Obsequium religiosumObsequium religiosum is a Latin phrase meaning religious submission, religious assent, or religious respect; it is used particularly in the theology of the Catholic Church. Second Vatican CouncilThe Latin term is used in the Latin original document Lumen gentium of the Second Vatican Council regarding the duty of the faithful to give obsequium religiosum (Latin for "religious submission") of will and intellect to certain teachings of the Magisterium of the Church. The Magisterium is a reference to the authoritative teaching body of the Roman Catholic Church. The phrase appears in Lumen gentium 25a in the following context, here translated as both "religious assent" and "religious submission":
The magisterial teachings of the Catholic Church are graded according to a "hierarchy of truths". The more essentially linked a proposed "truth" is to the mystery of Christ (the "Truth"), the greater the assent of the will to that truth must be. The document Donum Veritatis[1] teaches the following concerning this gradation of assent:
In its next section, Donum Veritatis states that "some judgments of the Magisterium could be justified at the time in which they were made, ... (but) only time has permitted discernment and, after deeper study, the attainment of true doctrinal progress". The document, ″Doctrinal Commentary on the Concluding Formula of the Professio fidei″[2] (scroll down to find document), gives a detailed description of these three "categories" of truths and gives examples of each. Withholding assentDonum Veritatis also allows that, "When it comes to the question of interventions in the prudential order, it could happen that some Magisterial documents might not be free from all deficiencies." However “it would be contrary to the truth, if, proceeding from some particular cases, one were to conclude that the Church's Magisterium can be habitually mistaken in its prudential judgments.” It acknowledges that a given theologian, "might have serious difficulties, for reasons which appear to him wellfounded, in accepting a non-irreformable magisterial teaching." In such a case "even if the doctrine of the faith is not in question, the theologian will not present his own opinions or divergent hypotheses as though they were non-arguable conclusions," and is to "refrain from giving untimely public expression to them," and "avoid turning to the mass media," but with a humble and teachable spirit it is his duty "to make known to the Magisterial authorities the problems raised by the teaching in itself, in the arguments proposed to justify it, or even in the manner in which it is presented," with "an intense and patient reflection on his part and a readiness, if need be, to revise his own opinions and examine the objections which his colleagues might offer him", prayerfully trusting "that if the truth really is at stake, it will ultimately prevail." In so doing it makes a distinction between dissent as in public opposition to the Magisterium of the Church and the situation of conscientious personal difficulties with teaching, and asserts that the Church "has always held that nobody is to be forced to embrace the faith against his will," while the Virgin Mary's "immediate and unhesitating assent of faith to the Word of God" is set forth as the example to follow in submitting to Catholic teaching. While the theologian, like every believer, must follow his conscience, and Joseph Ratzinger (as a priest-theologian) taught that "over the pope as the expression of the binding claim of ecclesiastical authority there still stands one's own conscience, which must be obeyed before all else,"[3] it is not "an autonomous and exclusive authority for deciding the truth of a doctrine," and the Catholic is obliged to form it according to Catholic teaching.[4] See alsoReferences
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