Teresa Heinz Kerry, Narnia, and revoltin' Red Sox fans

SDG here with a fascinating (if necessarily indelicate) article on the bumpy history of a number of expressions that many people use without any awareness and sometimes even without knowledge of their discreditable origins.

The author knows her onions, to use an an idiom that I’m reasonably sure has no secret etiology in perversity, and effectively references relevant usages from Teresa Heinz Kerry to Lyndon B. Johnson [NOT Larouche as previously noted — I need more sleep!] to C.S. Lewis. If you want to see how the dots are connected, you’ll have to read the article (though again consider yourself duly warned that the article contains, not surprisingly, some explicit language).

Side note for Sox fans: Although I’ve never really been much of a sports fan at all, I was born and bred in the shadow of NYC, so I should mention that when I do follow baseball at all, I generally tend to root more for the Mets than the Yankees. I’ve never really been into the vindictive glee that many New Yorkers take in the long, sad history of the Curse of the Babe. It’d be a’ight with me if y’all won a World Series sometime. That said, though, the final anecdote in this article, about a Sox fandom T-shirt, is so revolting that I now officially have no sympathy for y’all, and it’d be a’ight with me if you never won a World Series either.

Get the story

Teresa Heinz Kerry, Narnia, and revoltin’ Red Sox fans

SDG here with a fascinating (if necessarily indelicate) article on the bumpy history of a number of expressions that many people use without any awareness and sometimes even without knowledge of their discreditable origins.

The author knows her onions, to use an an idiom that I’m reasonably sure has no secret etiology in perversity, and effectively references relevant usages from Teresa Heinz Kerry to Lyndon B. Johnson [NOT Larouche as previously noted — I need more sleep!] to C.S. Lewis. If you want to see how the dots are connected, you’ll have to read the article (though again consider yourself duly warned that the article contains, not surprisingly, some explicit language).

Side note for Sox fans: Although I’ve never really been much of a sports fan at all, I was born and bred in the shadow of NYC, so I should mention that when I do follow baseball at all, I generally tend to root more for the Mets than the Yankees. I’ve never really been into the vindictive glee that many New Yorkers take in the long, sad history of the Curse of the Babe. It’d be a’ight with me if y’all won a World Series sometime. That said, though, the final anecdote in this article, about a Sox fandom T-shirt, is so revolting that I now officially have no sympathy for y’all, and it’d be a’ight with me if you never won a World Series either.

Get the story

Checking the facts

SDG here. Haven’t got much to say about last night’s vice-presidential debates, other than that both of these guys come across as more capable, more intelligent, and more presidential than their running partners. Going back to the presidential debates after this will be a real letdown.

I’ve always found Cheney’s low-key, unflappable delivery to be extremely authoritative — he comes across like he’s giving you the straight facts and he doesn’t care whether you believe him or not. He got in some real zingers last night, and my own opinion is that Edwards, as capable and polished as he was, didn’t land punches with the same force as Cheney.

However, Cheney DID make one VERY unfortunate mistake. In rebutting Edwards’ comments about Halliburton, Cheney misspoke in referring to FactCheck.COM when he meant FactCheck.ORG.

FactCheck.ORG is the non-partisan political informational service to which Cheney wanted to refer viewers.

What’s FactCheck.COM?

Before last night, it wasn’t anything. So of course someone snapped it up. To find out who, visit FactCheck.com.

(Don’t worry, it’s not porn. Although some might feel it’s just as evil.)

Thanks to my buds on the Arts and Faith message boards, where these facts came to light for me.

Incidentally, FactCheck.ORG analysis of the VP debates is available at their site. As usual, they find fault with both candidates.

Dumbing down culture

SDG here with a pair of related stories on institutions dumbing down culture.

According to British author Frank Furedi, The Tyne and Wear Museum in northeast England “encourage[s] the display of works from the collections which may not necessarily be famous or highly regarded, but have been chosen by members of the public simply because they like them or because they arouse certain emotions or memories.”

