Vatican bars U.S. Jesuit from teaching about Christ

Vatican bars U.S. Jesuit from teaching about Christ

NEW YORK CITY — An American Catholic theologian censured by the Vatican for “grave doctrinal errors” has been told to cease teaching about the nature and identity of Jesus Christ.

Roger Haight, a Jesuit, has been asked by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Catholic Church’s highest doctrinal authority, not to teach Christology at any institution, even one unaffiliated with the church. The news was confirmed to Catholic News Service Jan. 5 by Giuseppe Bellucci, chief spokesman in Rome for the Society of Jesus, as the Jesuits — the church’s largest religious order — are known.

Haight, 72, has been forbidden to teach theology at Catholic universities since 2005, when the congregation denounced his book “Jesus: Symbol of God” for casting doubt on the reality of Christ’s divinity, resurrection and unique role as the savior of all humanity.

At that time, the congregation was headed by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI.

A former president of the Catholic Theological Society of America, Haight is currently a scholar in residence at Union Theological Seminary, a nondenominational graduate school in New York City.

The Vatican in recent years has censured several Jesuit theologians for deviations from orthodoxy on such matters as the uniqueness of the Catholic Church and the compatibility of Christianity with the teachings of Karl Marx.