Catholics have been arguing about the Second Vatican Council—about what it did and didn’t do, about what it meant and still means or what it never meant and could never mean—for half a century. Many reform-minded Catholics today are disappointed by what they see as a retreat, under the papacies of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, from the council’s mandate for change, especially change in how the church is governed (see “Bishops or Branch Managers?”). Other Catholics, alarmed by the disarray that followed the council and mistrustful of attempts to reconcile Catholicism to a decadent, godless modern world, have applauded papal actions disciplining “dissenters” and reemphasizing traditional markers of Catholic identity. What reformers see as a rejection of the council’s promise of intellectual openness and ecumenism, traditionalists view as an indispensible move to safeguard truths of faith threatened as much from within the church as from outside it. Catholics who grew up after the council, meanwhile, often dismiss the polemics of both sides. To them, the changes that so disrupted the everyday lives of pre–Vatican II Catholics—the vernacular Mass with its visible role for the laity and particularly for women, the cataclysmic decline in vocations, the virtual disappearance of confession, the tolerance for public dissent from church teachings—are unremarkable, and comprise the only church they’ve ever known.
The result, it seems, is that there are currently several different, sometimes contending ways of being Catholic. To some degree that has always been so. The notion of the church as a rigorously disciplined and monolithic enterprise is largely myth, and modern myth to boot (see “An Imagined Unity”). What is not myth, however, is the dramatic change in the self-understanding of Catholics brought about by the council. For at least two centuries Catholicism saw itself as a bulwark against the spread of pernicious liberal and democratic principles, and held fast to a monarchical and aristocratic worldview in which the church enjoyed a privileged civic, cultural, and political role. At Vatican II, the bishops called off this long and ultimately futile struggle against modernity. Not without ambivalence, they reconciled themselves to the separation of church and state and to the idea of religious liberty (see “Outvoted, Not Persecuted”). They then went further, extending the hand of fellowship to other Christians, to non-Christian religions, and especially to the Jewish community, while warmly endorsing human rights and aspirations for democratic self-determination. Even the pursuit of technological and material progress, long viewed with world-weary skepticism, was encouraged.
And so a church once narrowly focused on the world to come suddenly discovered much to praise in the world at hand. Most important, perhaps, the laity was now urged to bring its faith into the secular sphere, to transform a fallen world rather than retreat from it. This effort at aggiornamento, or updating, looked back to certain neglected aspects of the tradition (ressourcement) for inspiration and guidance. That project was in part an effort to find within the church’s own traditions theological and philosophical sources that could more firmly ground and thus defend what was morally sound in the modern world’s understanding of human dignity and individual liberty.
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There is nothing intellectually, theologically, or politically tidy in this long-delayed encounter between the church and the post-Enlightenment world, as the ongoing struggles between the Vatican and theologians and the Vatican’s recent criticism of women religious remind us. Nearly forty years ago, longtime Commonweal columnist John Cogley offered the following assessment of the council’s aftermath: “The religious community that survived the early onslaught of bigotry, with a certain style; that built up an enormous citadel of protective institutions to protect its identity; and that valiantly fought its way out of the ghetto to achieve acceptance in American life may yet have to face its greatest challenge.” As Cogley understood it, the challenge was the seemingly irresistible, yet questionable, attraction and authority of modernity itself, with its atomizing individualism, triumphant materialism, scientific hubris, and deep skepticism about the existence of any transcendent values or reality.
Can the church rise to this challenge? So far the results are mixed. What seems certain is that not everything that worked in the past will work now. The “New Evangelization” now being implemented must do more than resurrect the apologetics of an earlier era when the church had more social and moral capital at its disposal. The larger cultural situation has changed in fundamental ways, and so has the church. It is no longer possible to protect Catholic identity by encasing it in small, carefully guarded institutions; both American life and Catholic life in America are too fluid, too differentiated, too focused on a forever idealized future. Like it or not, Catholics of all theological and ecclesiological opinion have been profoundly shaped by the larger culture’s deep skepticism toward hierarchical leadership and tradition itself. Cultivating more fruitful Catholic practices and associations will require experimentation and leadership (both lay and clerical).
