I would like to briefly discuss the Vatican II peritus Yves Congar's reception of Cardinal Newman's thought, especially in the former's contribution to the drafting of the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation, Dei Verbum. Like all Conciliar documents, Dei Verbum is saturated with references to scripture, the Fathers, and past Councils, but it refers to no modern theologian except for some popes. Hence, trying to pinpoint which sentences and paragraphs in the document are “Newmanian” is a difficult, if not impossible, task. Nevertheless, what I can, and intend, to do, is to present some of the explicit points of reception of Newman's thought in Congar's own writings, leaving it to the reader to speculate about the extent to which Newman was in the forefront of Congar's mind as he was drafting key passages of Dei Verbum. In the crucial chapter in question, Dei Verbum 8, which we attribute to Yves Congar, I will suggest that Congar had St. Thomas in the forefront of his mind, and John Henry Newman not far behind.
Congar was already fairly-well acquainted with Newman's thought before the Council. In the 1930s he was aware of Newman's place in the history of theology as exemplified in his lengthy contribution to the Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique's entry on ‘theology’. In his 1950 introduction to theology entitled La foi et la Théologie, Congar was already dedicating sections to Newman. By the time of his 1960–63 two-volume masterpiece Tradition and Traditions, Congar was actively engaging with detailed aspects of Newman's thought. Congar's indebtedness to Newman was considerable, as is clear from his recourse to his Dominican confrère and Newman expert, Jan Walgrave of Louvain and the French philosopher Jean Guitton, whose La Philosophie de Newman: essai sur l’idée de développement of 1933 was influential for him. Of the nearly one thousand authors referenced in his great opus of the conciliar period, Congar cites only a half-dozen or so writers — both ancient and modern — more often than he cites Newman. It is from these explicit points of reception in Tradition and Traditions that we can distill the Newmanian influences when Congar helped draft Dei Verbum.
In Tradition and Traditions, for example, Congar lauds Newman's articulation of the relationship between scripture and tradition.Footnote 1 Congar also refines some of Newman's thoughts in a very nuanced way such as when he compares Newman's Illative Sense to the Church's Sensus Fidelium.Footnote 2 While not being uncritical of Newman, Congar also makes note of Newman's distinction between conscience's moral sense and its sense of duty — a distinction which Congar finds ‘foreign to genuine Thomistic tradition.’Footnote 3 There are more examples,Footnote 4 but I mention these to show that Congar's engagement with Newman was far from a cursory familiarity. Congar read Newman and read him closely.
Of the numerous points of reception, I have discerned two main tenets in Congar's theology of tradition which have Newman as their main protagonist. Congar is indebted to Newman for the following: first, the consideration of the church as an active and living subject and, secondly, the view that this active subject, the church, includes all the faithful, including the laity. Both of these points are present — in varying degrees of explicitness — in both Tradition and Traditions and Dei Verbum. A proper understanding of Dei Verbum, especially Section 8, is only possible when one allows for these two elements that are clearly Newmanian in character, namely: that the Church is not merely passive, but active in its reception of the revealed deposit that is transmitted; and that all Christians, by virtue of their baptism, have the capacity to contribute to the deposit.
That Yves Congar was amongst the drafters who made up the commission that formulated this passage is indisputable.Footnote 5 It was during the second session that Congar — together with Umberto Betti (1922–2009) and Karl Rahner (1904–1984) — was assigned to the project on the nature of tradition and revelation transmitted in the church.Footnote 6 In his commentary on Section 8, Joseph Ratzinger writes, ‘It is not difficult … to recognize the pen of Y[ves]. Congar in the text’.Footnote 7
It is in Section 8 that we find the seminal paragraph in Dei Verbum which formally recognizes that doctrine develops over time. In addition, Section 8 seeks to give a general, if not intentionally vague, description of how this development happens. The promulgated draft reads,
This tradition which comes from the Apostles develops in the Church with the help of the Holy Spirit. For there is a growth in the understanding of the realities and the words which have been handed down. This happens through the contemplation and study made by believers, who treasure these things in their hearts (Lk 2: 19, 51), through a penetrating understanding experienced by believers, of spiritual realities, and through the preaching of those who have received through Episcopal succession the sure gift of truth.Footnote 8
One may now make some connections between what is present here in the conciliar text and Congar's own writings which were composed during the council itself. In doing so, I simply hope to add some colour and detail to the background of the portrait depicting Newman's influence on this paragraph which expresses the church's general, but nevertheless definitive, teaching on doctrinal development.