Furedi says he doesn’t like the term “dumbing down,” since his argument isn’t that people are getting dumber and dumber. “‘When I do use the term ‘dumbing down’ I’m primarily talking about institutions, not people. I’m talking about the elite, about the inability at the top of society to provide institutional support for the pursuit of scholarship, the arts or knowledge.”

Interestingly, Furedi’s roots are in the “revolutionary left,” and he is a former contributor to Living Marxism magazine.

In a related U.S.-based story, it seems that Washington, D.C.’s new National Museum of the American Indian

stubbornly refuses to impose any recognizable standard of scholarship, or even value, on the items in its galleries. Precious artifacts are mingled with present-day kitsch, with few if any clues provided about what makes them significant. The museum’s curators regard the very notion of a Native American cultural heritage as anathema because it clashes with the museum’s boosterish message that Native American culture is as vibrant today as it ever was. This isn’t a museum; it’s a public service announcement.

What does the National Museum of the American Indian consider worthy of museum piece status? According to the article,

Among the inaugural exhibitions is “The Jewelry of Ben Nighthorse.” If the name sounds familiar, that’s because the artist is a Republican senator from Colorado, where they call him Ben Nighthorse Campbell. In 1989, Campbell, who was then a House member (and a Democrat), sponsored the legislation that created the National Museum of the American Indian; he later helped provide necessary federal funds as a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee… The rings, bracelets, tie clasps, and other tchotchkes displayed reverently are indistinguishable from anything you might buy at a roadside stand in Boulder. What establishes Campbell’s bona fides as an artist of national renown? An informational pillar explains that “Nighthorse was among 20 artists selected by Arizona Highways magazine for a contemporary jewelry issue.”

The writer declares this “a straightforward declaration that the National Museum of the American Indian will sell gallery space to the highest bidder.” He also blasts the museum for making it virtually impossible to actually learn anything about the pieces, their historical or artistic significance if any, etc.

Get the British story..

Get the U.S. story.

Is there a country music / suicide connection?

SDG here. As a card-carrying Yankee and confirmed city slicker, I’ve never been into country music — not because it makes me suicidal, although over time I can see where it might begin to, but just because it triggers my guffaw response, sort of the way Laugh-In does for other people. (Man, after this Jimmy ain’t NEVER going to let me blog on his site again…)

Last week, on his way to the Catholic Answers cruise, Jimmy stopped by our house for a night, and on a couple of long car rides we had a chance to listen to a bit of one anothers’ CDs, and I can say that, in spite of the culture gap, I was able to appreciate some of Anthony Smith’s guitar tricks and even lyrics. (I especially liked this sweet little song.)

Unfortunately, this article on “The Effect of Country Music on Suicide” is available only through the subscription Questia.com website. Here’s an excerpt from the free preview:

In this article, we explore the link between a particular form of popular music (country music) and metropolitan suicide rates. We contend that the themes found in country music foster a suicidal mood among people already at risk of suicide and that it is thereby associated with a high suicide rate. The effect is buttressed by the country subculture and a link between this subculture and a racial status related to an increased suicide risk.

What I can tell you, after Googling the authors, is that both are sociology professors, Stack at Wayne State U and Gundlach at Auburn U, and that Stack is chairman of WSU’s criminal justice department, and Gundlach is director of AU’s social science computer lab. (According to Gundlach’s personal page at INeedCoffee.com, co-authoring this paper with Stack was Gundlach’s “fifteen minutes of fame.”)

Any thoughts, country music lovers?

Liberal head-scratching over Christopher Hitchens' Bush support

SDG here with an interesting interview of Christopher “I hate Mother Teresa, Ronald Reagan, and Mel Gibson” Hitchens (as he was recently described) by liberal Johann Hari trying to wrap his head around Hitchens’ support for Bush and the war on “Islamofascist” terror.

