
Karl Rahner, Foundations of Christian Faith: An Introduction to the Idea of Christianity (Grundkurs des Glaubens. Einführung in den Begriff des Christentums (Herder, 1976)), translated by William V. Dych (New York: Seabury Press (A Crossroad Book), 1978). |
Introduction. The Introduction sketches the general aim of the Foundations, its method, and the book’s assumptions about spiritual knowledge. The first part shows how the book intends to help Christians (and those who want to be Christians) understand the relation between Christianity and the whole of existenceThe second part gives us an insight into the general method that Rahner pursues throughout the Foundations. It is a method that unites philosophy and theology in faith. Against those who would subordinate philosophy to theology, Rahner wants to integrate the two. Philosophy presents the human being as a question, he writes, a question about the goal and meaning of life. Theology reflects on Christianity as an answer to that human question. It is the answer that God wants to share the divine life, and indeed offers it, to all humanity.
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(Intr.1, p. 1). The goal of the Foundations, says Rahner, is less religious edification than intellectual reflection. It asks about the idea of Christianity and about what makes faith possible. At the same time, however, it is no merely neutral history of religion, for it presupposes faith. What does it mean to ask about the possibility of faith? For an answer, see Parts 2 and 3 below.
(Intr.2, p. 3). In this section on method, Rahner explains how his book is a response to the Second Vatican Council. The council recommended an introductory course for seminarians (A) that would summarize the major Christian teachings (B) in a way that recognizes the needs of the age (C). Such a course would acknowledge that theology today is pluralistic (D), and that Christians today can give an account of their faith even in a situation of pluralism (E). Finally, the course envisioned by Rahner would contain a fundamental theology that is also a philosophic reflection on human nature as God’s creation (F). In short, Foundations of Christian Faith acknowledges the pluralism of modernity but insists that a single account of the faith is possible – not as an objective treatise, but as an expression of faith in the God of Jesus Christ.
A. The Call of Vatican II for an Introductory Course. (Intr.2.A, p. 3). The origin of the Foundations is the Vatican II request, in Optatam totius 14, for an “Introductory Course” in Christianity. Such a course focuses on the mystery of Christ and integrates philosophy and theology. The goal is to make even the beginning student aware of (a) the meaning of theological studies, (b) the interrelation of the branches of theology, and (c) the pastoral intent of such study..
B. The "Theological Encyclopedia" in the Nineteenth Century. (Intr.2.B, p. 4). This theological encyclopedia of the nineteenth century is a model for Rahner’s enterprise. Although the actual encyclopedias of that period are not adequate today, their intent – namely, to present the major themes of Christianity in outline – continues to be a sound one.
C. The Addressee of Contemporary Theology.(Intr.2.C, p. 5). In the Foundations, Rahner presupposes that there is a contemporary crisis in which faith is challenged, and that this crisis can be overcome. How? By affirming our faith honestly and in an intellectual way. Although Foundations is aimed at the beginner, such a beginner today is not like the beginner of Rahner’s youth, who could take Christianity for granted. The beginner whom Rahner addresses lives in a different situation, a situation in which the very possibility of belief is contested.
D. Pluralism in Contemporary Theology and Philosophy. (Intr.2.D, p. 7). There are so many subjects in contemporary theology and philosophy that no one can master them all. In this case, teamwork does not avail, for one must appropriate faith for oneself. Furthermore, there is no all-encompassing framework for understanding, and the theologian must be in dialogue with all the human sciences. Finally, one cannot treat philosophy and theology as a collection of facts, but rather must participate in (must affirm in faith) what one discovers and asserts. All of these observations suggest the pluralism of theology and philosophy.
E. The Justification of Faith on a "First Level of Reflection." (Intr.2.E, p. 8). Theology’s arguments for the credibility of faith (the traditional analysis fidei) do not establish faith. Rather, they are themselves a part of faith. Something like an “adequate” reflection on faith, a reflection that is scientifically thorough (i.e., a “second level” reflection, one in which each theological discipline gives an account), is not possible. In Rahner’s sense, all of us are rudes or beginners, for no one has an encyclopedic or all-comprehending faith. But it is possible for us to have a “first level” reflection, a reflection in which we are able to give an account of our own faith. This is based on something like converging probabilities or the method of inference that J. H. Newman called the “illative” sense. Foundations of Christian Faith aims to supply it.
F. The Content of the Introduction. (Intr.2.F, p. 10). The introductory course proposed by Rahner is a unity of philosophy and theology. The philosophy constitutes a “fundamental theology” in which we reflect on Christian existence and its foundations. The theology makes present what Catholics call dogma, namely, what has been revealed by God. The central and most important dogma is that God communicates the divine self to human beings, and that they are capable of receiving this communication. This is not only dogma, but also the philosophic foundation of human existence.
By unifying philosophy and theology, Rahner intends (1) to identify the human being as the “universal question,” (2) to show the transcendental and historical conditions that make revelation possible, and (3) to show Christianity as the “answer” to the question which the human being poses and in fact is.
Undoubtedly faith remains a mystery. But it is an intelligible mystery, says Rahner, a mystery that engages us at the heart of our being. Having said this, Rahner cautions us to be wary of a narrowly Christological approach that prematurely leaps to Jesus Christ as the “answer” before adequately posing the question. Then he warns us to avoid an exclusively philosophical (and not also theological) approach to the problem. Finally, he warns us to be wary of a naive Biblicism that might turn the foundational course into a course on exegesis.
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