Translate

Monday, August 10, 2020

PERHAPS ARCHBISHOP VIGANO'S RANTINGS ON VATICAN II WILL BE A GOOD THING?

“Is it fair to blame the Council and reject it as fatally riddled with error? But wouldn’t this mean that the Holy Spirit allowed the Church to lapse into prodigious and pernicious error?”
—Dr. John Cavadini in the essay below

Was Vatican II really the “seed of error”?

Or was it “a truth only half received?”

By John Cavadini, Ph. D.
    In a statement dated June 20, 2020, Archbishop Viganò reduces the Second Vatican Council to a seedbed of contemporary error animated by the spirit of “Masonry.” I sympathize with his frustrations with regard to the evident confusion in the Church today, the attenuation of Eucharistic faith, the banality of much of what claims to be the Council’s inheritance liturgically, etc.
    Yet is it fair to blame the Council and reject it as fatally riddled with error? But wouldn’t this mean that the Holy Spirit allowed the Church to lapse into prodigious and pernicious error and further allowed five Popes to teach it enthusiastically for more than 50 years? Thatclaim would seem to be the triumph of “Masonry!”
    Viganò claims, “[T]his Council has proven to be the only one… — from the Council of Jerusalem to Vatican I — that does not harmonize perfectly with the entire Magisterium or that needs so much interpretation.”
    But the Council of Nicaea (325) was controversial from the moment it closed, its teaching only clarified nearly 60 years of controversy later (381, Constantinople). Was Nicaea consistent with previous magisterial teaching?
    Yes — as clarified in 381 — but in its immediate aftermath some thought the homoousioscontradicted the condemnation of the heretical bishop, Paul of Samosata, who did not believe the Son was a distinct Person, or likewise vindicated the heresy of Sabellianism.
    Chalcedon (451) may be the Council whose legacy was contested the longest. The next three ecumenical Councils were attempts to grapple with its reception and its relationship to the teaching of Ephesus (431). Nor was there lack of political complexity, within both Church and society, to add to the need for clarification.
    Further, did the Council really produce no good worth mentioning? Viganò mentions none.
    True, its liturgical reforms were commandeered by banality in the U.S. – for example, the introduction of hymns with no aesthetic merit but containing doctrinal errors especially regarding the Eucharist, hymns whose use de-catechize the very Catholics who faithfully attend Sunday Mass.
    But it is equally true, for example, that the reforms produced the beautiful inculturated liturgies in churches across Africa. I attended a Mass celebrated according to the Rite of Zaire in an isolated region of the DRC. It fully expressed the spirit of the liturgy of the universal Church not in spite of its being celebrated in an unmistakably African voicing, but because of it. In chant and in movement it communicated a dignity commensurate with the “awfulness of the Sacrifice,” as Dorothy Day once put it, and yet clothed it in an un-self-conscious warmth appropriate to the “Sacrament of Charity.”
     Another example is a Mass I attended in Abuja, celebrating the ordination of five new priests. The hymnody, the languages, the liturgical gestures, were eclectic, reflecting not only traditions of Gregorian chant and English hymnody but also a variety of Ibo language hymns and liturgical customs of the villages from which the new priests came. But it was all integrated by the deepest conviction of dignity and joy flowing from the Eucharist itself. When, after Communion, the whole assembly, otherwise silent, recited in unison three times, “O Sacrament Most Holy, O Sacrament Divine, all praise and all thanksgiving be every moment Thine,” it seemed as though the Holy Spirit was making the deepest possible appeal to the hearts of everyone present, reaching into our souls, helping us to “pray as we ought.”
    Perhaps those of us blaming our own banality of imagination and failure of nerve on Vatican II should get out of the house a little and have the humility to learn from others whom we may customarily look down upon as unenlightened.
    Further, what about the many beautiful truths that found their most robust magisterial expression in Lumen Gentium? Do we leave behind the exposition of the universal call to holiness? — something which seemed so sublime to me when I first read it at age 19 that the impression, and the desire to live up to it, has never worn off so many years later.
    What about the clarifying recovery of patristic preaching on the royal priesthood of the baptized? a project which the Council of Trent left for a future age to undertake (since Trent was necessarily more focused on correcting the Reformer’s rejection of Holy Orders). Is the most maturely developed articulation of the three degrees of Holy Orders, incorporating but surpassing in precision and clarity anything preceding, to be overlooked and discarded? Are these advances really the work of freemasonry?
    And, to tackle it squarely, can’t we count as an achievement, and not an error, the characterization that the one true Church of Jesus Christ, organized as a visible society, subsists in the Catholic Church? Is it really freemasonry to find some way of validating the genuine bonds of communion that link separated communions to the Catholic Church? If there are no such genuine bonds, then it is also incoherent to say that the one true Church organized as a visible society “is” the Catholic Church, because recognizing it as such requires recognizing all the bonds of visible communion — including those that remain present in other communions and thus do link them to us.
