In light of recent documents from the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, Francis A. Sullivan has recently expounded his view again on the interpretation of Lumen Gentium no. 8 and what it means to say the Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church.Footnote 1 In what follows, we first state his view as we understand it. Second, we try to show why it is unsatisfactory.
I. Sullivan's Position
-
1 Sullivan denies the identity of the Church of Christ with the Catholic Church. He thinks this follows from saying with Lumen Gentium no. 8 that the Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church, rather than saying that it is the Catholic Church, and from recognizing that there are many elements of sanctification and truth outside the Catholic Church, in non-Catholic churches and ecclesial communities.
-
2 However, he thinks this non-identity of the Church of Christ and the Catholic Church depends very much on how one understands subsistere. It depends, he holds, on taking subsistere, with Karl Becker, to mean “to remain, to be perpetuated in.”Footnote 2 He thinks that if subsistere is given a more philosophical sense, such that one is warranted in speaking of one “subsistence” of the Church of Christ, and according to which Lumen Gentium no. 8 would mean that in the Catholic Church the Church of Christ has “‘being’ in the form of an independent agent” (Ratzinger), or such that one is warranted in saying that “there is only one subsistence” of the Church of Christ, and that in the Catholic Church (Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Notification on Leonardo Boff), then it is impossible to maintain (coherently, anyway) the non-identity of the Church of Christ and the Catholic Church, and that it is impossible (coherently) to speak of other churches outside the Catholic Church.Footnote 3 Therefore, since Lumen Gentium no. 15 does speak of separated churches (as does Unitatis Redintigratio, no. 15, the Decree on Ecumenism), and since we presume coherence, subsistere must mean “continues to exist in.” It cannot mean “has its concrete existence in”—these formulations are very different for Sullivan.
His argument for this last point is as follows: “If it is in the Catholic Church that the church of Christ ‘is concretely found on earth,’Footnote 4 how could there be any concretely existing ‘true particular churches’ except the particular Catholic churches?”Footnote 5 The argument seems to be that, if the Church of Christ is “concrete” only in the Catholic Church, then not only can it not be “concrete” in non-Catholic churches, but these “churches” cannot even really be churches. How does this conclusion follow? He seems to be supposing that a particular, concrete church, in order to be a church, must be contained within the concrete Church of Christ. Thus, if only the Catholic Church is this Church of Christ, concretely, then all other non-Catholic “churches” are both outside the Church of Christ and not even really churches.
-
3 He thus thinks that subsistere does in fact mean “continues to exist in,” and not “has its concrete existence in,” although he grants that of course the Church of Christ exists fully only in the Catholic Church. He would allow us to say, further, that while the Church of Christ subsists in non-Catholic churches, it does not do so fully or perfectly.Footnote 6
-
4 Sullivan thinks as well that saying that “elements of sanctification and truth” are to be found outside the Catholic Church is compatible with recognizing that there are true particular churches outside the Catholic Church. But he thinks that saying that “only elements of sanctification and truth” exist outside the Catholic Church is not compatible with saying that there are true particular churches outside the Catholic Church. Saying “only elements” is therefore equivalent to saying that the Church of Christ “has its concrete existence” only in the Catholic Church. Since this is false, we should not say “only elements,” and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith misspoke in its Notification on Leonardo Boff in 1985.Footnote 7
-
5 Sullivan thinks it true to say that the Church of Christ “continues to exist in,” is “present and operative in,” the non-Catholic churches (and ecclesial communities), although of course it exists fully only in the Catholic Church.Footnote 8 He thinks this way of speaking fits with saying the Church of Christ “continues to exist in” the Catholic Church, but not with saying it “has its concrete existence in” the Catholic Church, for with the latter sense, remember, there are no churches outside the Catholic Church, and so no churches outside the Catholic Church for the one Church of Christ to be operative in.
-
6 Last, Sullivan thinks that, because subsistere means what he says it does (and because it is not true that only elements exist outside the Catholic Church), then the one Church of Christ can be said to be “in and from” all of the particular churches, Catholic and non-Catholic.Footnote 9
-
7 He thinks this is implied by Unitatis Redintegratio no. 15, too.Footnote 10 If one says that subsistere means “subsistence” in the philosophical sense, however, one cannot say this.
