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The following is an extract of the talk given by Archbishop
Paul J. Hallinan at the National Newman Club Convention in Lafayette, La., last
week.
American Catholics are many, as are world Catholics, and our
oneness exists, absolutely one in one Lord, one faith, one baptism. After an
evening, for example, with Catholic segregationists and integrationists, it
occurs to the observer that what we all need here is an ecumenical movement
among Catholics: Our charge on the secular campus is a vast body of young
Catholics; some eager, some cynical; some complacent; some disgruntled; some
bright, some dull. When weighed in the scales of human reason and Christian
faith, there is abundant evidence that some have Catholic minds and hearts, and
a great many simply couldnt care less.
The Index of Forbidden Books was designed to preserve faith.
But in our day,, it does not touch the university library on an intellectual
plane. In fact, it does not touch anything at all on that level. It appears to
most Catholics and everyone else, as a moral issue far removed from the content
of any volume; has any institution that right to prohibit the reading of a
book? The list of named authors and named books is largely unknown to
todays students, only the French novelists, certain English philosophers
and a few other authors ever appearing on any college reading list. Even the
proscription by categories does not concern the student as he looks over the
highly pornographic content of the average paperback bookrack. Whatever its
relevance to the past, the Index has little relation to the student mind today.
It may be changed, updated, modified or abolished altogether. Whatever its
outcome, it is to be earnestly hoped that the prevailing reason will be the
magnificent paragraph of Pope Johns opening address to the Council:
The truth of the lord will remain forever. We see, in fact,
as one age succeeds another, that the opinions of men follow one another and
exclude one another. And often errors vanish as quickly as they arise, like fog
before the sun.
The Church has always opposed these errors. Frequently, she
has condemned them with the greatest severity. Nowadays, however, the spouse of
Christ prefers to make use of the medicine of mercy rather than that of
severity. She considers that she meets the needs of the present day by
demonstrating the validity of her teaching rather than by
condemnations...
Whether the Index is changed or not, the errors will
continue to appear, in doctrine and the guidance of morale conduct. Whether it
was effective or not, the Index was entirely negative. It did not increase the
faith of any Christian, nor attract others to the treasurers of the faith, nor
penetrate the shadows of the world with the light of truth. It if disappears
tomorrow, our proper positive task will still remain: to teach, in season and
out of season; to teach the truth that is within our competence, religious
truth; and to foster and encourage the teaching of those truths beyond our
competence, the bursting regions of the natural sciences, mathematics, history,
literature, the arts, and so on. We must honor the scholar who honestly seeks
truth in his field, whether he is on our side or not, whether we like him or
not, whether he likes us or not. Anything else is intellectual dishonesty. Our
students must imbibe this respect for scholarship from us. The Church did not
suffer when St. Paul walked among the intellectuals at Athens, when Augustine
urged his pupils to love intelligence, and love it very much; when Aquinas
investigated the philosophy of the Arabians, or when Father Montini read the
works of Thomas Mann and Bergson with his students. This is the vast burden
that is ours, the task of consecrating the intellect to God. It is difficult
today because although there are more educated minds than a century ago, they
are not educated in the things that pertain to God. The good man of salvation
has not had a good press. It would be a mistake to assume that all Catholic
students have Catholic minds. In Frank Sheeds phrase, many have secular
minds with Catholic patches. Yet it is our job to awaken in all these minds,
the guadium et veritate, the joy of finding truth. This will be a far more
effective tool than the Index, because the Index did not touch sins against the
mind which is Gods own created instrument for truth. There is a simony of
the intellect as well as a simony of goods. We are at a point in history where
this simony is the temptation of the educated man. To sell ones mind for
sordid gain, or for popularity, or for the coin of mediocre achievement or the
perversion of other mind, this is perhaps near the ultimate simony for
reparation is almost impossible to make. |