第四卷 (1980年) The Devotion of the future According to Karl Rahne
作者:白敏慈 Baptista, Marciano 年份:1980

1. INTRODUCTION

One of the less publicized facts concerning Karl Rahner is that his doctoral dissertation in theology, written in 1936 and as yet unpublished, was "on the Church's origin from the wound in the side of Christ as portrayed in the writings of the Fathers." Rahner's interest in the pierced side of Christ has never left him. It is the aim of this essay to examine briefly some of his writings on the Sacred Heart and to discuss their relevance for the local Church in Hong Kong.

2. THE WORD "HEART"

Rahner begins his consideration of the devotion to the Sacred Heart by examining the word "heart" in its symbolic significance. Although the word "heart" of necessity includes the idea of bodiliness and therefore includes also the bodily heart, "in the original (and not the subsesequent, derived or metaphorical) sense, 'heart' is a primal word. It is not susceptible of a proper definition by the joining of better known concepts."(3) The word "heart", Rahner adds, "falls into the category of words for the whole man; that is, it signifies a human reality predicable of the whole man as a person of body and spirit, a reality which is therefore prior to any possible distinction between body and soul."(4) Rahner continues:-

"Heart", taken in this primal sense, denotes the centre which is the original kernel of everything else in the human person..... Here is the focal point of a man's primal and integral relations with others and above all with God: for God is concerned with the whole man, and in his divine actions it is to man's centre, his heart, that he addresses his graces or his judgements.(5)

Since a heart can either be good or wicked the author emphasizes that "it is..... by no means inevitable nor a matter of course that 'heart' should imply love. The fact that Lord freely wished the centre of his Person to consist of 'love for us' is just the incomprehensible thing in our experience if him. "(6) Rahner adds, as if in wonderment, :-

And our ultimate discovery is that this centre (this "Heart") is possessed by a free, unfathomable love. This love, as the inmost "essence" of God himself, is bestowed on us as a free gift. And it is this love that characterizes and unifies all the attitudes of our Lord. (7)

Given the above considerations Rahner goes on to define veneration of the Sacred Heart as "the latreutic cult of the Person of Christ under the aspect of his Heart in so far as this is governed by the prodigal love of God for sinful men, the love in which God gives himself to the sinner."(8)

3. CERTAIN DOGMATIC CONSIDERATIONS

Rahner states that "theology can and must show that the devotion to the Sacred Heart is materially contained in the Scripture and in patristic and medieval tradition."(9) But he immediately adds: "nevertheless this abstract dogmatic argument and the indication of a precedent will not provide sufficient basis for the present devotion to the Sacred Heart. "(10) For this we must appeal "to the ‘private revelations’of Paray-le-Monial."(11)

In its present form the devotion to the Sacred Heart is a "new creation, from the perennially valid material of the faith, of something that was demanded at that precise moment by the actual historical circumstances of the Church. "(12)

Rahner further explains that "the private revelation points out the one path which the Church must with all urgency take. What is new is not the matter of such a revelation but the placing or shifting of the emphasis within the ambit of what is legitimate for Christianity."(13)

4. DEVOTION IS ESPECIALLY FOR THE MODERN WORLD

Some have claimed that devotion to the Sacred Heart was a corrective for Jansenism. Rahner denies this and states, concerning what is new in the devotion, that: "It cannot be described exclusively or even principally in terms of Jansenism. Not only was Jansenism and its range of ideas too ephemeral a phenomenon to provoke such an answer, but the message only became effective in a period no longer swayed by Jansenism."(14)

Rahner now comes to one of the central points concerning his theology of devotion to the Sacred Heart. He explains the newness of the devotion thus:-

The message must therefore be intended for the modern situation in general, which properly began only with the French Revolution. This period is characterized, and that in ever increasing measure, by the secularisation of life (of the state, society, economy, science, art). The religious values of Christianity are being progressively eliminated from modern life, and the burden of belief is resting more and more exclusively on the personal decision of the individual. The Christian world, which could once carry a man almost independently of his own decision, is subject to unceasing attenuation. Every man must live, irrespective of whether he decides for or against Christianity, in a situation marked by the outward, and therefore also inward, "absence of God", a situation which corresponds to Golgotha and Gethsemane in the life of Jesus (Mk. 14, 32 ff.; 15, 32 ff.), where life is to be found in death, where abandonment implies the deepest proximity to God, and where the power of God parades itself in weakness. (15)

Since the world is becoming more and more secularised and followers of Christ in the modern world find themselves more and more in a context of a world in which love has grown cold, then it is fitting that devotion to the Sacred Heart emphasizes the following: "the interior life, faith in the love of God, present even when it seems furthest away (in consequence of the growing sin and godlessness of the world, from which believers and unbelievers alike suffer), and reparation."(16) Rahner now explains these three aspects of the devotion more fully:-

Interior life is not the selfish luxury of religious introversion. The interior man is rather he who, by the power of God, believes and loves in spirit and in truth, in a world where the love of God has grown cold, or at least has almost ceased to project itself into "exterior" life. Interior life means the strengthening of man in faith and love without the props of an externally Christian society.

