Feb 13 Fri
What should I choose, what is ‘practical’ or the truth?
Here are 10 principles from Benedict XVI that can help us to navigate our way through any crisis of faith.
1. Truth must precede our practices.
Truth cannot be established only based on what is ‘practical’, praxis. Sometimes, what looks ‘practical’ is not morally correct.
2. Truth is not the “middle term” between authority and subjectivity.
It is not enough to mean well and follow our conscience; our conscience can err, and if it does so, we have failed to perceive the truth.
Truth is above consensus. Mere consensus is no guarantor of the truth.
3. Trust in Scripture.
We must not dismiss the Scriptures on the ground that no one followed Christ around with a tape recorder. On the contrary, we have to trust that the Holy Spirit was active in the composition of the Scriptures.
4. The Eucharist Is Not a Sinner’s Banquet.
We encounter Christ especially through the sacrament of the Eucharist, the very body and blood of Christ. The Eucharist is not a “fellowship meal” or a celebration of the achievements of the local community.
The Eucharist has a particular relationship to the sacrament of matrimony. Conjugal love is a sacramental sign of Christ’s love for his Church, a love culminating in the Cross.
5. Church Teaching Develops Organically.
The Church cannot develop her teaching by majority opinion. Truth is not discerned by taking opinion polls and searching for a consensus.
Christian tradition cannot hold as truth today what was heresy yesterday. Also, there must also be an internal coherence among the teachings in different areas of theology.
6. Relationship between Faith and Reason.
Faith and reason need to purify each other. The Catholic tradition represents a synthesis or integration of the two.
7. We must believe in a Creator God.
Since human beings are indeed created by God, they are creatures, not commodities. Moreover, the dignity of the creature is not found in their capacity to choose their own gender but in their having been made in God’s image. The belief in creation is also important for the understanding of our stewardship of creation.
8. Understanding of Synodal authority.
Speaking of the idea of a synodal structure of mixed lay and episcopal membership, Ratzinger declared:
“The idea of the mixed synod as a permanent supreme governing body of the national churches is a chimerical idea in terms of the Tradition of the Church as well as her sacramental structure and her specific goal. Such a synod would lack any legitimacy, and therefore obedience to it has to be decisively and unequivocally denied.”
9. Understanding of Holy Orders
Pope Benedict always defended the practice of a celibate priesthood and the notion of a priest as someone more than a community leader.
10. Understanding of the Petrine Office
The Pope is not the instrument through which one could, so to speak, bring a different Church into existence, but is a protective barrier against arbitrary action.
As such, a pope is not an absolute monarch, but rather like a constitutional monarch whose powers are restrained by a constitution.











