A Revival Cut Short
By D.Q. McInerny
D.Q. McInerny is a professor of philosophy at Our Lady of Guadalupe
Seminary in Denton, Nebraska. He holds B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees in
philosophy from the National University of Ireland, University College
Cork. Among his latest published books are Natural Theology (2005),
Epistemology (2007), An Introduction to Foundational Logic (2012), and
The Philosophy of Nature (2014).
Ed. Note: The first installment of this two-part series appeared in our May issue [HERE].
We return to the question posed in Part I: How to explain the
extraordinary collapse of the Thomistic renewal? I submit the following:
First, the collapse was a particular expression of a larger phenomenon
of which it was but a part; second, it was the result of a pervasive
mania for change; third, it was the targeted victim of a resurgent
modernism. While these items do not provide a complete explanation, they
do go some distance toward providing at least an adequate one.
The profound disruption suffered by the Thomistic renewal was a
particular instance, a specific manifestation, of the widespread
consequences of the disruptive forces at play within the Church at large
in the period immediately following the Second Vatican Council — a
period of prolonged disorientation and disorder, which at certain times
and regarding certain matters, was quite severe. We might think of the
situation in metaphorical terms, as if the Church experienced a massive
spiritual and cultural earthquake. The edifice that was the Thomistic
renewal was unable to withstand the violent tremors, and its walls came
tumbling down.
The Thomistic renewal was not alone in this regard; there were other
edifices that suffered damage extensive enough to warrant the word collapse:
the ancient Latin liturgy, catechesis, religious orders, and, to one
degree or another, Catholic education at every level. As to the broader
picture, the Church before and after Vatican II is a study in dramatic
contrasts. It is as if we were viewing two entirely different Churches.
For someone for whom the “after” picture does not represent an
improvement over the “before” picture, the question naturally arises:
How is it possible that an institution that on one day appeared to be in
a robust state of health was, on the very next day, in need of
immediate therapeutic attention? A possible answer to this question, and
one that is perhaps more obvious than we are prepared to admit, is that
appearances can be deceptive. What looked like robust health was only
seemingly so. Now, might it be that a comparable response could be made
with regard to the state of the Thomistic renewal before its collapse?
As it happens, a response of precisely that sort has been made, a point
to which we will return presently.
In the wake of Vatican II, a veritable mania for change roared through
the Church, and many Catholics were swept off their feet and lost a
balanced perspective. It was as if change had become the supreme
imperative for the Church, as if her principal mission in the world were
to change, simply change, otherwise she would somehow not be acting
according to a correct reading of “the signs of the times.” What was
especially peculiar about this near obsessive concern with change is
that it was, in many cases, indiscriminate to the point of mindlessness.
It became a matter of change for the sake of change, as if virtue lay
in pure process, never mind where the process might be leading us.
Although there was little reasoned specificity as to what would be put
in place by change, there was remarkable clarity of vision as to what
had to be replaced by it: just about anything that had to do with the
pre-Vatican II Church.
The “improper appeal to authority” fallacy was a prominent feature of
this mania for change. The standard example of this fallacy is when we
cling tenaciously to something only because it is customary, firmly set
in place by habit, and on that account alone has commanding “authority,”
regardless of its intrinsic value. But we likewise succumb to this
fallacy when we reject something simply because it has a history
behind it, taking the attitude that, if it is old it has to be
discarded, regardless of its intrinsic value. When a people get caught
up in a frenzy of indiscriminate change, tradition necessarily suffers;
and when tradition suffers, the present becomes drained of a vivifying
consciousness. A today cut off from yesterday is one whose sun still
shines, but upon lands whose population is made up mainly of “hollow
men.”
