The reason you cannot truly understand scripture without the - TopicsExpress



          

The reason you cannot truly understand scripture without the church is because the fulness of the faith includes Sacred Tradition. What did Christ mean when he said do not cast your pearls before the swine. ? Discipline of the secret. (Latin Disciplina Arcani; GermanArcandisciplin). A theological term used to express the custom which prevailed in the earliest ages of the Church, by which theknowledge of the more intimate mysteriesof the Christian religion was carefully kept from the heathen and even fromthose who were undergoing instruction in the Faith. The custom itself is beyond dispute, but the name for it is comparatively modern, and does not appear to have been used before the controversies of the seventeenth century, when special dissertations bearing the title De disciplinâ arcani were published both on the Protestant and the Catholicside. The origin of the custom must be looked for in the recorded words of Christ: Give not that which holy to dogs; neither cast your pearls before swine; lest perhaps they trample them under their feet, and turning upon you, they tear you (Matthew 7:6), while the practice in Apostolic times is sufficiently vouched for by St. Pauls assurance that he fed the Corinthians as . . . little ones in Christ, giving them milk to drink, not meat, because they were not yet able to bear it (1 Corinthians 3:1-2). With this passage we may compare also Hebrews 5:12-14, where the same illustration is used, and it is declared that solid food is for the perfect; for them who by custom have their senses exercised to the discerning ofgood and evil. Although the origin of the custom is thus to be traced back to the very beginnings of Christianity, it does not appear to have been so general, or to have been carried out with so much strictness in the earlier centuries as it was immediately after the persecutions had ceased. This may be due in part to the absence of detailed information with regard to the earlier period, but it is probable enough that the discipline was growing more strict all through the second and third centuries on account of the pressure of persecution, and that, when persecution was at last relaxed, the need for reserve was felt at first, while theChurch was still surrounded by hostilePaganism, to be increased rather than diminished. After the fifth or sixth century, when Christianity was thoroughly established and secure, the need of such a discipline was no longer felt, and it passed rapidly away. The practice of reserve (oikonomia) was exercised mainly in two directions, in dealing with catechumens, and with theheathen. It will be convenient to treat of these separately, as the reasons for the practice, and the mode in which it was carried out, differ somewhat in the two cases. Catechumens It was desirable to bring learners slowly and by degrees to a full knowledge of the Faith. A convert from heathenism could not profitably assimilate the wholeCatholic religion at once, but must be taught gradually. It would be necessaryfor him to learn first the great truth of the unity of God, and not until this had sunk deep into his heart could he safely be instructed concerning the Blessed Trinity. Otherwise tritheism would have been the inevitable result. So again, in times ofpersecution, it was necessary to be very careful about those who offered themselves for instruction, and who might be spies wishing to be instructed only that they might betray. The doctrines to which the reserve was more especially applied were those of the Holy Trinity and the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. TheLords Prayer, too, was jealously guarded from the knowledge of all who were not fully instructed. With regard to the Holy Eucharist and the Lords Prayer some relics of the practice still survive in theChurch. The Mass of Catechumens, that earlier portion of the Eucharistic service to which learners and neophytes were admitted, and which consisted of prayersor readings from Holy Scripture and sometimes included a sermon, is still quite distinguishable, though the custom no longer survives in the Western Liturgy, as it does in the Eastern, of formally bidding the uninitiated to depart when the more solemn part of the service is about to begin. So also the custom of saying the Lords Prayer in silence in all public services, except the latter part of the Mass, when catechumens would according to the ancient use no longer have been present, owes its origin to this discipline. The earliest formal witness for the custom seems to be Tertullian (Apol. vii):Omnibus mysteriis silentii fides adhibetur. Again, speaking of heretics, he complains bitterly that their discipline is lax in this respect, and that evil results have followed: Among them it is doubtfulwho is a catechumen and who a believer; all can come in alike; they hear side by side and pray together; even heathens, if any chance to come in. That which is holy they cast to the dogs, and their