Gavin D'Costa

Only One Way?


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or biases.2 So please do not stop reading if you are not a Catholic theologian. Why? Because as Christians we are called into special conversation and sharing as we have a call from Christ to discover our unity and this can only be done by being truthful with each other and being open to each other’s criticisms and corrections – which is precisely one of the objectives of this present book. If you are a Lutheran or Quaker or Baptist or a ‘don’t know’, but a spiritually sensitive person interested in the question at hand, I think I will learn from your criticisms and I hope you will learn from listening to the view of the Catholic Church on these matters, or at least one of its (unofficial) theologians explicating it. What is explicated below is my view as well. To ‘think with the Church’ allows ample room for critical exploration and development of arguments and engagement with a wide range of issues and is not a simple act of repetition, although the latter is also part of the theologian’s job.3

      If you respond to all this by saying: ‘I want to hear what this person Gavin D’Costa thinks, not what some institution thinks’, I would argue that the attention to what the individual thinks is a preoccupation of the modern period and it is an important intellectual task to find out what an authoritative body such as the Catholic Church thinks and then engage with a person who identifies themselves within this body and who is willing to engage in serious theological argument.

      Third, and finally, you may ask: but what of your experience Gavin? Does it not sometimes call into question the teachings of your Church on these matters? I have to be honest and say that there is a productive tension in ingesting some of my Church’s teachings, but in terms of dogma, nothing in my experience has called into question the teachings of the Church on other religions. Rather the contrary. I have found the teachings of the Church deeply illuminative of what I have experienced in some fifty years of interreligious dialogue. It should be said that first and foremost the question about ‘other religions’ is about dear friends and companions, people I have known. Sometimes, in looking at the formal teachings we can lose sight of human friendship, but that is not the intention of Catholic teachings, for Christ’s central gift is that of the command to love one another, to form friendships. Hence, the question about other religions might be simply one of how do we learn to love, honour and serve our neighbour who may be a Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist? Given the personal nature of dialogue, I should say a few words about myself.

      The Roman Catholic teaching on other religions

      Biblical and early church background

      Three interesting attitudes to this religious pluralism are discernible within the first few centuries that continue to shape contemporary Catholicism. First, there was a clear emphasis on the necessity of faith in Christ for salvation, echoing John 14.6: ‘I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.’ This faith had an ecclesial dimension, including the necessity for baptism into Christ’s body, so that membership of the Church (in the case of adults, always assuming active faith and love in the person’s heart) was required for salvation (Acts 2.23, 41; 8.12–13; 16.15, 31–3; Matt. 28.19; 2 Cor. 5.17; Gal. 6.15; 3.27; Rom. 6.3–4). This first emphasis meant that Christianity was a vigorous missionary religion with an explicit desire to convert all peoples. This was formulated in the famous axiom extra ecclesiam nulla salus teaching (no salvation outside the Church), which was formally taught at the Council of Florence in the fifteenth century, but originates from as early as the second century and was consolidated by Augustine of Hippo. It is formally still taught in the Roman Catholic Church. This missionary drive excluded no religion or culture, although Jewish rejection of the gospel was always an embarrassment in the early days and eventually led to a strong anti-Jewish polemic. This teaching presupposed that God created the world good and that the fall brought in death and alienation between humans and God (Gen. 3; Rom. 5.2–21; Luke 11.21–2; John 16.11). This breach initiated by Adam and Eve meant that the history of restoration of the broken covenant between God and humans begins