Just before his death last month, Milan’s Cardinal Carlo Martini lamented the institutional and pastoral paralysis gripping the European and American church. He cast a sorrowful eye on “pompous” liturgies, “empty” religious houses, and the church’s stifling bureaucracy. “Where are our heroes today who can inspire us?” he asked, and went on to recommend that the pope and the bishops “find twelve unconventional people to take on leadership roles.” What sort of unconventional people? “Those who are close to the poor,” Martini specified; “who can galvanize young people by being willing to try new approaches.”
One such “new” approach, as suggested by John Wilkins in this issue, would be a return to the council’s embrace of collegiality, and the development of that tradition to include genuine lay participation.
It’s important to keep in mind that over the centuries the church has found a way to flourish in every sort of culture, from empire to the industrializing nation-state. To be sure, today’s world, where social and cultural bonds are often weak and fleeting, presents a unique challenge to an institution that thinks of itself as a cohesive community, possessing a tradition that unites believers even in their disagreements. The sometimes bitter disagreements among Catholics today are not going to end any time soon. But that should not be a cause for pessimism or despair. As the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre has reminded us, every institution or tradition is “partially constituted by an argument about the goods the pursuit of which gives to that tradition its particular point and purpose.” In other words, robust debate about the church and its mission can be a sign of health. There will need to be more room, not less, for the “argument about the goods” of the Catholic tradition.
Modern men and women long for a unity of purpose that extends beyond mere individual striving or difference. Such unity is forged by the conviction that there is in fact meaning to suffering and death, and that the meaning and value of life itself can only be found in a good that reaches beyond this world. That was the first truth the council proclaimed, and to which it called every Catholic to give witness. The need for that witness is even greater now than it was fifty years ago.




Zoe Brain, your knowledge of biology is seriously wanting. Notwithstanding that, human life begins at conception. If it isn't HUMAN life, what kind of life is it? Regarding Vatican II, the problem is not that its work has been ignored or discarded; the problem is that so many have gravely misinterpreted what the council actually did and did not do and mean. A radical reading of Vatican II has polluted many of its authentic doctrines, causing confusion and misleading the people of God. Pope Benedict XVI has written extensively to correct this. Please read the wonderful books he has written. They are right on the mark!
Zoe Brain, your knowledge of biology is seriously wanting. Notwithstanding that, human life begins at conception. If it isn't HUMAN life, what kind of life is it? Regarding Vatican II, the problem is not that its work has been ignored or discarded; the problem is that so many have gravely misinterpreted what the council actually did and did not do and mean. A radical reading of Vatican II has polluted many of its authentic doctrines, causing confusion and misleading the people of God. Pope Benedict XVI has written extensively to correct this. Please read the wonderful books he has written. They are right on the mark!
Patricia,
Jesus Christ never said that the only licit means of birth control was natural family planning (periodic continence), nor did he say that contraception, under all circumstances and ethical contexts, is illicit. The last time I recall, God never revealed his "procreative plan" to a pope, bishop, theologian or lay person. Yet the Church believes that God revealed his plan to Karol Wojytla when he wrote Love and Responsibility as a bishop, and The Theology of the Body, as pope. No one knows God's procreative plan and philosophican anthropology and symbolism is speculation and a weak moral theory.
Catholics don't have a right to disagree with the fundamentals of our faith, but on disputed matters of morals they can disagree based on their informed conscience (emphasis added). This does not mean Catholics can pick and choose what teachings, e.g., sexual ethics, they like and dislike, believe or not. However, is does mean that for good and just reasons (philosophically, theologically, anthropologically) they can disagree with certain Church teachings based on adequate education of the subject, the guidance of their spiritual advisors, constant prayer and refection, and frequent sacrament. They must also be open to further education and reflection even if they disagree with a church teaching, e.g., contraception.
As to whether life begins at conception, consider the contradiction in prinicple that the USCCB offers in cases of rape.
