Full Text for CTM Scripture and Tradition in the Council of trent 24-6 (Text)

CONCORDIA THEOLOGICAL MONTHL Y Vol. XXXI JUNE 1960 No.6 Editorial Comment 340 Scripture and Tradition in the Council of Trent. RICHARD BAEPLER 341 The Sixteenth-Century "Confessyon of the Payth of the Germaynes" in Twentieth-Century American English. HERBERT J. A. BOUMAN 363 "But Right or Wrong-My Architecture." GEORGE W. HOYER 371 HOMILETICS 379 THEOLOGICAL OBSERVER 387 BOOK RINIEW 391 EDITORIAL COMMITTEE VICTOR BARTLING, PAUL M. BRETSCHER RICHARD R. CAEMMERER, MARTIN H. FRANZMANN ALFRED O. FUERBRINGER, ARTHUR CARL PIEPKORN WALTER R. ROEHRS,· LEWIS W. SPITZ GILBERT A. THIELE • On leave of absence AddreJI aU commlmications to the Editorial Committee in care of Victor Bartling, 801 De Mun Ave., St. Louis 5, Mo. Scripture and Tradition In the Council of Trent THIS study deals with the historical cir­cumstances surrounding the Roman Catholic doctrinal decision at the Council of Trent regarding the authority of Scrip­ture and tradition. By examining this de­cision in the light of events which led to its formulation as well as in the light of its subsequent fate, we shall be introduced to an issue which has become very much alive in both Roman Catholic and Prot­estant thought. In the past, Roman theology has tended to exalt tradition above Scripture; Prot­estants, in asserting their antithesis, have reversed the relationship. On the side of Roman Catholicism Biblical and patristic studies have prospered to such an extent that the Bible can no longer be relegated to a secondary role. In Protestantism the ecumenical movement has focused on the Bible as a common denominator in Chris­tendom, but this has paradoxically empha­sized the multitude of factors which shape the interpretation of the Bible. Within confessional Lutheranism the question also takes other forms, the most enduring being that of the relationship of the Lutheran Confessions to the Bible and of the Lu­theran Confessions to non-Lutheran con­fessions. The relationship of Scripture to tradi­tion is, of course, an aspect of the larger problem of authority in the church. Thus the churchmen at Trent felt they were dealing with a foundational issue when, in the fo1,ltth session, they treated this subject explicitly. 341 By RICHARD BAEPLER I How THE REFORMATION RAISED A QUESTION FOR WHICH THERE WAS No SINGLE TRADITIONAL ANSWER That the problem of authority could be raised at all and in the form that it was raised in the 16th century was due to a modification which the understanding of the church had undergone since the begin­ning of the Middle Ages. Without advanc­ing detailed patristic evidence it is possible to say that in general the patristic period did not feel the necessity for carefully de­fining and setting off such elements as church, Scripture, tradition, and authority. The common understanding of the church implied that the church, Scripture, and tra­dition were part of a whole, participating in the common authority of Christ. Theol­ogy was essentially exegetical in character, and tradition would ordinarily point to the commonly accepted understanding of the Bible as expressed in creeds, liturgy, and other forms. In this spirit Vincent of Lerins defined the true teaching of the church as that which is taught everywhere, always, and by everyone. Vincent was prob­ably directing this against the theological reforms of St. Augustine, but he expressed the idea of catholicity which the ancient church would probably have accepted as descriptive of the real situation. By the time of the Middle Ages subtle new forces were at work. Theology was in theory exegetical theology, although for some time before the revival of learning 342 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT it had been reduced to patristic quotations. But with the 12th-century renaissance came a renewed interest in the study of the Bible and the fathers. The two were felt to be a whole, sometimes the term sacra pagi11a being extended to cover the fathers as well as the canonical books. Newly discovered linguistic tools stimulated students toward new and fresh exegesis.1 The same revival produced a new in­terest in dialectics and consequently in philosophical theology. The study of the Bible was crowded out of the schools and found refuge in the monasteries, which continued to produce a stream of Biblicistic thought. At the same time the understanding of the church had undergone a subtle but im­portant change. Rudolph Sohm has de­scribed this change as the change from an organism to an essentially juridical organ­izatlon.2 Political developments pitted the church against the state over questions in­volving jurisdiction and authority. From another viewpoint the same question of authority was being raised by reform move­ments. The church was forced to develop organs for deliberation and for unified action, the Bishop of Rome becoming the chief beneficiary of these developments. In philosophy the power of nominalism would accelerate the breakdown. In theol­ogy the Vincentian consensus would be analyzed for its component parts in terms of Scripture, tradition, conciliar decrees, papal decrees, customs new and old. One towering figure in the 12th century 1 B. Smalley, The Study of the Bible h$ the Middle Ages (New York, 1952), pp.37-82. 2 K. D. Schmidt, Stltdien 7:lt1' Geschichte des Kon7:ils von T1'ient (Tiibingen, 1925), p.167, comments on the thought of Sohm with dis­cernment. incarnates the new trends: Peter Abelard, the father of scholasticism. His Sic et Non was a collection of mutually contradictory Biblical and patristic passages. He aimed to dispute the acceptance of doctrine on blind faith by introducing ratio and crit­ical inquiry. The writings of the fathers are to be read "not with the necessity of believing but with the liberty of judging." He halts only when confronted by the canon. Here no error is possible.s These developments imposed upon the church's theologians the task of clarifying the relationship between Scripture, tradi­tion, authority, and the church. To the extent that these questions are raised and become issues in theology, to that extent we are witnessing a breakdown of the natural unity between Bible and church that had for long characterized Westero. church life. Symptomatic of this disinte­gration is the flurry of spiritualistic, pro­phetic, and Biblicistic movements, of which the Waldensians are an important example. The new situation is already evident in the theology of St. Thomas. For St. Thomas the authority of Scripture is axiomatic, is proprie et ex 11eces.ritate (Summa, I, Q. I, Art. VIII). The authority of the fathers is not quite on the same level. It is rather probabiliter. No genuine contradiction be­tween the church and the Bible is contem­plated by Thomas, for he still presupposes a natural unity. But should there be some differences among theologians in indi­vidual Biblical interpretation the matter would, in the last analysis, be settled by papal decision. He uses tradition chiefly as a verb to refer to the transmission of 8 R. Seeberg, Text-Book of the History of Doctrines, translated from the German by C. E. Hay (Grand Rapids, 1952), II, 58. SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 343 Scripture. Casually and naturally he draws upon noncanonical apostolic tradition in discussing sacraments and the reverencing of images. His method is exegetical so far as he is concerned.4 Alexander of Hales equates theology with Sacred Scriptures, scarcely even men­tioning the word tradition. When it is used, it refers to the Word of God, which has been handed down in the Bible.5 St. Bonaventure, in his commentary on the sentences, does not even treat tradition or the teaching office of the church. Later in the commentary he occasionally refers to apostolic traditions in connection with the reverencing of images of Christ. Yet he is quite clear that auctoritas p1'i1~cipaliter resides in the Bible. (Brev. V 7) One of the first theologians to deal with a possible contradiction between Scripture and the church, Henry of Ghent, put the question in a purely hypothetical sense: "Must we believe rather the authorities of doctrine (Bible) than those of the church, or the other way around?" His answer was the classical answer that there is no con­tradiction between the church and the Bible. Should, however, the visible form of the church contradict the Bible in any way, the Word of Scripture would be the only true authority, f01' its teaching is immutable, while the teaching of human beings is changeable.6 Both St. Thomas and Henry of Ghent are aware of the possible element of error 4 Relevant passages collected by A. Deneffe, Der Traditionsbegrifl (Munster, 1931), pp.76 and 77. o Ibid., p. 75. 