II. Why Sullivan's Position is Unsatisfactory
A (ad 6). The Church is not formed out of non-Catholic churches
We begin with the sixth point. Sullivan wants to say that the universal Church, the one Church founded by Christ, is both in and formed from churches that are not in communion with Rome.
He argues from Lumen Gentium no. 23, which teaches that the universal Church is both present in and formed from particular churches. Then, he notes that Eastern churches are recognized as churches by the Council and in post-conciliar documents. Whence he concludes that the universal Church is formed out of both Catholic and non-Catholic churches. In this way, the universal Church, the Church founded by Christ, is a container within which both the Catholic Church and the Eastern churches are encompassed. Moreover, this recognition that non-Catholic churches are churches and compose the one Church of Christ is the very reason, according to Sullivan, that the Council said “subsists in,” and not “is” in Lumen Gentium no. 8. This asserts, and was meant to assert, the non-identity of the Catholic Church and the universal Church, the Church founded by Christ.
However, Sullivan's use of Lumen Gentium no. 23 is illegitimate. Lumen Gentium no. 23 is speaking of Catholic particular churches, Catholic dioceses. The universal Church, the Church founded by Christ, is both present in them and comprised of them, i.e. comes from them: “in and from which churches comes into being the one and only Catholic Church.”Footnote 11 That is, it is from Catholic dioceses each of which recognizes the primacy of Peter, each of which enjoys that catholic unity willed by Christ the founder (Unitatis Redintegratio no. 3Footnote 12), that the one, universal Church is constituted, constituted in the very way Christ constituted it, and with all the endowments with which he graced it.
However, the Eastern churches cannot be said to be particular churches from which the universal church is similarly constituted. For these churches do not recognize the primacy of Peter, which Unitatis Redintegratio no. 3 envisages as one of the means of salvation with which the Church of Christ is endowed.Footnote 13 And therefore, the universal Church, the Church founded by Christ, constituted in the very way he constituted it, is certainly not formed out of them. The Church founded by Christ, continuing to exist as he founded it, it can be formed only from churches that preserve the unity he gave to it—Catholic unity—and from churches that embrace the Petrine ministry as Catholics understand it, for the Church Christ founded he entrusted to Peter and his successors.
B (ad 7). The appeal to Unitatis Redintegratio no. 15
In no. 15 of the Decree on Ecumenism, the Eastern churches seem to be spoken of as comprising the one Church. It is Sullivan's inference that they are so spoken of. However, we think the inference he draws does not follow simply and necessarily from the text as he seems to think.
Yes, it seems that the Eastern churches and the Catholic Church are spoken of at least indirectly as comprising the one Church of God (Unitatis Redintegratio no. 15): “through the celebration of the Eucharist of the Lord in each of these [Eastern] Churches, the Church of God is built up and grows in stature.” For the Eucharist certainly builds up the particular church, and if in doing that it is building up the one Church of God, how can that particular church not in some way help comprise the one Church of God?
The answer is that they might “comprise” it only “imperfectly,” which would be an attempt to say what is better said in other language that they are in only imperfect communion with the one Church of God as founded by Christ. Thus, it should be said that the Eucharist of the Eastern churches can certainly build up the one Church of God, even if the Church of Christ does not subsist in them. Why must we put things this way? If the one Church established by Christ subsisted in the Eastern Orthodox Churches we would find in them all the things Christ gave the Church he established. However, we do not; for we do not find the ministry of Peter exercised in them. Therefore, we cannot speak of the one Church of Christ as subsisting in them.