After a "negative" pregnancy test, administered within 48-72 hours of a rape, it is licit to give the morning after pill to the victim. However, a pregnancy test can only detect pregnancy "after implantation" which occurs about 3 weeks after fertilization. Hence, all pregnancy tests will be ipso facto "negative" if performed within 2 weeks after a rape (unless the victim was pregnant before the rape ocurred). This practice is contradictory to the teaching that under no circumstances can someone frustrate the normal biological process of a fertilzied egg from implantation (the church's teaching). The morning after pill works the same way birth control pills work. If life begins at conception, the only way to detect it is an ovulation test, and this only determines ovulation has occurred, not whether the female egg has been fertilized. Today, most Catholic hospitals, under the guidelines of the USCCB, only have to perform a pregnancy test before administering the morning after pill to rape vicitms.
If Humanae Vitae is true, then how can anyone justifiy the Church's teaching that a married female whose life is threatened by another pregancy cannot take reasonable and secure means to safe-guard her life? According to the Church, this person must practice "risky PC" (an irrepsonsible act under the circumstances) or live a life of sexual abstinence (that will destroy her marriage). She cannot take the pill or be sterilized to safe-guard her life, she must ensure that every martial act has a procreative meaning. Absurd? Of course it is. Does it conflict with the heirarchy of values? Yes it does. Can a woman who has 2-3 children and wants no more for good reasons (Pius XII) take the pill? Why not? Because it violates God's procreative plan? Nonsense. No one knows God's procreative plan with moral certitude. This is only one of "many" issues that make Humanae Vitae a dead letter.
Read Massimo Faggioli's "Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning." He very succinctly in about 150 pages compares and contrasts the 2 schools that have emerged. For the scholars, there are extensive footnotes and a very good bibliography.
This was written for the average reader, not the scholarly. Hence it is eminently understandable.
You will not waste your time if you read this book.
Jim McCrea,
Great recommendation!
I read Massimo Faggioli's "Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning" and it is excellent. It will surprise many Catholics who will read this book how political and undermining the minority traditionalists have gone, and continue to go, to ensure that "tradition" is never reformed regardless of the overwhelming amount of good and just reasons to do so. Responsible reform does not mean the pillars of the Catholic Church will come tumbling down, as many exaggerate.
Michael I'm not going to turn a Vat II discussion thread into a contraception debate but I will leave you with this.
You are clearly misguided on the subject. Regardless of Humane Vitae, the fact tht the Magesterium has taught for centuries (from apostolic teachings), against un natural means of birth control, in and of itself makes it an infallible teaching. To contracept "artificiallly" is a great blasphmy ("interference"), against both the will of God and the marriage vows. The interference is the issue, not the intent.
It may also surprise you that until 1930, all of the protestants (who have since caved to culture), also taught strongly against it. Here's a good link to help you understand what and why the chruch teaches what it does, as well as the Scriptual roots: http://www.catholic.com/tracts/birth-control
As for the "life of the mother", I understand why in these times, any reasonable person would find it beyond appauling that a mother should risk death over her unborn child. The AZ case of the mother with pulmonary hypertension (who did have an abortion in a Catholic Hospital) was a great example. Personally, I believe the mother was being called to martydom, so "counter cultural" that few if any would even know it if they did see it. These are very very rare cases, especially with modern technology when 99% of the time, no mother is truly at the risk of death providing she has access to good medical care and modern technology, even at 5-6 months. That said, ever once in a while we do read of such a story, usually a mother who refused chemo while pregnant, althought, even in pregancy, chemo can be safely given in many cases.
I assue you and anyone else reading, that it really does all "make sense" if one truly knows not only what the chruch teaches, but why.
Again, the entire Vat II debate boils down to one or two things:
1. Not knowing/understanding what and why the Chruch teaches as it does
2. Not WANTING , for personal selfish reasons, to be obedient to Church Teachings, including the infallible ones.
FWIW, I think many DO know much of what the church teaches (albeit in most cases probably not the "why's"), but like myself for over 20 years, simply don't/didn't want to live it. Trust me, that's it in a nutshell!