6 G. Tavard, "Holy Church or Holy Writ: a Dilemma of the Fourteenth Century," Church History, XXIII (September 1954), p. 196 ff. This excellent article deserves thoughtful study. in the human attempt to interpret the Scriptures. To counter this danger a typical proponent of the papalist position, Guido Terreni, introduces the work of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit, he argues, is at work in the church, and particularly does He assist the Supreme Pontiff in his decisions, also with respect to the correct interpretation of the Scriptures. For the authority of the canon itself is dependent upon the church, particularly the pope.7 Both Henry's and Guido's views are dis­tortions of the patristic and earlier me­dieval view which considered Scriptures and church to be "mutually inherent" (Tavard). A more subtle but equally re­vealing expression is that of Nicholas of Lyra: "I protest that I wish to state or determine nothing but what has been plainly determined either by Sacred Scrip­tures or by the Church's authority." The either-or implies a double authority which would permit emphasizing one at the ex­pense of the other or at least would obscure any unity of authority.s During the 14th century, theologians vigorously discussed the question of author­ity. Marsilius of Padua declared that Scrip­ture alone (salam ... Scripturam) is true and must be believed for salvation; other writings of men may contain truth, but they are less reliable. Should there be doubt over unclear passages, a general church council would decide.9 The term sola Scriptttra is repeatedly used by William Occam in formulating his position. He denies the church the right to establish doctrines apart from Scripture. 7 Ibid., p. 199. 8 Ibid. 9 F. Kropatscheck, Das Schri/tprinzip der lutherischen Kirche (Leipzig, 1904), pp. 292 ff. 344 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT Only the Scriptures are without error; the pope and the councils can err. The only infallible interpreter of Scriptures is the whole church.10 For John Wycliffe the authority of Scrip­ture derives from Christ. It is His book, and thus, he argues, one is compelled to acknowledge the sola SC1'iptU1'a position. Still sensing a relationship between church and Scripture, he states a preference for the ancient church, which was relatively pure and had no pope. The institution of the papacy should be eliminated because it is not Scriptural.ll W ycliffe' s opponent, the learned Thomas Netter, argued chiefly on the basis of Scrip­ture and the early fathers. He pointed to the history of heresies as proof of the need for authoritative interpretation of the Bible while admitting at the same time the su­preme authority of Scriptures. The church which had established the canon should be the authoritative interpreter. Netter also spoke of an oral tradition which derived from the apostles, enabling the church to interpret authoritatively,12 The 15th-century nominalist Gabriel Biel argued that the Scriptures could not err, whereas the pope can. Still, reform in the church required more than Scripture, which was primarily a book for faith. There were also to be believed truths not found in Scripture. But he denied that the pope or church could create new dogma18 The 15th-century conciliarists shared a common view of the high authority of Scriptures. No dogma, institution, law, or 10 Ibid., pp. 309 If. 11 Ibid., pp. 326 If. 12 Denelfe, p. 78. 18 Kropatscheck, pp. 322 if. reason could make a claim for authority in the church unless it was based on Scrip­tures. The fathers, in some sense inspired, were excellent guides in the interpretation of Scripture. Particularly important is their method of throwing light on dubiou.s pas­sages by comparing them with clear texts. Yet their chief interest was not in the authority of the Bible but in a definition of the decisive organ of the church.14 It is very difficult to describe the com­plex 16th-century situation. There was no unified Protestant or Roman position, but both sides had theologians with a wide variety of views. Moving freely on either side were the humanists, many of whom shared with the Protestants an antagonism . toward the corruption within the church, an antipathy toward decadent scholasticism, and an urge to refurn to the sources of the faith. Luther's own position is not simple, for it developed over a period of years. Pri­marily concerned for the centrality of the preached Gospel, his views of Scripture and tradition would follow from his evangelical and kerygmatic center. In his Resolttti01~es disputatiomtm de indttlge11tiarum virtttte (1518) he bids the pope speak of Christ as Judge over the indulgence dispute. The pope is to be obeyed when he agrees with canonical law or a council, not when he speaks his own opinions.10 It was Eck who then formulated the debate in terms of authority, attempting to identify Luther with the conciliarists. Luther does seem to hold substantially to a condliarist po­sition, though he is forced by Eck to state that both pope and coundl are human and 14 Ibid., pp. 382 If. 15 WA 1,527,574,582. SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 345 therefore can err.16 We are reminded of earlier statements (Thomas and others) which attributed probability to human de­ductions from Scripture, since only God is infallible and unchangeable. How, then, did Luther regard the church's tradition? The ancient creeds he accepted and expounded because they summed up Scriptural teaching,17 Against sectarians he would summon the practice and teaching of the ancient church. On the other hand, the opinion of Paul was su­perior to the opinion of all the fathers whether they be Athanasius, Ambrose, or Augustine himself.1s The most thoughtful statement of views appears in 1539 in his treatise V 01~ Konzilie1~ und Kil'chen. In the same year Melanchthon published a similar essay: De ecclesia et autoritate Verbi Dei. Both Luther and Melanchthon are in substantial agreement that the an­cient church is purer than the present Roman Church, but that the fathers must be studied critically, the Word of God always remaining the norm. An interesting divergence is, however, discernible. Luther is always favoring the conciliarist position, sees congregations, schools, and pastors as little councils who are safe guides for people in their study of the Word; Me­lanchthon, partly because he was writing against Servems, tends to draw upon the historical past of the church to substantiate his argument.19 In the Augsburg Confes-16 J. Koopmans, Das altkirchliche Dogma it. der Reformation (Munich, 1955), pp. 17, 18, 17 W. Elett, Morphologie des Lftthertllms (Munich, 1931), I, 180 if. 18 Koopmans, p. 39. Also see Polman, L'Blement Historique dans la Controvene Re­ligieuse du XVUme Siecle (Gembloux, 1932), pp.27-31. 19 Koopmans, p. 29. sion and Apology the use of patristic evi­dence in a corroborative fashion is evident. The Augsburg Confession declares its the­ology to be that of the Roman Church as known by her writings CAC XXI). Me­lanchthon does seem to restrict "traditions" to rites and ceremonies, blasting the posi­tion which requires the observance of tra­ditions which contradict the Gospel CAC XXVI). Yet traditions which do not con­tradict the Gospel are retained CAC XV). Me1anchthon's pupil Chemnitz, in a more detached way than either Luther or Me­lanchthon, will be able to formulate a Lu­theran statement on tradition which gives great weight to patristic evidence. Jan Koopmans sums up the difference between Luther and Melanchthon admirably: Luther placed all emphasis on the Word of God, and to understand this Word, he had no need of fathers or councils. What he needed was the brother who would witness to him the forgiveness of sins, under the authority of the Word, and such brothers were the church fathers. Melanchthon saw the church in less eschatological terms, was sensitive to Scriptural manipulation, and sought the Augustinian unity of Scriptures and church. But too much a child of his times, he could not create that unity in such a way that church and Bible remained side by side. We should also note the dynamic view of both Scripture and tra­dition which would seem to be implied in Luther's emphasis on the living, spoken, and preached W ord.20 Calvin, too, understood theology to stand in obedience to the Word. His most ex­tensive statement of position on our issue is his Defensio contra Pighium.21 He 20 Ibid., pp. 31, 32. 21 CR VI, pp. 320 if. 346 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT agrees with Pighius that the church cannot err, but only under the condition that she is obedient to the Word. A student of Augustine, Calvin also strives toward unity of Bible and church. He does not reject traditions outright, as many left-wing Re­formers did, but critically distinguishes be­tween true and false traditions. He reads the fathers as chiefly supporting the Refor­mation position, which leads him to con­clude that the Reformers and the ancient church stand opposed to the papacy in common service to Christ.22 This position was shared by many Reformers, especially those with humanistic tendencies, and led to a great flourishing of patristic studies, of which the school of Bullinger in Snas­bourg is perhaps the most eminent ex­ample.23 There was also a left-wing reformation with radical theological views. Men such as Carlstadt and Bucer had little use for tradition of any sort. They even tended to reject all non-Biblical theological termi­nology. No doubt their extreme views tended to obscure the conservative stand­point of many of the Reformers, especially during the early years of the Reformation. But the course of debate between Protestant and Roman theologians gradually moved from the argument over Biblical and eccle­siastical authority to controversy over Bib­lical and patristic issues. This would seem to indicate that the conservative Protestant argument was felt by the Roman theolo­gians to be the most serious position. But left-wing radicals are pointed to as people who are consistent in their sola Scriptura views, as the sole logical position of people who disregard ecclesiastical authority. 