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Priesthood and Paternalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

A good deal of thinking about the priest and modern society has been about the priest rather than about modern society: by this I mean that we’ve tended to begin from the theological end, with an enquiry into what difference a renewed theology makes to our conception of the priest, and then to go on from here to the sociological implications : how does this new priest with his new functions fit into modern society, and what kind of society will be created around him? But I think we need to work the other way round as well: we need to try to get some idea of the reality of our society and then see what our theological talk amounts to, in that context. The point I’ll try to make in this paper is that there are some cases in which there is a serious tension between what seems theologically sound and desirable, and the results of this in terms of a whole society. This is why theological enquiry which is basically about society – the role of the priest, for instance – can’t afford to work on vague or superficial social ideas, on social caricatures. This isn’t just an abstract warning, because caricatures of our society are frighteningly easy, and it propably isn’t a caricature to say that this is one of the significant things about our society – that it makes stock judgements and category responses easy, and offers these as convincing descriptions of our experience.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1965 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 A paper given to the Clerical Students Conference at Spode House, Sept., 1965.

2 All this obviously raises difficult theological issues about the nature of the role of bishop and priest which must clearly be explored in more detail than I can do here: what I am trying to do is to suggest a social condition and sketch social ideas which seem to indicate that we need to do some re‐thinking. But the whole theological issue is clearly too complex for any easy answers to be given.