It was 21 September 1963, just a few days before
the resumption of the Second Vatican Council and the new Pope, Paul VI,
who had been elected the previous June, gave an important speech to the
Roman Curia, mentioning the possibility of bringing bishops into the
Curia dicasteries.
"Should the ecumenical Council express the wish to see
a bishop - particularly diocese leaders - associated in some way to the
supreme leader of the Catholic Church, in accordance with the doctrine
of the Catholic Church and canonical law, for the purposes of study and
ecclesiastical governance, the Curia will certainly not oppose this.”
The following November, during the Council’s
heated debate about the methods used by the former Holy Office, a
proposal was apparently made for a body of international bishops to be
established to help the Pope in his task. The body would have the
functions once performed by the Cardinals’ consistory and would be
consulted on general Church related problems. Paul VI decided to take on
this decision-making task himself.
Two years later, on 14 September 1965, during the
inauguration of the Council’s fourth and final session, Paul VI
announced the establishment of the Synod of Bishops which “will be
convened according to the Church’s needs by the Roman Catholic Pope, for
his consultation and collaboration, where he deems this is necessary
for the good of the Catholic Church.” Paolo VI claimed this new body
could help the Pope in his role as leader, although his task would be
merely consultative not deliberative.
The Pope inaugurated the newly created Synod of
Bishops in September 1967. The first four-day-long assembly in Rome was
on the theme: “preservation and reinforcement of the Catholic faith, its
integrity, vigour, development and doctrinal and historical coherence.”
A theme that is very similar to that of the Synod that is about to open
in the Vatican.
In his opening homily, Paul VI expressed the full
extent of his concern about the crisis that was growing within the
Church: “The concern for doctrinal faithfulness which was so solemnly
proclaimed at the start of the recent Council, must guide our
post-conciliar period. The higher the number and seriousness of the
dangers that threaten faith today, the more care needs to be taken by
those to whom Christ has given a mandate to teach, spread his message
and guard the “warehouse” of faith.
Paul VI referred to these as “huge dangers”
“because of the irreligious orientation of the modern mentality and
insidious dangers which are posed by the publications of teachers and
writers,[…]who are often more eager to adapt Catholic dogma to profane
thinking and language from inside the Church than to obey the teachings
of the Church, giving way to the opinion that: one, neglecting orthodox
principles, one is free to pick out the truths of faith which their
instinctive personal judgement tells them are more acceptable, rejecting
the rest and two, that the doctrinal heritage of the Catholic Church
can be subject to revision in order to give Christianity new ideological
dimensions that are very different from the theological ones which the
Church’s authentic tradition outlined, showing immense reverence for
God’s thinking.”
The Pope went on to tell the bishops of the new
international consultation body that “As we know, faith is not the
result of an arbitrary o purely naturalistic interpretation of the Word
of God, just as it is not the rising religious expression of a
collective opinion of individuals who call themselves believers and lack
an official leader. Neither is it the result of acquiescence towards
philosophical or sociological currents of a transient historical moment.
Faith is an adherence of our whole spirit to the wonderful and merciful
message of salvation, communicated to us through the bright and secret
paths of the Revelation; Faith is not only a search, but above all a
certainty.”
During that first Synod, some Fathers had asked
for a “rule of faith” to be prepared, in order to re-introduce the
content of the Catholic Faith in a clear and simple way. In June the
following year, in 1968, Pope Paul VI proclaimed his “Credo of the
people of God”, based on a draft sent by philosopher Jacques Maritain to
Swiss cardinal Charles Journet.