What we can do is take the language the Council used for individuals, speaking of “full incorporation” and therefore implying that there are degrees of incorporation (Lumen Gentium no. 14, Unitatis Redintegratio no. 3), and use it of separated churches.Footnote 14 If however we say that these churches are simply “incorporated,” or “fully incorporated” into the Church of Christ, then, like saying the Church of Christ subsists in them, we will imply that the Petrine ministry can both be and not be recognized as belonging to the Church established by Christ. In still other words, we can speak of these churches as in “imperfect communion” with the Catholic Church, as does Ut Unum Sint no. 11. We can speak, as Sullivan does, of degrees of “theological communion.”Footnote 15 This way of speaking both preserves the uniqueness of the Catholic Church as the only place where the Church of Christ continues to be found in its wholeness and respects the real relation of separated churches and non-Catholic Christians to the Catholic Church.
Thus, it is important that the way of speaking in Unitatis Redintegratio is only indirect. The Council nowhere says directly that the one Church of Christ, the universal Church, is composed of Catholic and non-Catholic particular churches. It nowhere gives the impression that the universal Church is being thought of as a container in which all the churches (and much less all the ecclesial communities) are placed in the same way.
C. The Catholic Church is not contained
If we say that the one Church is formed out of Catholic and non-Catholic churches, therefore, we are thinking of the one Church as a container, within which there is, among other things, the Catholic Church. This is the direction Sullivan's articles seem to lead. The magisterial documents since the Council have consistently refused this proposal, and have instead spoken of the one Church being present or operative, according to degrees, in non-Catholic churches and communities. The implications of the first way of speaking are worth developing.
If we say the one Church founded by Christ is formed out of Catholic and non-Catholic churches and ecclesial communities, then it is possible to be in one part of it, some non-Catholic part, and not discover things like the papacy or the sacrament of orders or the sacrament of reconciliation. And yet, one is supposed to be in the one Church established by Christ. Can this one Church both have and not have a Petrine office? We will, perhaps, seek more simply for the things held in common. Such things as the Petrine office, then, do not necessarily belong to the one Church established by Christ. They might be thought to be for the bene esse, but not the esse of the Church. If this is not acceptable, however, then it is not acceptable to think of the one Church as a container in which, among other things, there is also the Catholic Church.
Then again, if non-Catholic churches and communities are in the one Church, then it would seem not only that their members have a real and positive relation to the Church of Christ, but that they simply and without qualification are incorporated in this one Church. It would seem, in other words, as if the talk of degrees of incorporation enabled by the Council is unnecessary—all Christians of whatever communion are fully incorporated in the one Church.
D (ad 5). The Church of Christ is operative in non-Catholic churches and communities
It is indeed legitimate to say, as Sullivan wants, that the universal Church, the Church founded by Christ, is present and operative in non-Catholic churches (and ecclesial communities).Footnote 16 But it is not legitimate to say, we have argued, that the universal Church, the one Church founded by Christ, is formed “from” them.
However, we should observe that saying that the Church of Christ is in or operative in non-Catholic Churches is the same thing as saying that the Catholic Church is in or operative in them,Footnote 17 if indeed the Church of Christ—the Church as founded by Christ—is formed out of particular Catholic churches, and those alone (since those alone have all gifts with which Christ endowed the Church).
As we have said, Sullivan thinks that the Council could not have said “churches” in Lumen Gentium no. 15 if “only elements” were said (as it was not in fact said) or meant (as we think the case, see below) in Lumen Gentium no. 8. Now, when Lumen Gentium no. 15 speaks of the Church's relation to non-Catholics, it says that the Church recognizes the sacraments they receive in “their own churches.” The “their own” (propriis) seems significant. “Their own” is not “our.” Since the churches of these non-Catholics are “their own,” it cannot be supposed that the Church is being thought of as relating to some part of itself. That is what would follow, however, if the Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church, and the Church is comprised of all groups that are called “churches.” So, since the first is undeniable, the second must be false: and calling the Eastern churches “churches” does not mean that in Lumen Gentium no. 15 the Council thinks the Church is speaking of parts of herself.