The second characteristic is faith in the love of God in spite of his judgements. It has a special meaning in our day, when God, the Lord of history, appears as an angry judge, when the hour of darkness seems to have overtaken human history, and the historical situation of the world reflects mysteriously the interior state of souls.

Reparation means the endurance of this godless situation with and in the Son, in Gethsemane and Golgotha, and fellowship in Christ's apparently fruitless love for the sinful world.(17)

5. SPIRITUALITY AND DEVOTION TO THE SACRED HEART

Although devotion to the Sacred Heart is, according to Pope XI, summa totius religionis (the epitome of all devotion), nevertheless it would be wrong to think that "devotion to the Sacred Heart and the spiritual life are one and the same thing..... The heart is the origin and centre of, but it is not identical with, the whole spiritual life."(18)

One could speak broadly about devotion to the Sacred Heart in such a way that it "would be conceptually and materially identical with Christianity. But that could be only harmful to the devotion."(19) Although it is possible to focus the whole of the spiritual life on explicit, conscious devotion to the Sacred Heart, "such a concentration is not part of the devotion recommended to every Christian."(20) This is because "Christian spirituality, which will include devotion to the Sacred Heart..... allows of an endless variety of forms, and within it devotion to the Sacred Heart can appear in the most various shapes and degrees of intensity. "(21)
  

1.Herbert Vorgrimler, Karl Rahner: His Life, Thought and Work, trans. Edward Quinn (London: Burns and Oates, 1965): p.26.

2.Karl Rahner, "Some Theses on the Theology of the Devotion," in Heart of the Saviour: A Symposium on Devotion to the Sacred Heart, edited by Josef Stierli (Freiburg: Herder, 1957): pp. 131 - 156. This same essay has been published, in a different translation, in Karl Rahner, "Some Theses for a Theology of Devotion to the Sacred Heart," Theological Investigations, vol. 3: The Theology of the Spiritual Life, trans. Karl-H and Boniface Kruger (Baltimore: Helicon, 1967; London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1967): pp. 331- 352. In this article quotations will be take from the former Stierli edition. Cf. Karl Rahner, "The Theology of the Symbol," Theological Investigations, vol. 4: More Recent Writings, trans. Kevin Smyth (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1966; New York: Seabury, 1966): pp. 245 - 252.

3.Ibid., p. 132. Cf. Karl Rahner, "’Behold This Heart.’: Prelimiaries to a Theology of Devotion to the Sacred Heart," Theological Investigations, vol. 3: The Theology of the Spiritual Life, trans. Karl-H and Boniface Kruger (Baltimore: Helicon, 1967; London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1967): pp. 321-330; Karl Rahner, "The Theological Meaning of the Veneration of the Sacred Heart," Theological Investigations, vol. 8: Further Theology of the Spiritual Life 2, trans. David Bourke (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1971; New York: Herder and Herder, 1971): pp. 217 - 228.

4.Ibid. Cf. Karl Rahner, "Faith as Courage," Meditations on Freedom and the Spirit (New York: Seabury, 1978): pp. 9-11, for a further discussion of this category of words.

5.Ibid., p. 133. Cf. Karl Rahner, "Sacred Heart," The Eternal Year, trans. John Shea, S. S. (London: Burns and Oates, 1964): pp. 121 - 128.

6.Ibid.

7.Ibid., p.137.

8.Ibid., p.138.

9.Ibid., p.139.

10.Ibid.

11.Ibid.

12.Ibid.

13.Ibid., p.140.

14.Ibid., p. 141.

15.Ibid.

16.Ibid., p.142. (Rahner’s italics.)

17.Ibid. (Rahner’s italics.)

18.Ibid., p.144.

19.Ibid., p.145.

20.Ibid.

21.Ibid., p.146.

