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Thomas Albert Howard, The Pope and the Professor: Pius IX, Ignaz von Döllinger, and the Quandary of the Modern Age (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. xix + 339, £35.00.

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Most theologians today know one thing about Ignaz von Döllinger: he was excommunicated for his rejection of the First Vatican Council’s definition of papal infallibility. Beyond that, he remains mostly… Click to show full abstract

Most theologians today know one thing about Ignaz von Döllinger: he was excommunicated for his rejection of the First Vatican Council’s definition of papal infallibility. Beyond that, he remains mostly unknown. Thomas Albert Howard’s study is an excellent remedy for this deficit. It is a balanced, thoroughly researched, eminently readable study of Döllinger’s career, with a focus on the conflict over the papacy. Despite its dual title, it is a study primarily of Döllinger. The pope in question, Pius IX, comes in as a decisive part of the Döllinger’s context. A strength of the book is the depth and skill with which this context is developed. Nevertheless, Döllinger is the determining focus. Almost the first third of the book sets the stage for Döllinger’s career. An opening chapter describes European Catholicism in the first half of the nineteenth century, with emphasis on the ‘cultural trauma’ of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic periods. A second chapter analyses German Catholicism in greater detail and Döllinger’s early life, during which he was shaped both by the development of history as a discipline and by ultramontane tendencies. The third chapter traces Döllinger’s increasing alienation from papal claims during the 1860s, culminating in his active opposition to the definition of papal infallibility by the First Vatican Council in 1870. He was unrelenting in his opposition after the Council and was excommunicated by the Archbishop of Munich. A final substantive chapter traces Döllinger’s complex involvement with the Old Catholic movement, which he both inspired and carefully kept his distance from, and his role in organising the two Bonn Reunion Conferences of 1874 and 1875. A brief concluding chapter draws some tentative conclusions from the historical narrative. Howard does not tell a good-guys/bad-guys story. One has little sense of axes being ground in the background. Rather both Döllinger and the partisans of the papacy he was attacking are made understandable in their historical context. In particular, Howard explains the defensive stance of the Catholic Church. Both Pius IX and Leo XIII were present as boys in the crowds that greeted Pius VII back to Rome in 1814 after being kidnapped and held prisoner by the French. To say that Pius IX felt besieged is not a metaphor; he was literally besieged more than once. Sometimes you feel paranoid because they really are out to get you. Howard is clearly sympathetic with Döllinger and describes him more than once as a tragic figure. He was a brilliant and diligent scholar.

Keywords: ignaz von; chapter; pius; llinger; howard; oxford

Journal Title: Scottish Journal of Theology
Year Published: 2019

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