you do, please do not pronounce it this way:
I hear that and I immediately imagine God the Father wincing from Heaven.
Labels:
Byzantine Tradition,
Greek,
Liturgy,
Prayers
Thursday, February 16, 2017
2017 Sacred Liturgy Conference
2017 Sacred Liturgy Conference
New video ad for the 2017 Sacred Liturgy Conference
Medford, Oregon (July 12-15):
Join me, along with Cardinal Burke, Archbishop Sample, Bishop Vasa, Fr. Saguto, FSSP and other presenters for a three-day immersion in the Church’s sacred liturgy and its living musical heritage, hosted by Sacred Heart Church in Medford, Oregon. The theme of the 5th annual conference is “The Voice of the Bridegroom,” and will focus on sacred liturgy, Church history, and the role of Gregorian chant. Cardinal Burke will give a lecture and celebrate a Solemn Pontifical High Mass assisted by priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter.
Keynote presentations:
Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke (Rome)
Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
- "Liturgical Law and the Mission of the Church."
Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
- "Liturgical Law and the Mission of the Church."
Archbishop Alexander Sample (Portland)
- "The Prayers of the Fathers: Exploring Summorum Pontificum."
- "The Prayers of the Fathers: Exploring Summorum Pontificum."
Bishop Robert Vasa (San Francisco)
- "The Heart of the Liturgy: Essential Dogma and Belief."
- "The Heart of the Liturgy: Essential Dogma and Belief."
Fr. Gerard Saguto, FSSP (Elmhurst, PA)
North American District Superior of FSSP
- "The Offertory: Prelude to Sacrifice."
North American District Superior of FSSP
- "The Offertory: Prelude to Sacrifice."
I will also be giving two presentations: "St. Thomas and Divine Liturgy" and "Natural Law and Worship," and will lead one of the chant workshops, "Chanting the Ordinary."
Please share the video above, visit the website, view the schedule. You might want to registersoon, since already more than one hundred people have registered.
Please share the video above, visit the website, view the schedule. You might want to registersoon, since already more than one hundred people have registered.
Labels:
Conferences,
Liturgy
Friday, February 10, 2017
Sacred Liturgy Conference in Medford, Oregon with Card. Burke (July 12-15, 2017)
Sacred Liturgy Conference in Medford, Oregon with Card. Burke (July 12-15, 2017)
Join me, along with Cardinal Burke, Archbishop Sample, Bishop Vasa, Fr. Saguto, FSSP and other presenters for a three-day immersion in the Church’s sacred liturgy and its living musical heritage, hosted by Sacred Heart Church in Medford, Oregon. The theme of the 5th annual conference is “The Voice of the Bridegroom,” and will focus on sacred liturgy, Church history, and the role of Gregorian chant. Cardinal Burke will give a lecture and celebrate a Solemn Pontifical High Mass assisted by priests of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter.
Keynote presentations:
Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke (Rome)
Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
- "Liturgical Law and the Mission of the Church."
Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
- "Liturgical Law and the Mission of the Church."
Archbishop Alexander Sample (Portland)
- "The Prayers of the Fathers: Exploring Summorum Pontificum."
- "The Prayers of the Fathers: Exploring Summorum Pontificum."
Bishop Robert Vasa (San Francisco)
- "The Heart of the Liturgy: Essential Dogma and Belief."
- "The Heart of the Liturgy: Essential Dogma and Belief."
Fr. Gerard Saguto, FSSP (Elmhurst, PA)
North American District Superior of FSSP
- "The Offertory: Prelude to Sacrifice."
North American District Superior of FSSP
- "The Offertory: Prelude to Sacrifice."
I will also be giving two presentations: "St. Thomas and Divine Liturgy" and "Natural Law and Worship," and will lead one of the chant workshops, "Chanting the Ordinary."
Please share the attached poster, visit the website, view the schedule. You might want to register soon, since already more than one hundred people have registered.