Philosophers, as a type, are usually not apt to be swept off their
feet by a mania for change. But in this case, not a few Catholic
philosophers, who would have identified as Thomists, showed that they
too were not immune to the influence of this phenomenon. For many of
them, the infection took the form of something like a philosophical
identity crisis, a serious bout of professional embarrassment over the
fact that they were Thomists, as if by being such they were awkwardly
out of step with the rest of the philosophical world. They saw
themselves as dully distant from the cutting edge. Was not Thomism,
after all, a medieval philosophy, and therefore passé, obsolete,
dissonantly out of tune with the main melodic line of modern thought?
Distracted by such second thoughts about their intellectual commitments,
not a few of them decided, for the sake of bringing themselves up to
date with the brave new world of the 1960s, that they had better put
Thomism on the shelf and turn their attention to what were supposedly
more vital movements. Some drifted into analytical philosophy, which was
then ruling the academic roost in English-speaking countries; others
decided to take up one or another of the several versions of
phenomenology; still others became engaged in attempts to forge a
marriage between Thomism and a second philosophical system of one kind
or another. Apropos this last option, Archbishop Hélder Câmara of
Brazil, in an address at the University of Chicago in 1974 marking the
seven-hundredth anniversary of the death of St. Thomas, effectively
called for a combining of Thomism and Marxism! Just how many
philosophers sitting in that distinguished audience had pass through
their minds the thought that oil and water do not mix is impossible to
say.
Another explanation for the collapse of the Thomistic renewal has to
do with the resurgence of modernism within the Church, which occurred
in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Pope St. Pius X famously
described modernism as “the synthesis of all heresies”; he gave it a
detailed exposition in his encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis (1907), and an embellished treatment three years later in his motu proprio, Sacrorum Antistitum.
These documents had the beneficial effect of alerting Catholics to the
fact that modernism was a clear and present danger to the Church, but
although the documents put a damper on the movement, they did not
succeed in suppressing it. Modernists’ response was to take the
practical expedient of going underground, and for four decades they
functioned as something like a fifth column within the Church. Their modus operandi was to work behind the scenes.
That Rome recognized the movement as a continuing, operative presence within the Church well after the publication of Pascendi is attested to by Pope Pius XII’s promulgation of Humani Generis
(1950), an encyclical in which he echoes the various warnings against
the movement that had been sounded by his saintly predecessor in the
first decade of the century. Reading Humani Generis today is a
sobering experience; it makes one aware that just about all the problems
that plagued the Church in 1950 are still with us, and are still to be
contended with, sixty-five years later.
Modernism, as is true of most “isms,” is a complex phenomenon with any number of facets, as Pascendi
makes clear, but the particular feature of the movement that has direct
application to our discussion is the fact, pointed out and given
special emphasis by both Pius X and Pius XII, that modernists have shown
themselves to have a deep-seated and abiding antipathy toward
Scholasticism in general and Thomism in particular. When modernists
emerged from their underground bunkers right after the adjournment of
Vatican II, as vigorous and feisty as ever, they reasserted their
two-pronged philosophic prejudice in a bold and open way. Their
uninhibited expression of antipathy toward Scholasticism/Thomism was an
important factor in the collapse of the Thomistic renewal. Of this and
the previous two explanations given for the collapse, we can say that,
from an historical point of view, they all played a part, each in a
peculiar way, in bringing it about.
Returning to a point brought up earlier: Conjecture has it that an
additional (and possibly the best) explanation for the collapse of the
Thomistic renewal is that it was due not so much to external factors as
to internal ones. The basic idea is that the renewal was not what it
seemed to be, with regard to its perceived vitality and strength, that
it was beset by any number of in-house problems, and these eventually
caught up with it and account for its eventual dissolution. In other
words, the peculiar circumstances that prevailed in the Church after
Vatican II brought about an event that would have happened even had
there not been a Council.
In 1966, one year after the close of Vatican II, Doubleday published Thomism in an Age of Renewal
by the Thomist philosopher Ralph McInerny, in which he assumes an
attitude toward the Thomistic renewal that, in part at least, reflects
this latter explanation for its demise. What his book reveals, given
that it is a response to what was already a clearly detectable spirit of
anti-Thomism, is how quickly that spirit had made itself known and was
demanding attention.
