Evangelization and doctrine are closely intertwined

2 mins read
Pope Francis gives his annual pre-Christmas speech to officials of the Roman Curia and cardinals present in Rome in the Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace in 2018. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

Russell ShawCatholicism has always been an intellectual religion. This is not to say — heaven forbid — that it’s a religion only or especially for intellectuals, but rather that the Church has been intensely concerned from the start to hold, preserve and share what it believes to be revealed truth about God and the meaning of life.

No doubt there have been times when this intellectuality has caused Catholicism to be — or seem to be — too much a religion of the head and too little a religion of the heart. On the whole, however, insistence on clear thinking and careful formulations has served the Catholic Church well and helped to make it attractive to many people.

I thought of these things when I heard that Pope Francis in his reorganization of the Roman Curia was assigning pride of place to evangelization rather than doctrine. According to advance accounts, the plan calls for the merger of two existing evangelization dicasteries (“dicastery” is Vaticanese for “department”) into a new super dicastery spearheading efforts in this area.

It hardly needs saying that the pope can reorganize the Curia as he thinks best, just as popes before him have done. Moreover, there’s a good case for placing evangelization at the top of the new organization chart.

What bothers me is the rationale offered by some Vatican insiders who claim the shift signals a downgrading not only of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith but of doctrine itself. The controversy over changes in leadership and the program of Rome’s John Paul Institute for marriage and family studies in order to give it a more “pastoral” character seems to raise similar issues.

According to papal biographer Austen Ivereigh, writing in Commonweal, the Curia plan involves “relegating” the CDF. Relegating to what? Ivereigh doesn’t say, but presumably he means the move places doctrine in a subordinate position. And why? Because, he says, citing a draft, the Church’s “primary task” isn’t teaching doctrine but “offering the kerygma, or the Good News of Jesus Christ’s saving love.”

This is confused. If I may expand a bit on Ivereigh’s version, the Good News lies in the fact that in and through our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, crucified and risen — and only in and through him — we are redeemed. That is the “Good News of Jesus Christ’s saving love.” And it is immeasurably rich in doctrinal content.

The importance of the doctrinal truth at the heart of the Christian message runs throughout the New Testament. For instance, the letter to the Ephesians urges Christians not to be like children “tossed by waves and swept along by every wind of teaching arising from human trickery” (Eph 4:14); the letter to the Hebrews tells readers, “Do not be carried away by all kinds of strange teaching” (Heb 13:9). Texts could be multiplied, but the point is clear: Orthodox doctrine matters.

In that Magna Carta of contemporary Catholic evangelization, Evangelii Nuntiandi, published in 1975, Pope St. Paul VI conceded that evangelization “does not consist only of the preaching and teaching of a doctrine” (No. 47). But he also insisted that “catechetical instruction” is a tool of evangelization that “must not be neglected” (No. 44).

“The intelligence … needs to learn through systematic religious instruction the fundamental teachings, the living content of the truth which God has wished to convey to us and which the Church has sought to express in an ever richer fashion during the course of her long history,” he wrote (No. 44).

As yet another reorganization of the Roman Curia approaches, there should be no downgrading of that.

Russell Shaw is a contributing editor for Our Sunday Visitor.

Russell Shaw

Russell Shaw writes from Maryland.