The
Agreeable, the Irrevocable, and the Prophetic
by
Patrick O'Hannigan
Winemaking is a brash young business in the area where I live,
and environmentalists with more science than sense have tried to
slow the proliferation of vineyards by calling them "monoscapes."
To date, their efforts have failed. All but a few of the alcohol
farms in central California are profitable, and the negative connotations
of the word "monoscape" are largely unknown. For every person alarmed
by the way that look-alike vineyards consume water and displace
wildlife, scores more are seduced by images of blissful women who
stomp grapes while men play mandolins and sing songs they learned
from their grandfathers.
Modern winemaking is as romantic as an open-field tackle in football,
but cinematographers and holiday-themed Zinfandel commercials have
trained that inconvenient fact to nap with its paws in the air and
its belly exposed. I mention this because many sectors of contemporary
Catholic discussion are themselves monoscapes. Sincere progressives
who distrust the magisterium and emphasize lay empowerment can be
found in every diocese where liturgy committees exalt small faith
communities and personal giftedness. Their unflagging embrace of
the priesthood of all believers resonates stronglywith the egalitarian
message that has conned generations of public school students into
believing that the United States is a democracy rather than a republic.
Such homogeneous thinking by religious progressives and their cultural
allies sometimes frustrates conservative efforts to preserve the
church as a bulwark of sanity in an insane world. Over the long
haul, for example, people who describe assent to fashionable aspects
of church teaching as "prophetic" do more harm to evangelization
efforts than people who call dissent from church teaching "courageous."
In the poker game of public opinion, dissenters reject the Catholic
hand and tell other card players that they're tired of using a marked
deck, but their hostility makes them easy targets for skilled apologists.
Enthusiasts, by contrast, invite suspicion from neutral audiences
by overplaying the Catholic hand and its superabundance of allegedly
prophetic wisdom to the point where would-be evangelists must regain
lost trust before they can present a better case for apostolic faith.
Of course, over-reliance on adjectives like prophetic is more annoying
to some people than to others. When a perfectly-tuned sentence carves
barrel rolls in the air over your mind and a group of paragraphs
is an exercise in formation flying, you understand why Mark Twain
compared the gulf between the right word and the almost-right word
to the gulf between lightning and lightning bugs. Faithful Catholics
who attain that level of sensitivity to language are almost always
disappointed by mainstream discussion of issues like capital punishment.
Paragraph #2267 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church reads as
follows:
"Assuming that the guilty party's identity and responsibility have
been fully determined, the traditional teaching of the Church does
not exclude recourse to the death penalty, if this is the only possible
way of defending human lives against an unjust aggressor."
Grudging acceptance of capital punishment under limited conditions
can hardly be called endorsement of legalized vengeance, but many
Catholic leaders are discomfited by the fact that the church makes
even theoretical allowance for the death penalty. By their reckoning,
Our Lord should have rejected Pontius Pilate's authority to condemn
even an innocent man to death. As erstwhile politician and sometime
Catholic radio host Alan Keyes has pointed out, that He merely reminded
the Roman governor about the derivative nature of state power bothers
progressives more than they care to admit. Theology that extends
no further than the comforting notion that the Savior replaced the
unforgiving code of the Old Testament with a new Law of Love is
poorly equipped to ponder what He does at His trial, or what Paul
says to Festus in Acts 25:11 ("If I am guilty of any crime, I do
not ask to escape the death penalty"). The problem is that Catholics
who look to diocesannewspapers or popular periodicals for help with
questions posed by capital punishment are likely to be told only
that vengeance belongs to God.
Whether capital punishment should be considered vengeful is a question
that many writers refuse to ask. Fortunately for all concerned,
Pope John Paul II has made no secret of his opposition to capital
punishment. Many people were gratified when the pope called efforts
to abolish the death penalty "authentically pro-life." One wonders
why he felt the need to affirm what seems obvious. How canopposition
to death be anything other than "authentically pro-life"? You have
to answer that question if you want to understand why Christian
theologians through the ages have argued that capital punishment
is sometimes justifiable. Beyond that, it is a curious fact that
many of thepeople who applaud the pope's opposition to capital punishment
do not also applaud his opposition to ordained female priesthood.
Why are some papal views called "prophetic" and others not? The
answer to that question goes to the heart of the current problem
with language, which at root is a problem of impoverished thought.
Anyone tracking the misuse of "prophetic" soon discovers that this
once-proud adjective now belongs to the vast gray company of terms
mugged by the zeitgeist. What meant "inspired by God" when applied
to the utterances of Moses and Jeremiah slipped quickly past "predictive
of the future" to become a synonym for "insightful," "savvy," or
"praiseworthy."
As secondarymeaning turned "gay" from "happy" into "homosexual,"
so tertiary meaning turned "prophetic" into a paper umbrella for
garnishing verbal cocktails that in political or business contexts
might be called visionary. Want to add a splash of religious color
to a statement with which you agree? Call it prophetic. Examples
of this careless usage abound. In a recent issue of the newspaper
for the Catholic diocese of Monterey (California), US bishops were
congratulated for their "prophetic" suggestion that the Jubilee
Year iteration of a national Hispanic meeting should also be open
to people of other cultures. The paper reported that the meeting
was a great success, thanks in part to speakers who "shared moving
witness about the need for our Church in the United States to become
prophetic in its ability to show real community in plurality." That
heartfelt but incoherent statement is typical of the earnest nonsense
that so often clouds legitimate disagreements. In a fair fight,
unanswered questions about unexamined and possibly untenable relationships
between prophecy, plurality, and community would suggest flawed
logic.Unfortunately, fairness, like Elvis, has left the building.
You don't need logic in the public square if you stake a pre-emptive
claim to the high ground by calling your goal prophetic. Weak as
we moderns have let it become, the word still paints your opponents
as reactionary. One might wonder whether non-doctrinal questions
of word usage deserve our passion. As a self-styled paragraph farmer
with a day job in technical writing and a layman's interest in theology,
I would argue that they do. The reason for this is twofold: Because
the relationship between language and thought is reciprocal, the
Latin formula, "lex orandi, lex credendi" is true.
Moreover, because the words of God that we properly call prophetic
borrow what dignity they have from the incarnate Word of God, we
ought to take better care of our vocabulary. To misuse "prophetic"
in culturally acceptable ways is to engage in something akin to
what Blessed John Henry Newman once called "poisoning the wells."
The word, and the church, deserves better.
November
13, 2000
Patrick
O’Hannigan is a technical writer in California.
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