MODERNISM
419
MODERNISM
two elements in common, the negative part of the
"Critique of Pure Reason" (which reduces pure or
speculative knowledge to phenomenal or experiential
intuition), and a certain argumentative method in dis-
tinguishing dogma from the real basis of religion. On
the positive side, however, modernism differs from
Kantisra in some essential points. For Kant, faith is
a really rational adhesion of the mind to the postulates
of practical reason. The will is free to accept or reject
the moral law; and it is on account of this option that
he calls its acceptance "belief". Once it is accepted,
the reason cannot but admit the existence of God,
liberty, and immortality. Modernist faith, on the other
hand, is a matter of sentiment, a flinging of oneself
towards the Unknowable, and cannot be scientifically
justifiod by reason. In Kant's system, dogmas and
the whole positive framework of religion are necessary
only for the childhood of humanity or for the common
people. They are symbols that bear a certain analogy
to images and comparisons. They seri'e to inculcate
those moral precepts that for Kant constitute religion.
Modernist symbols, though changeable and fleeting,
correspond to a law of human nature. Generally
speaking, they help to excite and nourish the effective
religious sentiment which Kant (who knew it from his
reading of the pietists) calls schwcinnerei. Kant, as a
rationalist, rejects supernatural religion and prayer.
The modernists consider natural religion a useless
abstraction; for them it is prayer rather that consti-
tutes the very essence of religion. It would be more
correct to say that modernism is an offshoot of Schlei-
ermaeher (1768-1834), who though he owed some-
thing to Kant's philosophy, nevertheless built up his
own theological system. Ritschl called him the " legis-
lator of theology" (Rechtf. und Vers., Ill, p. 486).
Schlciermacher conceives the modernist plan of re-
forming religion with the view of conciliating it with
science. Thus would he establish an entente cordiale
among the various cults, and even between religion
and a kind of religious sentimentality which, without
recognizing God, yet tends towards the Good and the
Infinite. Like the modernists, he has dreams of new
rehgious apologetics; he wants to be a Christian; he
declares himself independent of all philosophy; he re-
jects natural religion as a pure abstraction, and derives
dogma from religious experience. His principal writ-
ings on this subject are "Ueber die ReHgion" (1799:
note the difference between the first and the later
editions) and "Dcr Christliche Glaube" (1821-22).
Ritschl, one of Kant's disciples, recognizes the New
Testament as the lii.-inriiMJ basis of religion. He sees
in Christ the coriM inii>iii--, of an inlimale union with
God, and considirs the institution of the Christian
religion, which for him is inconceivable without faith
in Christ, as a special act of God's providence. Thus
has he prepared the way for a form of modernism more
temperate than that of Schlciermacher. Though ho
pre<lic1ed a continual development of religion, Schlci-
ermacher admit tcil a certain fixity of dogma. For this
reason it seems to us that modernists owe their radical
evolutionary theory to Herbert Spencer (1820-1903).
It wius through the writings of A. Sabatier (1839-
1901), a French Protestant of the Broad Church type,
that the religious theories w-e have spoken of, spread
among the Latin races, in France and in Italy. It is in
these countries, too, that modernism has done greatest
harm among the Catholics. Sabatier is a radical
modernist. He has especially drawn upon Schlcier-
macher for the composition of his two works on reli-
gious synthesis ("Esquisse d'une philosophic de la
religion d'apnXs la psychologic et I'histoire", Paris,
1897; "Les religions d'autorit6 et la religion do
I'csprit", Paris, 1902).
The fundamental error of the modernist philosophy is its misunderstanding of the scholastic formula which takes account of the two aspects of human knowledge. Doubtless, the human mind is a vital faculty endowed
with an activity of its own, and tending t.iwards its
own object. However, as it is not in continual activ-
ity, it is not self-sufficient; it has not in itself the full
principle of its operations, but is forced to utilize sen-
sible experience in order to arrive at knowledge. This
incompleteness and falling short of perfect autonomy
is due to man's very nature. As a consequence, in all
himian knowledge and activity, account must be taken
both of the intrinsic and of the extrinsic side. Urged
on by the finality that inspires him, man tends towards
those objects which suit him, while at the same time
objects offer themselves to him. In the supernatural
life, man acquires new principles of action and, as it
were, a new nature. He is now capable of acts of
which God is the formal object. These acts, however,
must be proposed to man, whether God deigns to do
so by direct revelation to man's soul, or whether, in
conformity with man's social nature, God makes use
of intermediaries who communicate exteriorly with
man. Hence the necessity of preaching, of motives of
credibility, and of external teaching authority. Cath-
olic philosophy does not deny the soul's spontaneous
life, the sublimity of its suprasensible and .supernatural
operations, and the inadequacy of words to trans-
late its yearnings. Scholastic doctors give expres-
sion to mystical transports far superior to those of the
modernists. But in their philosophy they never forget
the lowliness of human nature, which is not purely
spiritual. The modernist remembers only the internal
element c*' our higher activity. This absolute and ex-
clusive intrinsecism constitutes what the Encyclical
calls "vital immanence". When deprived of the ex-
ternal supi")rt which is indispensable to them, the acta
of the higliir intellectual faculties can only con.sist in
vague sentiments which are as indetermined as are
those faculties themselves. Hence it is that modernist
doctrines, necessarily ex-pressed in terms of this senti-
ment, are so intangible. Furthermore, by admitting
the necessity of symbols, modernism makes to extrin-
secism a concession which is its own refutation.
(2) The Consequences. — The fact that this radi- cally intrinsic conception of the spiritual or religious activity of man (this perfect autonomy of the reason vis-a-i'is of what is exterior) is the fundamental philo- sophical conception of the modernists, as the altera- tion of dogma is the essential characteristic of their heresy, can be shown without difficulty by deducting from it their entire system of philosophy. First of all, of their agnosticism: the v.ague nature which they attribute to our faculties does not permit them, \yith- out scii-iitific observation, to arrive at any definite iiii(l|iiiu:il result. Next, of their evolutionism: there is no cirtcniiined object to assure to dogmatic formulas a permanent and essential meaning compatible with the lif(^ of faith and progress. Now, from the moment that these formula' simply serve to nourish the vague senliiiient which for modernism is the only common atidslabli' foundation of religion, they must change indefinitely with the subjective needs of the believer. It is a right and even a duty for the latter freely to interpret, as he sees fit, religious facts and doctrines. We meet here with the a priorisms to which the Encyc- lical "Pascendi" drew attention.
We wish to insist a little on the grave consequence that this Encyclical puts especially before our eyes. In many ways, modernism seems to be on the swift incline which leads to pantheism. It seems to be there on accoimt of its symbolism. After all, is not tli<' affirmation of a personal God one of these dog- malic formula' which serve only as symbolic expressions of the religious sentiment? Does not the Divine Per- sonality then become something uncertain? Hence radical modernism preaches union and friendship, even with mystical atheism. Modernism is inclined to panlheisni also by its doctrine of Divine Imma^ nence, that is, of the intimate presence of God within us. Does this God declare Himself as distinct from