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.




Patricia,
This blog about Vat II and it it is not the place to argue about Church teachings. However, your argument "from authority" is the weakest of moral arguments. Thank God we have a robust theological community who are constantly striving to understand the truth and throught their good work, assist popes and bishops in formulating doctrine and reforming it as well. We benefit from their continued scholarship, advances in the sciences, philosophy, theology, anthropology, nature and the world. The fact that most theologians disagree with HV is not to be cavelierly dismissed. Catholics are not drones, they can think for themselves and are guided by faith and the Holy Spirit. Most Catholics respect the heirarchry but their authority has been serverely harmed by their own failings and intransigence in ignoring the pain and suffering that some teachings cause. Not everyone is called to martydom or heroic virtue in order to ensure that a Church teaching is followed without remainder. There are many ethical contexts that argue for the refore of HV. Yet, the Church holds on to an intelligible and unconvincing theory in defense of HV.
It is obvious to me that you do not have a grasp of the fundamental theological arguments that have been going on for the past 44 years, regarding Humanae Vitae. You dismiss, perhaps by ignorance, that most theologians and many bishops and priests disagree with HV, because they must be misguided or invincibly ignorant. This issue of contraception, as well as other sexual ethical teachings, is not dead. If you want to learn something, contrasting a traditional point of view versus a revisionist point of view, read the two articles in Theological Studies, one of the most predigious Catholic journals in the U.S.....the December, 2011 issue (article by Bill Murphy) and the March, 2012 issue (article by Joseph Selling) regarding contraception, Aquinas et al. Based on your argument, you will likely not bother to educate yourself to what is referred to as "good and just reasons".
I can only summize that you live in some kind of bubble. Everyone knows that we have had a "silent pulpit" for the past 44 years for fear of heirarchical consequences, e.g., most bishops and priests remaining slient about preaching about contraception. A few do, but most will carefully advise Catholics in confidential guidance meetings, that their informed consciences can be used in making such birth control decisions. You don't have to have a theological education to know this.
Your dogmatic assertion that there is no crisis of truth in the Catholic Church is refuted by the late John Paul II and Benedict XVI. Anyone who studies and writes about sexual ethics knows quite well that we live in a divided church.
Lastly, my judgment about contraception is not based on the fact that since the laity disagrees with the Church, the teaching must be wrong. I base my judgment on a long history of education and studies in moral theology. You can disagree and still be a faithful Catholic.
Your claim "from authority" is all you have to offer in respones to complex philiosophical and theological arguments, much deeper than a simple "the Vatican and pope says its the truth, so it must be the truth". This does not mean I don't respect the Church's teachings, or do I pick and choose what teaching suit my lifestyle or idealogy. I am a faithful Catholic, well informed about the issues, and for good and just reaons believe that Humanae Vitae is "too great of a moral certitude". This means that there is some truth in HV, but it is not God's all-inclusive procreative plan and a moral absolute without remainder.
History is replete with many doctrines and teachings that were proclaimed by popes and bishops as truth, taught for centuries, and were later reformed: usury, slavery, freedom of religion, the torture of heritics, the ends of marriage. It took centuries for the Church to apologize for the Galaleo affair. I could give you a list of other issues, but this discussion will get us no where based on your point of view of claiming the higher moral ground.
Let's not bore the other bloggers who want to stick to the topic of Vat II. If you want to debate me further, email me.
.To Michael B: <For your information, most theologians and many priests and bishops disagree with Humanae Vitae for good and just reasons>
Wha tkind of argument it is? If na idiot bishop or theologina or a set of them claim something what is it? If you call John Paul II his Theology of Body too abstractive to comprehebd that is your problem@shool that taught you. Probably you are a fan of sth like Kung@similar bunch of half educated mass media gurus; H.Kung's for example discussion on the arguments for and contra for the existence for God reveal his total ignorance of classic thinkers @ especially modern mathematical logic-it is a joke repeating all agnostic arguments conquereed already by Aristotle. Home work: apply logic to your just slogans of half-educated some theologians against Humane Vitae. I can cite by names all these chicken "experts"; I do not deny they are some fools also at VAtican; for example, the kissing of Koran by John Paul II was a ...childlish wishfull thinking to "win" Muslims- they are just human mistakes. There is a lot of "junk"(i.e., just only a traditional view on some subject ignoring the latest discoveries in ex.biblical studies or logic) even in CAthesism of Catholic Church- these msitsake are nothing comparing to "junk" of other site or enemies (ateists, agnostics, skeptics).