E (ad 4). That it is not incorrect to represent the Council's teaching by saying that “only elements” exist outside the Church
When Sebastian Tromp proposed to the rest of Doctrinal Commission that the text say that the Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church rather than saying that it is the Catholic Church, he said at the same time that this is meant “exclusively,” and that “only elements” are found outside the one Church.Footnote 18 The text of Lumen Gentium says merely that “elements” (not “only elements”) exist outside the Church. As we have seen, Sullivan thinks this difference is important. For him, to say “only elements” as Tromp does would mean nothing can be called a church except the Catholic Church. This can seem to be plausible. For the 1962 schema, which has the est, remember, says that only the Catholic Church can be rightly (iure) called “Church.” Contrariwise, the text which first introduces subsistit in, and says “elements” (but not “only elements”), in speaking of non-Catholics, says of their sacraments that they are received “in their churches or ecclesial communities,” and this survives to the final text at Lumen Gentium no. 15.Footnote 19 On the other hand and to the contrary, when the Commission defends this usage, it says that it is right to say “churches” because the elementa that the Catholic Church recognizes as possessed by non-Catholics “not only regard individuals but also communities,” and goes on to remark that “pontifical documents speak generally of the separated Eastern ‘churches.’”Footnote 20 The “elements” were understood from the beginning to be possessed by individuals and also by communities. Thus, it seems that for the Commission, anyway, saying only “elements,” and even saying “only elements,” would not mean another group cannot be called a church.Footnote 21
It can be observed that the text of 1962, where it is said that only the Catholic Church can rightly be called “Church” means, in context, the Church given over by Christ to be ruled by Peter and his successors. That is, it means “the Church founded by Christ and as founded by Christ.” There is a certain sense, therefore, in saying that only that Church can rightly (iure) be called “Church.” That is, in context, what is being spoken of is the Church of Christ with all the instruments of sanctification he gave it, and with the unity he desired for it.Footnote 22
F. What it means to call the churches “churches” and ecclesial communities “ecclesial”
For the churches, it is a recognition of the observation of Henri de Lubac that the Church makes the Eucharist and the Eucharist makes the Church.Footnote 23 Wherever there is a full and valid celebration of the Eucharist, therefore, there must be a “church.” Defects there may be, of both the theological or moral order, but it cannot be that “the whole treasure of the Church” is made present at mass, and that the assembly there gathered is “called” to its Lord, and that we yet refuse to say “church.”
As for “ecclesial” communities in which “elements” of the Church were recognized, we have forgotten how liberating these words were at the time of the Council, since the distinction between such communities and the Church preserved the sense that, after all, we are bound to confess that it is the Lord who by his gifts defines the Church in its fullness and perfection, and so defines what counts as “Church,” and yet, at the same time, can recognize and name those elements of Protestant communions that really are from the Church, really do lead to the Church, really do have their efficacy from the Church, and so provide a basis from properly ecumenical discussion between Christian bodies. As the Doctrinal Commission said in explaining that the elementa regard communities, “precisely in this is located the principle of the ecumenical movement.”Footnote 24
G (ad 2 and 3). What “subsists in” means
Becker and Sullivan say it means “continues to exist in.” Maximilian HeimFootnote 25 and RatzingerFootnote 26 say it means “has its subsistence in,”“exists concretely in.” Becker and Sullivan argue that Tromp, a master of classical Latin, would have taken subsistere in its classical sense—“to continue to exist it.” Heim says that Tromp, a professor of fundamental theology, must have intended the word to have its scholastic sense, indicating a substance's manner of being, whereby it possesses its being in itself, and not in another.Footnote 27 Ratzinger says that all the Council fathers, trained as they were modo scholastico, would have understood immediately that subsistere is narrower in meaning the esse, and that it indicates the way of being of what the Greeks styled an hypostasis.Footnote 28 Moreover:
Subsistere is a special variant of esse. It is “being” in the form of independent agent. This is exactly what is concerned here. The Council is trying to tell us that Church of Jesus Christ may be encountered in this world as a concrete agent in the Catholic Church.Footnote 29
Ratzinger's observation, coming as it does from a participant in the Council, seems weighty.Footnote 30 It remains even so that the Doctrinal Commission did not express itself with all the fullness we might now desire on the meaning of the change. We are not, however, without resource. It may well be that the word has the sense Sullivan says it does, but that, in the larger context of Lumen gentium, it has also the sense Ratzinger thinks nicely captured in the scholastic vocabulary.