6. FOR WHOM IS EXPLICIT DEVOTION TO THE SACRED HEART?

Explicit devotion to the Sacred Heart will be practised by "a small circle, a holy remnant of devotees, of true witnesses, fruitful patterns of genuine piety for others to imitate, a circle of which priests too would be members. "(22)

In particular, this devotion will be singularly appropriate for the priest of tomorrow since he will be a man whose "office will not carry weight through social prestige; he will have to set forth and prove its validity by the proofs of the Spirit and of power, by the authentic vigour of his experience of God."(23) Furthermore, "he will be a man who truly endures the grievous dark-ness of existence together with all his brothers and sisters, knowing that both its first source and its blessed fulfilment are found in the mystery of love which conquers by the incomprehensibility of the cross. "(24) In addition, "tomorrow's priest will be a man whose calling is most difficult of all to justify in profane terms, because his real success is always vanishing into the mystery of God and because he is not a psychotherapist dressed in the old-fashioned costume of a magician."(25)

In short, the priest of tomorrow must be man with a pierced heart

..... from which alone he draws strength for his mission. With the pierced heart: pierced through by the godlessness of life, pierced through by the folly of love, pierced through by lack of success, pierced through by the experience of his own wretchedness and profound unreliability, believing that only such communicates the strength for his mission, that all the authority of office, all objective validity of the world, all the efficacy of the sacraments' opus operatum, are only turned into the event of salvation by the grace of God if they come to man through this ineffable channel of the pierced heart. I say he is the man with the pierced heart because he is to lead .men to the very core of their existence, to their inmost heart, because he can only do so if he has found his heart; because he and others can only find this centre of existence, the heart, if they accept its being pierced, pierced by the incomprehensibility of love that is pleased to conquer only in death.(26)

Rahner concludes thus concerning the priest of tomorrow:-

Now when a priest of tomorrow who must be like this is always overtaxed by what he should be-and is by the grace of God at the bottom of his heart-anxiously asks where he is to find what he has not of himself, where he can contemplate in its archetypal simplicity what he himself should be, then there is only one thing for him to do-turn to the Lord whom he serves, look on him whom they pierced, and venerate the pierced Heart of Jesus Christ.(27)

Devotion to the Sacred Heart is also most appropriate for Jesuits whose spirituality, like all spiritualities, needs a “new protective force, protective (oddly enough) against itself; so balancing its internal forces that the particular within it builds up and does not destroy.(28) Rahner then explains that "our point is..... the devotion to the Sacred Heart is an inherent and necessary preventive for Ignatian Spirituality against its own dangers.”(29)

7. IS THE DEVOTION OUT-OF-DATE?

Rahner has no problem admitting that certain elements of the devotion to the Sacred Heart as handed down to us

….. do carry clear signs of their age; the limited viewpoint from which they have been presented can only be explained from the theological background of the seventeenth century. For example, this form of the devotion has no ordered connection with the doctrine of the Blessed Trinity….. Moreover one misses in the devotion a lively awareness of the dogma that Christ is our mediator with the Father….. But these "period" failings are not essential to the devotion and can be supplied without undue difficulty.(30)

Rahner adds that "all the ingredients of devotion to the Sacred Heart are borrowed from dogma, and in this sense the devotion is valid for all ages of Christianity."(31)

The situation of "love grown cold," however, which was the external stimulus for the devotion in the first place, far from decreasing in our time has, in fact, intensified. This has prompted Rahner to write, concerning the circumstances of secularisation, of the experience of absence of God and of "love grown cold," that since these circumstances

..... are still with us and show no sign of changing, indeed are only now revealing all their breadth and gravity, the cult of the Sacred Heart can only become more and more seasonable. If the devotion, understood in its proper and most profound sense, has suffered a reverse in very recent times, this is not because it is ill adapted to our age. Such a reverse is rather itself a sign that "charity has grown cold."(32)

Rahner now elaborates his position concerning why he considers the devotion is most modern in these words:-

Do you imagine that this devotion to the Sacred Heart is old-fashioned, dated, a piety of yesterday. What is old-fashioned? What is modern? The really modern Christian is not the man who makes a point of non-conformity to a certain past and conforms to a today that only shallow minds take for the future; he is the man who keeps the old and anticipates the real future. Much in the Church which seems old really anticipates the future before anyone has yet caught sight of it..... No, the rare, resolute people who find things of tomorrow in those of yesterday are the ones to tell us what today really is. So it may be with devotion to the Sacred Heart..... The heart of man is always unknown country only discovered by the future, the first beginning at which we have not yet arrived. And therefore understanding the heart of Jesus in faith, hope and love is one long adventure ever new, that only ends when one has arrived at one's own heart and discovered that after all the frightful pit is filled with God. This is true of the individual and it is true of the general situation at the present day.(33)

RELEVANCE OF THE ABOVE FOR THE CHURCH IN HONG KONG

Does what Rahner says about devotion to the Sacred Heart have anything to do with our local Church here in Hong Kong? I believe it does especially if we reflect on our recent past and on our future. Let me explain what I mean.

