CTC402 Review of Dei Verbum Draft 2
CTC402 Review of Dei Verbum Draft 2
CTC402 Review of Dei Verbum Draft 2
In so far as it dealt with revelation, the First Vatican Council (1869-70) set out
its teaching1 against a religious and cultural background permeated by
Enlightenment rationalism, fideism and certain forms of deism. This teaching
presented revelation in terms of the communication of divine mysteries, the
doctrine of the faith and the deposit of revealed truths; these were embodied
to some extent in those inspired and inerrant works of Scripture that the
Church considered her own; they were received by the faithful by means of
what Newman would have called a ‘notional assent’.2 In his encyclical
Providentissimus Deus (1893), Pope Leo XIII cautiously recognised the value
of certain linguistic and exegetical studies that had been applied to Scripture
by mainly Protestant scholars. However this thawing of attitudes was halted
by the Church’s reaction to the Modernist crisis and pronouncements by
Popes Pius X (1903-14) and Benedict XV (1914-22) effectively silenced
Catholic thinkers such as Marie-Joseph Lagrange who were trying to promote
a more scholarly and critical reading of the Scriptures. After a couple of trying
decades for Catholic scholars a complete about-face in thinking about
revelation and scriptural study was achieved by Pius XII (1939-58) who in his
encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu (1942) inaugurated what has been called a
‘Magna Carta’ for biblical progress.3
1
cf the decree Dei Filius (1870)
2
cf Newman, The Grammar of Assent, Longmans (1930), Chapter IV; for a fuller discussion
see J Hick, Faith and Knowledge, Collins (1974), Ch 1: Faith as propositional belief.
3
R. Brown et al (eds.), The New Jerome Biblical Commentary (1990), p. 1167
3
2 Vatican II in its Context: Review of the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Liturgy, Dei Verbum
Three distinct points can be made about revelation in Dei Verbum. First there
is a movement away from revelata (truths disclosed) to revelatio (personal
disclosure). God chooses to ‘reveal himself and to make known the mystery of
his will’.4 This self-revelation of God takes place in history ‘by deeds and
words which are intrinsically bound up with each other’.5 The appropriate
mode by which this revelation is received is not so much intellectual assent as
a faith by which ‘man freely commits his entire self to God’.6 Secondly Dei
Verbum emphasises the christocentric character of revelation. Contrasting
with the Vatican I decree Dei Filius dealing with the mystery of God in which
there is very little reference to Christ as a source of revelation, Dei Verbum
says that Jesus ‘completed and perfected Revelation’ 7 The God revealed in
Jesus is also the God who will be shown in his full glory in the Second
Coming of Christ. Dermot Lane points out that ‘this fullness of revelation in
Christ does not exclude growth and development in our appropriation of the
Christ-event … Thus the closure of revelation is in another sense its
openness for man in the life of the Christian community.’8 Lastly, contrasting
with the anti-Modernist condemnations of the appeal to experience when
4
DV, 2, p. 750
5
DV, 2, p. 751
6
DV, 5, p. 752, my emphasis.
7
DV, 4, p. 752
8
Dermot A Lane, The Experience of God: An invitation to do theology, Veritas 1981: Ch 2 p.
47
3 Vatican II in its Context: Review of the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Liturgy, Dei Verbum
considering revelation, Dei Verbum affirms that it was through experience that
Israel came to know the ways of God with men. 9
9
Cf DV, 14 p. 759.
10
DV, 9 p. 755
11
that is, in his Development of Christian Doctrine
12
DV, 8 p. 754
13
particularly his Unity in the Church or the Principle of Catholicism
14
DV, 9 p. 755
15
DV, 10 p. 756
16
DV, 11 p. 757 ‘Since … all that the inspired authors … affirm should be regarded as
affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must acknowledge that the books of Scripture, firmly, faithfully
and without error, teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see
confided to the sacred Scriptures.’
17
See The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, op cit. p 1169.
4 Vatican II in its Context: Review of the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Liturgy, Dei Verbum
A. Hastings has remarked that the two short chapters on the two Testaments
are ‘most valuable for what they do not say’18, avoiding as they do the
censures and warnings that some at the Council were seeking.
The Council stated that the mission of the Church is above all to “reveal the
mystery of God, who is the ultimate goal of man.”22 Dei Verbum contributes to
this mission by inviting Catholics to see revelation as a relational encounter
involving the whole person.
1027 words
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Austin Flannery OP (Ed), Vatican Council II: The Conciliar and Post Conciliar
Documents, Costello (1975)
R Brown et al (Eds), The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, (1990)
A Hastings, Modern Catholicism, (1991)
A. Lane, Christian Thought, Lion (1984)
D A Lane, The Experience of God, Veritas (1981)
18
A. Hastings, Modern Catholicism, (1991) p. 76
19
DV, 21 p. 762
20
see Jerome, Comm. in Isaias, Prol.: PL 24, 17.
21
See Paul McPartlan notes Revelation: Vatican I to Vatican II with reference to DV, 25 p. 764
22
Gaudium et Spes, 41.
22
5 Vatican II in its Context: Review of the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Liturgy, Dei Verbum