So, first, as to “concrete existence.” The text of Lumen Gentium has it that “the sole Church of Christ, the one “entrusted to Peter's pastoral care,” the Church “constituted and organized as a society in the present world,” the Church previously characterized in the immediately foregoing sub-paragraph as a “complex reality,” visible and spiritual, “structured with hierarchical organs”—this is the Church that subsists in the Catholic Church. But then, as organized in a society, visible, structured, the Church in question seems to be quite concrete. And so, if it subsists in the Catholic Church, it presumably subsists “concretely,” which is to say “has its concrete existence” there.
Second, as to the Church of Christ being thought of as an “agent,” this is everywhere presupposed where there is talk of the Church speaking, doing, acting, as in the next sub-paragraph of Lumen Gentium no. 8.
But the concreteness of the existing, and the characterization of the Church as agent—we submit that these are the only two conceptual notes that Ratzinger's understanding of “subsists” adds to Sullivan's.
Therefore, whether Tromp was thinking of Gredt's Elementa Philosophiae Aristotelico-Thomisticae (as Heim suggestsFootnote 31) or whether he contented himself more modestly with some lexicon of classical Latin (Sullivan), it does not make any difference, since from the context of Lumen Gentium we end up with the notion proposed by Ratzinger, by Heim, and by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in its Notification on Boff and elsewhere. It could not be said, therefore, that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in either its Notification (1985), or Dominus Iesus (2000), or the Responses to Some Questions (2007) has either derogated from the teaching of the Council or been confused as to what was really meant.
H (ad 1). Identity and non-identity
If subsistere in means “has its concrete existence in,” Sullivan holds, then the Church of Christ is identical with the Catholic Church, and there are no non-Catholic churches. There is, however, more than one way to conceive non-identity. There is the non-identity of a part and a whole. That is how Sullivan seems to shape things up. The Catholic Church is not exactly the same thing as the Church of Christ because it is only a part of it.
There is also the way the Council conceives of non-identity. The Church founded by Christ and as founded by Christ subsists in the Catholic Church, but the Catholic Church does not exhaust, as it were, absolutely all ecclesial reality; no, elements of the Church and sometimes even churches exist outside her. There is ecclesial being outside the one and unique Church. But there is no subsistence of the one and unique Church founded by Christ except singularly, uniquely. And that is in the Catholic Church. The elements are not self-sustaining, and so one is tempted to think of the distinction between substance and accident. That is not quite right, however, since the elements are “outside” the one Church, the one subsistence. It is a distinction, one may say, whose difficulty matches the difficulty of thinking coherently about a reality marred by sin.Footnote 32
Sullivan's proposal is in the interest of respecting non-Catholic Christians. If there are churches and ecclesial communities outside the Catholic Church then we cannot interpret subsistit to mean that the Church of Christ is fully identical with the Catholic Church. We agree, but only if that means that the Council acknowledges the existence of ecclesial reality outside the Catholic Church.Footnote 33 There is true ecclesial reality outside the boundaries, social and institutional, of the Catholic Church. Because of this, however, Sullivan also wants also to deny that the Church of Christ subsists only in the Catholic Church. We do not agree at all. The Church of Christ subsists in the Catholic Church, and only there, and in this sense, moreover, is fully identical with the Catholic Church.Footnote 34 True, the Church of Christ must continue to exist, in some degree, in particular Churches and ecclesial communities separated from the Catholic Church.Footnote 35 However, saying that the Church of Christ subsists only in the Catholic Church because she alone has all the things that Christ gave the Church, does not mean that every church and ecclesial community outside the Church is not really a church or is not really an ecclesial reality.