McInerny, who earned his licentiate and doctoral degrees at Laval
University in Quebec under the direction of Charles De Koninck, was a
professor of philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, the philosophy
department of which was, at the time, thoroughly Thomistic. The
principal task McInerny set out for himself in his book was to lay out
the particulars of what could qualify as a genuinely Christian
philosophy — a task he accomplished with his typical clarity, cogency,
and stylistic verve. Following closely the thought of Pope Leo XIII as
articulated in Aeterni Patris (1879; the encyclical that launched
the Thomistic renewal), McInerny argues that a genuine Christian
philosophy would be one based on the thought and methods of St. Thomas
Aquinas. But he takes the position that the restoration called for by
Pope Leo was less than successful because the Thomism that had gained
ascendancy in the Church after the publication of the encyclical was not
the real thing. Therefore, he did not regard the negative
criticisms leveled against the kind of Thomism produced by the renewal
to be entirely unjustified.
McInerny quotes a pointed statement made by the eminent Dominican
philosopher and biographer of St. Thomas, Fr. James Weisheipl, in his
book Thomism as a Perennial Philosophy (1956): “It is a social
historical fact that the hope of Leo XIII has never been universally
realized in Catholic colleges, universities and seminaries. Not even the
ardent efforts of St. Pius X, Benedict XV, Pius XI, or Pius XII were
able to effect anything more than a closed, safe, and sterile Thomism,
imposed by legislative authority. Legislation did not stimulate a return
to the true thought and spirit of St. Thomas relevant to our day.” A
bit further on, Fr. Weisheipl writes, “Until the program of Leo XIII is
seriously attempted in a thorough and spontaneous manner, there will
always be zealous priests and laymen who react to what they only half
understand. Reactions against Thomism in the past half-century have
been, in fact, to a pseudo-Thomism, a half-understood Thomism.”
Though he does not endorse this rather harsh assessment without
qualification, McInerny, in the main, agrees with it. Referring to the
brand of philosophy he saw as the all-too-typical outcome of the
renewal, which he describes as a “rigid, catechetical Thomism” and a
“sterile Thomism,” he remarks, “It is not meaningless to say, therefore,
that a rejection of such Thomism has little or nothing to do with the
teaching of Thomas Aquinas.” Given his view that the restoration of a
genuine Christian philosophy had not taken place, due to the quality of
the Thomism sustaining it, McInerny ends his book by calling for a
renewal based on and animated by an authentic Thomism, a philosophy that
faithfully reflects the mind and the manner of the Universal Doctor.
Perhaps at the time, such a proposal seemed a real possibility
rather than mere wishful thinking, but subsequent events proved
otherwise. In retrospect, we can see that Thomism in an Age of Renewal
was a response to what were only the first relatively mild rumblings
that would develop into a major quake, in the wake of which Thomism,
whatever might be said of its quality, no longer held a governing role
in Catholic higher education.
Three pertinent questions remain: (1) How thorough was the
devastation wrought by the anti-Thomistic upheaval? (2) Was the
Thomistic renewal as complete a flop as Fr. Weisheipl would have us
believe? (3) What is the status of Thomism today?
Without question, the anti-Thomistic movement that followed hard
upon the Second Vatican Council had generally calamitous consequences.
In virtually all U.S. Catholic colleges, universities, and seminaries,
Thomism ceased to be a significant presence. Philosophy departments,
once plainly identifiable as Thomistic, became indeterminate and
amorphous, lacking integrating ideological centers; a smorgasbord
approach to the discipline of philosophy was commonly adverted to.