ps. these bunch so called theologians especially feminists are more devilish than communists I met at (St.Paul's University).For them for example J.M.Bochenski, The logic of religion, 1956 will be always a total mystery (of intellect)
Krzysztof Cluba,
My comments were not a substitute for a robust discussion about the philosophical and theological issues underpining HV. Far from it.
I don't call JP II's Theology of the Body too abstract. It is based on his philosophical anthropology, symbolism, mysticism and personalism. This theory was formulated in the mid 1950s while Karol Wojtya was a bishop and professor at the University of Lublin. He also wrote about it in his 1960 book Love and Responsibilty...and once again in his Krakow Memorandum sent to Paul VI in February, 1968. I am fully aware and versed in his thought and theology on marriage and procreation.
JP II's symbolistic argument goes sometime like this: Christ's love for the Church is also a love of total self-giving and self-donation...and by analogy, spousal love is a total self-giving love but concupiscence exchanges a self-seeking gratification for the sincere gift of self; it uses the other as an object made for my sake rather than loving the other as subject for his or her sake...therefore contraception falifies creative love and speaks to the diabolic anti-Word.
The issue here is whether it is a metaphoric leap that unless there is a total self-giving and openness to procreation under all circumstances, and in every act of coitus, spouses are expressing a false, evil and destructive love. Wojtyla had a creative moral imagination, but “imagination enables theology to resist the constant temptation towards absolutizing…. And if we are to accept the priority of symbol over intellect, then theology has an important role to play in ensuring that the image does not become the only word, or the last word….”[Dermot Lane] This means we must resist the temptation of proclaiming we know God’s procreative plan with moral certainty based on symbolic speculation. We also must balance assertions with existential reality when we find no evidence whatsoever that PC couples treat each other as loving subjects, while couples that use artificial birth control have a utilitarian attitude and a diabolical love grounded in concupiscence.
HV also claims that "natural family planning-periodic continence" is God's procreative plan. No one knows God's procreative plan with moral certitude! Are to accept by faith that God took more than 2000 years to tell a pope about His procreative plan? Where in revelation can we find it? Where can we find it beyond symbolic speculation? This assertion that NFP is God's procreative plan challenges the practical reason of most Catholics...and theologians, and many bishops and priests.
More importantly, no pope, bishop, or theologian ever wrote or spoke about an "inseparable connection between the unitive and procreative dimensions of the marital act" before 1960 (when Karol Wojtyla wrote about it in Love and Responsibility). This was not tradition or a constant teaching of the Church, yet it was proclaimed as Divine law.
There is some truth in HV, but the principles are claimed as "moral absolutes". For many reasons, beyond these comments, they represent too much of a moral certitude.
If you want to discuss this further, email me.
It's not that by using birth control,every act of intercouse becomes a selfish evil act,but rather that over time-if artifical birth control is used -then the spouses who are not open to procreation-are living out a marital life that compartimentalizes procreation and sex. Because sex is the natural way to procreate-this decoupling of sex and procreation corrupts the natural God made connection between sex and procreation. Sex is now a different human act which is not in harmony with the natural wholeistic man/woman /married couple.This unnatural alteration effects the man and woman psychologically,emotionally and physically.It's one thing to intercede artificially when nature is flawed[illness and even infertilility,say].God gave us intelligence and medicine used to heal and alleviate suffering or otherwise improve life on earth is in keeping with how God made us.But to
intervene to stop what is natural and good[human life is natural and good]and to separate sexual intercourse between married couples from procreation,needlessly violates what is natural and good.To not be open to life [life made by God who is good and creates us in his image]is a greivous abandonement of a faith centered life. We're created for heaven- not to have all our ducks in order[just the right amount of children at just the right times in our lives,say].