Regarding the first main tenet, the active engagement of the believer, we observe that Dei Verbum 8 is clearly concerned with those activities which contribute to the church's growth in her understanding of the deposit of revelation. This growth in understanding is the result of an active engagement described in terms of contemplation and study, and an ‘intimate understanding’ of spiritual things.
Congar's awareness of his debt to Newman in this regard is evident in Tradition and Traditions. In Congar's amendation of what he considers to be Franzelin's useful but inadequate, distinction between active and passive traditions, Congar emphasises that the reception of the objective content of tradition is performed by a living and active subject. To illustrate the active nature of this reception, Congar quotes Newman's famous fifteenth University Sermon in which Newman, drawing upon St. Luke's words, ‘Mary kept all these things in her heart’Footnote 9 describes her as ‘our pattern of Faith’, who is not satisfied with simply reflecting upon or assenting to ‘divine truth’ but who actually ‘develops it’. In doing so, Newman, says, ‘she symbolizes to us, not only the faith of the unlearned, but of the doctors of the Church also, who have to investigate, and weigh, and define, as well as to profess the Gospel.’Footnote 10 This passage sets the tone for Congar's entire project on the nature of tradition and its dynamism as it is represented in Dei Verbum 8.
When Congar comments on this quotation, he draws attention to the traditional belief that rightness in one's personal life is a prerequisite for rightness in knowledge concerning divine things. In making this claim, Congar highlights the grace-filled and active character of the Christian's reception of tradition.
In this same section, Congar also describes tradition as an apprehension of the divine realities, or as a grasping of the treasure which living Christianity has possessed as a reality from the beginning, and which passes progressively, as a result of reflection, from the level of the implicit [l’implicite vécu] to that of the expressly known [l’explicite connu].Footnote 11 In a word, this grasping of divine realities, which has holiness as its prerequisite, is a principle of development.
With regard to the second main tenet, the holistic conception of the Church, Dei Verbum makes no distinction within the body of Christians whose understanding of the deposit grows. Rather, according to Dei Verbum, all Christians — lay, clerical, religious — by virtue of their baptism, can penetrate the deposit, contributing to an increased understanding of the mysteries.
The most straightforward aspect of Newman's thought that is scattered throughout Congar's ‘Theological Essay’ in Tradition and Traditions is Newman's patristic conception of the church, in which the church, as an organic whole with its different roles, offices, and functions, includes both the hierarchy and the laity.Footnote 12 Newman's inclusive ecclesiology is rooted in the threefold office into which all Christians are baptized. The real and necessary distinction, then, between the Ecclesia discens and docens does not necessitate a passive infallibility of the kind proposed by Franzelin. Congar, rather, subscribes to the idea defended by Newman according to which the sensus fidelium is not limited to the act of the magisterium but adds to it its own value as testimony and, possibly, an element of development.Footnote 13 Congar sees in Newman's conception of the sensus fidelium not simply an echo or mirror of magisterial teaching, but a locus for potential development. Let us now take a more detailed look at the active nature of the Christian's reception of the faith.
The final text of Dei Verbum states three ways in which the church actively contributes to her increased understanding of the deposit of faith: (1) contemplation and study,Footnote 14 (2) an experience of an intimate understanding of spiritual things, and (3) Episcopal preaching.Footnote 15 The last was added only to the final definitive document as the original draft conceived of development through only (1) and (2), and even these were more simply formulated. Hence, according to the original draft, two things contributed to doctrinal development: contemplation (and study) and the intimate experience of spiritual things.Footnote 16
Now, is it any accident that a little less than twenty years earlier in 1946, when he was asked to write the dictionary entry on ‘theology’, Congar wrote the following?:
This effort of perceiving the revealed Object can be done in two different ways, which are also the two ways of dogmatic progress. It can be done on the way of supernatural contemplation [la voie de la contemplation surnaturelle], based on an affective union with God. Or it can be done by way of theological contemplation [la voie de la contemplation théologique], based on activity of knowledge of the rational and discursive type.Footnote 17
A few lines down, Congar continues, explaining that in contemplation surnaturelle, the soul possesses God in His mystery ‘by way of experience’ or ‘vital connaturality’, whereas in contemplation théologique the soul does so through cognition.Footnote 18 In the latter, the object of faith is penetrated by rational work, whereas in the former the penetration is achieved by charity.Footnote 19 Now I contend that this dual motif in Congar's dictionary article mirrors exactly the dual motif in the first draft of Dei Verbum. Footnote 20 The twofold mode of growth in the first draft of Dei Verbum corresponds exactly to the Congarian conception of dogmatic progress, which also happens to be identical to the scholastic modes of perception of the divine Object.
