Today heralds the beginning of the Year of Faith for Catholics. It also marks the 50th anniversary of Vatican II.
In remembrance, I want to share this Council Daybook from that opening day. From Catholic News Service at http://vaticaniiat50.wordpress.com/
(The emphasized words are mine. I find them even more hopeful today than for the time in which they were written.)
Council Daybook, Vol. 1
Opening General Congregation
October 11, 1962
Pope John XXIII set the tone for the Second Vatican Council by
declaring at its solemn opening that it would be a council of hope and a
preparation for Christian unity.
Pope John declared that the Church “considers it her duty to work
actively” toward the realization of Christ’s prayer for Christian unity.
He also stressed that the prophets of disaster are not to be heeded
and that the ecumenical council will concentrate on emphasizing the
validity of the Church’s teaching rather than concern itself with
condemning heresies.
The Pope proclaimed his fearless hope that the council “will bring
the Church up-to-date where required.” He assured the cardinals and
bishops gathered around him near the tomb of St. Peter that the council
will compel “men, families and peoples everywhere to turn their minds
toward heavenly things.”
He confessed that he has frequently been bothered by prophets of
doom, who with misplaced zeal have tried to convince him that the modern
world is lost in a “morass of prevarication and ruin.”
These prophets, the Pope noted, say that our era in comparison with
past ages is constantly growing worse. Such men have learned nothing
from history, Pope John said, for they seem to believe that “in the
past, particularly at the time of former councils, everything was a full
triumph for the Christian idea and way of life and for proper religious
liberty.”
In actual fact, the Pope said, these prophets of disaster are wrong.
Divine Providence is guiding the Church today, he continued, “toward a
new order in human relations wherein — by men’s own efforts and even
beyond their greatest expectations — the superior and inscrutable
designs of God’s will are being fulfilled.”
The Pope said that he sees even in the constant differences among men advantages that lead to the greater good of the Church.
Pope John expressed his gladness that the ecumenical council can meet
in an atmosphere of freedom from the political pressures exerted on
past councils.
Even though the majority of mankind today is locked in controversy
over the direction in which political and economic order should be
pursued, he said, and although vast numbers have no time or regard for
spiritual reality, “the new conditions of modern life have at least this
advantage: They have eliminated those innumerable obstacles by which at
one time the sons of this world impeded the free action of the Church.”
The Pope noted with sorrow the absence of many bishops restrained by
godless governments. But he said that he foresees that the Church,
untrammeled by political considerations, will “from this Vatican
basilica, as if from a second apostolic cenacle, now through the
intervention of her bishops, raise her voice anew with resonant majesty
and greatness.”
The principal concern of the new council is to discover methods
whereby the deposit of Christian doctrine will be both safeguarded and
taught more effectively, he continued. It will teach men how to fulfill
their duties as citizens both of heaven and earth, he said.
Commenting on Christ’s words, “Seek first the kingdom of God and His
justice,” the Pope cautioned that the second part of this quotation –
“and all these things will be added to you” (Matt. 6, 33) — must
constantly be kept in mind. This means, he said, that those who seek
evangelical perfection with all their might must not fail to make
themselves useful to society.
While the doctrine of the Church is to influence human activities in
all fields, it is necessary that the Church should never depart from the
sacred patrimony of truth received from the Fathers, he said, adding:
“At the same time, however, she must ever look to the present, to new
conditions and new forms of life introduced into the modern world which
have opened new, avenues to the Catholic apostolate.”
The 2lst ecumenical council, drawing on the wealth of the Church’s
juridical, liturgical, apostolic and administrative experience, will
transmit to the world without distortion the doctrines of the Church, he
said.
But the key point of the council, the Pope declared, is not the
discussion of one article or another the fundamental doctrine of the
Church. He noted that what as been taught by the Fathers and theologians
is presumed to be familiar to all.
Rather, he said, what the world expects is “a step forward toward a
doctrinal penetration and a formation of consciences, in faithful and
perfect conformity to the authentic doctrine, which, however, should be
studied and expounded through the methods of research and through the
literary forms of modern thought.” The Church desires that the ancient
doctrine of the deposit of faith should now be conveyed in an effective
“pastoral” manner, he declared.
Referring to the question of the condemnation of heresies, Pope John
said: “While the Church has always repressed errors and frequently in
the past condemned them with great severity, today the Spouse of Christ
prefers to make use of the medicine of mercy rather than that of
severity.
“She considers that she meets the needs of the present day by
demonstrating the validity of her teaching, rather than by
condemnation.”
In fact, he said, the fallacious opinions and dangerous concepts that
must always be guarded against are so evidently in contrast with the
truth, that “by now it would seem that men of themselves are inclined to
condemn them, particularly those ways of life which despise God and His
law or place excessive confidence in technical progress and a
well-being based exclusively on the comforts of life.”
Noting the presence of many important personalities from all over the
world, the Pope assured them of a new hope which, seconding the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, would certainly make the council “a
revolutionary event not merely for the well-being of the Church but for
the progress of human society.”
Msgr. James I. Tucek
NC Rome bureau chief
This is wonderful, Woodeene -- thank you!! Blessings and love to you!
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