pearls, although they are not real ones, they fling to the swine (Praescr. adv. Haer., xii). Other passages from the Fathers which may be cited are St. Basil (On the Holy Spirit 27): These things must not be told to the uninitiated; St. Gregory Nazianzen(Oratio xi, in s. bapt.) where he speaks of a difference of knowledge between those who are without and those who are within, and St. Cyril of Jerusalem whose Catechetical Discourses are entirely built upon this principle, and who in his first discourse cautions his hearers not to tell what they have heard. Should acatechumen ask what the teachers have said, tell nothing to a stranger; for we deliver to thee a mystery . . . see thou let out nothing, not that what is said is not worth telling, but because the ear that hears does not deserve to receive it. Thou thyself wast once a catechumen, and then I told thee not what was coming. When thou hast come to experience the height of what is taught thee, thou wilt know that the catechumens are not worthy to hear them (Cat., Lect. i, 12). St. Augustine andSt. Chrysostom in like manner stop short in their public addresses, and, after a more or less veiled reference to the mysteries, continue with: The initiated will understand what I mean. The Lords Prayer was in St. Augustines time taught eight days before baptism(Hom. xlii; cf. Enchir., lxxi, and the Apostolic Constitutions, VII, xliv; St. Chrys. Hom. cc, al. xix, in Matt.). The Creed in like manner was taught just before baptism. So St. Ambrose, writing to his sister Marcellina (Epist xx, Benedict, ed.) says that on Sunday, after thecatechumens had been dismissed, he was teaching the Creed in the baptistery of the basilica to those who were sufficiently advanced. (Cf. also St. Jerome, Epist. xxxciii, ad. Pammach.) More detailed teaching about the Holy Trinity and about the other sacraments was only given afterbaptism. Other passages which may be consulted are: Chrys., Hom. in Matt., xxiii, Hom. xviii, in II Cor.; Pseud. Augustine, Serm. ad Neoph., i; St. Ambrose, De his qui mysteriis initiantur; Gaudentius, Ser. ii ad Neoph.; Apost. Constit., III, v, and VIII, xi. The rule of reticence applied to all the sacraments, and no catechumen was ever allowed to be present at their celebration. St. Basil (On the Holy Spirit 27) speaking of thesacraments says: One must not circulate in writing the doctrine of mysteries which none but the initiated are allowed to see. For baptism reference may be made to Theodoret (Epitom. Decret., xcviii), St. Cyril of Alexandria (Contr. Julian., i), andSt. Gregory Nazianzen (Orat. xl, de bapt.). The discipline with respect to the Holy Eucharist of course requires no proof. It is in involved in the very name of the Missa Catechumenorum, and one can scarcely turn to any passage of the Fathers which deals with the subject in which the reticence to be observed is not expressly stated. Confirmation was never spoken of openly. St. Basil, in the treatise already spoken of (On the Holy Spirit 25.11), says that no one has ever ventured to speak openly in writing of the holy oil of unction, and Innocent I, writing to theBishop of Gubbio on the sacramental form of the ordinance answers: I dare not speak the words, but I should seem rather to betray a trust than to respond to a request for information (Epist. i, 3).Holy orders in the same way were never given publicly. The Council of Laodiceaforbade it definitely in its speaking of the practice of begging the prayers of the faithful for those who are to be ordained, says that those who understand co-operate with and assent to what is done. For it is not lawful to reveal everything to those who are yet uninitiated. So also St. Augustine (Tract xi. in Joann.): If you say to a catechumen, Dost thou believe in Christ? he will answer, I do, and will sign himself with the Cross . . . Let us ask him, Dost thou eat the Flesh of the Son of Manand drink the Blood of the Son of Man? He will not know what we mean, for Jesushas not trusted himself to him. The heathen The evidence for the reserve of Christianwriters when dealing with religious questions in books which might be accessible to the heathen is, naturally, to a large extent of a negative character, and therefore difficult to produce. Theodoret (Quaest. xv in Num.) lays down the general principle in terms which are quote clear and unmistakable: We speak in obscure terms concerning the Divine Mysteries, on account of the uninitiated, but when they have withdrawn we teach the initiated plainly. That passage alone would suffice to refute the allegation not unfrequently made that the Discipline of the Secret was a confinement of theknowledge introduced in imitation of theheathen mysteries. On the contrary allChristians were taught the whole truth, there was no esoteric doctrine, but they were brought to full knowledge slowly, and precautions were taken, as was verynecessary, to prevent heathens from learning anything of which they might make an evil use. A very striking example of the way in which the discipline worked may be