Justice, Unity, and the Hidden Christ: The Theopolitical Complex of the Social Justice Approach to Ecumenism in Vatican II
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Matthew John Paul Tan
Matthew John Paul Tan is the Felice and Margredel Zaccari Lecturer in Theology and Philosophy at Campion College Australia, and Director of the Centre for the Study of Western Tradition. Prior to this, he served as a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology in DePaul University in Chicago. He received his doctorate in Political Theology at the Australian Catholic University, and his License in Sacred Theology at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome. He is also editor of the theological blog, "The Divine Wedgie," and is a regular contributor on the Sydney-based internet radio station, cradio.org.au.
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Justice, Unity, and the Hidden Christ - Matthew John Paul Tan
Justice, Unity, and the Hidden Christ
The Theopolitical Complex of the Social Justice Approach to Ecumenism in Vatican II
Matthew John Paul Tan
12528.pngJustice, Unity, and the Hidden Christ
The Theopolitical Complex of the Social Justice Approach to Ecumenism in Vatican II
Copyright © 2014 Matthew John Paul Tan. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
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isbn 13: 978-1-62032-364-9
eisbn 13: 978-1-63087-118-5
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Tan, Matthew John Paul.
Justice, unity, and the hidden Christ : the theopolitical complex of the social justice approach to ecumenism in Vatican II / Matthew John Paul Tan.
x + 108 pp. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliographical references and index(es).
isbn 13: 978-1-62032-364-9
1. Social justice—Religious aspects—Catholic Church. 2. Vatican Council (2nd : 1962–1965 : Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano). 3. Christianity and politics. I. Title.
BX830 1962 .T36 2014
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
Just as there are two coinages, one of God and the other of the world, each with its own image, so unbelievers bear the image of this world, and those who have faith with love bear the image of God the Father through Jesus Christ
Ignatius of Antioch
Acknowledgments
This work is not just my own. Many important people and organizations have in many ways contributed to the birthing of this book, all to whom I owe my thanks and to whom this book is dedicated.
My thanks to the Russell Berrie Foundation, whose Fellowship in Interreligious Studies provided the funding that enabled me to spend a considerable amount of time in Rome, the perfect setting for reflection on this work, considering its primary subject matter was undertaken just across the Tiber. This funding in turn afforded me contact with faculty members at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome, otherwise known as the Angelicum, many of whom have also provided invaluable intellectual and administrative assistance. Special thanks are due to Rev. Dr. Carsten Barwasser, OP, who provided sage advice in the drafting process, and to Rev. Dr. Bruce Williams, OP, without whom my time at the Angelicum would not have been possible. Thanks also to Prof. Donna Orsuto, the staff of the Lay Centre and to Rev. Dr. Athanasius McVay, all of whom provided a home away from home in Rome. They brought together a wonderful support network, the discussions and conviviality with whom played a vital role in tilling the intellectual soil that nurtured this work. Eric Bernhard has assisted me greatly in editing the early drafts of this text.
Thanks are also due to those who foregrounded my Italian sojourn with incredible support, assistance and preparation. The first of these are my mother, Frances, and brother, Joseph. Archbishop Mark Coleridge and Monsignor Anthony Randazzo of the Archdiocese of Brisbane have opened many doors that would have otherwise remained closed to me. Last but not least, Dr. Terry Veling of the Australian Catholic University and Prof. Tracey Rowland of the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family provided the intellectual discipleship that has profoundly shaped this work.
Introduction
Framing the Problem
In Unitatis Redintegratio, the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council exhorted the faithful to engage in cooperative projects with non-Catholics as an avenue to foster visible church unity. Of particular interest in this regard was paragraph 12, in which the Council encouraged all Christians to confess their common faith in the Triune God through cooperation in social matters
such as
the promotion of the blessings of peace, the application of Gospel principles to social life, the advancement of the arts and sciences in a truly Christian spirit. It should use every possible means to relieve the afflictions of our times such as famine and natural disasters, illiteracy and poverty, lack of housing and the unequal distribution of wealth.¹
That same paragraph spoke of the great benefit not only for the recipients of such projects. The Council also expressed their enthusiasm of a threefold benefit that could arise from such cooperative projects for the sake of Christian unity. Between ecclesial communities, the Council spoke of the way such projects could lead to understand[ing] each other better and esteem[ing] each other more,
while at the same time vividly expressing to the non-Christian world that bond which in fact already unites [Christians], and finally
set[ting into] clearer relief the features of Christ the Servant."²
While the above statements of the Council Fathers may have been promulgated more than forty years ago, the enthusiasm with the approach that was expressed by the Council Fathers finds echoes in contemporary ecumenical practice in the protestant world, as exemplified by statements by the Lutheran World Federation, the World Communion of Reformed Churches and the World Council of Churches.³ Indeed, such enthusiasm for what may be called the social justice approach to ecumenism ostensibly seems justified in light of what sociologists and political scientists have labelled a process of desecularization
in which religious players enjoy a much higher profile and greater credibility in engaging in sociopolitical activity.⁴ According to this line of reasoning, social justice projects as corporeal works of mercy could be a legitimate avenue whereby the Christian Gospel as an explicitly Christian Gospel can be unequivocally proclaimed as a form of reasoning for common social action, and whereby a firm foundation on which visible ecclesial unity can be nurtured. It is here that this book wishes to intervene with a question: do such acts explicitly proclaim the Christian Gospel?
