Mailnews_old

Views 620 Votes 0 Comment 0
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
austraLasia 924
 
'Not an iota of difference!'  In this case there is.
 
ROME: 27th October '04 --  We know that East split from West over many factors, but doctrinally, at least, it may be put down to 'an iota of difference' in the case of the Greek homo(i)-ousios.  Is there likely to be a future rupture over the more Latin-sounding en/inculturation?
    The comments that follow will leave doctrinal considerations to those with the competence for them.  Mine can help to clarify the linguistic history, and be of some supporting role to the former, I'm sure.  The Rector Major, in a comment during his visit to East Timor indicated that enculturation is distinct from inculturation.  He defined the former as socialisation and described the latter in a contextual way for his listeners.  No doubt, with a doctorate lurking behind the word, he also has a precise definition for that term too.
    Let's begin with the 'Latin-sounding' aspect of either term.  Enculturation has a Latin core (the culture bit), but Latin morphology, that is the way words are put together in that language, does not allow an en- prefix, so we can be immediately sure that this word did not begin its existence in that language.  In fact we know precisely when, by who and how this word came into existence.  It began as an English word and was coined by M.J. Herskovitz, an anthropologist, in 1952 (Man and His Works: The Science of Cultural Anthropology NY:Alfred A. Knoopf).  You still find that reference in Anthropology 101 courses in most universities.  And he intended by the term precisely what Fr Chávez defined it as: socialisation, or something that goes on between generations in a culture, mum toilet-training the kids.
    Enculturation was not the first 'expansion' of culture in English.  Already in the 19th century, an American anthropologist (not the Polish Malinowski, as some have claimed) had introduced acculturation to refer to the learning of a second culture, so this time something that goes on between two culture, not just two generations of a single culture.  Me learning how to live as an Australian in Italy, for example.  The Académie française had already 'admitted' acculturation to French by 1911.
    So what of inculturation?  Here is where the woolly thinking, linguistically speaking, begins.  I read an entire Bishop's Pastoral Letter, basing his thoughts on inculturation of liturgy etc. on the 'fact' that the term began its voyage from Vatican II's 'Ad Gentes'.  This is incorrect.  Neither in the Latin nor in the English official translation does the term appear.  I have also heard it said that John Paul II coined the term.  The linguistic evidence is against this.  We know when he first used it, though:  Catechesi Tradendae, 53.  1979.  This was the first use of the term in an official papal document, albeit an 'Apostolic Exhortation'.  And his first use of the term is telling: 'the term acculturation or inculturation may be a neologism but it expresses very well one factor of the great mystery of the Incarnation...'.  He is writing in Latin, so he will use the 'in-' form regardless.  He is also unclear of the distinction between acculturationand inculturation at this stage (an awareness that sharpens by the time of Redemptoris Missio), and the evidence surely is that the term inculturation already exists, and JPII feels it may be applicable.  In all likelihood, but I have no proof yet for this, inculturation is an anthropological coining, sometime after 1952, to further distinguish understandings from that developing science.  We also get exculturation, but that hasn't survived.
    It is important to note here that the Pope's first reference to the term is an analogical comment, not an etymological one.  That inculturation somehow expresses the incarnation is an application of analogy.  To say that the word combines incarnation with enculturation to produce inculturation is etymologically incorrect.  This has not prevented the galloping development of theological underpinnings of inculturation going back to the Pauline understanding of the Incarnation - and why not?  Just so long as we are clear that (Catholic) theologians have now taken the high ground on the term, and do not forget its more likely lowly birth in an individual's struggle to make himself clear.
    Mind you, the man-in-the-street might still think it's a toss-up, en- or in-.  The major dictionaries are ambiguous or silent about inculturation.  It's not a man-in-the-street term, after all, nor is enculturation for that matter.  Cardinal Ratzinger became so exasperated by the brush-fires he had to put out that at one point he suggested dropping inculturation for inter-culturality.  Now he might have good theological reasons for that, but is unlikely to win the linguistic battle for hearts and minds!
JBF

List of Articles
No. Category Subject Views
930 GIA 0930_RM spending the day with Salesian Sisters 483
929 GIA 0929_Don Rua: 'learned Don Bosco off by heart'. 361
928 RMG 0928_RM glad to be beginning visit to Japan on Feast of Don Rua 186
927 World 0927_In/enculturation - a lighter moment: only read on if you have a sense of humour! 588
926 ITM 0926_How Don Bosco formed his own to become Salesians: RM to novitiate community, 'Be good Salesians'. 493
925 ITM 0925_ITM: Indonesia - Planting a charism 374
» World 0924_'Not an iota of difference!' In this case there is. 620
923 ITM 0923_East Timor's Past Pupils of Don Bosco: where the President is a president! 386
922 World 0922_The Salesian Brother: DB, Vespignani, Rinaldi - Fr Zuliani's translations available 558
921 ITM 0921_RM focuses on inculturation - be ready for a Letter on this! 365
920 RMG 0920_Availability of English language Salesian literature 367
919 ITM 0919_Timor: Several thousand Salesian youth gather round RM for Mission Sunday 523
918 ITM 0918_East Timor: Open Forum discussion on RM's Letters to the Congregation 6837
917 India 0917_Fr. James O'Halloran SDB: Great mind of the 21st Century 445
916 ITM 0916_Don Bosco in Dili: Salesian world's centre shifts to Timor Lorosae (Timor L'este, Timor Timur, East Timor) 294
915 RMG 0915_WHEN IS FORMATION PROFESSIONAL? 644
914 PGS 0914_RM celebrates 25 years of Salesian presence in Samoa: 'I give thanks'. 436
913 RMG 0913_SAMOA (AUL): Rector Major's 'stolen heart'! 522
912 India 0912_Don Bosco, Matunga: Most Socially Responsible School 266
911 RMG 0911_RM to AUL youth leaders: 'Let's build a better world!' 173
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 ... 177 Next
/ 177