The various textual monuments of tradition reveal that Dei Verbum's ‘intima intelligentia’, or Congar's contemplation surnaturelle, is attributed to the intellective gifts of the Holy Spirit: wisdom, understanding, and knowledge.Footnote 21 Such an ‘experiential knowledge’Footnote 22 or ‘judgment without reasoning caused by love’Footnote 23 are, according to Romanus Cessario, ‘meant to develop an “experiential”, “supra-rational”, or “affective” way of laying hold of divine truth in the believer’.Footnote 24 Such a theological conception has roots extending into the patristic period. Adolphe Tanquerey, for example, in his treatise on ascetical and mystical theology cites numerous authors, both ancient and modern, to illustrate this kind of experiential knowledge and understanding. St. Augustine's ‘spiritual senses’ is one such example.Footnote 25
In essence, Congar basically takes St. Thomas's modes of perceiving the divine object — rational and connatural — and extends them as the two principal ways by which doctrines develop.
At this point, however, one may rightly ask on what basis does Congar take this step? What inspired Congar to take St. Thomas's two modes of perceiving the divine object and make them additionally the two modes of dogmatic progress? The answer, I suggest, is Newman's passage in the fifteenth University Sermon, with which Congar was very familiar as we have seen. That doctrinal development progresses as a result of rational penetration of the mysteries was nothing new to either Congar or Newman. Scholastics of the seventeenth- and eighteenth-centuries were already admitting the contribution of deductive argumentation to the development of dogma. But Congar's contemplation surnaturelle, or vital connaturality which results from an affective union with God becomes, in Dei Verbum, a way to dogmatic progress through, I suggest here, encountering Newman's sermon in which a similar loving affectivity is described. But when Newman describes this loving affectivity, he does so, not in terms of perceiving the divine object, but in terms of developing it. According to Newman's Sermon, Mary's reflection stems from ‘love and reverence’, not from, say, rational principles. Newman points out that she is the model not only for the learned but also for the unlearned; for theologians as well as non-theologians; or, in the words of Dei Verbum, for those who ‘contemplate and study’ on the one hand, and for those who undergo an intimate understanding of divine things, on the other.
Congar's encounter with Newman, then, was a significant contribution to the genesis of Dei Verbum. Generally, Newman aided Congar in observing the following three things: 1) that grasping the divine object is active in nature, 2) that this grasping is a principle of development, and 3) that all Christians, by virtue of their baptism, can contribute to this development through living the theological life of grace. Especially important for the genesis of Dei Verbum was the intersection between Congar's treatment of Newman in Tradition and Traditions and his scholastic description of St. Thomas’ divine modes of perception in his dictionary article. Dei Verbum 8 emerged when, Congar — like Newman — placed these modes of perception in the context of Luke ch.2. Congar cited Luke because he found Newman's ruminations on the same passage so compelling for the task at hand: namely, to demonstrate how it is that the church's understanding of divine truth progresses, with faith as her starting point.
We may never know, but perhaps Congar was also familiar with Cardinal Newman's Meditation on the Kingdom of God, which echoes both his fifteenth Sermon with its Marian reference and, like Congar, distinguishes between the rational and the connatural ways of laying hold of divine truth. So, let Newman have the last word in describing this distinction which is so seminal to Dei Verbum:
I need Thee to give me that true Divine instinct about revealed matters that, knowing one part, I may be able to anticipate or to approve of others. Lord Jesus, teach me, like Mary, to sit at your feet, and to hear your word. Give me that true wisdom, which seeks your will by prayer and meditation, by direct intercourse with you, more than by reading and reasoning.Footnote 26