Although Thomism was widely abandoned at the institutional level, there
nonetheless remained, within just about every Catholic institution, at
least for a time, individual philosophers who retained their loyalty to
Thomism and who continued to fight the good fight on its behalf. And
that circumstance isn’t entirely a thing of the past. Today one can find
Thomists of the first rank at certain institutions, such as at the
University of Notre Dame, for example, the faculty of which includes
David Solomon, Alfred Fredosso, and Alasdair MacIntyre. And while most
colleges and universities have abandoned an institutional commitment to
Thomism, a few have managed to keep their philosophic wits about them.
One can point to the School of Philosophy at the Catholic University of
America, which maintained a steady, sane course through troubled times
under the able leadership of its dean, Prof. Jude Dougherty. Two Texas
schools also come to mind: the University of St. Thomas in Houston and
the University of Dallas. Mention should also be made of the Dominican
House of Studies in Washington, D.C., under the aegis of the Province of
St. Joseph.
It would be careless to reject out of hand the general assessment of the Thomistic renewal as found in books like Thomism in an Age of Renewal.
One may concede the point that the movement was not the sparkling
success it appeared, on the surface, to be. However, it is possible to
denigrate the movement to the point where one does not sufficiently
credit its distinctly positive aspects. It was, after all, a complex and
highly variegated phenomenon, with a lifespan of better than eight
decades. Bearing this in mind, it would not do to contend that it was an
unrelieved failure, or to argue that it represented a uniform betrayal
of the thought of St. Thomas.
While granting that the movement was not in every respect what it
could and should have been, and that it did not evolve into the
transforming force for philosophic good within the Church that Pope Leo
had envisioned, we should nonetheless recognize, with wonder, that
something extraordinary happened in the Church between the publication
of Aeterni Patris and the close of Vatican II. The Church today is better for its having happened, and worse for its having suffered cessation.
While some Catholics (those, doubtless, infected by modernism) might
have regarded the effort to restore a vibrant Thomism as unfortunate,
the eminent American philosopher Josiah Royce thought otherwise, and
even expressed fears that the effort might not succeed. On the occasion
of the death of Pope Leo XIII in 1903, he wrote, “Many students of
philosophy, of theology, and even of the natural sciences — students, I
mean, who have no direct concern with any of the internal affairs of
Leo’s own religious body — are still forced, although outsiders, to
recognize how important, for the general intellectual progress of our
time, the future outcome of the whole Neo-Scholastic movement in the
Catholic Church may prove.” He goes on to remark, “But what an admirable
opportunity for a genuine spiritual growth will be lost if Leo’s
revival of Catholic philosophy has even its first fruits cut off, and is
not permitted to bear the still richer fruit that, in case it is
unhindered, it will some day surely bring forth.”
Alas, “Leo’s revival of Catholic philosophy” did not go unhindered,
and the production of the still richer fruit that the “outsider” Royce
had hoped for from the movement did not materialize. Royce showed
uncanny perspicacity in seeing the Thomistic renewal, still in its
incipient stages when he wrote, as an important contribution to “the
general intellectual progress of our time,” and as providing “an
admirable opportunity for a genuine spiritual growth.” He saw
Scholasticism for what it essentially is: a philosophy totally dedicated
to truth and consistently concentrated on “the deepest deep down
things.”
The Thomistic philosophy being taught in some institutions in the
first half of the twentieth century might have been less than completely
desirable, but the fact is that a number of U.S. Catholic colleges and
universities had philosophy faculties whose quality was pronouncedly
superior, and the students in those institutions were very well served
in their philosophical education. Even in those institutions (very
likely the major portion of the total) in which the overall quality of
the Thomism being taught was wanting, all those students who took the
required philosophy courses, typically at least four, need not be
classified as victims; they were not on the receiving end of an
experience entirely devoid of positive effects for their intellectual
and moral development. An imperfect exposure to a sound philosophy is
better than a full exposure to an unsound one.
Among the teachers of those students, the philosophers themselves,
of whatever Thomistic stripe, there were surely some who, for a variety
of reasons, were not what they should have been, as philosophers or as
teachers; but just as surely there were philosophers and teachers who
were not meanly possessed of talent, whose dedication was not in the
least bit flaccid.
