In July 1960, Yves Congar, a renowned Catholic expert in ecclesiology,
felt that Vatican II “was coming 20 years too soon from the vantage
point of theology and especially of ecumenism”.
Many ideas had already
changed, the French Dominican priest acknowledged, but it would take
another 20 years for bishops to mature in ideas developed from Scripture
and tradition to attain “a missionary awareness and a sense of pastoral
realism”.
But ready or not, the world’s Catholic bishops
arrived in Rome two years later to debate and vote at the in many ways
unprecedented church council that Pope John XXIII had announced on 25
January 1959.
Today, 50 years after the opening of Vatican II on
11 October 1962, we may still wonder why the council happened when it
did. John XXIII consistently maintained that his desire for a council
was the product of an inspiration. The idea came to him, he said, “like a
flash of heavenly light”.
While accepting his statement as
truthful, we can still point to developments in the first half of the
twentieth century that made the Church ripe for Vatican II. I shall
consider only three: the emergence of a modern global Church embedded in
a new world arising out of the ashes of the Second World War; the
willingness at the highest levels of the Church’s hierarchy to consider
convoking a council; and a growing Catholic commitment to ecumenism.
Vatican
II was the first truly global council of the Catholic Church, “quite
possibly”, John O’Malley remarked in What Happened at Vatican II (2008),
“the biggest meeting in the history of the world”. European bishops and
theologians certainly were the most influential at the council yet the
gathering in Rome of bishops from 116 countries showed that a global
Church was coming of age, albeit at a time of global crisis when the
Cold War remained a worrisome source of instability. The Berlin Wall,
the architectural symbol of the Cold War, went up in 1961. A few days
after the council opened, the Cuban Missile Crisis began to unfold,
bringing the world to the brink of a nuclear war.
The Cold War
intersected with a concurrent global development – decolonisation – as
the United States and Soviet Union jockeyed for influence in emerging
independent states primarily in Asia and Africa, the beneficiaries of
the erosion of European imperialism after the Second World War. After
the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947 and of Indonesia in 1949,
decolonisation gained momentum in the 1950s and 1960s.
In the
year that the council opened, Uganda, Algeria, Rwanda, Burundi, Jamaica,
and Trinidad and Tobago achieved independence. A week after the third
session of Vatican II came to an end, the thirty-eighth Eucharistic
Congress opened in Bombay on 28 November 1964. This was the first time a
Eucharistic Congress was held in Asia: a sign of the Church’s life in
an emerging new world order.
Latin American states had already
achieved independence in the nineteenth century. The history of the
Church’s engagement with these countries and their societies is a
complex one, but in various ways Catholicism exercised considerable
social influence. In 1955, the episcopal conferences of Latin America
joined together to form an episcopal conference for the entire region,
known by its acronym Celam. Pope Pius XII recognised Celam in the same
year and established the Pontifical Commission for Latin America in
1958. At Vatican II, the bishops of Celam demonstrated effective
organisation and cohesion.
Readiness for a church council was to
some extent evident in the Church’s hierarchy, and in particular in the
Roman Curia, without whose resources the preparation for, and the
managing, of Vatican II would have been impossible. Only a few bishops
who received in 1959 an invitation from the Holy See to recommend topics
for Vatican II to consider had received in 1923 a letter from Pope Pius
XI canvassing opinions about the suitability of holding a church
council in 1925.
Although 90 per cent of the more than 1,000
respondents favoured a council, Pope Pius abandoned the idea in 1924. In
February 1948, Cardinal Ernesto Ruffini, the Archbishop of Palermo,
urged Pope Pius XII to summon a council. Ruffini had the support of an
assessor at the Holy Office, Mgr Alfredo Ottaviani, who became a
cardinal in 1953. In 1959, John XXIII appointed Ottaviani Secretary of
the Holy Office, the predecessor of the Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith.
In March 1948, Ottaviani, authorised by Pius XII,
convened a special secret committee within the Holy Office of seven
other clerics – six priests and the titular bishop of Aela, Alois
(Luigi) Hudal, now infamous for his involvement in the so-called
“ratline” that helped Nazi war criminals escape Europe after 1945. Other
members joined the committee in 1949, when it became a central
commission whose ultimate goal would have been to coordinate the work of
several commissions in preparation for a council.
The
commission developed a series of themes that a council should address.
It proposed the condemnation of many modern errors, such as
existentialism and ecumenism. Some themes anticipated important
commitments embraced at Vatican II, such as a vernacular liturgy, the
formation of priests, the lay apostolate and Catholic education.