Hitchens is no friend of religion of any kind. But at least he avoids the insanity of certain wackos on the left whose hatred of fundamentalist Christians and traditional Catholics is so great that they consider them as bad as if not worse than head-severing terrorist psychos in black masks.

Some excerpts:

To many of Christopher Hitchens’ old friends, he died on September 11th 2001. Tariq Ali considered himself a comrade of Christopher Hitchens for over thirty years. Now he speaks about him with bewilderment. “On 11th September 2001, a small group of terrorists crashed the planes they had hijacked into the Twin Towers of New York. Among the casualties, although unreported that week, was a middle-aged Nation columnist called Christopher Hitchens. He was never seen again,” Ali writes. “The vile replica currently on offer is a double.”…

He explains that he believes the moment the left’s bankruptcy became clear was on 9/11. “The United States was attacked by theocratic fascists who represents all the most reactionary elements on earth. They stand for liquidating everything the left has fought for: women’s rights, democracy? And how did much of the left respond? By affecting a kind of neutrality between America and the theocratic fascists.” He cites the cover of one of Tariq Ali’s books as the perfect example. It shows Bush and Bin Laden morphed into one on its cover. “It’s explicitly saying they are equally bad. However bad the American Empire has been, it is not as bad as this. It is not the Taliban, and anybody – any movement – that cannot see the difference has lost all moral bearings.”

Get the story.

Liberal head-scratching over Christopher Hitchens’ Bush support

SDG here with an interesting interview of Christopher “I hate Mother Teresa, Ronald Reagan, and Mel Gibson” Hitchens (as he was recently described) by liberal Johann Hari trying to wrap his head around Hitchens’ support for Bush and the war on “Islamofascist” terror.

Hitchens is no friend of religion of any kind. But at least he avoids the insanity of certain wackos on the left whose hatred of fundamentalist Christians and traditional Catholics is so great that they consider them as bad as if not worse than head-severing terrorist psychos in black masks.

Some excerpts:

To many of Christopher Hitchens’ old friends, he died on September 11th 2001. Tariq Ali considered himself a comrade of Christopher Hitchens for over thirty years. Now he speaks about him with bewilderment. “On 11th September 2001, a small group of terrorists crashed the planes they had hijacked into the Twin Towers of New York. Among the casualties, although unreported that week, was a middle-aged Nation columnist called Christopher Hitchens. He was never seen again,” Ali writes. “The vile replica currently on offer is a double.”…

He explains that he believes the moment the left’s bankruptcy became clear was on 9/11. “The United States was attacked by theocratic fascists who represents all the most reactionary elements on earth. They stand for liquidating everything the left has fought for: women’s rights, democracy? And how did much of the left respond? By affecting a kind of neutrality between America and the theocratic fascists.” He cites the cover of one of Tariq Ali’s books as the perfect example. It shows Bush and Bin Laden morphed into one on its cover. “It’s explicitly saying they are equally bad. However bad the American Empire has been, it is not as bad as this. It is not the Taliban, and anybody – any movement – that cannot see the difference has lost all moral bearings.”

Get the story.

More on Catholicism and Orthodoxy

SDG here with Part 3 of my series of posts on Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy (following up on Part 1 and Part 2).

In reply to my comments in part 2, my Orthodox-leaning Protestant friend wrote the following:

That does seem like a rather clever way of stating the Catholic position. The Orthodox, of course, incline more towards what I call the “Goldilocks” approach, i.e., Catholicism added too much to the faith, Protestantism subtracted too much, but Orthodoxy is Just Right.

Here’s my reply.

And here is why the Goldilocks paradigm doesn’t work.

It might work if religious truth and error were a three-layer sandwich — if there were three options called Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and Protestantism — or, failing that, if there were roughly comparable errors of “too much” and “too little” on the one side and on the other, and Orthodoxy were anywhere near the middle. If Orthodoxy looked anything remotely like a Golden Mean among the available extremes, then the Goldilocks paradigm might indeed have some persuasive power.