22 Koopmans, p. 41. 23 PoIman, pp. 98, 99. The initial Roman argument against the Reformers followed the lead set by Eck. There is a general unanimity in the fust stage of the polemics, most of the contro­versialists pounding away at the formal insufficiency of Scripture. They argue that Scripture is obscure, that it is peculiarly subject to extravagant manipulation, that its free interpretation is the source of all heresies. Such insufficiency required the authority of the church. It was the same church which established the canon which guarantees authentic interpretation. This initial argument was not particu­larly effective, since many of the Reformers could agree in a formal way with these assertions, provided of course the "church" were understood in the Reformation sense. Indeed, precisely this issue concerning the nature of the church, which had lain dor­mant since the beginning of the Middle Ages, embarrassed the Roman dogmati­cians, since it was all too apparent that unanimity was lacking among them. The church was a complex reality. Which were the component parts? Some, such as John Fisher, attempted to maintain a unified picture of the church in which the church is considered a living whole, consisting of all the faithful among whom the Holy Spirit is active preserving the true doctrine. In this whole Fisher dis­tinguished several elements: fathers, coun­cils, apostolic traditions, customs of the church. On the other hand, the Italian Dominican Prierias opposes to Luther the authority of the pope, the councils, and the church. In Eck's view the pope and coun­cils represent the church.24 Much less agreement is present over the 24 The arguments are well summarized by PoIman, pp. 284-293. SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 347 issue of who or what is the organ of the church. Bartholomew Latomus speaks of the faith in the hearts of all the people. John Fisher held that the church speaks through the mouth of the fathers. Driedo and Peresius promote the Church of Rome, while Pighius holds to the person of the pope as the proper ecclesiastical organ.25 In what sense do the fathers speak for the church? The distinction is usually made between the fathers as individuals and the fathers as a group. While individually they may err, collectively they have authority. But whence do they receive this authority? Some held that their authority came from the Holy Spirit; others that their authority derived from the approval of the church. In the case of councils similar uncertainty showed itself. Was the council independ­ently infallible or only when approved by the pope? 26 There was no unanimity on this issue, and thus the Roman attack on the formal sufficiency of Scripture lost force. This same weakness will show itself in the Council of Trent; it did not achieve a clari­fication of the nature of the church. The controversy entered a new stage with the Reformation's critical attack on doctrines not in the Bible and with the Roman assertion of the material insuffi­ciency of the Bible. The concept of tra­dition was deeply involved, and at this stage it suffers a considerable reduction at the hands of many polemicists, coming to refer to those doctrines not written in Scripture.27 In the patristic and early scho­lastic period, tradition had included the transmission of the whole apostolic preach-25 Ibid., p. 294. 26 Ibid., pp. 294-303. 21 Denefte, pp. 127-130 ing, chiefly in Scriptures. But already in the writings of Bonaventure and St. Thomas the notion of a non-Scriptural source of truth is mentioned in connection with the reverencing of images and sacraments. More evidence of such a source can be found in Occam, it has recently been as­serted, and in Thomas Netter the idea is full-blown.28 Again this development wit­nesses to the breakdown to which we have previously referred. Now, in the 16th cen­tury, the pressures of polemic have con­stricted the idea of tradition to those doc­trines outside the Scripture. And yet even here great diversity is to be found. Some Roman theologians emphasize the apostolic character of tradition and give highest au­thority only to tradition which can be established as apostolic. Other theologians stress ecclesiastical traditions, not distin­guishing between apostolic and ecclesias­tical, holding that the authority of the church is decisive. We may examine the relevant teaching of some of the leading pre-Tridentine Roman theologians. We possess a thorough study of the dog­matician Johann Driedo's idea of tradi­tion.29 Christ and the apostles bring the revelation of God. But not everything they revealed was committed to writing. That which was written is the Bible; the rest of 28 The relevant material is collected by J. Beumer, "Das Katholische Schriftprinzip in der theologischen Literatur der Scholastik his zur Reformation," Scholastik, XVI (1941), 24-52. The revised views on Occam are reported by A. van Lecumen, "L'Eglise, regIe de foi, dans Ies ecrits de Guillaume d'Occam," Ephemerides The%gicae LOvatlienses, Xl (Ian-Iun 1934), 249 ft. 29 J. Lodrioor, "La Notion de Tradition dans Ia Theologie de Jean Driedo de Louvain," Ephemerides Theologicae Lovaniensl.ls, XXVI (Ian-Iun 1950), 37-53. 348 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT the revelation comes to us through the church. This is the tradition. It is apo­stolic in that its source is Christ or the apostles. The church may draw out the implications of this tradition, may clarify and develop it, but cannot add to it. Tra­dition is used by Driedo in a twofold sense: as the original deposit of faith and as the active handing down of the apostolic truth through the physical succession of bishops. The distinction between apostolic tradition and ecclesiastical customs is made also by John Fisher, but although he does not ex­plicitlyequate their authority, he uses them for all practical purposes as if they were on the same level,3° We have a full study by George Tavard of the monk Nikolaus Ellenbog on this issue. Ellenbog did not occupy an influen­tial chair at a university but was active in 16th-century polemics. He is valuable in particular because of his extensive cor­respondence with Romans and Protestants. We have seen previously that the aid of the Holy Spirit has been invoked by thinkers to account for certainty in mat­ters which were not clear in the canon. Ellenbog logically carries this line of thought to the conclusion that if the Spirit once gave revelation to the apostles, and if Christ promised the Spirit to the church, the Spirit continues to reveal through the church. Thus there is revealed the author­itative interpretation of Scripture. This post-canonical inspiration also accounts for later ecclesiastical customs, particularly those which proceed from councils and the pope. Here there is no distinction made between apostolic and post-apostolic inspiration. The church can add new doc-so J. Fisher, Assertionis Lutheranae Conlu­Mio (Coloniae, 1553), p.22. trines to the original deposit, even some which contradict earlier assertions.S1 Albertus Pighius in his earlier writings uses the terms apostolic traditions and ec­clesiastical traditions in about the same way, later choosing to use the latter desig­nation only, referring to those extracanon­ical truths with apostolic origins.s2 Peresius Aiala, who participated in the Council of Trent, distinguishes traditions from Christ, traditions from the apostles, and traditions from bishops. The first two uses are the most important for him, so that tradition comes to designate that doc­trine which is extracanonical. The author­ity of Scripture is guaranteed by the au­thority of the church manifesting itself in tradition. Three criteria for finding that tradition are (1) the belief of the universal church, principally Rome; (2) the general councils; (3) the orthodox fathers.Bs One of the members of the committee which helped produce the fourth session's decree was Alfonso de Castro. In his Ad­versus haereses he asserted that many things taught by Christ were not written down by the apostles but have come down to us by mouth to mouth and heart to heart. He emphasized that behind this tradition is the authority of the church, which is as strong today as when it fust established the canon.34 Confronted by a wide variety of theo­logical positions within Christend0m, how would the Council respond to the ques-31 Tavard, "A Forgotten Theology of In­spiration: Nikolaus Ellenbog's refutation of 'Scriptura Sola,' .. FranciJcaJ~ Studies, XV (June 1955), pp. 106-122. B2 Folman, p. 305. 