And let us not forget those truly exceptional philosophers, men of
gigantic intellectual stature, who were part and parcel of the movement.
It is impossible to imagine that, had there never been a Thomistic
renewal, we would now have available to us the priceless works of such
luminaries as Jacques Maritain, Étienne Gilson, Charles De Koninck,
Cornelio Fabro, and Josef Pieper.
What is the status of Thomism today? We can begin by noting the
obvious, that Thomistic philosophy, whatever the particulars of its
form, is not a large and pervasively influential fact of Catholic
intellectual life as it was, say, in 1955. The tempest has taken its
toll; the landscape has been rudely roughed up, but — here is the
heartening news — what we gaze out upon now is not a picture of complete
and irremediable desolation. Something is astir; there are hopeful
signs of new growth. I subtitled this article series “The Rise &
Fall of the Thomistic Renewal,” but perhaps it would have been more apt,
in light of what I am about to note, to have called it “The Ascent
& Descent of the Thomistic Renewal.” The term fall has too final a ring to it, suggesting a state that is not only unhappy but permanent, and therefore beyond repair. Descent,
on the other hand, has more generously open-ended connotations and does
not preclude the possibility of subsequent ascent — a rising again, a
regaining of lost altitude, and perhaps even the attainment of yet
higher altitudes than those hitherto gained. That imagery better
describes what I take to be the current state of affairs. It may be
overly optimistic to think that we are on the verge of witnessing a
brilliant resurrection of the renewal that was so rudely interrupted a
half century ago, but there is reason for being cautiously optimistic
about the possibility of such an eventuality. Why? Because Thomism is in
fact beginning to show signs of recovery, and it may indeed be moving
toward re-establishing itself as a significant presence in the life of
the Church.
If Thomism is ever to be re-established as a vibrant philosophical
force within the Church, what will be required are the dedicated labors
of philosophers themselves — philosophers who have a principled and
whole-hearted commitment to the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas. There are
promising indications that this requirement is beginning to be met.
There is today a growing number of philosophers, definitely Thomistic in
direction, most of them quite young, who hold influential faculty
positions in premier academic institutions on both sides of the
Atlantic. A new wave of Thomists has washed upon our desiccated shores,
and they are showing themselves to be formidable scholars, as attested
to by the number of weighty publications they have turned out in recent
years. A brief sample includes: Holy Teaching: Introducing the Summa Theologiae of St. Thomas Aquinas (2005) by Frederick Bauerschmidt, Understanding Our Being (2008) by John W. Carlson, God and the Natural Law: A Rereading of Thomas Aquinas (2006) by Fulvio Di Blasi, Trinity in Aquinas (2003) and Trinity, Church, and the Human Person: Thomistic Essays (2007) by Gilles Emery, O.P., The Logic of Desire: Aquinas on Emotion (2011) by Nicholas E. Lombardo, O.P., Discovering Aquinas (2002) by Aidan Nichols, O.P., The Ethics of Aquinas (2002; Stephen J. Pope, ed.), Nature as Reason: A Thomistic Theory of the Natural Law (2005) by Jean Porter, The Perspective of the Acting Person: Essays in the Renewal of Thomistic Moral Philosophy (2008) by Martin Rhonheimer, By Knowledge and By Love: Charity and Knowledge in the Moral Theology of St. Thomas Aquinas (2011) by Michael S. Sherwin, O.P.