Labels:
Conferences,
Liturgy
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Our Lady's Breasts, Pope Francis' Comment, and the Iceberg of Catholic Culture
Our Lady's Breasts, Pope Francis' Comment, and the Iceberg of Catholic Culture
First of all, I'd like to apologize for this post, which is really just a rant. It's not on a speculative theological matter, so I cannot just rely on the scholastic method to deduce a solution to the problem. It's a faith-based reflection on a real life problem that I have encountered in my journey as a traditional Catholic. Most of my conversations with traditional Catholics, or with people who are just beginning their love affair with the traditional Mass, naturally tend to focus on doctrinal and liturgical matters. Sadly, many 'trads' understand the concept of being a traditional Catholic in doctrinal and liturgical terms, and never see that, in the end, becoming a traditional Catholic is so much more than that, and has to do with culture. As a philosopher, theologian, and scholar, I am used to deductive, demonstrative reasoning and I therefore often struggle to communicate this non-scholarly, existential idea in a convincing way to people. Granted, this is not a serious moral issue, like that having to do with the reception of Holy Communion by those in adulterous unions. But to me, it is symptomatic of a much deeper problem.
So, this issue will inevitably be seen differently by people in different countries, and in different circles within the same country. And because in practial matters there may be many correct ways of acting, even opposing views on the issue may be found to be reasonable.
In this case, in Latin America for example there is a very strong sense among the general Catholic population---even many traditional Catholics---that breastfeeding is completely out of place in Church, that it is disrespectful, even indecent; whereas for example among traditional Catholics in the US, especially large families attending a TLM, no one would bat an eye over a mom nursing her baby, especially if done with a nursing cover. Non-traditional Catholics in the US and Europe tend to lie somewhere in the middle.Social media is abuzz over this issue, with lots of people, notably from Latin America, disapproving the practice as well as the Pope's remark. Why would some Catholics, especially in some cultures, be so strongly opposed to this statement of the Pope, and generally opposed to the practice of nursing a baby in church? I think ultimately it is because they have let an anti-Catholic culture dominate their minds, perhaps without realizing it. Culturally they have become unaccustomed to life, to the natural family, to the growing family.
We often do that: we allow a new way of thinking creep into our minds, and unconsciously let it dictate how we think; not necessarily at the level of dogma, or at the level of first moral principles, but we let it influence our unexamined attitudes and sensibilities. I have noticed this happen in other areas of life. For example, in the last twenty years it is easily noticeable there has been a profound shift in the way people think about homosexuality. I'm not talking about people who now are pro-homosexual marriage. I'm talking about faithful Catholics who are against it, but who have nonetheless allowed the surrounding culture (or lack thereof) transform their attitude towards homosexuals. They reject homosexual marriage, but their attitude towards homosexuals is now entirely different from the way it was twenty years ago: before, they thought of homosexuals as mentally-ill, perverted, and even dangerous people---nearly everybody did. But now that homosexuals have fully revealed their social revolutionary agenda, and the media has campaigned in their favor, these people now have passively agreed to think of homosexuals in entirely different, primarily positive terms. They drank the Kool Aid without realizing it.
Yet homosexuality is just another issue among many that are symptomatic of a crisis in the Western view of marriage and the family. It is an important issue, a grave problem to be sure, but it is by no means the only one.
The deeper crisis is that the culture (or lack thereof) that we have been imbibing in the West since at least the mid-20th century is against every natural aspect of the family as God intended it to be, especially as it concerns the nature of womanhood. Feminism has pressured the West to think that women flourish only by emancipating themselves from the chains of motherhood and engaging in professional work. Feminism has forced us to believe that women are to have at most two children, and thus having a child is an exceptional event in an adult woman's life. Feminism has made us think that once a woman has given birth, it is her duty to detach her baby from herself as soon as possible, so that she may return to 'normal' life, i.e., professional work. This often means either weaning the baby as soon as possible or not breastfeeding at all; it means switching to formula and bottle-feeding so that others can care for the baby and she can leave to work. And this brings with it other problems. Because fertility returns soon after the baby is weaned, this creates a false urgency for contraception. Recall that nursing on demand usually is a natural way of spacing births. Not all women are like this, but it does work in most cases. It is the way God intended for mothers to be able to focus on their babies and bond with them without having to deal with the discomfort of another pregnancy while their baby is still very young. In the case of many women, they become infertile for a year or two while the baby is exclusively fed mother's milk, directly from the breast, and strictly on demand. But this natural order is disturbed when the baby is not nursed on demand, but nursed on a schedule, or bottle-fed, or given formula, etc. So weaning, formula and bottle-feeding, women in the workplace, contraception: it all goes hand-in-hand.
