doctrine must be defended for all time. This is why the Roman Catholic
Church waited until 1992 to change the doctrinal position that it had taken in
1633 on Galileo’s astronomical theories.
In practice, of course, doctrines have changed over time, with new
doctrines being added to the body of teaching, and with others being amended
(see ‘Atonement’).
In recent decades theologians have been
re-thinking the status of
doctrine, particularly in the light of twentieth-century developments in the
philosophy of language. Wittgenstein, in particular, argued that language does
not merely describe the world or express our ideas: all language is embedded
in a ‘form of life’ and cannot be understood apart from the cultural milieu in
which it is used. Taking up Wittgenstein’s ideas, George Lindbeck (The
Nature of Doctrine, 1984) has proposed that orthodoxy is expressed in the
complete life of the Church and not simply in its doctrinal formulae.
Doctrines operate like rules that help us to define and organise the ‘form of
life’ of any particular church.
John Milbank (Theology and Social Theory, 1990) has gone beyond
Lindbeck to suggest that doctrine cannot be abstracted
into rules but is the
complete mythos or lived-narrative reality of the Christian faith: both the
story of Jesus and the ongoing history of the Church. The principal weakness
of Milbank’s approach is that the Christian mythos comes in more than
35,000 versions, and he provides no criteria for determining which is most
true. Indeed, if Milbank were to provide criteria, he would have to concede
that Lindbeck is correct in insisting on doctrinal ‘rules’.
A more satisfactory modern understanding
of doctrine has been offered
by David Tracy (The Analogical Imagination, 1982; Plurality and Ambiguity,
1987), who accepts that there will be many valid versions of Christianity and
argues that doctrine is constituted by the conversation about what he calls ‘the
religious classic’. Tracy uses the word ‘classic’ to mean a religion’s governing
text, idea, ritual, event or person. In the case of Christianity, the ‘classic’ is the
story of Jesus.
When we look at the debates and controversies that have made up, and
continue to make up, the history of doctrine, Tracy’s view has a ring of truth
about it. Christian doctrines aren’t handed down from the heavens but are the
result of conversations and arguments about what constitutes the true faith.
THINKERS
Hans Frei (1922–88 ) inspired the New Yale School of theology by
thinking of doctrine in narrative terms (Theology and Narrative, 1993).
Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930) was a powerful liberal critic of
dogmatic Christianity. He argued that the earliest Christians were concerned
with a way of life, and that doctrinal belief was the result of Greek influence
in Christian theology: ‘in its conception and construction [doctrine] is a
product of the Greek spirit on the soil of the Gospel’ (The History of Dogma).
Vincent of Lérins (?–?450) described the ideal of true doctrine as ‘what
has been believed everywhere, always, and by all’ (
Commonitorium
II.3). In
reality, of course, this ideal has never been realised.
Bernard Lonergan (1904–84) saw doctrine as a process of evolution and
exploration in understanding divine mystery,
arguing that the process of
human understanding was not merely cerebral, but involved the full range of
human experience.
John Henry Newman (1801–90) argued in his Essay on the Development
of Christian Doctrine (1845) that inconstancies in the teaching of the Church
could be explained by taking an evolutionary view of the history of doctrine:
‘The highest and most wonderful truths, though communicated to the world
once for all by inspired teachers … have required … longer time and deeper
thought for their full elucidation.’
Karl Rahner (1904–84) argued that Christian doctrine must be rooted in
our common experience of being human: ‘no doctrine of God is possible any
more without a doctrine of man, no theology without anthropology.’
Ian Ramsey (1915–72) argued in Religious Language that the basis of
doctrine lies in ‘disclosure’ situations.
Leo Tolstoy (1879–1910) complained that ‘religious doctrine is professed
in some other realm … disconnected from life’ (A Confession, ch. 1).
Ernst Troeltsch (1865–1923) argued that the message of Jesus was ethical
rather than doctrinal: ‘We are no longer in the business of fixing permanent
dogmas from an inspired Bible. Instead, we formulate teachings which
express the essence of Christian piety.’
IDEAS
The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary: a ‘new’ doctrine,
controversially adopted by the Roman Catholic Church in 1950, that the
Blessed Virgin Mary was taken, body and soul, straight up to heaven after her
death.