As an instance of the proverbial truth that good can be born of
evil, not long after most Catholic institutions of higher learning
turned their backs on Thomism, a number of entirely new colleges sprung
up across the land. To be sure, these new colleges were established
principally in reaction to the fact that so many of the long-established
institutions had embarked upon vigorous projects that involved a
wholesale watering down, not to say effective obliteration, of their
Catholic identity. However, the establishment of these new institutions
was also a response to what had happened to Thomism, and their founders
were motivated by the desire to restore it to its proper place in
Catholic higher education. And this is precisely what is taking place
right now at schools like Christendom College in Virginia, Thomas
Aquinas College in California, Thomas More College in New Hampshire, and
Wyoming Catholic College, where young men and women are receiving an
education which is structured according to those principles that serve
as the pillars of our Catholic philosophical heritage. The graduates of
these institutions will not be ignorant of the Thomistic tradition, and
it would not be unreasonable to expect that some of them will be
numbered among the Thomistic philosophers of the future.
Another reason to think that we are witnessing what appears to be a
resurgence of Thomism relates to a recent reminder the Church has given
us of the special esteem in which she has consistently held the
philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas. In 2011 the Vatican’s Congregation for
Catholic Education released its “Decree on the Reform of Ecclesiastical
Studies of Philosophy.” After noting that the Church “has always cared
deeply about philosophy,” the decree echoes what Pope Leo XIII pointed
out in Aeterni Patris, that “philosophy is indispensable for
theological formation.” The decree acknowledges the “crisis of
postconciliar theology,” which it rightly identifies as “in large part,
the crisis of philosophical foundations.” Unsound theology follows upon
unsound philosophy. And the remedy for an unsound philosophy is the
eminently sound philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas, a philosophy that is
“important both for the acquisition of intellectual ‘habitus’ and for
the mature assimilation of the philosophical heritage.” St. Thomas, the
decree asserts, is to be recognized as the “apostle of truth,” and
though the Church’s preference for his method is not exclusive, his
method is to be regarded as exemplary — that is, it should serve as a
guiding model. The philosophy that is to be taught to young men studying
for the priesthood, the decree mandates, “must be rooted in the
‘philosophical patrimony which is perennially valid,’ which has been
developed throughout history, with special attention being given to the
work of Saint Thomas Aquinas.”
This recent Vatican decree, emphasizing the unique place the thought
of St. Thomas is to have in philosophical studies, is but the latest in
a long list of such documents, dating back to the fourteenth century.
“Rome has spoken” on this particular subject, again and again, and with
the utmost clarity. We would be seriously remiss if we were to assume a
cavalier attitude toward what the Church’s highest authorities have so
often reiterated. Pope Leo XIII, having a particularly keen sense of the
array of negative ramifications of modern philosophy, knew that, for
the sake of the Church and the world, modern philosophy had to be
opposed, and he saw, in a Scholastic philosophy centered on the thought
of St. Thomas Aquinas, the one philosophy that could effectively stand
up to it. Only a decisively Christian philosophy can counter an
essentially godless philosophy. Unfortunately, his grand plan for the
restoration of such a philosophy, though impressively launched, was not
to see its proper culmination.
It is imperative that what Pope Leo began be begun anew — for the
simple reason that there is a pressing need for the restoration of
Christian philosophy. That need was admittedly great in the late
nineteenth century; it is appreciably greater in the early twenty-first
century. The steady failing of the light, since Pope Leo’s day, has
reached the point where it is positively alarming. We must take up again
this critically important task, with renewed earnestness of purpose. If
it was gotten wrong the first time, or at least only imperfectly right,
this time around it must be gotten unqualifiedly right. That we can do
with confidence if we heed the very precise advice given us by Pope Leo
in Aeterni Patris: Ite ad Thomam, “Go to Thomas!” In the philosophy of the Common Doctor we have the kind of luminous guidance that will not fail us.
The foregoing article, "A Revival Cut Short" was originally published in the New Oxford Review (May 2015), and is reproduced here by kind permission of New Oxford Review, 1069 Kains Ave., Berkeley, CA 94706.
It would be helpful if the author tried to give some content to his terms, like authentic Thomism or Decadent Scholasticism -- it is a bit vague on what exactly was falling into decline or why. The article is useful as a kind of historical sociology of the ups and downs of Thomism, but we need to know something about the content of the debates. Elaborate please. Thanks.
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