The foil for this book is this statement in paragraph 12 of Unitatis Redintegratio: that the social justice approach ecumenism can lead to mutual understanding, demonstrate the commonalities between Christians and forcefully proclaims Christ to the world. The concern here is not so much the legitimacy of a common witness to the poor, but whether the current practice of ministering to the poor in light of its contemporary sociopolitical context so readily communicates Christ and builds the bonds of unity between ecclesial communities.
This should be a particular concern since the desecularized
context that underpins the contemporary hope for ecumenism is also driven and mediated by the forces of media and market.⁵ The fact that joint works of mercy seem justified or affirmed in the public eye when it comes in commercialized packaging points to a problem not so much in the relationship between one church and another. It seems that a more fundamental puzzle would concern the relationship between the Church and secular culture. More specifically, the fulcrum of this puzzle is located in the way in which the Church interprets culture. This is because a nexus of theological, political and cultural assumptions operate behind Unitatis Redintegratio’s enthusiastic endorsement of the social justice approach to ecumenism, and paragraph 12 can be said to be read within the framework of a theopolitical complex.
More specifically, paragraph 12 appears to be set within the paradigm of religion entering the public square,
now called civil society.
This in turn assumes that the Church has entered a social space that is free from any cultural, religious, political or social bias, and that different churches can unproblematically engage in cooperative projects within these culturally neutral spaces. It is assumed further that due to the transparency and cultural neutrality of the public square, collaborative social justice projects undertaken by differing ecclesial communities can unequivocally proclaim Christ in common, whether between ecclesial communities or between Christians and non-Christians.
This book seeks to provide a corrective to these assumption by focussing attention on the cultural context within which such projects are implemented, particularly in a contemporary context where society is circumscribed by the state and market. This is a context that the Council Fathers may have been too hasty in baptizing. This book will argue with Henri de Lubac, contrary to the assumption ostensibly adopted by the Council Fathers that the public square was a culturally neutral sphere, that all social spaces bear within them some cultural agenda.⁶ The cultural agenda operating within these social spaces possesses the capacity to refract the cultural logic of any given practice carried out within them. As such, the ecclesial granting of autonomy to the secular has allowed Christian witness to be culturally outflanked by the secular sphere. In other words, practices that supposedly aim to declare the message of the Servant King can be made to proclaim something rather different when set against the backdrop of the state, civil society and market. What could have been the Christian cultural logic operating within acts of social justice can be reinterpreted and geared towards non-Christian or even anti-Christian ends.
What is more, this book argues that the cultural context’s refraction of the interpretation of the act of social justice is a phenomenon that will impact not only the observer of that act, but also the person that carries out that act. This means that for Christian practitioner and non-Christian observer alike, the act’s Christian content, marked by the building of communion between man and God, can give way to that of political liberalism, marked by radical individualism, fragmentation and pure immanence. In light of this, it would be difficult to share today in the Council Fathers’ enthusiasm for the unquestionable promise of acts of social justice for the building of communion among the Churches as articulated in paragraph 12 of Unitatis Redintegratio.
It must be stated at the outset that the Council Fathers were correct in looking at social justice as a potential resource for fostering Christian unity, since it can be a resource for the building of communion among differing ecclesial communities. However, it must also be stated that the Council Fathers were too hasty in regarding the surrounding culture as a merely passive category, infinitely malleable to the development by the work of [human] hands
⁷ and completely subject to the assertion of human will. At another level, it must be shown that the Council Fathers were also too hasty in baptizing the developments within modern culture as "provid[ing] some preparation for the acceptance of the