At the age of 32, Nigeria’s Cardinal Francis
Arinze was the youngest bishop in the world when he participated in the
last session of the Second Vatican Council (Vatican II).
On
October 11, together with eleven other bishops who had taken part in
that historic event, he joined the celebration in St Peter’s Square for
the 50th anniversary of the Council’s opening, and the inauguration of the Year of Faith.
As the youngest of the 69 surviving Vatican II
fathers, he greeted Pope Benedict at an audience for bishops on October
12. Some days later I talked with him about his exchange with the pope
then, and about his memories of Vatican II.
What did the Pope say to you at that audience?
He was happy and he said to me: “It must have been an unforgettable experience for you.” I replied, “Holy Father it is an unforgettable experience!”
What made it an unforgettable experience?
I was
ordained bishop just two weeks before the last session began. I was the
youngest bishop in the world, and being the youngest and knowing there
was so much I did not know, I had no fixed ideas so I was open to what
the Council was saying. I listened and I read its documents back and
forth. It was inspiring.
There, I experienced at first hand the
universality of the Church. I knew about this in theory already but to
see the bishops from all parts of the world gathered together was
something else, something one does not forget.
Then I was struck by the great sentiments of joy
and optimism at the Council. “Joy” - the Church then conveyed an image
of joy, and of not being afraid of the world. “Optimism” – yes, I use
that word even though some have accused “Gaudium et Spes” (The Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World) of being over optimistic. But
my reply would be to ask them: what do you expect the Church to be? Do
you want the Church to be pessimistic about human nature, about
cultures, about the calling, the vocation of the human person?
Shouldn’t the Church be optimistic about these? The Gospel is actually
optimistic, it’s Good News. When the angels appeared to the shepherds at
Christmas night they announced Good News. Gloria in excelsis Deo is
certainly not pessimistic! So I believe it’s better for the Church to
be more on the side of hope than on the side of no-hope.
That’s what struck me about the Council, together
with the whole idea of ‘communion’ which has been emphasized ever since.
We are a body communicating in Christ who brought us together,
rejoicing in Christ, celebrating the mysteries of Christ, called
together by Christ, we are a family. Indeed the 1994 African synod chose to use the word ‘family’, and ‘family spirit’ to convey all this.
Really, I was inspired by the Council: it
projected a Church open to the human person as such, to the world, to
other Christians, to other believers. It was truly remarkable. It
defined my whole life as a bishop.
What has the Council given to Africa?
It has encouraged missionary activity. This was already going on but the Council strongly encouraged it, in various documents.
Then Vatican II put the spotlight on ‘culture’ and
‘inculturation’. Four years later, Pope Paul VI focused on Africa when
he visited Uganda, and on 31 July 1969, when the Symposium of Episcopal
Conferences of Africa and Madagascar (SECAM) was inaugurated, he told
the Bishops of Africa: “You Africans are to be missionaries to
yourself”. He encouraged inculturation, and said once you share the same
worldwide Catholic faith, you can and you must have an African
Christianity. That was really something in 1969!
The Council also encouraged work for justice, peace and development. Now
almost every diocese, and certainly every Bishops’ Conference in
Africa, has an office for this purpose. It is not a new doctrine, but
the emphasis is new in the Church: it tells us we must live our faith
also by paying attention to this dimension. Over the past fifty years
the Church worldwide has been paying greater attention to this whole
area thanks to Vatican II.
The Council’s promotion of dialogue with other religions must have been significant for Africa.
Certainly, this
is very important for Africa: the meeting of the human person, and
therefore inter-religious contacts, collaboration. I use these
words because at times when one says ‘dialogue’ some only think of
discussion. In our continent there are three religions: Christianity,
Islam and African Traditional Religion – which is the main religious
background. I must say also that the Council’s
affirmation of the Bible is also very important for Africa. As you know,
Africans love the Bible, and the bishops and priests encourage them to
read it. Then, the Vatican II documents are
most supportive of the lay apostolate, and of the apostolate of each
person in the Church, and especially the lay faithful. Furthermore, as a
consequence of the Council we have Bishops Conferences and SECAM.
So you don’t belong to the group who say Vatican II made a lot of problems for the Church and created confusion?
I do not belong to that group! You
see with sixteen documents, if people have their own fixed ideas they
are likely to find one or two lines that seem to justify what they say,
but if a person doesn’t have fixed ideas and simply reads the documents
as they are, the result would be a very happy one. I think those
documents have very much to tell us, even today.
In North America and Europe there has
been some polarization over Vatican II and people have not experienced
much of the joy, optimism and family spirit you mentioned earlier.
Yes, they miss the spirit of Vatican II! They seem to be people with fixed ideas; they have their agenda pre-decided and don’t give the Council a chance to speak.