Ratzinger. Consciousness and Truth
Ratzinger. Consciousness and Truth
Ratzinger. Consciousness and Truth
“In this sense, Paul can say: the Gentiles are a law
to themselves—not in the sense of modern liberal
notions of autonomy which preclude transcendence
of the subject, but in the much deeper sense that
nothing belongs less to me than I myself.”
1
This text is a selection from “Conscience and Truth,” presented at the 10th
Workshop for Bishops, February 1991, in Dallas, Texas. Published in On
Conscience (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2007). Reprinted by permission.
respect the prophet of Jesus Christ has its roots in this fundamental
question. Socrates’ taking up of this question bestowed on the way
of philosophizing inspired by him a kind of salvation-historical
privilege and made it an appropriate vessel for the Christian Logos.
For with the Christian Logos we are dealing with liberation through
truth and to truth. If you isolate Socrates’ dispute from the accidents
of the time and take into account his use of other arguments and
terminology, you begin to see how closely this is the same dilemma
we face today. Giving up the idea of man’s capacity for truth leads
first to pure formalism in the use of words and concepts. Again, the
loss of content, then and now, leads to a pure formalism of judg-
ment. In many places today, for example, no one bothers any longer
to ask what a person thinks. The verdict on someone’s thinking is
ready at hand as long as you can assign it to its corresponding, formal
category: conservative, reactionary, fundamentalist, progressive,
revolutionary. Assignment to a formal scheme suffices to render
unnecessary coming to terms with the content. The same thing can
be seen in more concentrated form, in art. What a work of art says
is indifferent. It can glorify God or the devil. The sole standard is
that of formal, technical mastery.
We now have arrived at the heart of the matter. Where
contents no longer count, where pure praxeology takes over,
technique becomes the highest criterion. This means, though,
that power becomes the preeminent category whether revolu-
tionary or reactionary. This is precisely the distorted form of
being like God of which the account of the Fall speaks. The way
of mere technical skill, the way of sheer power, is imitation of an
idol and not expression of one’s being made in the image and
likeness of God. What characterizes man as man is not that he
asks about the “can” but about the “should” and that he opens
himself to the voice and demands of truth. It seems to me that
this was the final meaning of the Socratic search and it is the
profoundest element in the witness of all martyrs. They attest to
the fact that man’s capacity for truth is a limit on all power and
a guarantee of man’s likeness to God. It is precisely in this way
that the martyrs are the great witnesses of conscience, of that
capability given to man to perceive the “should” beyond the
“can” and thereby render possible real progress, real ascent.
534 Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
a. Anamnesis
the part of the faithful. It does signify, however, the sureness of the
Christian memory. This Christian memory, to be sure, is always
learning, but proceeding from its sacramental identity, it also
distinguishes from within between what is a genuine unfolding of its
recollection and what is its destruction or falsification. In the crisis
of the Church today, the power of this recollection and the truth of
the apostolic word is experienced in an entirely new way where,
much more so than hierarchical direction, it is the power of memory
of the simple faith which leads to the discernment of spirits. One can
only comprehend the primacy of the Pope and its correlation to
Christian conscience in this connection. The true sense of this
teaching authority of the Pope consists in his being the advocate of
the Christian memory. The Pope does not impose from without.
Rather, he elucidates the Christian memory and defends it. For this
reason the toast to conscience indeed must precede the toast to the
Pope because without conscience there would not be a papacy. All
power that the papacy has is power of conscience. It is service to the
double memory upon which the faith is based and which again and
again must be purified, expanded, and defended against the destruc-
tion of memory, which is threatened by a subjectivity forgetful of its
own foundation as well as by the pressures of social and cultural
conformity.
b. Conscientia