33 Deneffe, pp. 84, 85. 34 A. de Castro, Adversus haereses, Lib. I Cap. V (Basel, 1534). SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 349 don? The fact that the Reformers were not represented, and that the membership was .deliberately weighted with prelates rather than with theologians seemed to prejudice the true catholicity of the answer. II How THE COUNCIL PRODUCED A COMPROMISE FORMULA WHICH SETTLED NOTHING The debates leading up to the fourth session fall naturally into two parts, the first beginning Feb. 8, 1546, and ending with the first draft of the decree March 22, 1546, the second leading to the adoption of the final text on April 8, 1546.85 The two texts are given at the end of this article, and the debate may be best under­stood through constant reference to them. In reviewing the main lines of the de­bate we may note four salient features. The first is the confusion that reigns con­cerning the term traditi01$. Shall tradition be designated "apostolic" or "ecclesiastical," or does it make any difference? No final clarity is achieved, although the final decree (which uses neither) in substance means apostolic tradition. But to the very end of the discussion no genuine clarity is achieved. The second feature we note is the un­willingness of the council to grapple with the definition of authority or of the church. The issue is raised on several occasions, but it is always postponed, never to be undertaken formally in the final promul­gation. 35 The sources for the council are collected in Concitium Tridentinum, edited by the Societas Goerresiana (Freiburg, 1901). We shall hence­forth refer to this simply by a Roman numeral (for the volume) and an Arabic number (for the page). Thirdly, we should follow the fate of the pa1'tim . . . pa1'tim clause introduced by Cardinal del Monte and included in the first draft of the decree but dropped later. We shall analyze this more closely at the appropriate point. Fourthly, we should note the excited de­bate over the phrase pari pietatis afJectu, first applied to all the canonical books, later extended to include the tradition. This controversy became another form of the argument between apostolic and eccle­siastical partisans. The letters of the papal legates to Far­nese reveal their plan to propose that the coundl accept Sacred Scriptures as the source of doctrine; to establish that all of Jesus' revelation was not recorded in the Bible but that some was handed down in the tradition; that after the Ascension, the Holy Spirit continues His work of reveal­ing in the church, the results of which are found in the tradition which is defined chiefly by the councils. (X 373) On Feb. 8 the legates inform the council that they first ought to receive Scriptures as the source of theology (I 28). On Feb. 11 they add that "tradition" ought to be considered also. In the discussion Seri­pando, general of the Augustinians, and the Bishop of Fano suggested a distinction among Biblical books according to their religious value, but there was no support for this move (V 7 ff.). In their subse­quent letter the papal legates indicate satis­faction with the proceedings. In this letter it becomes clear that their intention is to formulate a general statement which will defend the church's practice against Prot­estant claims that such practice is not in the Bible. (X 378, 386). After preliminary discussion concerning 350 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT the method of receiving the Sacred Scrip­tures, Cardinal del Monte introduced the question of tradition immediately at the general assembly on Feb. 12. His words are significant: Noverunt Paternitates Vestrae, qualiter omnis fides nostra de revelatione divina est et hane nobis traditam ab eeclesia par­tim ex scriptutis, quae sunt in veteri et novo testamento, partim edam ex sim­plici traditione per manus. 'Therefore, he concluded, we should begin with Scripture and then deal with tradi­tion. (V 7). It is important to note that the tradi­tions are here described as ecclesiastical traditions and that the pat'tim . . . partim phrase would seem to imply a double trans­mission of revelation. This seems to be the only time in the debate in which "tradi­tion" is used in a comprehensive sense to include both canonical and noncanonical doctrines. Late at night in the meeting of Feb. 15 the issue de receptione traditionum aposto­licarum is introduced, but the hour is too late for further consideration. The next meeting was held on Feb. 18. In connection with the reception of Sacred Scriptures into the decrees, two related articles would need consideration: de re­ceptione traditionum apostolicarum and the abuses in connection with the Sacred Scriptures (V 10). First it was necessary to decide in which order these two matters would be considered. 'The debate reveals the controversial nature of this issue. Some think that the abuses ought to be treated first, others argue for the traditions. Cas­tellimaris would have the Scriptural abuses treated, followed by the traditions and the abuses pertaining to them. 'The bishop of Fano argued that when we receive the Scriptures we necessarily receive the traditions, for both are dictated by the same Holy Spirit. (V 10) Bellicastrensis took a strong position for the traditiones ecclesiae et eius consuetu­dines, cum haec omnia principia sint nos­tfafum conclttsionum (V 10). Asturicensis thought the matter should be delegated and that weightier issues should be un­dertaken. But the legate of Cardinal Giennensi, the Spanish theologian Alfonso de Castro, pushed the debate to the issue of authority, declaring that there was no unanimity among the delegates about that vital issue. The diaries indicate an interesting side­light, the Bishop of Cavo insisting that he believed the Gospel of John because John said so, not because the church said so. He received the reply that this was heret­ical. (I 484, 480) The General of the Servites introduced a consideration of the councils and the papal decretals into the debate, since the heretics rejected their authority. In summing up, the presiding cardinal, S. Crucis, thought that the majority desired a consideration of the traditions after the Sacred Scriptures, for there is no difference except that one is written and the other not, both having come from the same Holy Spirit. There are three principia et funda­menta of our faith: the first is the Sacred Scriptures, written by the Spirit's dictating; the second is the Gospel, which Christ taught orally, part of which some evan­gelists committed to writing, the rest being transmitted orally; and third is the on­going revelation of the Holy Spirit in the church, which will continue until the con­summation of the age. (V 11) SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 351 The meeting of Feb. 23 raised the ques­tion as to whether Scripture and tradition should be treated in the same decree or in separate decrees. The procurator of the cardinal of Augsburg suggested that they must distinguish a diversity of authorities and that there was a reception appropriate to each authority. Matters which pertain to faith must be received as the Gospel itself; other matters, such as rules concetn­ing bigamy and the eating of strangled meat, are not so received. This distinction was well taken, but De Castro, promoting a strong ecclesiastical position, proposed that the following be included in the decree: Ultra autem sacros libros nonnulla in ecclesia Dei habemus quae scripta non sunt, sed ipsius ecdesiae auctoritate ob­servantur, cui ecdesiae ab apostolis tradita sunt et per manus ad nos usque deven­erunt. (V 7) In summing up this meeting Cardinal S. Crucis accepted the distinction made be­tween traditions which were essential to the faith and those pertaining to ceremo­nies. He then submitted a long series of Biblical and patristic quotations on the place of tradition in the church. In reporting to the general assembly of Feb. 26 Cardinal S. Crucis adlieved further precision in establishing a valid criterion for apostolic traditions. Remembering the distinction between essential and nonessen­tial apostolic traditions, he designated those as essential quae ab ecclesia receptae ad nos usque pervenerunt (V 18). This criterion, therefore, is continuity.ao 36 E. Ortigues, "1'.icritures et Traditions Apos­toliques au CondIe de Trente," Recherches de Science ReligieflSe, XXXVI (Avril, Mai, Juin 1949), p.277. This did not satisfy all. Turritano and others expressed the view that all the eccle­siastical traditions themselves should be generaliter accepted, that so much mention should not be made of traditionum aposto­licarum lest the rest of the traditions would seem to be rejected (V 18). At this point Nacchianti, bishop of Chioggia, stood up and declared traditions to be substantially irrelevant because of the soteriological suf­ficiency of the Bible! Nemo enlm ignorat contineri in sactis libris omnia ea quae ad salutem pertinent. After the presentation of the first draft on March 22, the council proceeded on March 23 to debate its adequacy. The records indicate that the draft of the de­cree, though ostensibly worked out by Cer­vini in committees, was in fact largely suggested by the papal legates already in February.37 Senogalliensis (V 33) thought the de­scription of "tradition" was too general, since it would include traditions which were no longer in use or which had been rejected, e. g., the prohibition against strangled meat. Feltrensis replied (V 33) that they fol­lowed the 7th council in speaking of tra­ditions in general. As for those traditions no longer in use, the following sentence excludes them: traditiones quae continua successive usqtte ad nos pervenerunt. How­ever, Senogalliensis was not satisfied with this. (I 522) There was considerable concern over the phrase pari pietatis affectu. The bishop of Fano and Bellicastrensis exchanged words on this issue. The bishop of Fano declared (I 523), "Non placet quod dicitur: pari 87 K. D. Schmidt, p. 195. 