Because this way of seeing things is so ingrained in the minds of some Catholics, especially in some cultures like Europe and Latin America, a child being nursed has become a rare event. In Europe especially, even just seeing children is rare; let alone a child being nursed in public. Most children are fed formula from a very young age, so people in general have grown completely unaccustomed to seeing children being nursed in public. Not just in church, but anywhere.
Because they don't use them, these people have strangely forgotten what breasts are for. And as a result they have by default attached an exclusively sexual meaning to them. Hence the perceived indecency of nursing in public.
If, on the other hand, a woman decides to be so counter-cultural that she chooses to rear her child in a thoroughly natural way, the way God designed things, she has no option but to do things that people around her will consider odd. She cannot choose when the child will want to eat. The baby cries and whines when he wants milk, and it is at that moment that she must feed him---both for the baby's sake and her own, and those who are around her. It is greatly inconvenient for her to leave the church to do this, especially if there is no cry-room (a very American phenomenon, by the way, which is relatively rare in other countries). In some cases, not being able to nurse at church means she cannot attend Mass.This sort of cultural clash can be violent. It is not at the level of dogma, so there is no clear-cut way for the traditionally-minded woman to be vindicated by Church teaching. And even though the issue touches on Catholic morality, the immediate issue of where a woman may nurse her baby is a prudential matter that is not dictated by Catholic moral principles. Despite feminist pressures she is heroically embracing her femininity and following her maternal instinct in feeding her baby when he needs it, even if this means subjecting herself to the criticism of others. It is sad to see these valiant mothers have to suffer through this.
These painful experiences are a sign that a good number of Catholics drank the cultural Kool Aid of the West and see the human body, especially the female body, in a hyper-sexualized way, so that they think of women exclusively as sexual symbols and can no longer admire and respect the beauty of motherhood. Breasts inevitably mean sex. They are not for children, because children drink formula. They are just sexual play things. As a result, we have lost sight of the beauty of a nursing mother, and have no other way of looking at nursing but as something indecent, disrespectful, or demeaning, which is definitely not a Catholic attitude.In order to illustrate this last statement in a powerful way, I have included in this post several pictures of the Blessed Mother nursing the divine Child. If any of the images I have shared here disturb you, then very likely you have been the victim of non-Catholic (or anti-Catholic) cultural sensibilities creeping into the way you see reality. You may be thinking that because it is the Blessed Mother, it is very different from the case of an ordinary mother nursing her child in church. But I think that if Our Lady can be so portrayed without damaging her purity, then a fortiori an ordinary mother nursing her child should not shock us. They did not portray her nursing the Child because of some supernatural privilege that she had over all other women to show her breasts. On the contrary, she is the supreme model of feminine modesty and purity. That is, if the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose purity sacred art has taken such great pains to defend, is portrayed in this way, it is only because traditionally Catholic artists in past ages have seen nursing as just a natural, motherly act, and the Blessed Mother doing it will not be seen as anything immodest, indecent, or demeaning.
In fact, not only are Catholic artists traditionally comfortable with pictorially portraying the Blessed Virgin's breasts. Catholics throughout the ages have constantly celebrated the "blessed... paps that gave Thee suck" (Luke 11:27) in liturgical texts and song.
For example, in the pre-1960 Roman Divine Office, every day, every priest and cleric had to praise the breasts of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the end of every one of the liturgical hours:
Translation:
This text and its variants have become part of the corpus of our sacred music.