This can be put in terms of the unicity of the Church. To deny that there exists only one subsistence of the Church of Christ is to deny the unicity of the Church. The commentary on the Responses to Some Questions makes this very point stating that the unicity of the Church:
would be compromised by the proposal that the Church founded by Christ could have more than one subsistence. If this were the case we would be forced, as the Declaration Mysterium Ecclesiae puts it, to imagine “the Church of Christ as the sum total of the Churches or the ecclesial Communities – which are simultaneously differentiated and yet united”, or “to think that the Church of Christ no longer exists today concretely and therefore can only be the object of research for the Churches and the communities.” If this were the case, the Church of Christ would not any longer exist in history, or would exist only in some ideal form emerging either through some future convergence or through the reunification of the diverse sister Churches, to be hoped for and achieved through dialogue.Footnote 36
Either we affirm the one subsistence of the Church of Christ in the Catholic Church or we end up denying that the Church which Christ founded remains and lives today with all gifts that Christ gave it – including its unity – from the beginning. If we think of multiple subsistences of the Church of Christ then we will think that the one Church of Christ does not have the unity that Christ willed it to have and we will, in turn, misconceive the primary reason for ecumenism as having to do with overcoming this lack of unity in the one Church of Christ.Footnote 37
Furthermore, to affirm multiple subsistences is to overlook the fact that the Church of Christ cannot lose her unity without losing something essential to her mission. How can the Church of Christ lose the unity that Christ intends it to have and still remain in the nature of a sacrament and an instrument “both of a very closely knit union with God and of the unity of the whole human race”?Footnote 38
The unicity of the Church willed by Christ is bound up with the indefectability of the Church. She is indefectible, in part, because she will never be lacking in what she needs to fulfill her mission. Unity is necessary for the Church's mission otherwise she cannot be the saving sacrament of unity.
III. Conclusion
The Council Fathers taught in Unitatis Redintegratio no. 4 the gift of unity that Christ bestowed on the one Church was something that remained in the Catholic Church and could never be lost:
… when the obstacles to perfect ecclesiastical communion have been gradually overcome, all Christians will at last, in a common celebration of the Eucharist, be gathered into the one and only Church in that unity which Christ bestowed on His Church from the beginning. We believe that this unity subsists in the Catholic Church as something she can never lose, and we hope that it will continue to increase until the end of time.
Sullivan acknowledges that the Catholic Church has the unity and the institutional integrity that Christ wants the Church to have but affirms at the same time that the Church of Christ does not have the unity that Christ wants it to have because the Church of Christ is still found where ecclesial communion is not as full as it should be in particular churches and ecclesial communities.Footnote 39 Then it follows that if there is but one subsisting of the Church, it subsists as something incoherent, or that there are many subsistences. This second alternative leads one to think of the Church of Christ as existing in fragments and of the ecumenical task having to do with re-assembling those fragments so that the Church of Christ might regain her lost unity and oneness. On the contrary, the disunity among Christians does not shatter the unity of the Church of Church but hampers the Church's pursuit of the fullness of catholicity. Therefore we read in Unitatis Redintegratio, no. 4:
Nevertheless, the divisions among Christians prevent the Church from attaining the fullness of catholicity proper to her, in those of her sons who, though attached to her by Baptism, are yet separated from full communion with her. Furthermore, the Church herself finds it more difficult to express in actual life her full catholicity in all her bearings.
And Dominus Iesus no. 17:
The lack of unity among Christians is certainly a wound for the Church; not in the sense that she is deprived of her unity, but “in that it hinders the complete fulfillment of her universality in history.
Holding firmly to the one subsistence of the Church of Christ in the Catholic Church helps us to see and understand that the task of the ecumenical movement bears upon the Church's catholicity. “Full unity and full Catholicity”, in the words of Pope Benedict XVI, “go together”.Footnote 40
We forget today how at the time the recognition of ecclesial elements outside the Catholic Church was thought to be a great breakthrough of positive ecumenical significance; maintaining only the subsistence of the Church of Christ in the Catholic Church was thought to be sober and newly modest. Today, on the other hand, it seems that every attempt to recognize the continued perfect and full and identifiable existence of the Church of Christ, and this in accordance with the promises of Christ, is thought to be yet another exercise of Roman imperialism.
We think the position we have outlined, the position we think to be that of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, is coherent. It respects the ecclesial reality of non-Catholic churches and communities. It is the opposite of ecclesial relativism and so accepts the dominical promises to the Church at face value. It both makes ecumenical discussion possible and calls for it.