- Feb 5, 2002
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Labels can be useful sometimes, even if they're not perfect.
When I tell people I recently wrote a bookcritiquing liberal Catholicism, I sometimes get this reply: “I’m not a liberal Catholic or a conservative Catholic. I’m just a Catholic.”
Are these made-up labels to stoke controversy? Or do they track with a real division within the Church?
First, labels are just approximations of real divisions, so they will always be much broader than the nuanced opinions of people who might fall under them. But just as I can know who has a beard and who doesn’t even though I don’t know when stubble becomes a beard, I can know when some expressions of Catholicism tend to be more liberal and others tend to be conservative.
But what does that refer to?
Typically, it refers to the ongoing project of retaining the truths of the Faith handed on in the past while adapting them to new and ever-changing circumstances.
On the very, very far left, you would have people who say there is nothing essential to be handed on. They might even deny fundamental elements of the Creed. Indeed, theological liberalism reached its heyday in the early twentieth century, when, in reaction to the work of German higher form criticism, it tried to “modernize” the Christian faith by rejecting doctrines like the Virgin Birth.
Similar controversies in the nineteenth century arose in the Catholic world, with scholars questioning doctrines like papal infallibility (prompting that doctrine’s reaffirmation at Vatican I), the miracle accounts of the Bible, and even foundational teachings like the deity of Christ. One prominent French scholar referred to Jesus as un homme incomparable—an incomparable man, but a man nonetheless. Pope Pius X called this primacy of modern sentiments over divine revelation “the synthesis of all heresies” (Pascendi Dominici Gregis 39).
Continued below.
Liberal Catholics? Conservative Catholics?
Some people say, 'I'm not a liberal or a conservative. I'm just a Catholic.' But there is usefulness to these labels, even if they're not perfect.