352 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT pietatis affectu recipiendas esse traditiones, quia maiores auctoritates sunt scripturae quam traditiones." Yet lest the adversaries say that in accepting the apostolic tradi­tions we reject the ecclesiastical traditions, it should be made clear that the latter are also given by the Holy Spirit. Bellicastrensis thought that since the Spirit was the Author of both, and could change the traditions when it pleased Him, there should be no objection to the pari pietatis affectu. A series of questions was then placed before the council. Some are irrelevant to our discussion. Question 6: Should the traditions be named individually, or shall it be in­dicated simply that they exist and are received? Question 7: Can we say of Scripture and traditions par debetfir pietalis afJechts, or shall an expression indicating debita reverentia be used? Question 8: Should pari pietatis afJectu be retained with a qualification that this pertains to dogmatic, not ceremonial matters? Question 14: Should ecclesiastical tradi­tions also be dealt with here? On March 27 the bishop of Fano took up once again the theme that Scripture and tradition should not be received pari pie­tatis affectu because inter haec maXim1Jm discmnen sit. Scripture is unchangeable, while tradition can be modified by the church. The same Spirit may be behind them, but they are not on the same level. To combat Lutheran arguments, though, it would be enough to insert the following words: quoniam sancta haec synodus scit, quam pI ura alia esse in ecclesia a S piritu Sancto dictata, quae in sacris litteris non sunt prodita, propterea illa quoque suspicit et veneratur. Unless this distinction is made, he argued, the opposition would accuse us of receiv­ing traditions against which we are vio­lators. (V 40) Bituntius (V 40), taking up the argu­ment that the Holy Spirit was Author of both o'adition and Scripture, suggested that the Spirit also auth01'ed other truths. So it would be insufficient merely to say that some traditions were abolished. Not every­thing established by the apostles has per­sisted. But there are some things, namely, those quae ad fidem pertinent, which are perpetually valid. The changes did not satisfy all the men. Bishop Nacchianti of Chioggia raised a storm by declaring the pari pietatis affectu to be impious. Since this was taken by some to be personal and out of place, Nac­chianti was forced to apologize (V 71). But his statement as such was not called heretical. The opposition to this formula exerted sufficient pressure to cause the committees to substitute simili for pari on April 6. The next day, by vast majority, this was changed back to pari. On April 1 the fathers voted: 7 voted merely to note the existence of the tradi­tion; 44 wanted to receive them; 33 ac­cepted the pari pietatis affectu, while 11 proposed simili pietalis affectu; 3 voted feverentia debeatur,. 3 voted dubie, while there were 2 l~ihil placet; several abstained. 13 against 11 (with 28 abstaining) voted for making no distinction among tradi­tions. The council was unanimous in post­poning further discussion on ecclesiastical traditions. (V 42-58) On April 5 the modified form of the decree was again presented. The chief SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 353 change was the insertion of tum ad fidem, tum ad mores pertinentes, to exclude cere­monial traditions and to establish an in­ternal criterion. Another significant change in the first draft was the elimination of the partim . . . parthlt formula. Shortly after the draft had been presented, Bonucci, the learned gen­eral of the Servites, criticized it by say­ing: ludico omnem vet'itatem evangelicam scriptam esse, non ergo partim. later he again protested against the suggestion that veritatem eva#gelicam partim in scriptis, pat'tim in traditio#ibus conti#eri. (V 47) The supporters of pa4·thn . . . paftim tried to base their contention on John 21:25, which asserts that Jesus did many things which were not recorded. Cam­peggio refuted this (I, 525) by asserting that the Biblical basis for the council's action was John 16: 13: "The Spirit will lead you into all truth." The combined assault of Nacchianti, Bonucci and others forced the council to substitute ... et ... for partim ... partim. Father Geiselmann argues that the com­bined protest of Nacchianti and Bonucci, who both asserted the sufficiency of Scrip­ture, succeeded in producing a compromise formula. This formula was deliberately left in an indecisive state, surely in part due to the reluctance of the papal legates to force the issue of supreme authority. What was decided was to reject the partim ... paftim formula, to lay great stress on the apostolic character of tradition, and to assert, how­ever indistinctly, some basic unity between Scripture and tradition.as 38 "Das Missverstandnis tiber das Verhiiltnis von Schrift und Tradition und seine Dber­windung in der katholischen Theologie," Schrift fmd Tradition, ed. T. Ellwein (Bad Boll, 1956), pp.8,9. Geiselmann argues that the standpoint of Nacchianti and Bonucd, though a minority position at Trent, really has the authentic catholic tradition behind it as classically stated by Vincent of lerins. Vincent not only stated the famous definition of catho­licity in his Commo#itot'ium but also as­serted the sufficiency of Scripture. This document was rarely studied during the Middle Ages. Geiselmann thinks that an edition published in 1528 inspired these men to hold their position.so He seems to be supported in his general conclusions by Johann Beumer who has studied the cath­olic Schriftp1'i#zip, particularly in the Middle Ages:lO Surely there was much common ground on which the minority party at Trent and the conservative Re­formers could stand. III How THE UNSETTLED QUESTION HAS ONCE AGAIN, AFTER MANY YEARS, REASSERTED ITSELF The Protestant answer to the Council of Trent varied. The left wing continued to develop radically; its history would tend to support the claim that private interpre­tation, cut off from a creative relationship to the church's tradition, is self-destructive. The Reformed wing, sometimes tending toward a radical use of the Bible, outdid other branches of Protestantism in patristic studies which aimed to show the agree­ment of the Reformed position with the ancient church. But the most thorough treatment of the problem of tradition, both on the theoretical level and in actual theo­logical application, came from Martin a9 Ibid., p. 8. 40 Ibid., pp. 41, 50. 354 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT Chemnitz in his Examen.41 The burden of his argument is that Trent, not the Refor­mation, has been unfaithful to tradition in its total exposition of doctrine. Chemnitz, the Ma1'tinus sec1tndus of the Reformation and a major author of the Formula of Concord, clearly distinguished his position from the Biblicistic wing of Protestantism. He rejects Biblical interpretation which depends on one's own wisdom, for Scrip­ture is not of private interpretation. We value highly and reverently use the labors of the fathers. Nor do we approve of someone who invents a sense of Scripture which contradicts all of antiquity.42 Arguing that Trent was exploiting the imprecision so clearly evident in the use of the word "tradition," Chemnitz pro­ceeded to distinguish eight kinds of tra­dition.43 1. We may designate as tradition that which Christ and the apostles handed down viva voce, which the evangelists and apos­tles subsequently reduced to writing. 2. The faithful and careful transmission of the Sacred Scriptures in a certain con­nected succession to us is a form of tra­dition. 