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Fr Hans Kung says Pope has responded to his call for discussion on infallibility dogma
27 April 2016 | by Sean SmithFrancis has 'set no restrictions' to discussion called for by Swiss theologian
Fr. Hans Küng, the Swiss theologian, has told The Tablet that he has received a letter from Pope Francis that responds to his "request to give room to a free discussion on the dogma of infallibility".
The Tablet has been unable to confirm the existence of the
letter as Küng refused requests by The Tablet and the National Catholic
Reporter to the Swiss theologian to view a copy of the letter.
"On 9 March, my appeal to Pope Francis to give room to a
free, unprejudiced and open-ended discussion on the problem of
infallibility appeared in the leading journals of several countries. I
was thus overjoyed to receive a personal reply from Pope Francis
immediately after Easter. Dated 20 March, it was forwarded to me from
the nunciature in Berlin."
Küng said that in the Pope’s reply, Francis makes the following points which "are significant" to the Swiss theologian: "The fact that Pope Francis answered at all and did not let my appeal fall on deaf ears; the fact that he replied himself and not via his private secretary or the Secretary of State; that
he emphasises the fraternal manner of his Spanish reply by addressing
me as Lieber Mitbruder (Dear Brother) in German and puts this personal
address in italics, that he clearly read the appeal, to which I had attached a Spanish translation, most attentively.
"[And] that he is highly appreciative of
the considerations which had led me to write in which I suggest
theologically discussing the different issues which the infallibility
dogma raises in the light of Holy Scripture and Tradition with the aim
of deepening the constructive dialogue between the 'semper reformanda'
21st century Church and the other Christian Churches and post-modern
society."
"Pope Francis has set no restrictions," Küng added. "He
has thus responded to my request to give room to a free discussion on
the dogma of infallibility. I think it is now imperative to use this new
freedom to push ahead with the clarification of the dogmatic
definitions which are a ground for controversy within the Catholic
Church and in its relationship to the other Christian Churches.
The Swiss theologian said in his
statement to The Tablet that the letter is part of the "new freedom"
that Pope Francis has brought to the Vatican.
"I am fully convinced that in this new
spirit a free, impartial and open-ended discussion of the infallibility
dogma, this fateful key question of destiny for the Catholic Church,
will be possible,"Küng said. "I am deeply grateful to Pope Francis for
this new freedom and combine my heartfelt thanks with the expectation
that the bishops and theologians will unreservedly adopt this new spirit
and join in this task in accordance with the Scriptures and with our
great church tradition.
Full text of Fr. Hans Küng statement. Translation: Christa Pongratz-Lippitt, Vienna
The Pope answers Hans Küng
On 9 March, my appeal to Pope Francis to
give room to a free, unprejudiced and open-ended discussion on the
problem of infallibility appeared in the leading journals of several
countries. I was thus overjoyed to receive a personal reply from Pope
Francis immediately after Easter. Dated 20 March, it was forwarded to me
from the nunciature in Berlin.
In the Pope’s reply, the following points are significant for me:
– The fact that Pope Francis answered at all and did not let my appeal fall on deaf ears so to speak;
– The fact that he replied himself and not via his private secretary or the Secretary of State;
– That he emphasises the fraternal manner of his Spanish reply by addressing me as Lieber Mitbruder (Dear Brother) in German and puts this personal address in italics,
– That he clearly read the appeal, to which I had attached a Spanish translation, most attentively;
– That he is highly appreciative of the
considerations which had led me to write Volume 5 in which I suggest
theologically discussing the different issues which the infallibility
dogma raises in the light of Holy Scripture and Tradition with the aim
of deepening the constructive dialogue between the “semper reformanda”
21st century Church and the other Christian Churches and post-modern
society.
Pope Francis has set no restrictions. He has thus
responded to my request to give room to a free discussion on the dogma
of infallibility. I think it is now imperative to use this new freedom
to push ahead with the clarification of the dogmatic definitions which
are a ground for controversy within the Catholic Church and in its
relationship to the other Christian Churches.
I could not have foreseen then quite how much new freedom
Pope Francis would open up in his Post-Synodal Exhortation Amoris
Laetitia. Already in the introduction he declares “that not all
doctrinal discussions, moral or pastoral, need to be resolved with
interventions of the Magisterium.” He takes issue with “cold
bureaucratic morality” and does not want bishops to continue behaving as
if they were “arbiters of grace”. He sees the Eucharist not as a reward
for the perfect but as “nourishment for the weak”. He repeatedly quotes
statements made at the Episcopal Synod or at national bishops’
conferences. Pope Francis no longer wants to be the sole spokesman of
the Church.
This is the new spirit that I have always expected from
the Magisterium. I am fully convinced that in this new spirit a free,
impartial and open-ended discussion of the infallibility dogma, this
fateful key question of destiny for the Catholic Church, will be
possible. I am deeply grateful to Pope Francis for this new freedom and
combine my heartfelt thanks with the expectation that the bishops and
theologians will unreservedly adopt this new spirit and join in this
task in accordance with the Scriptures and with our great church
tradition.
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