But in fact, as even the short lists in my earlier post suggest, nothing like that is now or has ever been the case. Quite the contrary, the long history of heresy, schism, and religious error offers an embarrassment of riches of evidence of a frighteningly consistent dynamic in one specific direction. The “too little” error is overwhelmingly the error of choice of the heretic and schismatic, if indeed the “too much” error has EVER been committed.

Indeed, the history of heresy could persuasively be characterized as a history of all the different “too-little” options one can possibly take — all the ways that divine truth can be split up, with one truth set in false opposition to another truth, and one affirmed and the other denied. Divine truth is so large and mysterious, and our finite minds can understand so little of how it all fits together, that the temptation to fixate on one element of it to the exclusion of others is almost irresistible.

That, indeed, is what heresy essentially IS. It’s even what the word means [as discussed in my first post].

In a word, the full truth ALWAYS seems like “too much” to the heretic, and heresy always seems like “too little” to the one who has the full truth, or even a fuller truth than the heretic. (I wrote about this dynamic previously in my post on “the heretical ‘or’ and the catholic ‘and'”.)

As you probably know, the 1054 schism of East and West, while it was certainly the most serious split among the ancient Churches, was hardly the first. Bishops and Churches have been split apart by numerous heresies and schisms, some of which remain to this day.

For example, I have close friends who belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, one of the non-Chalcedonian Oriental Churches, which split with the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church over issues of Chalcedonian Christology all the way back in the fifth century. (Besides the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Oriental Churches include the Syrian Orthodox Church, the Coptic Orthodox Church, The Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and several others.)

Among Catholics and Orthodox the Oriental Churches have frequently been called “Monophysite,” because they have historically and theologically rejected Chacedonian christological language. Specifically, while they affirm that Christ is one Person, they deny that he has two natures, a human and a divine. Now, the Oriental Churches themselves reject both the language and the teaching of Monophysitism, which they regard as a heresy as much as we do. Their Christological formulation, sometimes called “Miaphysitism,” is semantically different from the Chalcedonian formulation, but appears to affirm substantially the same divine truth.

Be that as it may, the Oriental Churches reject the Council of Chalcedon and subsequent Councils. By their enumeration, there have been only three Ecumenical Councils. They count three, where the Orthodox Churches go up to seven, all in the first millennium. (By Catholic reckoning, there are 21 and counting, the most recent of which was Vatican II.)

Then there’s the Assyrian Church of the East, which counts only the first two general councils and split with the One Church over the Council of Ephesus, a couple of decades earlier than the Oriental Churches. Where the Oriental Churches are sometimes unfairly considered Monophysite, AFAIK (and I’m open to correction) the Assyrian Church appears actually to endorse the opposite heresy of Nestorianism, or something much like it. (The Nestorians affirm Christ’s two natures but basically deny his oneness as a person, making Christ an amalgamation or juxtaposition of two persons, one human and one divine.)

And of course the Assyrian Church wasn’t the only breakaway Church of the first millennium to fall into the Nestorian heresy (though it may be the only such Church to have so long persisted in that heresy and schism). Likewise, the Monophysite heresy, though it may not have claimed the Oriental Churches, was certainly believed in some Churches and responsible for some schisms.

And of course both the Nestorian and Monophysite heresies involve on the one hand affirming something that is true while on the other hand DENYING and REJECTING a corresponding truth. The Nestorians deny that Christ is one Person; the Monophysites deny that he has two natures. In effect, they create a false dichotomy between two aspects of divine truth, insist on a fractured “either-or” dialectic rather than an integral “both-and” synthesis, and then line up behind one or the other of the two false alternatives.

By contrast, the Catholic faith of the One Church of the first millennium, and of the Catholic and Orthodox communions today, insists on BOTH the oneness of Christ’s person AND on the twoness of his natures. In response to the heresies of Nestorianism and Monophysitism, the Church say that they are each right in what they affirm, but wrong in what they deny. In the language of the Goldilocks paradigm, both heresies are “too little,” rather than “too much.”