For example, in the pre-1960 Roman Divine Office, every day, every priest and cleric had to praise the breasts of the Blessed Virgin Mary at the end of every one of the liturgical hours:
V. Beata viscera Mariae Virginis, quae portaverunt aeterni Patris Filium.
R. Et beata ubera, quæ lactaverunt Christum Dominum.
Translation:
V. Blessed is the womb of the Virgin Mary, that bore the son of the everlasting Father.
R. And blessed are the breasts which gave suck to Christ the Lord.
You may be wondering by now where I am going with all this. The moral of the story is this: Being a traditional Catholic is not just about the Latin Mass, or just about upholding traditional dogma. It is about Catholic culture as well. It's about not drinking the cultural Kool Aid, and instead finding a way of immersing oneself as much as possible in the Catholic culture that we did not naturally receive through our upbringing. It is not enough to know the old Mass by heart, to be able to quote Denzinger from memory, and to recite the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary faithfully throughout the week. Being a traditional Catholic means letting Catholic culture thoroughly influence us.
And culture influences us deeply indeed. It permeates every aspect of our minds, from our religious beliefs, to the way we talk, dress, and interact with others, including our assessment of aesthetic values and our affective responses to the world. It especially has a way of affecting our unexamined beliefs, attitudes, and sensibilities. That is to say, our beliefs as Catholics are not just in the Trinity and the Incarnation. Or in pastoral practices concerning the relationship between marriage and the reception of Holy Communion. All of that is just the tip of the iceberg. Our Catholic culture permeates our psyches somewhat like this:
Our Catholic formation goes much deeper than doctrine and morals, and reaches down to our human formation, to our unquestioned, unexamined attitudes, sensibilities, dispositions, behaviors.
If you are deeply immersed in a non-Catholic (or anti-Catholic) culture, chances are that even if you persevere and keep the faith, some of your unexamined sensibilities will suffer alterations in ways that run afoul of Catholic tradition. You may make it to heaven, and you may even become a great saint, but you will not be able to understand or appreciate other, often more Catholic perspectives on certain things. Even if you have a superior theological, moral, and liturgical formation, you will perhaps not be as Catholic (or Catholic-minded) as people in other traditionally Catholic countries or in other more thoroughly Catholic ages when the social Kingship of Christ was in place. Concretely, if you live in one of many English-speaking countries, which are historically or demographically Protestant, such as the United States, England, Australia, etc., this will inevitably happen, even if you are unaware of it. You become aware of it only when you suddenly encounter a Catholic practice, custom, or perspective which---though hallowed by time and by the endorsement of centuries of Catholics, of saints, and popes---is deeply contrary to your unexamined sensibilities.
If you are deeply immersed in a non-Catholic (or anti-Catholic) culture, chances are that even if you persevere and keep the faith, some of your unexamined sensibilities will suffer alterations in ways that run afoul of Catholic tradition. You may make it to heaven, and you may even become a great saint, but you will not be able to understand or appreciate other, often more Catholic perspectives on certain things. Even if you have a superior theological, moral, and liturgical formation, you will perhaps not be as Catholic (or Catholic-minded) as people in other traditionally Catholic countries or in other more thoroughly Catholic ages when the social Kingship of Christ was in place. Concretely, if you live in one of many English-speaking countries, which are historically or demographically Protestant, such as the United States, England, Australia, etc., this will inevitably happen, even if you are unaware of it. You become aware of it only when you suddenly encounter a Catholic practice, custom, or perspective which---though hallowed by time and by the endorsement of centuries of Catholics, of saints, and popes---is deeply contrary to your unexamined sensibilities.
You are a traditional Catholic to the extent that you strive to immerse yourself in traditional Catholic culture in all its aspects.
Labels:
Bioethics,
Catholic Culture,
Ethics,
Liturgy,
Mariology,
Marriage and the Family,
modernism,
Moral Theology,
Popes,
Women
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