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Against saying “Catholics believe”

Given the stakes of defending the faith in a secular age, when a misconstrued response can send interlocutors back into the arms of unbelief that stretch over every area of life, the proper framing of our answers is critical.

(Image: Joshua Ness/Unsplash.com)

My sophomore English teacher taught an invaluable writing lesson that has stayed with me: “Show, don’t tell.” In explicating texts, we should make our point directly without saying we are doing so.

Rather than begin sentences, for example, with an unnecessary introduction (“I think that Willy Loman felt insecure”), we should state our point directly (“Willy Loman felt insecure”). The latter is more effective in style and conveys confidence in our interpretation.

The same rule should be applied when explaining the Catholic faith to interlocutors, whether they are young, old, curious, or hostile: Show the faith, don’t tell about it.

We should state, for example, “Jesus rose from the dead,” and not, “Catholics believe that Jesus rose from the dead.” The reason for doing so exceeds preferences for style and confidence: it concerns whether our faith is objective and universal or subjective and applicable only to some.

The beliefs of Catholics are objective and universal because they come from God, who can neither deceive nor be deceived, and are revealed for the salvation of all people. With moral certitude, Catholics know in faith the truths articulated in the Nicene Creed and summarized in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Faith is a valid form of knowledge that depends on the credibility of witnesses, and we have every reason to trust the writers of the Bible and the apostles who handed on what they received from Jesus Himself. And it is Christ, as the Son of God, upon whom our faith ultimately rests.

“Nothing is truer than His word of truth,” writes St. Thomas Aquinas in the Adoro Te Devote.

Of course, Catholics believe these truths. The difficulty is not in that fact. It arises when someone asks a question about the faith, and our first two words in response are “Catholics believe.”

Why? When we lead with those two words, we unwittingly relativize the faith. We give the impression that the truths of faith are only for Catholics. Yes, Catholic beliefs are different from those of other religions or belief systems. But we know our beliefs are true; the interlocutors require instruction or correction. Hence, we should state with confidence the truth without qualifying it, without giving an opening that can be interpreted, however wrongly, as “Catholics believe this. But others believe something different, and that’s their prerogative.”

Consider some scenarios in which introducing a response with “Catholics believe” can undermine the truths we intend to articulate:

  • A child asks his parents: “Why can’t someone have two mommies?”
  • A Protestant in a Catholic school asks: “Why do you believe the Eucharist is the body of Christ?”
  • A friend asks: “Why do you have a problem with IVF?”

Answers to each of these questions depend on objective realities: the first on biological facts that exist in nature, the second on the witness of Scripture and the unbroken Tradition of the Church, the third on nature and on human dignity. Objectivity points to universal applicability: the teachings of the Church are true for all because they are based on metaphysics, which in turn shows the reasonableness of the Church’s teachings. To hold the contrary opinion is not to disagree with the private views of some religious body; it is to place oneself at odds with reality: with nature, Scripture, and Tradition.

If, by contrast, we open a response to these questions with “Catholics believe,” we place ourselves on relativistic grounds—grounds of our interlocutor. Even if we think we are adequately defending Church teaching, we give the impression that our beliefs are subjective rather than objective, that they belong to some but not to all.

After all, what makes one subject’s argument greater than that of another? It is a better hold on the evidence, on objective reality. Beginning with the subjective risks failing to lead our interlocutor to the finish line.

In these instances, the child asking his parents about “two mommies” can come away with the impression that the secular world has painted: Catholics are “homophobes” because they believe two people who love each other cannot marry. The Protestant asking about the Eucharist accepts “denominational differences” as the reason for Catholics believing in the real presence, while Protestants do not. The friend asking about IVF sees Catholics as insensitive to the plight of infertile parents: “What about their beliefs?” goes the retort.

Their beliefs are incorrect, not because of what Catholics believe but because they are not in accord with reality, and reality is the basis of truth. Beliefs must be true to be worthy of respect. The interlocutor can point to feelings or other forms of rationalization in defense—something we all do to justify our sins—but none of these factors make beliefs true. Sometimes stubbornness perdures and becomes something else, as St. Augustine bluntly stated in Book VI of the City of God: “Stupidity glories in never yielding to the force of truth.”

