Notice
RELIGIOUS
FREEDOM IN
ACTION:
Theologians speak out
Editor's preface and apologia:
This is my personal project. I believe it is in keeping with the
goals of ARCC, but I do not wish to have anyone other than myself
held responsible. Shortly after I announced this web site on Vatican2
I received an essay by a Professor of Church History at a
Catholic institution of higher learning who wondered how he might
go about publishing the article in these "dangerous times" without
forcing his bishop to fire him for open dissent. Suddenly I felt cold,
as I flashed back to my childhood in Austria during the Second World War
and remembered my parents hovering close to the radio set, listening
intently to static and unintelligible words in a foreign
language, forbidden words in a
forbidden language.
I sensed their terror that the wrong person might open the
door and all of us might be arrested because they allowed
forbidden ideas to be heard, and they might even be
thinking or expressing forbidden ideas. Years
later, when I read of thoughtcrime and Thought Police in Orwell's
1984 I remembered those times, but I never
until this moment allowed myself to connect the Orwellian fortress-like
Ministry of Truth with the contemporary church. And yet there
are strong parallels between the Orwellian dystopia and those
powers in the institutional church that want to squash all dissent
and return to the 19th century garrison church of enforced uniformity.
It is with deep concern, with "brennender Sorge," to quote Pope
Pius XI out of context, that I dedicate this section of the ARCC/Vatican2
Web Site to the task of implementing the principles of religious liberty
and human dignity affirmed by the Second Vatican Council but generally
applied primarily to institutions other than the church itself.
We read in The Declaration on Religious Liberty
(Dignitatis humanae), promulgated on 7 December 1965:
- The Vatican Council declares that the human person has a right to
religious freedom. Freedom of this kind means that all men should be immune
from coercion on the part of individuals, social groups and every human
power so that, within due limits, nobody is forced to act against his
convictions nor is anyone to be restrained from acting in accordance with his
convictions in religous matters in private or in public, alone or in
associations with others.(sec. 2)
- It is in accordance with their dignity that all men, because they are
persons, that is, beings endowed with reason and free will and therefore
bearing personal responsibility, are both impelled by their nature and
bound by a moral obligation to seek the truth, especially religious
truth. (sec. 2)
- Religious communities have the further right not to be
prevented from publicly teaching and bearing witness to their beliefs
by the spoken or written word. However, in spreading religious belief
and in introducing religious practices everybody must at all times
avoid any action which seems to suggest coercion or dishonest or
unworthy persuasion especially when dealing with the uneducated or the
poor. Such a manner of acting must be considered an abuse of one's
own right and an infringement of the rights of others. (sec. 4)
- It is certain therefore that men of the present day
want to profess their religion freely in private and in public.
Indeed it is a fact that religious freedom has already been declared a
civil right in most constitutions and has been given solemn
recognition in international documents. (sec. 15)
- But there are forms of government under which, despite
constitutional recognition of the freedom of religious worship, the
public authorities themselves strive to deter the citizens from
professing their religion and make life particularly difficult and
dangerous for religious bodies. (sec. 15)
- [Referring to the immediately preceding two paragraphs]
This sacred Council gladly welcomes the first of these two
facts as a happy sign of the times. In sorrow however it denounces
the second as something deplorable. The Council exhorts Catholics and
directs an appeal to all men to consider with great care how necessary
religious liberty is, especially in the present condition of the human
family. (sec. 15)
Articles and Essays by Catholic Scholars
who do not
consider the current church a safe place for open dissent, no matter
how respectfully expressed
Articles and Essays by Catholic Scholars
who are willing
to sign their names