introduction to fundamental theology

21
INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLICISM FR. LLANE BRIESE Introduction to Fundamental Theology

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Introduction to Fundamental Theology. Introduction to Catholicism Fr. Llane Briese. Key Vocabulary. Divine Revelation Experience Private revelations Apologetics Existence of God Problem of Evil Theodicy. Sacred Scripture Tradition Canonicity Principles for Interpreting Scripture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

INTRODUCTION TO CATHOLICISMFR. LLANE BRIESE

Introduction toFundamental Theology

Page 2: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Key VocabularyDivine RevelationExperiencePrivate

revelationsApologeticsExistence of GodProblem of EvilTheodicy

Sacred ScriptureTraditionCanonicityPrinciples for

Interpreting Scripture

CharismMagisterium

Page 3: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

What is Fundamental Theology

Fundamental Theology is one of several sub-disciplines in professional theology which seeks to understand the reality of Divine Revelation itself.

For this course, we will limit ourselves to three questions: What is Divine Revelation? Is it credible? How is it handed on in the Church?

Page 4: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

LESSON ONE

What is Divine Revelation?

Page 5: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

What is Divine Revelation?

Revelation: from Latin revelare (“to unveil”)Divine Revelation refers to God’s self-

disclosure throughout history in which he gives Himself to humanity through concrete experiences.

CCC 50: “Through an utterly free decision, God has

revealed himself and given himself to man. […] God has fully revealed this plan [of loving goodness] by sending us his beloved Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit.”

Page 6: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

How do we know anything?Brief Discussion

Page 7: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

How Does God Reveal Himself?God reveals himself through

experiences because humans know through experience.

Biblical Examples: the liberation from Egypt the messages of the prophets the coming of Christ as man (most important)

Crucial Point: Divine Revelation is first and foremost a PERSONAL encounter with the Triune God, not just a list of PROPOSITIONS to be believed!

Page 8: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

The Stages of Revelation (CCC 51-73)

Occurred progressively throughout history (e.g. in creation, through Noah, Abraham, and the people of Israel in the Old Testament).

Reached its fulfillment in the coming of Christ: “In times past, God spoke in partial and various

ways to our ancestors through the prophets; 2 in these last days, he spoke to us through a son, whom he made heir of all things and through whom he created the universe […]” (Hebrews 1:1-2; 2nd reading—Christmas Mass during the Day)

Page 9: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Christ: Fullness of Revelation

CCC 65: “Christ, the Son of God made man, is the

Father’s one, perfect, and unsurpassable Word. In him he has said everything; there will be no other word than this one.”

Christ is the final word in Revelation.Private revelations: Possible, but must

always (1) be discerned by the Church and (2) be in conformity with public Revelation.

Page 10: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

LESSON TWO

Apologetics and the Credibility of Divine Revelation

Page 11: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Apologetics: Defending the Faith

Apologetics: From Greek apo + logos = “a word away from”, a defense.

Defending the Faith (apologetics): An essential aspect of evangelization.

Attitudes Which Are Contrary to FaithCatholic Apologetics vs. Other Christian

Apologetics

Page 12: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Proofs for the Existence of God

St. Thomas Aquinas: Five Ways (ST I, q. 2, a. 3): Argument from Motion Argument from Causes Argument from Necessity Argument from Perfection Argument from Design

A Fundamental Choice: Either submit to our innate hunger for the infinite/perfect/eternal, or close in and trust only in ourselves.

Page 13: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

The Problem of Evil

The Problem Posed Logically:If an all-good God existed, then no evil would exist.But evil does exist.Therefore, an all-good God does not exist.

Christian Response (= Theodicy): God permits suffering because humans have

free will; it is a consequence of sin. God finds a way to bring good out of evil. The Cross, the ultimate theodicy.

Page 14: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

LESSON THREE

The Transmission of Revelation:

Page 15: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Two Modes of Transmission

In order for Revelation to continue for all time, God wills for it to be transmitted in the Church.

Christ => Gospel => Fullness of Revelation2 Modes of Revelation from 1 Source (CCC

80): ORAL: Sacred Tradition WRITTEN: Sacred Scripture

Catholics believe that BOTH are of equal value.

Page 16: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

What is Tradition?

Tradition: “comes from the apostles and hands on what they received from Jesus’ teaching and example and what they learned from the Holy Spirit. The first generation of Christians did not yet have a written New Testament, and the New Testament itself demonstrates the process of living Tradition.” (CCC 83)

Distinct from various practical traditions (e.g. liturgical, devotional, etc.).

Page 17: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Scripture and Tradition

Christ = Fullness of Revelation

Oral Form

Scripture

Written Form

Tradition

Page 18: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Relation of Scripture and Tradition

Oral Traditio

n• Dynamic: Existed

before the New Testament

Written Scriptur

e

• Static: Serves to Ground Tradition

Page 19: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

The Interpretation of Scripture

Canonicity: The property of biblical books that makes them part of the Bible.Canon: From Greek kanōn, meaning

“standard, measuring stick”Scripture is both inspired (written by

the Holy Spirit) and human (written by human beings).

All Scripture is true (but not to be interpreted naively).

Page 20: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

Rules for Biblical Interpretation

Must attend to the human authors’ intentions by studying “their time and culture, the literary genres in use at that time, and the modes of feeling, speaking, and narrating then current.” (CCC 110)

Must also respect the Holy Spirit’s authorship (CCC 111-114): 1. “Be especially attentive ‘to the content and unity

of the whole Scripture.’” 2. “Read the Scripture within ‘the living Tradition of

the whole Church.’” 3. “Be attentive to the analogy of faith.”

Page 21: Introduction to Fundamental Theology

The Role of the Magisterium

To safeguard Divine Revelation, Christ gave it not just to individuals, but to the Pope and Bishops who has a special grace from the Holy Spirit (or charism) to authoritatively teach the Faith and protect the Christian people from error in matters of faith and morals.

Mt 16:18— “You are Peter (Petros) and on this rock (petra), I will build my Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against you.”

This teaching authority, or “mastery”, is called the Magisterium.