    Wouldn’t we want to use language that allows us to celebrate the degree of communion preserved, for example, with the Coptic Christians whose recent heroic witness “to the point of shedding blood” moved the one non-Christian in the group of hostages to accept his own baptism of blood? Isn’t it beautiful to be able to say, with the CCC’s summary of this Conciliar teaching, that “Christ’s Spirit uses these [separated] Churches and ecclesial communities as means of salvation,” while qualifying that their “power derives from the fullness of grace and truth that Christ has entrusted to the Catholic Church” (CCC #819)? Is this freemasonry? Or is it Catholic truth, expressed more fully than in pre-Conciliar formulations? The treatment of this issue by Mgr Philips, L’Église et son mystère au II Concile du Vatican, Tome 1 (Paris: Desclée, 1967), 119, is worth revisiting.
    Relatedly, are we really willing to return to a legalistic interpretation of “Outside the Church there is no salvation” that leaves the witness of these Coptic martyrs and others in ambiguity? Philips shows how patristic understanding of this phrase arose in controversies which envisioned counter-claims by heretics, not envisioning situations, such as those considered both by Pius IX and Pius XII regarding souls who find themselves outside of the visible bounds of the Catholic Church through no fault of their own (see Philips, 192-93).
    Is the rigorist understanding of the patristic dictum truly and fully Catholic teaching? Or does Vatican II, rather, express that teaching most fully? — thus enabling the CCC to sum it up (##847-48) in a way that I (at least) have found useful in releasing undergraduates from misguided revulsion against the Church because of the baggage of a needless triumphalism.
    Viganò says the “seeds” for contemporary errors were planted at Vatican II and that now we can see from their bad fruit that the seed itself was bad. But does this stand up to scrutiny?
    Dei Verbum taught that the human authors of Scripture were “true authors,” and that the interpreter must therefore “take into account the conditions of their time and culture,” etc. (DV 11-12). Is this a bad seed, because it was used by biblical scholars to so promote the hegemony of the historico-critical method that eventually no other options were even imagined? — even though Dei Verbum forcefully and equally teaches that the Scriptures, both OT and NT, “have God as their author and have been handed on as such to the Church herself,” and so, among other things, must be read “within the living Tradition of the whole Church” (see DV 11-12, CCC ##106, 113).
    A truth only half received can be the seed of error, but through no fault of the truth! — but rather of a certain laziness on the part of theologians (like myself!) who settled for a method of biblical interpretation that ended up regarding the exegesis of Church councils (including that of the Vatican II and CCC) as “pre-critical” impositions on the text.
    Another example, sticking with Dei Verbum: Is the relativism that de facto if not de jure is the implicit operating assumption of much interreligious dialogue the fault of Vatican II, though Dei Verbum clearly states that “’The Christian economy … since it is the new and definitive Covenant, will never pass away; and no new public revelation is to be expected before the glorious manifestation of our Lord Jesus Christ’” (DV 4, CCC #66)?
    Is it the fault of Nostra aetate, not even a “dogmatic constitution,” that theologians (like myself!) have been content to allow the relativism of post-modern culture to operate as an implicit default mode? To emphasize NA’s (true!) claim that there is truth in other religions without working equally hard to articulate at the same time how Jesus Christ is the unsurpassable seal on revelation? How would one even recognize truth in other religions if we did not already in our own have the fullness of truth whereby to be able to recognize it elsewhere?
    Is Vatican II bad seed? Or is the “seed” in question rather the lopsided choice of theologians to develop one strand of conciliar teaching at the expense of occluding others? Not to mention pastors who have so prioritized the (true!) good of making Christian teaching accessible and intelligible to modern people that they downplay its uniqueness and distinctiveness as embarrassingly outmoded?
    I understand the instinct, teaching so many students who think they are looking for just such intelligibility and only that, yet they discover they were actually seeking so much more if you actually work to give them that “more,” too.
    Viganò’s letter has at least had the virtue of forcing myself to emerge from my complacency in accepting half-measures in the reception of the Council. Perhaps others will find themselves with me in the same boat!
***
    John C. Cavadini, Ph. D., is a Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame and Director of its McGrath Institute for Church Life. He specializes in patristic and early medieval theology, the theology of Augustine, and the history of biblical and patristic exegesis. 

15 comments:

Mark Thomas said...

