Pope John XXIII Catholic Community in Canal Winchester features a
portrait of the pope in a corner alcove of the sanctuary, his right hand
raised in a gesture of blessing.
Monsignor A. Anthony Frecker, the pastor, founded and named the
church in 2000.
He calls John XXIII one of his “true-life heroes” for
his holiness, simplicity and love of his people.
The pope was less than a month shy of his 77th birthday when he was
elected in 1958 by Roman Catholic cardinals, who thought his time at the
Vatican would be short and uneventful.
But “they missed the mark when they thought he wouldn’t do anything,” Frecker said.
Pope John called for a Second Vatican Council, also known as Vatican
II, in 1961. More than 2,000 bishops participated in the worldwide
meeting convened in October 1962.
Over the next three years, they made
changes that transformed the way the church interacted with the modern
world.
In conjunction with the 50th anniversary of the council, the Vatican
has called for a Catholic Year of Faith aimed at reuniting followers
with church tenets and encouraging them to have a “living sense” of
their faith.
“If you read the (Vatican II) documents, they give you a beautiful
understanding of what our church should be,” Frecker said. He said the
church, by the time of Pope John’s election, had “become a little
stuffy.” When the pope called for the council, he said it was time to
“throw open the windows of the church and let the fresh air of the
Spirit blow through.”
At the close of the council, churches began switching from
celebrating Mass in Latin to using the languages of their parishioners.
Priests turned around to face their congregations in Mass, and altars
were brought closer to worshippers.
The wine — the blood of Christ —
which had been reserved for the clergy, was offered to the faithful
along with the host.
Laypeople were welcomed to participate in ministry. Girls were
permitted to serve alongside altar boys. Religious women could trade in
habits for secular clothing and reclaim their given names.
Fifty years later, Sister Ruth Caspar (who was known as Sister George
Marie from 1955 to 1968) still remembers the years as freeing,
empowering and “one of the most-exciting times.”
“My experience was very, very positive,” said Caspar, who taught
religious philosophy at Ohio Dominican University on the North Side for
more than 30 years.
The council stressed, she said, that “the church is all of us; we are
‘the people of God.’ ”
Sisters were freed to “preach” in new ways and
soon embraced social-justice ministries.
“For us, it was liberating. We really viewed ourselves as being
spokespersons for the Gospel. How better to do it than to speak out for
the oppressed?” said Caspar, a member of the Columbus-based Dominican
Sisters of Peace.
The Vatican has offered wide-ranging recommendations to help
Catholics meet the call for a year of faith, including studying and
following the lives of the saints, reviewing the church’s foundational
teachings and studying the documents of Vatican II.
Catholics are
encouraged to return to confession and to reach out “in a truly
welcoming manner” to people who might have fallen away from the faith,
said Don Clemmer, spokesman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
The global push started last month and continues until Nov. 24, 2013.
Frecker said the goal is for Catholics to deepen their relationship
with Christ and to live their faith more publicly.
A “new
evangelization” effort seeks the “re-conversion” of the faithful in
Western Europe and the United States, in countries that used to be
Catholic but are now secular, Frecker said.
Along with letting in some fresh air, the Second Vatican Council was
meant to allow the church to see out and others to see in, said Frecker.
Catholics were no longer forbidden to enter Protestant churches, and
Catholic-Jewish relations were placed at the forefront.
“The idea was to try to re-establish a relationship between the church and the world,” Frecker said.
As a testament to that idea, the tabernacle holding the consecrated
host sits in front of a window in Frecker’s church, which has
architecture reminiscent of Pope John’s native northern Italy.
The wood and stained-glass chapel at the Columbus motherhouse of the
Dominican Sisters of Peace also calls to mind the era of Vatican II.
Fabric-covered chairs flank and curve around the altar, a layout that
never would have been considered in years before the council, Caspar
noted.
Some, feeling that the changes came too fast, abandoned the religious
life or held to the traditional, she said. Others, like Caspar, felt
that the new approach was “life-giving.”
“Congregations like my own ... found the spirit of Vatican II very
liberating,” she said. “I don’t think we could ever go back through the
window.”