One
of the committee members drafted his own ideas for conciliar business.
Sebastiaan Tromp, a Dutch Jesuit theologian, in a presentation in July
1948 to the cardinals of the Holy Office, wondered, among other things,
whether it would be advisable to ordain permanent deacons free of the
obligation of celibacy.
Although the central commission met for
the last time in 1951 and Pius XII decided against holding a council,
the flirting with the idea of a council is historically significant. The
promulgation of papal infallibility in 1870 at Vatican I, a possible
argument against the need for any further councils, did not deter two
popes and their closest collaborators from pondering the need of a such a
gathering.
Although Vatican II issued no dogmatic
condemnations, it did pursue some of the themes proposed in 1949.
Ottaviani and Ruffini were powerful forces at Vatican II, even if they
often disagreed with the majority of bishops. Tromp served faithfully
under Ottaviani, first as the secretary of the Preparatory Theological
Commission for Vatican II (1960-62) and then as the secretary of the
council’s Doctrinal Commission. His question about the permanent
diaconate became a reality in Lumen Gentium, Vatican II’s Dogmatic
Constitution on the Church.
Ecumenism was part of the programme
of Vatican II from the outset. In his announcement of 25 January 1959,
at the end of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, John XXIII invited
“the faithful of the separated communities to participate with us in
this quest for unity and grace, for which so many souls long in all
parts of the world”. By adopting the Decree on Ecumenism in November
1964, the Council Fathers officially converted the Roman Catholic Church
from a sceptical outsider of the ecumenical movement to one of its
leading proponents.
Modern ecumenism began in the nineteenth
century. Protestants spearheaded the movement to bring about unity among
Christians. Large international ecumenical gatherings convened in the
twentieth century, beginning with the Edinburgh Missionary Conference in
1910. Delegates at the Faith and Order conference in Edinburgh in 1937
supported the creation of the World Council of Churches, which took
shape in 1948.
The Holy See initially looked with suspicion on
the ecumenical movement. Pius XI’s encyclical, Mortalium Animos (1928),
represented the most emphatic prohibition of Catholic participation in
ecumenical meetings, the product of “a most serious error”. An
instruction of the Holy Office of 1949 relaxed previous strictures,
however, allowing Catholics to gather with other Christians for
ecumenical purposes, provided they had “the prior approval of the
competent ecclesiastical authority”.
But a sincere Catholic
interest in ecumenism had long been in evidence in some quarters of the
Church. Pope Pius X welcomed the Octave of Prayer for Christian Unity,
initiated in 1908 by the Episcopalian Fr Paul Wattson, a year before he
and the Franciscan Friars and Sisters of the Atonement entered into full
communion with the Church. In 1921, the Belgian Cardinal, Désiré-Joseph
Mercier, initiated informal discussions between Anglican and Catholic
theologians in Mechelen to seek ways towards unity. The discussions
lasted until 1927. Two years later, the pioneering German Jesuit
ecumenist, Max Pribilla, published his book on Church unity. Congar, a
committed ecumenist, articulated “principles of a Catholic ecumenism” in
Chrétiens désunis (1937).
A year after the publication of
Congar’s book, the German Catholic priest Max Josef Metzger founded the
Una Sancta ecumenical fellowship of prayer and study. This fellowship
gave many German Christians a sense of solidarity in opposition to the
Nazi dictatorship, which executed Metzger in 1944. Immediately after the
Second World War, Una Sancta, as a grass-roots ecumenical movement,
spread in Germany and attracted the support of Archbishop Lorenz Jaeger
of Paderborn, who in 1957 founded an institute for ecumenical studies
that still thrives today. He contributed to the creation in 1960 of the
Holy See’s Secretariat for Christian Unity, a major force for promoting
ecumenism at Vatican II.
Reflecting on an ecumenical ceremony at
which Pope Paul VI addressed with affection the non-Catholic observers
to the council on 4 December 1965, just before the closing of Vatican
II, Congar wondered: “Who would have thought it was possible five years
ago?”
As surprising as Vatican II seemed 50 years ago, it cannot
be classified as a historical accident, as it were. More can and must
be said about other developments that made Vatican II conceivable, such
as Rome’s interest in closer ties with Orthodoxy, the liturgical
movement, and the evolving contribution of the laity to the life of the
Church. Greater familiarity with the background to the council will
surely increase the appreciation of its significance within the history
and life of the Church.