Z is for Zen.

Cardinal Zen blessed us recently, via his blog, as well as a Catholic News Agency interview, with a powerful defense and promotion of Vatican II.

Cardinal Zen's blog: https://oldyosef.hkdavc.com/?p=1503

==================================================================================

Cardinal Zen: In Vatican II, Catholics hear ‘real voice of the Holy Spirit’

Catholic News Agency: https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/cardinal-zen-in-vatican-council-ii-catholics-hear-real-voice-of-the-holy-spirit-62749

==================================================================================

The recent false, unorthodox claims that Archbishop Viganò, Bishop Schneider, Father Hunwicke, Peter Kwasniewski, and others, have unleashed in regard to Vatican II may serve as blessings in disguise.

That is, holy, orthodox Churchmen — Cardinal Zen, for example — have stepped forward to counter falsehoods about Vatican II.

Z is for Zen.

Pax.

Mark Thomas

Mark Thomas said...

John C. Cavadini, Ph. D., is a Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame and Director of its McGrath Institute for Church Life said:

"But it is equally true, for example, that the reforms produced the beautiful inculturated liturgies in churches across Africa. I attended a Mass celebrated according to the Rite of Zaire in an isolated region of the DRC.

"It fully expressed the spirit of the liturgy of the universal Church not in spite of its being celebrated in an unmistakably African voicing, but because of it.

"In chant and in movement it communicated a dignity commensurate with the “awfulness of the Sacrifice,” as Dorothy Day once put it, and yet clothed it in an un-self-conscious warmth appropriate to the “Sacrament of Charity.”

===============================================================================

As Pope Benedict XVI noted, Vatican II, as well as the Novus Ordo, when implemented in unity with the mind of the Church, hav blessed the Church.

As theologian John C. Cavadini made clear, that applies most certainly to the booming Church in Africa.

Pax.

Mark Thomas

Anonymous said...

Mark Thomas,

Booming in Africa? African Catholics constitutes 17.3 percent of the world's Catholics Why do you keep posting this nonsense?

Anonymous said...

Mark Thomas:

Go find another blog to hijack with your BS. ⚠⚠

Pierre said...

Vatican II, as implemented, has been a complete and utter failure. Worse, a catastrophe of epic proportions. Why lefties continue to deny this leaves one with the conclusion is that destruction is precisely what they wanted. We need to quit treating Vatican II as an idol or golden calf and undertake a critical review of its documents and decide which, if any, of its decrees will promote a Catholic restoration. Quite frankly, the one vehicle I see presently that is generating a bit of a restoration is the EF movement. When I attend the EF, the congregation is dominated by young families with children. So maybe Sacrosanctum Concilium is the first decree that should be revisited since in my opinion, that is where all of the trouble began.

rcg said...

The questions I have are:
Is it possible to have a council that is not guided by the Holy Spirit?
Is Vatican II necessary for any of the beneficial results attributed to it?
If it was not the source of the abuses, and worse, attributed to it why were there no corrections made concerning those abuses?

I am skeptical that Pope Benedict’s assertion that both forms of the Mass were intended or allowed under Vatican II. I think it is obvious the hierarchy intended to replace the liturgy as well as significant teaching and doctrine because that is exactly what was done in full public view.

The defenses of Vatican II seem to be, for the most part, passive aggressive. “It changes nothing, it is another way of doing the same thing.” Then why have it at all? Why was it necessary to suppress the Old Form? Why were the translations allowed to be so flawed?

TJM said...

rcg,

A priest friend of mine, who is now deceased, was a peritus at the Council. He spoke Latin like a vernacular and taught Latin and Biblical Greek at a seminary. He said the liturgical "reforms" that were implemented were a total shock to him and contrary to SC. He recalled that at most, the Pope and Bishops would permit the non-Ordinary prayers to be in vernacular with no comprehensive overhaul of the Mass like we got with the Novus Ordo. What amazes me is that there was relatively little push back on Bugnini's "reforms" other than the Ottaviani Intervention.

Joe Shlabotnick said...

If the Church promises that an Ecumenical Council cannot err, one would have to assume that such a guarantee would only apply to a Council that was above board and administered correctly. There is overwhelming evidence that the Second Vatican Council was indeed sabotaged, so such guarantees do little to quell our ongoing questions about the Council.

Further, just because someone calls an "inculturated liturgy:" beautiful does not make it so. It is merely an opinion. Mark Thomas' endless bloviating about Africa overlooks the fact that the Church always has success where there is a missionary mandate (i.e., most people don't know about Christianity) or the Church is persecuted. Holding up Africa as an example of postconciliar success is flimsy, at best.