And essentially the same dynamic applies to all the other major heresies and schisms of the first millennium and afterward. They are all essentially predicated on leaving something out, not putting something in.

Many of the early heresies were christological in nature. Docetism and Apollinarianism were heresies that affirmed Christ’s divinity but denied his true humanity, claiming that he only appeared to be like a man but was not truly human. The opposite temptation is embodied in, e.g., the Arian and Socinian heresies, which affirm Christ’s humanity or creatureliness, but deny his divinity.

Then there are soteriological heresies. For example, the Pelagians affirmed the reality of human aspect of responsibility and working out our salvation, but denied the necessity of divine grace. (As far as I know, the opposite error, that of affirming the necessity of divine grace to the exclusion of human freedom and responsibility, was not an issue until after the Reformation. Not all possible permutations of denial were explored in the first millennium, or likely have yet been explored.)

Then there are ecclesiological and sacramental heresies. For example, the Donatist heresy affirmed the real power of the sacraments, but denied that the sacraments are valid and have the power to give grace independent of the moral character of the minister of the sacrament.

All of these heresies produced splits and schisms among the Churches, some of which have remained to this day. And then of course with the second millennium come all the various varieties of Protestantism, all of which also fall into the “too little” category, from the Catholic / Orthodox perspective.

So, the simple three-layer sandwich of [1] Catholic (too much), [2] Orthodox (just right), and [3] Protestant (too little) turns out instead to be a Dagwood Bumstead special, with Orthodoxy claiming “just right” status, not in the middle, not anywhere near the middle, but in the penultimate place.

From an Orthodox perspective, if we were to apply the Goldilocks paradigm to the history of heresy and religious error, we might come up with a rough-and-ready chart that might look something like this (caveats, quibbles, corrections welcomed):

  1. Too much? – Catholicism (“adds” pope, 14 general councils, filioque, etc.)
  2. Just right? – Orthodoxy
  3. A bit too little – The Oriental Churches (reject all but three ecumenical councils)
  4. Too little (heresies that retain certain basic Christian beliefs) –
    • Donatism
    • Iconoclasm
    • Traditional Anglicanism
    • Traditional Protestantism
  5. Much too little (heresies that retain monotheism and other historic Christian beliefs) –
    • Apollinarianism, Monothelitism
    • Arianism, Adoptionism / Ebionism, Psilanthropism / Socinianism, Monarchianism, etc.
    • Docetism
    • Macedonianism
    • Modalism, Sabellianism
    • Monophysitism, Eutychianism
    • Nestorianism (including Assyrian Church?)
    • Pelagianism, Quietism
  6. Much, much too little (extra-Christian or pre-Christian monotheism) –
    • Deism
    • Judaism, Islam
    • Sikhism, Baha’i
    • Zoroastrianism?
  7. Much, much, much too little (sub-theistic religious options, including sub-theistic Christian heresies) –
    • Dualism (including Gnosticism, Manichaeism and Marcionism)
    • Monism, pantheism
    • Polytheism (including Mormonism)
    • Animism, spiritism, magic, etc.
  8. Much, much, much, much too little (non-religious options) –
    • Materialism, atheism, secularism, etc.

My, my. All those varieties and gradations of “too little” errors — just about every religious error ever committed, really — all in the “too little” direction. And in 2000 years, exactly how many “too much” errors?

From a Catholic perspective, the answer is NONE. Heresy is ALWAYS essentially predicated on denial. But naturally from an Orthodox perspective there’s that one really gigantic exception. Just one. It really is remarkable.

Of course, those lower on the list can always play verbal games and try to define those higher on the list as “rejecting” their key principles. For example, Protestants can say that the Orthodox and Catholics err by “rejecting the solas,” and write off the sacraments, the priesthood, and so forth as mere ancillaries to that fundamental error.

