Theology without a Church Or Speaking Ex Cathedra from the Keyboard
I recently read a report in the National Catholic Reporter about Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. Opening the dicastery’s plenary session, Fernández warned that anyone can now publish an opinion online and condemn others “as if speaking ex cathedra ,” even when the writer has studied little theology. ( National Catholic Reporter ) It is an irresistible line. Anyone who has spent much time reading religious commentary online will recognize the phenomenon. The internet has produced an astonishing number of self-appointed guardians of orthodoxy. They possess no ecclesiastical office, sometimes little theological education, and almost never any pastoral responsibility for the people they judge. Yet they speak with a certainty that would make an ecumenical council appear indecisive. Fernández’s complaint could easily be dismissed as the irritation of an institutional authority confronted by unofficial critics. He has, ...