Instead of name-calling Vigano and Schneider, it would be far more useful to argue for or against the merits of their positions and arguments.

Victor said...

Can anyone here answer the question of why the V2 Council was called in the first place? I have often heard the answer that it was to modernise the Church. But the main characteristic of modernity is God-lessness, so if so, even from before the start of the Council, it was heretical in trying to make the Church God-less.

I believe all Councils before V2 were called to settle a well defined important controversy. There was no such controversy for V2 to be called for, so it became an idle Council that made for a devil's workshop. We know that all the preparatory documents except for one were rejected, which allowed all these theologians in their ivory towers to propose their own pet theories to be voted on without much serious study. That is to say, it was quickly taken over by the Modernists.

Anonymous said...

To put things in perspective, one might point out to Mark Thomas that Jimmy Swaggart Ministries are also experiencing tremendous growth in Africa. Heck, the Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormons likely make the same claim.

Pierre said...

Anonymous at 12:20 pm:

Well here is one explanation. I am not certain it is accurate but here goes:

Vatican II was a pastoral council called by the Holy Spirit [I did not know John XXIII was the Holy Spirit] to combat the heresies that developed since the Protestant Rebellion in 1517 and were compounded by The Enlightenment that began in 1715.

The Egyptian said...

Maybe, just maybe the problem is not Vat 2 per say but the total, out of control, "spirit" of Vat 2 that has been the problem. More crap was imposed in the "spirit" that because of the council. I don't believe anywhere in the actual council was the whole sale destruction of our churches or the bastardization of the mass called for. (puppets for one or priests on hover boards)
I'm just a pew sitter but can smell the rot from there

John Nolan said...

On the first Sunday of Advent last year, Pope Francis celebrated a Mass in St Peter's according to the Rite (or Use) of Zaire. How 'authentic' was it? Well, as far as I could see, not very. The changes to the order of Mass, like putting the Penitential Act after the Gospel, were observed, and the 'tribal' singing and dancing I assume were Congolese although they were accompanied by such 'traditional' instruments as the electric guitar, jazz drumkit and electronic keyboard (western cultural imperialism?)

The Mass was in Italian, which is not widely spoken in the Congo where the lingua franca is French; the vestments were standard modern Roman; everyone stood for the Gospel, rather than sitting as is usual in the Congo; and most disappointingly the acolytes carried candles rather than spears.

I realize that this was a Mass to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Congolese chaplaincy in Rome, but it still seemed an odd example of reverse inculturation or even token inculturation - put in a few native elements but keep most things Italo-centric.

The Novus Ordo as performed in most western parishes is inculturated in that it conforms to western popular culture, which originated in 20th century America but has spread its tentacles across the globe.

John Nolan said...

I came across a report of an open-air Mass celebrated with a congregation of a thousand in Nairobi on Pentecost Sunday 2008.

'The plan of the Mass emphasized the meaning of Pentecost in the context of the challenges of the present tribalism and negative ethnicity in Kenya today. A new learning was the mutual enrichment of the values of unity and diversity ... an important value in the inculturation of the Catholic Church to become a genuine world Church and in the rich cultural traditions of the African peoples'.

The Penitential Act 'invited the congregation to privately name some of the evil things that happened during the 2008 post-election violence ... The homily was in buzz groups of two people sharing the question "What gift of the Holy Spirit is most important to me?' In a ritual that took almost one half hour members of the congregation spontaneously offered 25 Prayers of the the Faithful in their heart languages [examples of fourteen languages are here given, including English and French. Apart from this being a strange definition of the word 'homily' we are supposed to believe these prayers were 'spontaneous'].

The Our Father was prayed twice - once in different languages simultaneously to emphasize diversity and again all together in Swahili to emphasize unity. 'The lively Mass which focused on community was filled with singing and processions.'

I have no doubt that some people would regard this as an entirely admirable example of inculturation. In fact they would no doubt excoriate me for criticizing it. Yet I do so. It is a good example of something imposed by well-meaning white people on black people. It would have taken a lot of organization, so spontaneity would not have come into it. 'We'll tell you what is good for you'. The political message is not something that certain tribes would have agreed with, yet we have to pretend a consensus which does not exist.

A lot of post-V2 inculturation consisted in imposing modernist western norms on other civilizations. Japan was an example - it is still a highly ritualized society but was forced by 'reformers' to replace the ritualized Tridentine Mass with a western-generated informal liturgy, alien to its culture.

And, I have to add, alien to mine also.



Anonymous said...

That open air mass sounds like a circus....I would be curious as to how they handled Communion under those circumstances.