But this is obviously false. The solas themselves are denials, not affirmations — sola scriptura MEANS “scripture AND NOT tradition or Church authority.” The Catholic / Orthodox position of sacred scripture and sacred tradition interpreted authoritatively by the Church is clearly the more comprehensive view, the Protestant view the less comprehensive one.

Likewise, the Docetists, for example, would accuse Incarnational Christians of denying Christ’s true divinity and falling into the the Socinianist error, while Socinianists accuse us of denying Christ’s true humanity and falling into the the Donatist error. It’s not true, of course, but they perceive a dichotomy where we don’t, and so they say it.

Likewise Calvinists sometimes accuse us of denying God’s sovereignty and effectively falling into the Pelagian heresy, and the Pelagians could accuse us of denying human freedom and responsibility. To a Modalist, a Trinitarian is someone who denies monotheism; to a Mormon, a Trinitarian is someone who confuses separate divine persons.

And in the same way the Orthodox say that Catholic ecclesiology rejects the principles of conciliarity and collegiality, which they say are contradicted by the Church’s Petrine teaching. It’s a very familiar type of charge, and it always comes from one direction.

And in fact it is possible that historically some Catholic theologians or polemicists really did fall into the error that the Orthodox charge, and denied collegiality and conciliarity, just as some opponents of Docetism probably really did fall into the Sociniarian error, etc. I don’t know.

But the facts are that we have these two principles, collegiality on the one hand, Petrine unity on the other. The Orthodox affirm one and deny the other; and the Catholic teaching is that both are true. The Orthodox SAY Catholics reject their truth, of course, but the correct solution, as in the case of every other major heresy, is the view that integrates the conflicting claims and rejects the denials, the view that is larger, more comprehensive, more catholic than the alternatives. Collegiality is true. Petrine unity is true. We must affirm both truths, not pit one against the other.

That’s how you answer the heretical theologies of too little.

some thoughts on Catholicism and Orthodoxy

SDG here. Following up on my post on the heretical “or” and the Catholic “and”, in which I argued that theological error is always essentially fragmentary and partial while truth is always catholic, integral, here are some specific thoughts on Catholicism and Orthodoxy.

This came up because a Protestant friend who is being drawn toward Orthodoxy recently wrote the following in an exchange with me:

…to me it seems like Catholicism broke itself off from Orthodoxy and set itself up as the central authority and is now telling the Orthodox churches that they can keep on doing what they do so long as they submit to the Pope, while Evangelicals broke off from Catholic and set up the Bible (and a specific way of interpreting the Bible) as the central authority are and are now telling both Catholic and Orthodox churches that they can keep on doing what they do so long as they submit to (the Evangelical understanding of) scripture…

Here’s the first part of my reply:

No, no, no.

You’ve got it backwards. You’re quite right on the one hand that Catholicism says to Orthodoxy something that, for the sake of discussion, we can roughly approximate as “You can keep on doing what you do so long as you submit to the Pope.” That’s because what is wrong with Orthodoxy from a Catholic perspective is fundamentally not that they do or believe anything positively wrong (that is, that they have any fundamental, positive erroneous beliefs or practices), but that there is something fundamental and positive that is missing in their faith and praxis. So, add the missing something to what they do and say now and everything will be all right.

But it’s meaningless words to try to put in the mouth of Protestantism a parallel message to Catholics and Orthodox to the effect that “You can keep on doing what you do so long as you submit to (the Evangelical understanding of) scripture,” since what is wrong with Catholicism and Orthodoxy from a Protestant perspective is precisely that there ARE important elements of what we do and practice that are positively wrong according to the Evangelical understanding of scripture.

In other words, for Catholics and Orthodox to “submit to (the Evangelical understanding of) scripture” would not remotely allow us to “keep on doing what we do,” in anything like the sense that the Orthodox submitting to the Pope would allow them to “keep on doing what they do.” On the contrary, it would require us to cease and desist from a great deal of positive and vital Catholic/Orthodox belief and praxis — our eucharistic sacrifice, our episcopal succession of apostolic authority, our ministerial priesthood, our prayers to saints, our veneration of Mary and unscriptural belief in Mary’s perpetual virginity and heavenly queenship, etc.

