2013-02-23 First published in Kairos, Archdiocese of Melbourne magazine, Vol 24, Issue 1
INTERPRETING
PART
1 THE QUESTION OF CONTINUITY
Bishop
Peter J. Elliott, Melbourne
Celebrating
the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council raises
questions. How are we to understand the Second Vatican Council today? What is
the right “hermeneutic” or way of interpreting and explaining this Council?
And how do we evaluate the changes and projects that followed?
Since
his first Christmas address to the Curia on
Avoiding
complex analysis, I open questions raised by this “hermeneutic of
continuity”. Here and there I include personal recollections.
Self-Conscious
Catholics
The
Second Vatican Council recedes in time but we are all part of developments that
flowed from it. We also inherit baggage from the recent past. It is difficult to
step out of our little “life situations”, difficult to look objectively at
the major ecclesial event of the Twentieth Century.
We
carry an unhealthy Catholic self-consciousness. This preoccupation affects members of my
generation and the preceding generation who remember the Council era vividly. To
a lesser extent, younger generations also inherit this distraction.
But there is also a generation gap. My generation cannot pass on the
enthusiasm we experienced fifty years ago to those born in the decades that
followed Vatican II.
Much
time and energy has been expended over the past fifty years in agonized
ecclesiastical self-scrutiny. At times this self-conscious exercise was carried
out in emotive ways. Family feuds tend to run that way. It is evident in a range
of critical books, published from the time of the Council up to the new
Millennium. The preoccupation lingers through a wide spectrum of relentless blog
sites, some spiteful, others delusional. It seems best to rise above the
preoccupation by going back to the aims of the Council and its achievements.
Great
Expectations
Vatican
II had three aims: faith, unity and reform – the same as the other Ecumenical
Councils, but with a different emphasis, described as opening the Church to the
world. Looking outwards, this path of dialogue was evident in Ecumenism which
advanced rapidly after Blessed John XXIII was elected in 1958. The Council took
his work forward. At the same time Inter-Faith dialogue began, for example
opening Jewish-Catholic relations, so clouded by the Holocaust and
anti-Semitism.
Looking
inwards, four major documents of the Council initiated developments within the
Church. The liturgical movement triumphed in the constitution Sacrosanctum
Concilium and a program of reshaping worship in the Roman Rite began. A
deeper understanding of the nature of the Church was proclaimed in Lumen
Gentium and a clearer understanding of Divine Revelation in Scripture and
Tradition was set out in Dei Verbum.
In Gaudium et Spes we find a development of our understanding of the
human person and the sacrament of marriage.
“Left”
and “Right’?
With
developments and renewal, a polarization soon divided Catholics, particularly in
“developed” countries. Everyone was judged in terms of his or her attitude
to “the Council”. This was often reduced to simplistic categories, along the
conventional political spectrum from the “Left” to the “Right”, which is
how secular journalists tried to depict the Council.
Imposing
that political spectrum on the
People
do not neatly slot into these categories. Dorothy Day was on “the Left” in
social and political terms, but on “the Right” when it came to doctrine,
liturgy and spirituality. Then there were certain American Catholics who were
politically of “the Right” but ardently liberal when it came to their
understanding of the Council. In Australia Catholics on the “Left” or the
“Right” held, and still hold, attitudes in the Church which bear little or
no resemblance to their political opinions.
Towards
the Centre
In
his encyclical Ecclesiam Suam. Pope
Paul VI rose above categories. He presented the Church not as some kind of
linear spectrum, running from left to right, but as a series of concentric
circles. He did not do this by focusing only on the Church, rather on the whole
human race, which has at its centre the People of God. People are either tending
towards the centre, the Church gathered around the Pope, or heading away from
the centre. His letter on the Church was the first magisterial fruit of the
Council and we can all benefit from reading it in these times.
A
Flawed Debate
Unfortunately
polarized debate on the hermeneutic of continuity is evident today in
Fifty
years on we may ask whether extremist attitudes can contribute to the wider
discussion about the interpretation and application of the Council. Then we can
focus on a deeper appreciation of the “hermeneutic of continuity and reform”
and anticipate how this can free us from self-consciousness that does little to
advance the
He
concluded with these words: “Renew in our time your wondrous works, as in a New
Pentecost, and grant that Holy Church, gathered together in unanimous, more
intense prayer, around Mary the Mother of Jesus, and guided by Peter, may spread
the Kingdom of the Divine Savior, which is the Kingdom of truth, of justice, of
love and of peace. Amen.
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