To answer questions by articulating the Church’s teachings is an apology in the classical sense: a defense. Too often, however, especially in uncomfortable situations when we are put on the spot, an answer that begins “Catholics believe” can sound like an apology in the modern sense: a statement of contrition.

Given the stakes of defending the faith in a secular age, when a misconstrued response can send interlocutors back into the arms of unbelief that stretch over every area of life, the proper framing of our answers is critical.

“Always be prepared to make a defense to anyone who calls you to account for the hope that is in you,” St. Peter urges us (1 Pt 3:15). Our preparation should include training ourselves to show the faith plainly and not tell about it.


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About David G. Bonagura, Jr. 55 Articles
David G. Bonagura, Jr. is the author, most recently, of 100 Tough Questions for Catholics: Common Obstacles to Faith Today, and the translator of and the translator of Jerome’s Tears: Letters to Friends in Mourning. An adjunct professor at St. Joseph’s Seminary and Catholic International University, he serves as the religion editor of The University Bookman, a review of books founded in 1960 by Russell Kirk. Visit him online at his personal website.

7 Comments

  1. And yet we begin the creed with the words “I believe.”

    Jesus said, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet believe. The distinction between what is seen and what is believed is very clear. Our confidence in what is seen and in what is believed rest on different bases, and it is vain to pretend otherwise. Certainly there are things in the seen category which people today dispute, and it is appropriate to assert what is seen without qualification. But it is nothing but false bravado to speak of what is believed as if it were what is seen. Our interlocutors are entitled to know when we are making a claim based on what is seen and when we are making one based on what is believed. They will think us dishonest if we do not make this distinction. And it is not because we have less confidence in what is seen than in what is believed, but because our confidence it of a different type and origin in each case.

  2. Wonderful article, Sir! Awesome premise!

    I would add that, just as in the Scriptures there are many words for translated only as “love” in our English language, losing so, so, so much Divine Meaning in the transalation, so too the English word “believe,” used in the context above, virtually always comes across as a (cowardly) apology for “what those old geezer bishops force us to accept.”

    Bishop Sheen masterfully articulated the differences between the various Greek words for Love, but I have neither heard nor read anything about similar distinctions in Greek terms for Faith, Belief, etc. Perhaps a (credible) Catholic scholar might do so…

    St James’ words about Faith Without Works come to mind, and they certianly support your article, Sir, but… as you say, using the above words in today’s culture certainly is a weak, ineffective way to “defend” anything.

    Thank you for quoting the great St Thomas! I love Gerard Manley Hopkins’ poetic translation: “Truth Himself speaks truly… or, there’s NOTHING true!”

  3. Wonderful article, Sir! Awesome premise!

    I would add that, just as in the Scriptures there are many words translated only as “love” in our English language, thus losing so, so, so much Divine Meaning in the transalation, so too the English word “believe,” used in the context above, virtually always comes across as a (cowardly) apology for “what those old bishops force us to accept.”

    Bishop Sheen masterfully articulated the differences between the various Greek words for Love, but I have neither heard nor read anything about similar distinctions in Greek terms for Faith, Belief, etc. Perhaps a (credible) Catholic scholar might do so…

    St James’ words about Faith Without Works come to mind, and they certianly support your article, Sir, but… as you say, using the above words in today’s culture certainly is a weak, ineffective way to “defend” anything.

    Thank you for quoting the great St Thomas Aquinas! I love Gerard Manley Hopkins’ poetic translation of that line: “Truth Himself speaks truly… or, there’s NOTHING true!”

  4. Similarly, another annoyance of mine is habitually starting every utterance with “I would say that.” Just say it. While one may occasionally have reason to qualify a statement in that way, the constant repetition of such qualifiers is unnecessary. “That is a mortal sin,” is far more effective than saying, “I would say that is a mortal sin,” or “Catholics believe that is a mortal sin.” Unfortunately, even many of those doing otherwise good work in Catholic radio have succumbed to this habit. Correcting a bad habit takes effort, but it is doable. We’re not just dealing in relativism; we’re asserting things that are true– and we should confidently and boldly make those assertions.

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  1. Against saying “Catholics believe” – seamasodalaigh

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