When the Catholic Church affirms the importance of how all the
faithful understand matters of faith and morals, it is not saying
Catholic beliefs are open to a popular vote, Pope Benedict XVI said.
An authentic "sensus fidei," which literally means "sense
of faith," can come only when Catholics actively participate in the life
of the church and follow the teaching of the pope and bishops, he said
Dec. 7 during a meeting with members of the International Theological
Commission.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church quotes the Second Vatican
Council's teaching that "the whole body of the faithful ... cannot err
in matters of belief. This characteristic is shown in the supernatural
appreciation of faith ('sensus fidei') on the part of the whole people,
when, 'from the bishops to the last of the faithful,' they manifest a
universal consent in matters of faith and morals."
Pope Benedict praised the theological commission members for
including a discussion of the "sensus fidei" in "Theology Today:
Perspectives, Principles and Criteria," a document they released in
March and which affirms the primacy of bishops over theologians as
interpreters of church teaching.
"Today it is particularly important to clarify the criteria which
make it possible to distinguish the authentic 'sensus fidelium' from its
counterfeits," the pope said.
"In reality, it is not some kind of
ecclesial public opinion, and it is unthinkable to use it to contest the
teaching of the magisterium because the 'sensus fidei' cannot develop
authentically in a believer except to the extent in which he or she
fully participates in the life of the church, and this requires a
responsible adherence to the magisterium."
The "sensus fidei" is a kind of "supernatural instinct" that helps
Catholics recognize what does and does not belong to the faith of the
church, he said, and it is a sign that "the Holy Spirit does not cease
to speak to the churches and lead them to the whole truth."
Referring to another document the commission is working on, about the
Catholic belief in one God, Pope Benedict said the "sensus fidei" is
what helps believers rightly react against "the prejudice that says
religions, especially monotheistic religions, would inherently be
bearers of violence, mainly because of the claim that they advance about
the existence of a universal truth."
Some people, he said, insist relativism is the only way to guarantee
tolerance and peace and that it best conforms to the ideals of a
democratic society where everything should be open to a vote.
When people are denied the possibility of referring to objective
truths, he said, "dialogue is rendered impossible and violence, whether
declared or hidden, becomes the rule of law of human relationships."
The life and death of Jesus, Pope Benedict said, demonstrates "a
radical rejection of all forms of hatred and violence" in favor of the
absolute primacy of love.
"If, therefore, in history there have been or are forms of violence
carried out in the name of God, these are not to be attributed to
monotheism, but historical causes, mainly the result of human errors,"
he said.
In fact, the pope said, "it is forgetting God that immerses human
societies in a form of relativism, which inevitably generates violence."