3. The rule of faith, a summary of Scrip­tural truth similar to the Apostles' Creed, such as that handed down by Irenaeus and Tertullian, may be called tradition. 4. The true exposition and understand­ing of Scripture was received by the prim­itive church from the apostles and handed 41 Martin Chemnitz, Examen Concilii Tt'i­dentini, ed. Ed. Preuss (Berlin, 1861). Also see J. Pelikan, "Tradition in Confessional Lutheran­ism," Lutheran W' orld III (December 1956), 219 ff. 42 Ibid., Part I, sec. 8, p. 66. 43 Chemnitz, pp. 70-99. down. This, too, we accept as a valid form of tradition. 5. Dogmas not explicitly stated in Scrip­ture but drawn from clear Scripture on the basis of sound reason are traditions. These have been transmitted by the church from the apostles. An example would be infant Baptism. 6. The catholic consensus of the fathers is a form of tradition in which we delight. Thus, as members of the catholic church, after we have set fo1'th Scripture as judge in matters of religion, we immediately join to it the evidence of the catholic consensus. 7. Many ancient rites are designated as apostolic, though it cannot always be estab­lished that they derive from the apostles. Nevertheless, in our Christian freedom, we accept them; indeed, we retain and love them, for we distinguish between doctrine and rites. While all doctrines are taught in Scripture, many rites manifestly were not committed to writing, and so we re­ceive them (e. g., renunciation of the devil, abrogation of the Sabbath, other dtes in connection with Baptism which have edi­fying value, etc.). 8. The single sense of tradition to which Chemnitz objects is those matters of faith and morals which derive from post-apo­stolic times, or which are not written, i. e., without foundation in the canon, which are raised to the same level as the Scrip­tures. It must be said, in evaluating Chemnitz's work, that we are confronted by a masterful handling of the problem which certainly tries to maintain a kind of unity between Scripture and tradition reminiscent of the classical position. It is an advance (which was not developed by his successors) that SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 355 Chemnitz recognizes Scripture to be a part of tradition ("tradition" in the senses in which he defined it). There are many passages which seem to be striving for that unity. Chemnitz is a major author of the ,For­mula of Concord which, though it speaks of the Scriptures as the pure fountain of Israel, qualifies this by adding immediately that the function of Scripture is to judge doctrine. This would suggest that doctrine is an entity in some sense derived from Scripture, yet apart from Scripture, which is brought into some kind of relation­ship to Scripture without being identified with it. The comparison further suggests that this doctrine, controlled by the norm within tradition, becomes the norm for the living preaching and teaching of the church. In the 17th century, Protestants, such as Grotius and Calixtus, still attempted to utilize tradition in a constructive and creative way by insisting that tradition in some sense precedes Scripture, but the power of rationalism triumphed in theol­ogy, reducing much of Protestant thought to a one-sided emphasis either on the Bible or on individual experience. On the Roman side the decision of Trent did not prevent theologians from speaking about tradition in the same way as be­fore. Some precision, however, is achieved through the great and decisive work of Melchior Cano.44 De locis theologicis was published shortly before the coundl was closed. This work is a basic treatise on theological methodology, was a product of the theological renaissance which was to put Spain in the front ranks of theology 44 M. Cano. De locis theologicis, in Melchi­oris Cat~i opera (Petavius, 1734). for some time, and became determinative for nearly every dogmatidan who followed him, including the great Bellarmine. With­out exaggerating we can say that pOSt­Tridentine theology, at least on the ques­tion of Scripture and tradition, is based on Cano rather than the cound1.45 In his book he sets forth 10 kinds of theological authority, presumably in their order of importance. First is Sacred Scrip­ture, second are apostolic traditions, third is the catholic church, fourth are the coun­cils, fifth is the Roman Church, etc. Here at last clarity is achieved in clearly dis­tinguishing apostolic authority from eccle­siastical authority and in indicating criteria for establishing that authority. However, the partim . . . prtrtim formula is still re­tained (1. III, c. 3), and the analysis of various kinds of authority obscures the question of their unity. Thus the same rationalism which des­iccated Protestantism will now reduce Ro­man theology in the main to a kind of scholasticism in which authority and cer­titude become the chief issues, the latter growing in importance for two reasons. Historical criticism called into question certainty which was based on history, since historical analysis could only yield prob­abilities. In addition, the Thomistic revival reaffirmed that deductions drawn from revelation by reason had only probability, not certainty, for reason was fallible. Thus in July 1601, Father Gaspar Hurtado of the University of Alcala, defended as a thesis for his doctorate a number of propositions, among them that "it is not de fide that 45 This opinion is supported by A. Michel in Dictiomutire de Theologle Catholiqfle, ed. E. Amann and others (Paris, 1903), Vol. XV, col. 1322. 356 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT a particular person, e. g., Clement VIII, is Pope." The reasoning was that while reve­lation may declare the successor of Peter to be pope, only historical and rational investigation could affirm that Clement VIII was the successor of St. Peter.46 The developing sense of history weak­ened the classical Roman polemic against the Protestants, formulated by Bossuet, that while Catholicism remained unchanged all through history, hel'esy represented varia­tion. Prophetic of the decay of this argu­ment is the work of Petavius (d. 1652), who, a patristic scholar and not a school­man, formulated the theory that Platonism was at the root of all heresy. "In five successive chapters Petau surveyed ante­Nicene Christianity, showed how heresi­archs like Marcion and Tatian depended upon Platonic presuppositions, displayed the cloven hoof peeping out beneath the togas of Justin Martyr and Clement of Alexandria and Origen." 47 He was joined by the famous 17th-century French Bene­dictines, among whom the study of pa­tristics reached new heights. So at the time when Richard Simon, for the Prot­estants, was startling Biblical scholars with new critical studies, these French historians were beginning to throw doubt on well­intrenched legends in the vulgar Roman tradition. The man Chiefly responsible for giving Rome a new start in theology by which she began to recover from the extreme embal'l'assments she found herself in, was no less than Gotthold Ephraim Lessing.48 46 O. Chadwick, From BosSftet to Newman (Cambridge, 1957), p. 39. 47 Ibid., p. 58. 48 J. Ranft, Del' Ursprung des kathoUschen Tf'aditionsprinzips, (Wiirtzburg, 1931), p.144. In his "Necessary answer to a very unnec­essal'y question of Herr Hauptpastor Goeze in Hamburg" Lessing attacked the Luther­anism of his day by striking at its foun­dation, the Bible. He argued that oral tradition, the fegtt!a fidei, preceded the Bible, that many Christians had been saved without the Bible, that this early confes­sion is the rock on which the church was built, not the Bible.49 The first Protestant who saw in this viewpoint an escape from the devastating results of Biblical criticism was Eichhorn, who began to study the gos­pels on the presupposition that they are the results of, and are formed by, oral tradition. He thereby became a kind of precursor to form criticism, which modern Roman Biblical scholars have developed with great skill and profit. In Roman theology Sailer combined the Lessing insight with Fenelon's concept of living tradition. Thus was begun a direc­tion of thought which flourished in the Tiibingen school under the Tiibingen greats: Drey, Moehler, Kuhn, Doellinger. Forced into controversy with his Protestant colleague Baur, Drey appropriated Hege­lian insights to argue that revelation is dialectically and dynamically developed in the living history and life of the church. The Bible is a part of tradition, but extra­canonical sources also contribute to this development. Moehler, under similar in­fluences, advanced the thought of his teacher. In The Unity of the Chttr'ch he argued that tradition is the Gospel of the apostles, that faith is not the servile sub­mission to some authority, but that it im­poses itself upon the believer and is self­validating. These ideas combined with 49 Lessing's Theological Writings, trans. H. Chadwick (Stanford, 1957), pp. 62 ff. SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 357 a high and romantic view of the church to enable the Tiibingen theologians