There is a familiar Scholastic axiom, "In medio stat virtus," which some Catholics in the middle-aged and senior generations may recall from their college years. It meant literally: "Virtue stands in the middle."
The corollary of that medieval principle is that neither virtue nor truth can be found at the extremes. ...
Thus, the theological virtue of hope is located somewhere between the extremes of presumption on one side and despair on the other.
Similarly, in seeking the truth of Christ's identity, one must steer clear of Nestorianism on the extreme left (a heresy which exaggerated his humanity) and Monophysitism on the extreme right (which exaggerated Christ's divinity).
Catholics of an older generation were taught that, in the face of serious conflict over truth or virtue, the center is always the safest place.
Indeed, if you happen to find yourself attacked from both sides, you can be reasonably sure that you are doing something right.
But, of course, a crucial question was begged, and no one, at least not in my memory, ever raised it: Who defines the center? The question is crucial because those who define the center also define the extremes. And in defining the extremes, they also marginalize them.
There is much to be learned today from the historic Christological debates of the 4th and 5th centuries and their doctrinal resolution at the Council of Chalcedon in 451.
Most mainline Christians today would place the Chalcedonian teaching in the orthodox center, and would regard Nestorianism and Monophysitism as extreme positions that were rejected as heresies.
But if Monophysitism were to claim the center of the Christological spectrum, Chalcedonian orthodoxy would be pushed to the left (and Nestorianism still further to the left, if not off the doctrinal chart). On the right-the new right-would be the Julianists (followers of Bishop Julian, an extreme Monophysite), who in effect denied that Christ's earthly body was truly human.
Imagine now if a Catholic with Monophysitic devotional and theological tendencies were elected to the papacy. Imagine, further, that he appointed numerous priests of similar orientation to the hierarchy and to key offices in the Roman Curia. It would not take long before closeted Monophysites, sensing a new atmosphere in the Church, began coming out in the open to bask in the sunlight of a restored "orthodoxy."
For the Chalcedonians it would not be a conflict between the left and the right, but between the center and the right.
And so it is with the Catholic Church today. What we have been witnessing over the past two and a half decades is a concerted (and increasingly successful) effort to redefine the center, and in the process to redefine the extremes.
Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]