There’s no parallel ceasing and desisting that Catholicism demands of Orthodoxy. On the contrary, it is Orthodoxy that demands that Catholicism cease and desist in its claims regarding the authority of the papal office, just as Protestantism demands that Catholicism and Orthodoxy cease and desist their claims regarding the authority of the councils and the traditions.

I notice that you don’t paraphrase the message of Orthodoxy to Catholicism. Does it not take essentially the following form? “You must submit to (the Orthodox understanding of) sacred tradition and the seven councils. We see that you acknowledge in principle the authority of sacred tradition and the councils, but you interpret them wrongly, and wrongly claim additional authority (i.e., the papacy) as your basis for doing so. You must stop pretending to have some additional authority, return only to the tradition and the councils, interpret them as we do, and do and profess only what (we have said all along) is compatible with them.”

And does that not take precisely the same form as the message of Protestantism to both Orthodoxy and Catholicism? “You must submit to (the Evangelical understanding of) sacred scripture. We see that you acknowledge in principle the authority of the sacred scriptures, but you interpret them wrongly, and wrongly claim additional authority (i.e., sacred tradition and the councils) as your basis for doing so. You must stop pretending to have some additional authority, return only to the scriptures, interpret them as we do, and do and profess only what (we have said all along) is compatible with them.”

But now let’s look at things the other way round. What’s the message of Orthodoxy and Catholicism to Protestantism? “Your rule of faith is incomplete. You go only by the scriptures as you understand them, when the scriptures themselves, rightly understood, enjoin to you accept the authority of the bishops, of the councils, of sacred tradition. You err because you interpret your sources not in accordance with right authority. You must accept an authority you now reject per se and in principle, and then you will interpret the scriptures rightly.”

Compare to the message of Catholicism to Orthodoxy: “Your rule of faith is incomplete. You go by the councils and traditions as you understand them, when the councils and traditions themselves, rightly understood, enjoin to you accept the authority of the successor to St. Peter, the Bishop of Rome. You err because you interpret your sources not in accordance with right authority. You must accept an authority you now reject per se and in principle, and then you will interpret the councils and traditions rightly.”

Clearly, there is a continuum here from Catholicism to Orthodoxy to Protestantism. And we could extend it thus:

  1. Catholicism (accepts Old and New Testaments, sacred tradition and councils, apostolic succession of bishops, Petrine succession of popes)
  2. Orthodoxy (accepts Old and New Testaments, sacred tradition and councils, apostolic succession of bishops)
  3. Protestantism (accepts Old and New Testaments)
  4. Pharisaical Judaism (accepts Old Testament)
  5. Saduccees (accepted only the five books of Moses)
  6. Deists (accept no divine revelation)

And of course everyone lower on the list believes that those higher on the list have added false authority to true, and interpret the true wrongly on the basis of the false, while those higher on the list believe that those lower on the list have rejected or failed to accept part of true authority, and therefore fail to understand fully even what they have.

Or look at it this way:

  1. Catholicism (professes one God in Three Persons who has spoken through the law and the prophets; God made man for our redemption; the seven sacraments; the apostolic succession and the priesthood; the Petrine office of the bishop of Rome)
  2. Orthodoxy (professes one God in Three Persons who has spoken through the law and the prophets; God made man for our redemption; the seven sacraments; the apostolic succession and the priesthood)
  3. Protestantism (professes one God in Three Persons who has spoken through the law and the prophets; God made man for our redemption)
  4. Pharisaical Judaism (professes one God who has spoken through the law and the prophets)
  5. Saduccees (professed one God who has spoken through the law)
  6. Deists (profess one God)

As I said, it’s not hard to see which sets of beliefs are more comprehensive, more catholic — which include and expand upon the basic positive elements of the others, and which leave things out.