Mr.M.B:<Where in revelation can we find it> That is your main problem! Yes, directly nonewhere; indirectly-yes! Right now I donot have with me the bibliography on it,esp.one book on the history of contraception (or sth); my anti-Devil source are few thousands kilometer from me thanks to the action such people like you at one University in North America); your arguments are ....eternal like sophists, though on different subject; you just ....repeats that of my personal enemy, Fr. Andre Guindon O.M.I (ex.Sexual Creators , and not....creatures (!); if you wish I can sent you officials letter to@from Vatican on my counterattack (1991/1992- you see how I foresaw it; he .....died beceasue of me.
HV just repeats again the Church on contraception from the past! What do you expect? To change it because the contaceptice pill was invented? Use your intellect - about the lack you accuse JPii @HV- and not "feeling" of you@masses; Yes, we know the procreative plan of God though we need to adjust it to new conditions like God's plan in any natural sciences.
Jesus never said you will know that you are my disciples by your sexual behavior
In his October 10/05/12 response to Patricia, Michael J. Barberi writes: "History is replete with many doctrines and teachings that were proclaimed by popes and bishops as truth, taught for centuries, and were later reformed: usury, slavery, freedom of religion, the torture of heretics, the ends of marriage. It took centuries for the Church to apologize for the Galileo affair. I could give you a list of other issues, but this discussion will get us no where based on your point of view of claiming the higher moral ground."
Barberi, like those supporting the nuns in the Vatican's crackdown on the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, has discovered the fact that conservative, pre-Vatican II-minded Catholics are quick to claim the moral high ground via an appeal to the church's questionable wisdom and authority re: teaching on sexual behavior of which they have little knowledge -- beginning with their usual quick draw of the abortion card.
Speaking of abortion, it is interesting to note the post-Vatican II abortion of the church's newborn collegiality by Pope Paul VI -- who along with the Curia panicked at this threat to their authority -- and its burial by his autocratic, monarchial-minded successors Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI. (This was taken from my comment on John Wilkins' Oct. 12, 2012, piece, "Bishops or Branch Managers?")
For related insights on the governance of the institutional church and its potential pre-Vatican II future, see the following book reviews at <http://www.amazon.com/gp/pdp/profile/A3927GE69M656Q>.
o "Back to the Future?" on Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose;
o "Father Greeley Was Prescient Re: Ratzinger Papacy" on Andrew Greeley's The Making of the Pope 2005
o "Fox's Book Relevant to the Times" on Matthew Fox's The Pope's War: Why Ratzinger's Secret Crusade Has Imperiled the Church and How It Can Be Saved.
FYI, the second run of "A Church reborn," NCR's 52-page special edition on the 50th anniversary of the opening of Vatican II, is now available for distribution. For ordering details visit the NCR website at NCRonline.org/council, or call 800-333-7373.
Notwithstanding the undermining of Vatican II reforms by the pope and his curia, the people of God must continue to build on the council's spirit of renewal and foundational documents with unblinking eyes on John 13:34-35, “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” Note that Jesus never said you will know that you are my disciples by your sexual behavior
To Mr Frank.G.S:Matthew 19:12 says nothing for you? St.Paul's teaching on marriage @ homosexual behviour is nothing for you?
to remind you as you as most of graduates do not know: absolute laws are in only formal sciences! Natural sciences @others are governed just by probable laws but it..works, ex. Sklodowska Marie -Curie, Heisenberg@atomic bomb-by an analogy apply it to theology@morals. Devils are plenty also in Vatican not only in this world-do you believe (better, know) the Devil?- but....an example: archbp Dabrowski, also as we know now, an agent (TW-secret cooperator)of KGB/UB he delievered a warrant to Fr. Jerzy Popieluszko, a later martyr, because he (Fr.Jerzy)personally did refuse to receive such JUdge letter as a legal way to fight with Regime- what happened to Archbp Dabrowski? He died in a ...car accident.
Of course it is too much for your naive,by "feeling" understanding of the Bible.