found in the writings of St. Chrysostom. He writes to Pope Innocent Ito say that in the course of a disturbance at Constantinople an act of irreverence had been committed, and the blood of Christ had been spilt upon the ground. In a letter to the pope there was no reason for not speaking plainly. But Palladius, his biographer, speaking of the same incident in a book for general reading, says only, They overturned the symbols (Chrys. ad Inn., i, 3 in P.G., LII, 534; cf. Döllinger, Lehre der Eucharistie, 15). It is, no doubt, on this account that almost all the early apologists, as Minucius Felix,Athenagoras, Arnobius, Tatian, and Theophilus, are absolutely silent on theHoly Eucharist. Justin Martyr and to a less degree Tertullian are more outspoken; the frankness of the former has been unduly urged to prove the non-existence of this institution in the first half of the second century. So again, as Cardinal Newmanhas observed (Development, 87), bothMinucius Felix and Arnobius in controversy with heathens deny absolutely that Christians used altars in their churches. The obvious meaning was that they did not use altars in the heathensense, and they must not be taken as denying the teaching of the Epistle to the Hebrews, that, in a Christian sense, we have an altar. The controversial importance of this subject in more recent times is, of course, obvious. The Catholics answered the accusation of Protestant writers, that their special doctrines could not be found in the writings of the early Fathers, by showing the existence of this practice of reserve. If it was forbidden to speak or write publicly of these doctrines, silence was completely accounted for. So again, if here and there in early writings terms were used which seemed to countenanceProtestant teaching — as for instance by speaking of the Holy Eucharist as symbols — it became necessary always to examine whether these terms were not used intentionally to conceal the true doctrinefrom the uninitiated, and whether the same writers did not, under other circumstances, use much more definite language. Protestant controversialists, therefore, endeavoured first of all to deny that the practice had ever really existed, and then when they were driven from this position, they asserted that it was unknown to the earliest Christians, as shown by the freedom with which Justin Martyr speaks on the subject of the Holy Eucharist, and that it was the result ofpersecution. They alleged therefore thatCatholics could not use it to account for the silence of any writer before the latter part of the second century at the earliest. To this Catholics responded that, although no doubt the practice may have been intensified through persecution, it goes back to the very beginnings ofChristianity, and to Christs own words. Moreover it can be shown to have been in force before St. Justins time, and his action must be regarded as an exception, rendered necessary by the need for putting before the emperor an account of the Christian religion which should betrue and full. The monuments of the earliest centuries afford interesting examples of the principle of the Discipline of the Secret. Monuments which could be seen by all could only speak of the mysteries of religion under veiled symbols. So in thecatacombs there is scarcely any instance of a painting the subject of which is directly Christian, although all spoke ofChristian truth to those who were instructed in their meaning. Jewish subjects typical of Christian truths were commonly chosen, while the representation of Christ under the name and form of a fish made the allusion to the doctrine of the Holy Eucharist possible and plain. There is, for example, the famous Autun inscription (seePECTORIUS): Take the food, honey-sweet, of the redeemer of the saints, eat and drink holding the Fish in they hands; words which every Christian would understand at once, but which conveyed nothing to the uninitiated. The inscription of Abercius offers another notable instance. The need for this reticence became less pressing after the fifth century, as Europebecame Christianized and the discipline gradually passed away. We may, however, still trace its effects in the seventh century in the absurd understatements contained in the Koranon the subject of the Blessed Trinity and the Holy Eucharist. This, perhaps, is almost the last instance which could be brought forward. Once the doctrines of the Church had been publicly set forth, any such discipline became impossible and no return to it was practicable. For a refutation of the theory of G. Anrich (Das Antike Mysterienwesen, 1894), that the primitive Christians borrowed this practice from the mysteries of Mithra, see Cumont, The Mysteries of Mithra (London, 1903), 196-99 Paul says hold fast to the traditions oral and written. Have you searched for the tradition God obligates you to hold fast to? What was the reasoning for the sign of the fish and the three legged table?
Posted on: Sat, 09 Nov 2013 01:09:54 +0000

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