Development of doctrine is a term used by John Henry Newman and other theologians influenced by him to describe the way Catholic teaching has become more detailed and explicit over the centuries, while later statements of doctrine remain consistent with earlier statements.
The term was introduced in Newman's 1845 book An Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine. Newman used the idea of development of doctrine to defend Catholic teaching from attacks by some Anglicans and other Protestants, who saw certain elements in Catholic teaching as corruptions or innovations. He relied on an extensive study of early Church Fathers in tracing the elaboration or development of doctrine which he argued was in some way implicitly present in the Divine Revelation in Sacred Scripture and Tradition which was present from the beginnings of the Church.
He argued that various Catholic doctrines not accepted by Protestants (such as devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, or Purgatory) had a developmental history analogous to doctrines that were accepted by Protestants (such as the Trinity or the divinity and humanity of Christ). Such developments were, in his view, the natural and beneficial consequences of reason working on the original revealed truth to draw out consequences that were not obvious at first. This thinking of Newman had a major impact on the Bishops at the Second Vatican Council, and appears in their statement that ′′the understanding of the things and words handed down grows, through the contemplation and study of believers, [...] [which] tends continually towards the fullness of divine truth."
There is a more radical understanding of development of doctrine that is known as evolution of dogmas. This view, mixed in with philosophical currents such as vitalism, immanentism and historicism, was at the heart of the modernist controversy during the papacy of Pius X, and was condemned in the encyclical Pascendi dominici gregis.
Cette page est générée automatiquement et peut contenir des informations qui ne sont pas correctes, complètes, à jour ou pertinentes par rapport à votre recherche. Il en va de même pour toutes les autres pages de ce site. Veillez à vérifier les informations auprès des sources officielles de l'EPFL.
vignette|redresse=1.3|Le peuple romain rassemblé dans la basilique Saint-Pierre de Rome le jour du vote du dogme de l'infaillibilité, Le Monde IllustréL′infaillibilité pontificale est un dogme proclamé par l'Église catholique le et complété le 21 novembre 1964, selon lequel le pape ne peut se tromper dans son pouvoir ordinaire et extraordinaire lorsqu'il entend définir une doctrine révélée en matière de foi ou de mœurs, qu'il exprime ex cathedra.
Le protestantisme est l'une des principales branches du christianisme, avec le catholicisme et l'orthodoxie. Entendu largement, le protestantisme est l'ensemble des Églises issues de la Réforme. L'ensemble de ces Églises englobe des mouvements variés, tels les luthériens, presbytériens, réformés, anglicans, méthodistes... Il regroupe plus d'un tiers des chrétiens dans le monde, soit 900 millions de protestants, dont 300 millions dans les Églises directement influencées par la Réforme et 600 millions dans les nouvelles Églises protestantes, principalement évangéliques (dont l’anabaptisme, le baptisme et le pentecôtisme).