The council’s legacy has indelibly shaped the modern Catholic Church, writes
Fr VINCENT TWOMEY
I CAN STILL remember the
surprise and excitement caused in January 1961 when the newly elected
Pope John XXIII announced his convocation of the 21st Ecumenical Council
in the Catholic Church’s history. Its objective would be to open the
windows of the church and let in some fresh air. Some might say a
whirlwind entered instead.
For the universally loved pontiff, the
council had three aims: the renewal of the church, Christian unity, and
an opening to the contemporary world. His programme was initially
greeted with euphoria.
To understand the impact of the council,
the cultural situation of the 1960s needs to be taken into account.
Prosperity had replaced the austerities of the second World War.
Long
in preparation, the sexual revolution erupted with volcanic force.
Science and technology were quite literally reaching for the stars. New
nations in Africa and Asia were shaking off the shackles of their
colonial masters.
The first Catholic president of the US, John F
Kennedy, had ushered in a new era of confidence. The Soviet Union, the
other world power, led by Nikita Khrushchev, was in the process of
shaking off some of its Stalinist excesses.
But above all, it was
the time when TV came of age and with it a new political role for
journalism in general. All this left its mark indelibly on the council.
Vatican
II was like no other council. It was the largest assembly of bishops
ever: some 2,300 from every continent and almost every nation. It was
the first to have official observers from the Anglican, Protestant and
Eastern Orthodox churches.
Another first was the inclusion of
religious and lay experts, male and female, in the course of its four
years of deliberations (1962-1965). Included among the latter was Frank
Duff, who received a standing ovation.
Moral theologians were
trying to develop an alternative to the legalist approach found in the
manuals used to train confessors. Before the council, these developments
were confined to a small number of critical theologians, some of whom
had been silenced by the Holy Office.
Vatican II, it could be said, was
their council.
But it was also the journalists’ council. They
flocked to Rome to relate the deliberations of the council to the world.
Their presence also left its effect on the way the council was
interpreted and on theology itself.
Used to commenting on
political life, they naturally tended to interpret the intense debates
in the Aula of St Peter’s in political terms, namely “progressive”
versus “conservative”, thus replacing the traditional terms of orthodox
and heterodox.
Generally speaking, it was felt that the progressives won most battles at the council, but not without conceding compromises.
This
led liberal theologians to promote an interpretation of the council
that was more true to what they now call “the spirit of the council”
rather than the letter.
Soon they were calling for even more
radical developments (in doctrine, liturgy, discipline and morals), more
often than not echoing contemporary currents of thought.
They
were assured of headlines and public approval. Others felt that the
council had betrayed the church’s apostolic tradition. Confusion was
rife. Was the council responsible?
Twenty years after the close of
the council, the then Cardinal Ratzinger, though critical of aspects of
the council, denied this.
The damage, he said, was due to the
unleashing of polemical and centrifugal forces within the church and the
prevalence, outside it, of a liberal-radical ideology that was
individualistic, rationalistic and hedonistic.
Those centrifugal
forces, Ratzinger claimed, helped to unleash the student unrest in 1968,
which he experienced first hand in Tübingen.
Within the church, they led to the initial attempts to articulate a theology of liberation in Latin America.
As
George Weigel pointed out, unlike previous councils, Vatican II failed
to give a key to the interpretation of its documents (in terms of a
creedal statement or condemnation of some teachings).
Blessed Pope
John Paul II aimed to provide such a key in various ways, not least
with his many encyclicals and apostolic letters.
But the main
interpretive keys he provided were the revised Codes of Canon Law (1983
and 1990) and the Catechism of the Catholic Church (1992).
Pope
Benedict XVI played a significant role not only in the council but also
in the revision of the codes and in overseeing the worldwide process
that produced the catechism. He has now called for a Year of Faith to be
devoted especially to recovering the original teaching of Vatican II.
The
late American cardinal Avery Dulles summarised the pope’s views:
“Traditionalists and progressives, said, fell into the same error: They
failed to see that Vatican II stood in fundamental continuity with the
past."
“In rejecting some of the early drafts, the council fathers
were not repudiating their doctrine, which was solidly traditional, but
only their style, which they found too scholastic and insufficiently
pastoral. Particularly harmful was the tendency of progressives to
contrast the letter of the council’s texts with the spirit. The spirit
is to be found in the letter itself.”
That is our task for the Year of Faith.
Fr Vincent Twomey is professor emeritus of moral theology at St Patrick’s College Maynooth