Patricia,
I appreciate your point of view, but not your judgment.
I also do not want to turn a discussion about Vatical II into a debate about direct-indirect abortion (the Phoenix Case) or contraction. However, there are more complex philosophical and theological issues that argue against the teaching and judgment of the Church in these two matters.
I am well versed in moral theology and the issues...the what and why of Catholic teachings. For your information, most theologians and many priests and bishops disagree with Humanae Vitae for good and just reasons. They are not all misguided or invincibily ignorant. Nor are they dissenters and other degrogatory name-calling the Church likes to pin on most Catholics who disagree with certain teachings. This includes more than 90% of the laity, many of whom attend weekly Mass and recieve the Eucharist.
Everyone who is aware of this culture understands its extremes, but this is does not make everone liberals, relativists, individualists or as you say "selfish". Most are faithful and loving Catholics. This issue has been debated for the past 44 years without a resolution. This is one of the reasons we have a divided Church and a Crisis in Truth.
As for the Phoenix case, you need some education. Ditto for contraception. The moral method and analysis of Germain Grisez and Martin Rhonheimer were used by Therese Lysaught of Marguette University in her excellent report to Catholc Healthcare West on the moral analysis of this case. That procedure was indirect abortion and any Catholic with or without a theological education can wisely reason that the judgment and decision of the Bishop of Phoenix in this case was both ill advised and deplorable.
If you want to discuss this further let's take this off-line (e.g., email me). I would be happy to get into the more complex aguments. However, I doubt any argument will change your mind.
With all respect to you Michael, I have no desire to battle out or rationalize intrinsic evils and or Church infallible teachiings.
It's when we think we know more than 2000 years of Church Teachings, especially from an "intellectual" standpoint, that we are duped.
Sorry, been there done that. By the grace of God, not going back. I wish you and others the freedom and peace of heart that comes with the acceptance of the grace of obedience. Only then will you realize that what you now think sets your "free" is in actuality, enslavement.
For the record, the Church didn't survive all of these years by getting it wrong.
Michael I want to point out one more thing, which is quite relevant to the Vat II overall discussion.
Your write:
most theologians and many priests and bishops disagree with Humanae Vitae for good and just reasons. They are not all misguided or invincibily ignorant. Nor are they dissenters and other degrogatory name-calling the Church likes to pin on most Catholics who disagree with certain teachings. This includes more than 90% of the laity, many of whom attend weekly Mass and recieve the Eucharist.
Everyone who is aware of this culture understands its extremes, but this is does not make everone liberals, relativists, individualists or as you say "selfish". Most are faithful and loving Catholics. This issue has been debated for the past 44 years without a resolution. This is one of the reasons we have a divided Church and a Crisis in Truth.
Firstly, it's time to put HV to rest. Not only is the church teaching of contracepton infalliable by years of Magesterial Teaching (regardless of HV), but HV has now been proven to be right in all of its prophesy and consequences. Even the Winnepeg Bishops have admitted that they were wrong.
You seem to fail to understand that simply because the "laity disagree" the church must be wrong, when in point of fact, the laity being wrong is EXACTLY the reason we need the Chruch. There have been countless examples throughout church history where bishops, priests, and even a few popes were wrong. What has NEVER been wrong, or never changed, is the offical (dogmatic) teachings of the Catholic Church.
We do NOT have a "crisis of Truth." Truth is right there, in black and white, in offical church teaching, the immutable teachings of Jesus Christ. Either you believe that the CC is the true Chruch guided by 2000 plus years by the Holy Spirit or you don't. Jesus can't be wrong.
We are know where "division" comes from, and it's not the "Holy" Spirit.
After reading your articles on Vatican II Continued and Bishops as Managers I am reminded of Carl Barth's comment: " the church is the greatest obstacle to the kingdom of God on earth, yet the church is the only place where the redemptive love of God is preached". We live always in that tension and most especially in these post Vatican II years of revisionism.
fr. Joe Sanches