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Modernism (Roman Catholicism)

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Modernism is, according to the teachings of the Catholic Church, a heresy. First condemned in 1910 by Pope St. Pius X, Modernism is characterised by an unwillingness to accept defined Church dogmas accompanied by claims for the possibility of the evolution of dogma - a notion subtly distinct from Cardinal Newman's teaching on the "development of doctrine".

Modernism was a term given by clergy, theologians, and popes such as Pius X, to describe series of movements and beliefs of other Catholic and Protestant theologians, clergy, and bishops. It should be noted that almost none of the "modernists" used this label, or saw themselves as a unified group; it was applied to them by the popes and others.

Modernism in the Catholic Church is the result of a certain memes and schools of thought popular in the Catholic and Protestant Churches around the turn of the 20th century:

The combination of these three currents usually led to other conclusions which were common in Modernist thinking:

Table of contents
1 Evolution of dogmas
2 Social/Anthropological causes of Modernism
3 Church officials' responses to Modernism

Evolution of dogmas

The final overall teaching of Modernism, is that dogmas (what is taught by the Church and what its members are required to believe) can evolve over time, rather then being the same for all time. This aspect of thought was what made Modernism unique in the history of heresies in the Church. Previously, a heretic (someone who believed and taught something different than what the rest of the church believed) would either claim that he was right and the rest of the church was wrong because he had received a new revelation from God, or that he had understood the true teaching of God which was previously understood but then lost. Both of those scenarios almost necessarily led to an organizational separation away from the Church (schism) or the offender being ejected from the Church (excommunication). With this new idea that doctrines evolve, it was possible for the modernist to believe that the old teachings of the Church and his new seemingly contradictory teachings were both correct - each had their time and place. This system allows almost any type of new belief that the modernist might want to introduce, and for this reason Modernism was labelled the "synthesis of all heresies" by Pope Pius X.

Social/Anthropological causes of Modernism

Catholic historians and theologians have social explanations as to why Modernism developed as it did and became so popular:

Church officials' responses to Modernism

Pope Pius X was the first to identify Modernism as a movement. He frequently condemned both its aims and ideas, and was deeply concerned by the ability of Modernism to allow its adherents to believe themselves strict Catholics while having a markedly different belief as to what that meant (a consequence of the notion of evolution of dogma). Due to this, he instituted the Anti-Modernist oath to force people to come to clear terms with what they believed. He also, more controversially, introduced a secret society called the Solidatium Pianum to spy on seminaries to see if Modernism was being taught in them. Catholics reason that this had to be done because of the dangerous structure of modernist thinking.

Modernism continues to be condemned by the Church hierarchy, with Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger and others having done much in recent decades to prevent its spread. It is generally accepted that measures taken under Pope Pius X led in several cases to injustices being perpetrated against orthodox Catholics, and the structures of ecclesial espionage which characterised his period in office have long since disappeared.