8. LOVE GROWN COLD IN HONG KONG?

What has been the most significant event for our Church in Hong Kong in the last twenty or so years? This is a moot point, but I would like to stick my neck out and single out the Golden Jubilee Affair as the most momentous event in our recent history. The reason why I say this is that that event was the occasion when for the first time the Church in Hong Kong came face to face with the fact that She is the Church of sinners. The sin I speak about is not an isolated, individual sin, but rather the disunity, disharmony and division in our Church during the months in which the Golden Jubilee affair occurred. During this time priest was fighting against priest, sister against sister, brother against brother and Christian against Christian.

I happened to be away at the time when the main events of the Golden Jubilee affair were taking place. The reports I received showed that there was a real confrontation in the Church here. Having returned from overseas recently, I have discovered that there is still much rancour concerning the whole Golden Jubilee episode.

Now I am quite willing to admit that my perception of the situation may be quite wrong. Indeed I hope and pray that I may be wrong and that in fact the situation in our local Church following the Golden Jubilee affair is just as it was prior to the those same events. But at least the question must arise whether or not our charity has grown cold. If it has and if there is discord in our local Church then the only way it will be healed is by forgiveness, compassion and reparation; it will not be healed by renewed accusation,' by vituperation and by making demands.

In a way the Church of Hong Kong has reached the point of no return. Either we get on our knees and pray for forgivness for our own part in injuring the Body of Christ and for the grace to be able to forgive our enemies (especially our enemies within the local Church) from the heart, or else the damage to the Church in Hong Kong will be permanent because, in a very real sense, we wish it to be so; even God cannot forgive if we do not want to forgive and be forgiven.

If, however, we humbly admit our own contribution to the damage done to Christ's Body as incarnated in Hong Kong and forgive our enemies from our hearts and, furthermore, pray for them and make reparation for their sins as well as our own, if we do this then the Church in Hong Kong will rise like our Master, wounded but glorious. The choice is ours and the time for choosing is now.

9. THE FUTURE OF THE CHURCH IN HONG KONG

The discord and divisions in the Church in Hong Kong spoken about just now will pale in comparison to the disunity we will all experience in the local Church if Hong Kong is returned to the Chinese Government. If that day comes there will be some who will refuse to compromise on any issue, there will also be those who will join the Patriotic Church and then there will be those who will wander around like lost sheep without a shepherd, not knowing what to do or what to believe.

Objective criteria for orthodoxy will become clouded over with time: contact with the Vatican will become more and more problematic as silence descends on the local Church; unity with the bishop will be no less uncertain since there will be some bishops who will be suspect; relations between the priests and the faithful will become harder and harder and, for many, all will seem to be lost.

If that time comes it will be hard to evaluate who belongs to the true Church and who does not. When all other signs seem ambiguous the indisputable sign of the True Church will be recognized by those who are true followers of Christ: do they love one another, do they love their enemies and pray for them, do they make reparation for the wrongs their enemies do, do they forgive those who persecute them? ..... If they do they are the true Church.

Most Sacred Heart of Jesus teach us to love and pray for our enemies and give us the grace to forgive them from the heart.

  

22.Karl Rahner, "The Man with the Pierced Heart," Servants of the Lord, trans. Richard Strachan (London: Burns and Oates, 1968; New York: Herder and Herder, 1968): p. 110.

23.Ibid., p. 111.

24.Ibid., p. 112.

25.Ibid., p. 113. Cf. Karl Rahner, "Unity-Love-Mystery," Theological Investigations , vol. 8: Further Theology of the Spiritual Life 2, trans. David Bourke (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 1971; New York: Herder and Herder, 1971): pp. 229 - 250, concerning the relationship between the Sacred Heart and Mystery.

26.Ibid., pp. 113 - 114.

27.Ibid., p. 115.

28.Karl Rahner, "Ignatian Spirituality and Devotion to the Sacred Heart," Woodstock Letters 91 (Feb., 1962): p. 22.

29.Ibid., p. 23.

30.Karl Rahner, “Some Theses,” p.142-143.

31.Ibid., p.143.

32.Ibid.

33.Karl Rahner, "The Man with the Pierced Heart," pp. 117 - 118.