to ac­cept a great deal of critical history. But still in Moehler, romanticism, argues Father Geiselmann, prevented him from achieving a complete unity of Scripture and tradition, for the church did somehow add something to the Bible, thus not wholly freeing the concept of tradition from an incremental function. It was the greatest of the Tii­bingen men, Moehler's pupil Johann Kuhn, who finally overcame the partim ... pm·tim idea. Kuhn began his career as an exegete and later became a dogmatician. Since tra­dition was the living transmission of reve­lation, borne by the community, the Scrip­tures were the literary deposit of this. The Scriptures were materially sufficient; all explication of dogma in the church is rooted in them; nothing can develop which does not have its premise or Ankniipfm~gs­pllnkt in the canon. Thus the sufficiency of Scripture is declared in the sense of Vincent of Lerins, and a kind of classical unity is achieved (d. the exact parallel development in the Lutheran Erlangen School). The tradition lives on and un­folds in the preaching of the church.50 But the general retreat of Christianity on all fronts had accelerated the ultra­montane tendencies already strongly rep­resented in Trent. The great theological spirit behind the Vaticanum was Fran­zelin."l He pressed for a greater precision in the definition of tradition, distinguish­ing for the first time explicitly betWeen t1"aditiol~es (tradition in the passive ~ense) referring to doctrines or truths objectively stated, and traditio (in the active sense) 50 I depend for my summary upon Geisel­mann, pp. 14-21. See n.38 above. 51 A. Michel, Op. cit., col. 1336. referring to the living and authoritative transmission in the church. This enabled him to emphasize the magisterial function of the church. He denied that the church promulgated new revelations. The Spirit assists the teaching of the church, does not inspire. This is the main thrust of the Vatican decree also. The Vaticanum reaffirmed Trent (sessio III, c. 2) and emphasized the magisterial function of the church, partic­ularly that of the Supreme Pontiff when he speaks ex cathedra (sessio IV, c.4). But by failing to define ex catbedra the Vati­canum did not close the door to further discussion of Scripture and tradition. Fol­lowing the distinction of Franzelin betWeen the active and passive sense, theological debate in Roman circles continues over the relationship betWeen traditiones and tra­ditio. This is substantially the same debate which we witnessed at Trent betWeen sup­porters of apostolic tradition and supporters of ecclesiastical tradition. Is the traditio controlled by, or does it control, the tra­ditiol~es? Can the traditio be corrected by a more accurate and fuller apprehension of the traditiones? The antimodernist en­cyclicals did not really close this debate, for they were chiefly concerned with ex­cesses in the theory of doctrinal develop­ment which, in Rome's opinion, gave indi­vidual and corporate experience too decisive a role as a source in the development of dogma. A recent example of the continuation of the Tddentine discussion has appeared in the first issue of the new theological jour­nal from Montreal, StlJ,dia Mantis Regii. Gerard Owens, C. SS. R., of Assumption University, Windsor, Ontario, undertakes to answer the celebrated French Jesuit 358 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT Jean Danielou.52 Danielou is well-known for his published discussions with Oscar Cullman on the subject of Scripture and tradition,53 and he has formulated a posi­tion which seems unsatisfactory to his critic Owens. Danielou poses the question: "Once we have admitted that Tradition and Scripture ate the two sources of Revelation, by which the message of Christ is transmitted to us ... are these two sources merely two dif­ferent ways by which a single truth is transmitted to us? Or rather have they a distinct content in such wise that certain truths are transmitted by Scripture but other revealed truths omitted by Scripture are transmitted to us by Tradition alone?" Danielou's answer to the second ques­tion is negative. Owens responds in his article entitled "Is All Revelation Contained in Sacred Scripture?" There are three major objections to Danielou's position, Owens contends. First, the truth of the canonicity and inspiration of Scripture cannot be derived from Scrip­ture itself. A second objection concerns the five sacraments usually rejected by Protestants as non-Scriptural. It would be extremely difficult to establish these from Scripture alone. The third objection in­cludes the dogmas relating to Mariology. Especially the doctrine of Mary's intimate 52 G. Owens, "Is All Revelation Contained in Sacred Scripture?" Stltdia Montis Regii, I (1958),55-60. 53 This important debate on Scripture and tradition, carried on sympathetically by a Prot­estant and a Roman Catholic, may be studied in English in O. Cullmann, The Early Chltrch, trans. A. J. B. Higgins and S. Godman (Phila­delphia: The Westminster Press, 1951), pp.59 to 99; and in J. Danielou, God and the Ways of Knowing, trans. W. Roberts (New York: Me­ridian Books, Inc., 1957), pp. 174-217. association with Christ in redemption would be difficult to establish from Scrip­ture alone. Owens concludes: "The more one thinks of the complete corpus of Catholic doc­trine, the more does the restriction of the content of Tradition as a source to co­extension with that of Scripture, appear to be a mirage .... It is certainly praiseworthy to remove any unwarranted obstacles to the path of reunion, but it seems questionable, to say the least, whether any approximation to the 'scriptura sola' is a step in the right direction." This exchange could almost literally have been excerpted from the minutes of the Council of Trent. In view of the narrow­ing and consequent distortion of authentic Christian tradition, which has constituted the main theological direction of Rome since Trent, it must appear curious to many that such discussion is still alive within the Roman communion.54 And yet such controversy is inevitable in view of the significant revival of Biblical and pa­tristic studies within Roman Catholicism.55 These developments would be sure grounds for great optimism if one were not saddened by certain dominant trends 54 The most recent analysis of this problem by a Roman Catholic deals again with the Council of Trent. Conclusions supporting my general interpretation of the council as well as the theological position of Danielou are pre. sented by H. Holstein, "La Tradition d'apres Ie CondIe de Trente," Recherches de Science Re­ligiefMe, XLVII (Juillet-Septembre 1959), 367 to 390. 55 E. B. Koenker, "The New Role of the Scriptures in Roman Catholicism," The LI/theran Quarterly, X (August 1958), 248-254, shows that in addition to the great renewal of Bible studies on a scholarly level there is also an important movement encouraging Bible study on the level of the parishes. SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 359 in Mariology as exemplified by the recent Dogma of the Assumption. There seems to be a certain irreversibility in Roman Catholicism which constitutes a grave prob­lem for all who view evangelical develop­ments within this communion with sym­pathy. At the same time we must be grateful for, and attentive to, the lifeblood of the Gospel that still flows within sclerotic Ro­man veins.56 We must never underestimate the renewing power of the Word of God, no matter what the circumstances of his-tory. This srudy has principally dealt with the Council of Trent and has neglected parallel Protestant developments. These may be de­scribed at another time. We may now at­tempt some concluding observations which will try to place our results into the context of the current theological siruation. The problem of Scripture and tradition is part of a whole complex of questions, such as the nature of the church and the nature of authority within the church. In the past the question of the relationship between Scripture and tradition has been formulated on the presupposition that these were two competing and mutually exclu­sive realities. The new formulation of the question which is developing both within Roman Catholicism and Protestantism tends to link Scripture and tradition her­menettticaUy. The basic question seems to be: What is involved in bridging the gap between the then of revelation and the now of the life of the church? The Bible is not a dead book, but continues to live in 56 The problema tics of Protestant-Roman Catholic dialogs are discussed by ]. Pelikan, The Riddle of Roman Catholicism (New York: Abingdon Press, 1959). the act of reading, contemplation, procla­mation, interpretation. This is accom­plished in the living context of the church, which under the guidance of the Spirit is shaped by the message of the Bible and, in rurn, supports it and shapes its procla­mation. The question of tradition, then, as it is being raised in modern theology, deals with the presuppositions and influential factors