If you think the magisterium is sitting for a class picture above, think again.
Deacon Bill Ditewig returns to the blogosphere โ yay! โ with a new look for his blog, along withย a fresh look at one of the most misunderstood terms in all Catholicism:
If a quick survey of certain web sites is any indication, many people seem to think thatย magisterium is a โwhoโ: the Pope, for example, or the Pope and the worldโs bishops, or the Pope and the curia in Rome.ย Actually, this is not accurate.ย Magisterium, linguistically, is a neuter noun; it is a โwhatโ, not a โwho.โย It is โthe teaching authority of the Church.โย And, as we all know, โthe Churchโ is more than its episcopal leadership.ย Letโs consider a few basics.
Why do we claim any sort of teaching authority at all?ย It seems rather presumptuous to think that we human beings can teach with authority about spiritual matters.ย Remember that this was shocking to some of Jesusโ own listeners, when they observed that โthis man teaches with authority.โย ย Magisterium is founded on the promise of Christ that the Holy Spirit will remain present and active in the community of disciples.ย Consider John 14:26:ย ย โThe Advocate, the holy Spirit that the Father will send in my name โ he will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.โย It is the Holy Spirit who teaches, no human authority.
The Holy Spirit is given to everyone at Baptism, and indeed, through all of the sacramental life of the Church.ย In the Middle Ages a distinction was introduced between theย ecclesia docens (the teaching Church) and theย ecclesia discens (the learning Church).ย However, of course, all of us participate, in a variety of degrees, in the one and the same teaching-and-learning Church.ย The role of the ordained is often highlighted.ย Vatican II spoke of the teaching role of bishops and presbyters as their primary obligation (theย primum officium); subsequent documents have extended this as well to the renewed (permanent) diaconate as well.ย While one can sometimes read (usually in very derogatory terms) that others are claiming magisterial authority as well (consider some recent nasty blog posts about โtheย magisterium of the nunsโ when criticizing the LCWR, for example), the medieval Church DID extend its understanding ofย magisterium beyond the bishops themselves.ย No less a theological giant than Thomas Aquinas in the 13th Century, wrote of theย magisterium of university theologians; at the great Council of Trent in the 16th Century, and at Councils before that, the theological experts were often given a vote on conciliar texts!ย Trent, for example, referred to the theologians asย minor theologians and the bishops asย major theologians.ย Some votes included them all; some were restricted to the bishops alone.
And welcome back, Triple D!