Home » Opinion » Vatican II at 50

Vatican II at 50

 

Fifty years ago today the Second Vatican Council began with a clear indication of who had gained control of the Catholic Church’s direction. From the Latin Mass to meatless Fridays to the concept of salvation, numerous components of the faith were set to be reformed, led mostly by clerical academics who had served on preparatory commissions. So powerful were they that Cardinal Alfredo Ottaviani, a conservative who headed what is now the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (which the future Pope Benedict XVI would later lead), was vocally heckled and silenced by his participating colleagues.

As described to journalist Robert Moynihan by Monsignor Brunero Gherardini, who attended the council and lives at the Vatican, Cardinal Ottaviani was addressing the 2,000 assembled bishops in October 1962: “As he speaks, pleading for the bishops to consider the texts the curia has spent three years preparing, suddenly his microphone was shut off. He kept speaking, but no one could hear a word. Then, puzzled and flustered, he stopped speaking, in confusion. And the assembled fathers began to laugh, and then to cheer…” This was on day three.

It turns out, according to Monsignor Gherardini, that it was Cardinal Achille Lienart, a leading liberal from France serving on Vatican II’s board of presidency, who cut Cardinal Ottaviani’s microphone. Ottaviani would later author a major critique of the vernacular Mass that came out of the council, a plea to Pope Paul VI that fell on deaf ears.

Some of the reformist-oriented clergy participating in the Second Vatican Council would eventually rise through the ranks of the Catholic Church. Karol Wojtyla (the future John Paul II), who was a young archbishop in Cracow, was seen as the liberal counterweight to Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, who was the conservative, yet popular, primate of Poland. Father Joseph Ratzinger (the future Benedict XVI), was the periti (theological expert) for Cardinal Joseph Frings of Cologne, writing the cardinal’s speeches for the council, including one calling Cardinal Ottaviani’s Vatican office too traditional and authoritative. Even though Raztinger had been ordained a priest over a decade ago, his attire throughout the Second Vatican Council was a secular business suit and necktie.

The results of holding a council during prosperity in order to modernize the institution quickly became disastrous. While countless priests, brothers and nuns quit, most Catholics stopped attending Mass and the remaining Catholics largely embraced dissent. Even Pope Paul VI, who led most of Vatican II, reflected 10 years after the council’s opening with an infamous observation that “from some fissure the smoke of Satan has entered the temple of God.”

Fast-forwarding, the Latin Mass has made a comeback, in part because of the rightward-drifting Pope Benedict. Cardinal Timothy Dolan, head of the church in the U.S., writes about restoring meatless Fridays and fasting. And the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), a traditionalist order of priests, has forced the Vatican to address the substance of the Second Vatican Council. Religious liberty and the Mass are at the heart of the talks, including whether the SSPX is permitted to simply ignore these pastoral (as compared to dogmatic) writings. Ecumenism, which was called “the enemy of the Immaculata” by Saint Maximilian Kolbe, a Franciscan priest killed in a Nazi concentration camp, is being weighed and discussed after 40 years of visits to mosques, temples and other non-Catholic houses of worship with little conversions as a result. To contrast, when Pope Pius XII negotiated with the chief rabbi of Rome, the rabbi converted to Catholicism and chose Pius’ name of Eugenio as he was christened.

Defenders of the Second Vatican Council from a center-right perspective have insisted that nearly all negative indicators of the Catholic Church have stemmed from the “spirit of the Council.” As seminaries continue to close (all but one remains in Ireland), parishes continue to merge and convents are redeveloped, a key question ought to be what tangible, positive results have occurred in those five decades. No one has been able to point to an actual statistical benefit of Vatican II and its 16 documents. Ironically, the only current growth in vocations is in religious orders such as the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter that reject the new Mass and most of the liberalizations of Vatican II.

Fifty years later, the greatest accomplishment that can be said for the Second Vatican Council is Pope John XXIII’s stated goal to “throw open the windows of the Church.” Yet from conversions to Mass attendance, it has produced nothing measurable in the upward direction. Perhaps traditionalist Catholics, led by the SSPX, are onto something when they call into question the council itself. Their solution is for the pope to simply erase all 16 Vatican II documents and restore the liturgy, teachings and discipline in place before the collapse of all that was considered good and holy in 1962.

Wolfe is a columnist for traditionalist Catholic publications.

SOURCE

Kenneth J. Wolfe/The Washington Post

 
 
 
 

5 Comments

  1. Kathleen Schatzberg says:

    Mr. Wolfe might want to look more closely at those who have left the RC Church. Perhaps, like me, most are those who feel the Church did not sufficiently embrace and implement the Spirit of Vatican II. Women and gays are still second-class, priests and bishops continue to use their positions to violate the young, and contempt is displayed for those of other faiths by many Catholic leaders. Is it any wonder that faithful people have chosen to disassociate themselves from a Church with such leadership?

    • Jim says:

      Kathleen — gays will always be considered for what they are — disordered. You can’t change the truth. The reason so many people like you have left the Church is because you want to make up your own truth; you want to sidestep God and His Church, just like Eve in the garden. You’ll never be happy contravening God’s will. Your heart will remain restless until it rests in God and His Catholic Church.

  2. Florian says:

    Today’s or tomorrow’s problems don’t get solved merely by applying yesterday’s solutions or invoking the technology of the past. Why should religion, or the church, be any different?

  3. girard kohler says:

    Wolfe is miopic and ethnocentric in his analysis.
    The Church in Africa has grown exponentially since the Council which allowed it to relate to its own cultures and histories. The reforms of Christianity have just begun there.

  4. Vincent says:

    We sometimes think that the Church grows independently from the cultures in which she finds herself,not realizing that the Spirit of God is alive and active within them. The Second Vatican Council was desperately needed exactly to combat the secularism that is growing in leaps and bounds. The Council did not create the problem, it was those who thought that we don’t need God anymore in our lives, such as the modern existentialists. I don’t understand how people, good intentioned as they are, want to keep the Church “locked up” in a past.

 
 

Leave a Comment

 




 
 

 
 
 

Switch to our mobile site