at work as a reader weighs, elabo­rates, and connects the various data of Biblical revelation. In short, we are dealing with the very heart of theology, the expo­sition of the Scripture. To illuminate this question rather than to provide answers, we may call attention to merely two of these influential factors which make their presence felt in the inter­pretation of the Bible. The historic doc­trinal decisions, embodied in the creeds and confessions, are always at work sup­plying the presuppositions and doctrinal framework for interpreters who accept dlese decisions as dogmatically binding. Another instance would be the influence of the great doctors of the church. For example, can we really understand the ex­egesis current in the Missouri Synod apart from the specific heritage of luther, Ger­hardt, Walther, Pieper, and Stoeckhardt, to mention only a few? The expositor is always in some sense indebted to the great teachers who preceded him. A question which may be raised in this connection is the traditional assertion of the principle that the Scripture interprets itself. Of course, this principle sets certain conditions which the interpreter must obey, but within those conditions the process of apprehension and interpretation continues. My observations on the new form of the 360 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT old problem of Scripture and tradition are partly in anticipation of what we think will happen and partly a recognition of a trend already evident. If this becomes a major trend and development, we may hope that interconfessional dialog will turn more and more to matters of Biblical ex­position. One can observe this new situa­tion already in various theological disci-plines. For example, the church fathers are now being studied not so much as meta­physical theologians but principally as Bib­lical expositors. Thus the study of patristio. exegesis is one concrete field in which Protestant and Roman Catholic studies are converging with mutual benefit and illu­mination. Valparaiso, Ind. ADDENDUM The text of 22 March is the initial draft; the text of 8 April is the final decree. Words omitted or added in the course of the debate are in italics. An English trans­lation is appended. Text Presented on 22 March Saerosancta oecumenica et generalis Tri­dentina synodus in Spiritu saneto legitime congregata praesidentibus in ea eisdem tribus ApostoHcae sedis legatis, hoc sibi perpetuo ante oeulos proponens ut sublatis erroribus puritas ipsa Evangelii Dei conservetur, quod promissum ante per prophetas eius in Scrip­turis sanctis Dominus noster J. C. ejitS fiUw proprio ore primum promulgavit, delnde per suos apostolos tanquam regtttam omnis et salutaris veritatis et morum disciplinae omni ereaturae praedicari iussit, perspiciensque banc veritatem partim contineri in Ebris scriptis partim sine scripto traditionibus, quae vel ipsius Christi ore ab apostolis ac­ceptae vel ab ipsis apostolis Spiritu sancto dictante quasi per manus traditae ad nos usque pervenerunt: orthodoxorum patrum exempla secuta omnes libros tam veteris quam novi Testamenti, cum utriusque unus Deus sit auctor, necnon traditiones ipsas tan­quam vel oretenus a Christo vel a Spiritu sancto dictatas et continua successione in Ecclesia catholica conservatas, q1tib'JS par pietatis debetNr affectus, summa cum reveren­tia pro sacris et cano·nicis suscepit et venera­tur, mscipi et rib omnib1l-s Christi fidelib1M statttit et decernit. Omnes itaque intelligant quo ordine et via ipsa synodus post iactum fidei confessionis fundamentum sit progres­sura et quibus potissimum testimoniis ae praesidiis in constitttendis dogmatibus et in­staurandis in Ecclesia moribus sit usura. (The list of canonical books follows.) Final Text of 8 April Sacrosancta oeeumenica et generalis Tri­dentina synodus in Spiritu saneto legitime congregata praesidentibus in ea eisdem tribus Apostolicae sedis legatis, hoe sibi perpetuo ante oculos proponens ut sublatis erroribus puritas ipsa Evangelii in Ecclesia conservetut, quod promissum ante per prophetas in Scrip­turis sancds Dominus noster J. C. Dei FitifUI proprio ore primum promulgavit, delnde per suos apostolos tanquam fot&tem omnis et salutaris veritatis et morum disciplinae, omni creaturae praedicari iussit: perspiciensque, hanc veritatem et disciplinam contineri in Ubris scripds et sine scripto traditionibus, quae ipsius Christl ore ab apostolis acceptae, atft ipsis apostolis, Spiritu saneto dictante, quasi per manus traditae, ad nos usque per­venerunt, orthodoxorum patrum exempla secuta, omnes tibros tam veteris quam novi Testamenti, cum utriusque unus Deus sit auctor, necnon traditiones ipsas, t1lm ad {idem, tftm ad mores pertine1ztes, tanquam vel oretenus a Christo vel a Spiritu saneto SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT 361 dictatas, et continua successione in Ecclesia catholica conservatas, pari pietatis affectu ac reverentia suscipit et veneratur [the list of canonical books follows} .... Omnes itaque intelligant quo ordine et via ipsa synodus post iactum fidei confessionis fundamentum, sit progressura et quibus potissimum testi­moniis ac praesidiis in confirmandis dogma­tibus et instaurandis in Ecclesia moribus sit usura. The Text of 22 March The holy, ecumenical and general coun­eil of Trent, lawfully assembled in the Holy Ghost, the same three legates of the Apo­stolic See presiding, keeps this constantly in view, namely, that the purity of the Gospel of God may be preserved after the errors have been removed. This [Gospel], of old proclaimed through the Prophets in the Holy Scriptures, our Lord Jesus Christ, His Son, promulgated first with His own mouth, and then commanded it to be preached by His Apostles to every crea­ture as the mle at once of all saving truth and norms of conduct. It also clearly per­ceives that this truth is contained partly in the written books and partly in the unwritten traditions, which, received either by the Apostles from the mouth of Christ Himself, or from the Apostles themselves, the Holy Ghost dictating, have come down to us, transmitted as it were from hand to hand. Following, then, the examples of the orthodox fathers, it receives and ven­erates with the highest reverence as sacred and canonical all the books both of the Old and New Testaments, since one God is the Author of both; also the traditions, to which is due an equal feeling of piety as having been dictated either orally by Christ or by the Holy Ghost and preserved in the Catholic Church in unbroken suc­cession; and orders and decrees that these be received by all the faithful of Christ. Let all understand, therefore, in what order and manner the coundl, after having laid the foundation of the confession of faith, will proceed, and who are the chief wit­nesses and supports to whom it will appeal in establishing dogmas and in restoring morals in the church. (The list of canon­ical books follows.) The Final Text, Approved 8 April (This translation is essentially the Schroeder translation provided with his edition of the text. I have made some modifications.) The holy, ecumenical and general coun­dl of Trent, lawfully assembled in the Holy Ghost, the same three legates of the Apostolic See presiding, keeps this con­stantly in view, namely, that the purity of the Gospel may be preserved it. the Church after the errors have been removed. This [Gospel], of old promised through the Prophets in the Holy Scriptures, Oill' Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, promulgated first with His own mouth, and then com­manded it to be preached by His Apostles to every creature as the source at once of all saving ttuth and norms of conduct. It also clearly perceives that this truth and fitle are contained in the written books and in the nnwritten traditions, which, received by the Apostles from the mouth of Christ Himself, or from the Apostles themselves, the Holy Ghost dictating, have come down to us, transmitted as it were from hand to hand. Following, then, the examples of the orthodox Fathers, it receives and ven­erates with a feeling of equal piety and reverence all the books both of the Old and New Testaments, since one God is the author of both; also the traditions, whether they relate to faith 01' morals, as having been dictated either orally by Christ or by 362 SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION IN THE COUNCIL OF TRENT the Holy Ghost, and preserved in the Catholic Church in unbroken succession. (There follows a list of the sacred books.) . . . Let all understand, therefore, in what order and manner the council, after having laid the foundation of the confession of faith, will proceed, and who are the chief witnesses and supports to whom it will appeal in confirming dogmas and in re­storing morals in the Church. BIBLIOGRAPHY Primary Soltrces Cano, M. De loci! theologicis, in Melchioris Cani opera. Madrid, 1734. Canons and Decrees of the Council 0/ Trent, trans. H. J. Schroeder. New York, 1955. Chemnitz, Martin. 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