Louie Verrecchio
Celebrating Vatican II
FacebookTwitter
By Louie Verrecchio
October 16, 2012

In response to the Holy Father's wishes for this Year of Faith, plans are being made in parishes and dioceses all over the world to "celebrate" Vatican II in light of the 50th anniversary of the Council's opening. But how many Catholics have an appropriate understanding of what it means in this case to celebrate?

With football season in full tilt here in the United States, maybe the following analogy will lend some perspective:

Imagine your favorite team blazing a trail through the regular season and then the playoffs; going all the way to Super Bowl. That would be a cause for celebration, right?

Now, imagine as well the team's head coach drawing up a robust game plan for the big contest, but for whatever reason, a good number of the players never actually got around to opening the playbook, and some of the ones that did decided to enforce their own views on it; improvising it a little bit here and tweaking it little bit there.

Even some of the position coaches got into the act, and before very long, the team broke down into factions with each group favoring its own particular view while a whole bunch of players in the middle were left not knowing what to believe.

Well, needless to say, two quarters into the big game the players find themselves locked in a terrible struggle; not just against their opponent, but against one another as well. As halftime arrives, they make their way to the locker room, tired, bruised and confused.

What do you think they should do once inside? Uncork bottles of champagne? Jump up and down and congratulate one another for having an association with the big event?

No, of course not! What they really need to do is set aside all of their preconceived notions and opinions and get into that playbook; to become unified as a team once again so that together they can confront their true opponent and go about doing the things that are necessary in order to secure a victory!

What on earth does this have to do with Vatican II?

Well, it seems to me that most of us very naturally tend to think of celebrating in terms of festivity; reveling in the joy of a major accomplishment, like graduating from college, or perhaps a significant life event, like getting married.

When it comes to Vatican II, however, that kind of celebrating is no more appropriate than it would be for that football team I just described.

Even as we joyfully embrace this opportunity to reflect upon the Council with renewed determination in tis Year of Faith, now is neither the time for festivity nor revelry, because let's be honest, there is far too much confusion and disagreement and division in our ranks as it relates to the Council.

It's time for us to set aside our own preconceived notions and opinions and to get into the playbook, so to speak; to delve into the Council documents; to get on the same page with one another and become unified under the banner of Christ the King once more, so that together we may engage our true opponent — an enemy who desires nothing less than our eternal damnation.

So, what is an appropriate understanding of what it means to celebrate Vatican II? If we look up "celebrate" in the dictionary, one of the entries stands out; "to hold up for public notice."

Now that, my friends, is an appropriate notion of what it means to celebrate Vatican II:

To hold this Council up to the purifying light of sacred Tradition; to make well-known its teachings and its place in the life of the Church — and just as importantly — its place in our lives as believers and followers of Christ.

This is precisely what Pope Benedict XVI had in mind when he issued his Apostolic Letter, Porta Fidei, in which he said that he deliberately decided to launch the Year of Faith to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the Council's opening in the hope that doing so would serve as an invitation for the faithful to enter the fields of the Council, at long last, to undertake the critically important work of harvesting the fruit of Vatican II.

Harvesting is a work not best carried out in the dark of night for obvious reasons. In the darkness, it's difficult to distinguish between that which is ripe and sweet and nourishing from that which is hard and bitter or may not even be fruit at all.

As we explore the Second Vatican Council in response to the Holy Father's encouragement, ours is a work that must be carried out in the light as well; not just any light, but the light of sacred Tradition.

On this note, Pope Benedict went on in Porta Fidei to quote his venerable predecessor, Pope John Paul II, who said of the Council documents, "They must be read and understood within the Church's Tradition."

Just months into his papacy, Pope Benedict XVI renewed that charge very passionately; and he plainly acknowledged that all too often we have failed to frame our understanding of this Council within the Church's Tradition, and this has led to what the Holy Father described as two competing approaches to the Council:

One that is based on an interpretation of rupture; treating the Council as though it is a break with Tradition — an approach that needless to say is the path that leads to confusion and division and error. The other approach — the one that renders a correct interpretation — is based upon what the Holy Father described as "a hermeneutic of renewal in continuity with the one subject Church the Lord has given us."

In other words, the Holy Father is saying that in order to approach the Council correctly, we must understand and evaluate all that it proposes in the context of, and in continuity with, sacred Tradition.

Now, that's all well and good, but in order to do this we must have a clear understanding of what sacred Tradition truly is.

The word tradition itself comes from the Latin word tradere meaning to transmit. And so Tradition can be described as that which transmits the Faith that comes to us from the Apostles, in all of its fullness.

It's critically important for us to realize that the Faith that is being transmitted, this Tradition, is the same yesterday, today and always. It is immutable; that is, it is unchangeable, and this is why the Holy Father has so often stressed the need view the Council's teachings in continuity with Tradition — the only light that can illuminate for us the sure path to truth.

With The Holy See encouraging the faithful to explore the documents of the Council firsthand at long last, we have every reason to be hopeful in this Year of Faith.

I've spent much of the last decade creating faith formation materials that, all glory and honor to God, provide Catholics with the guideposts necessary to explore the Council documents by the light of Tradition. Already, I'm seeing a tremendous increase in parishes and dioceses wising to start Harvesting the Fruit of Vatican II faith formation programs, and hosting events designed to encourage the faithful in this effort. In fact, as I write, I am looking forward to presenting a Vatican II workshop for the Archdiocese of Denver in just a couple of weeks.

In short, I fully expect this Year of Faith to be a great grace for the Church, provided we answer the call that is being issued; the call to explore the Council by applying a hermeneutic of continuity.

© Louie Verrecchio

 

The views expressed by RenewAmerica columnists are their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of RenewAmerica or its affiliates.
(See RenewAmerica's publishing standards.)

 

Stephen Stone
HAPPY EASTER: A message to all who love our country and want to help save it

Stephen Stone
The most egregious lies Evan McMullin and the media have told about Sen. Mike Lee

Siena Hoefling
Protect the Children: Update with VIDEO

Stephen Stone
FLASHBACK to 2020: Dems' fake claim that Trump and Utah congressional hopeful Burgess Owens want 'renewed nuclear testing' blows up when examined

Pete Riehm
Drain the swamp and restore Constitutional governance

Victor Sharpe
Biden sanctions Israeli farmers while dropping sanctions on Palestinian terrorists

Cherie Zaslawsky
Who will vet the vetters?

Joan Swirsky
Let me count the ways

Bonnie Chernin
The Pennsylvania Senate recount proves Democrats are indeed the party of inclusion

Linda Kimball
Ancient Epicurean Atomism, father of modern Darwinian materialism, the so-called scientific worldview

Tom DeWeese
Why we need freedom pods now!

Frank Louis
My 'two pence' worth? No penny for Mike’s thoughts, that’s for sure.

Paul Cameron
Does the U.S. elite want even more homosexuals?

Frank Louis
The battle has just begun: Important nominations to support

Jake Jacobs
Two 'One Nation' Shows

Curtis Dahlgren
Progress in race relations started in baseball
  More columns

Cartoons


Click for full cartoon
More cartoons

Columnists

Matt C. Abbott
Chris Adamo
Russ J. Alan
Bonnie Alba
Chuck Baldwin
Kevin J. Banet
J. Matt Barber
Fr. Tom Bartolomeo
. . .
[See more]

Sister sites