America (americamagazine.org), Vol. 188 No. 6, February 24, 2003
Vatican II: The Myth and the Reality
By Avery Dulles
The memory of the Second Vatican Council, 40 years after the opening of the
council, continues to arouse both acclamation and vilification. Its champions,
in many cases, see it as having liberated Catholics from a long night of
oppression, thus restoring to the people of God their rightful liberties. Its
detractors blame it for shattering the unity and order of the church and
introducing an era of contestation and doubt. While reformers caricature the
preconciliar church as tyrannical and obscurantist, traditionalists idealize the
preconciliar church as though it were a lost paradise.
In part, the quarrels are due to a conflict of interpretations. The council
documents, like most committee products, reflect some compromises. Four factors
make the interpretation especially difficult.
1. The council fathers, under the direction of Pope Paul VI, made every effort
to achieve unanimity and express the consensus of the whole episcopate, not the
ideas of one particular school. For this reason, they sought to harmonize
differing views, without excluding any significant minority. In some cases they
adopted deliberate ambiguities.
2. Pope John XXIII, in his opening speech on Oct. 11, 1962, declared that
although the church had sometimes condemned errors with the greatest severity,
it would best meet the needs of our time “by demonstrating the validity of her
teaching rather than by condemnations.” Because the council saw fit to follow
this instruction, it did not dwell on the negative implications of its doctrine.
Framed so as not to offend any large group, except perhaps atheistic Communism,
the documents are markedly irenic.
3. The council occurred at a unique moment of history, when the Western world
was swept up in a wave of optimism typified by Pope John XXIII himself. The “new
humanism” was confident that if free play were given to human powers and
technology, the scourges of poverty, disease, famine and war could be virtually
eliminated. Christians, on this theory, had no good reason for standing apart
from the rest of humanity. They should throw in their lot with all the forces
making for humanization and progress. Books like The Secular City (1964), by
Harvey Cox, served as bibles for the new gospel of freedom and creativity.
Secular enthusiasts interpreted Vatican II as an invitation for Catholics to
jump on the bandwagon.
4. In the postconciliar period, the communications media favored the emphasis on
novelty. Progressive theologians were lionized for writing books and articles
that seemed to be breaking new barriers and demolishing the old edifice of
preconciliar Catholicism.
In this atmosphere, early interpreters of the council suggested that the
documents contained revolutionary implications not apparent on the surface. Some
propounded the hermeneutical principle that where there are ambiguities in the
council documents, these should always be resolved in favor of discontinuity.
Others used the device of preferring to follow the “spirit of Vatican II” at the
expense of the letter.
Whereas this innovationist hermeneutic of Vatican II was clearly predominant in
the literature of the first decade after the council, another school of
interpretation began to surface toward the middle 1970’s. Such distinguished
theologians as Henri de Lubac, S.J., Hans Urs von Balthasar and Joseph Ratzinger
banded together to found a new international review, Communio, which was widely
viewed as an attempt to offset the progressive Dutch-based journal Concilium.
Writers for Communio preferred to interpret Vatican II with what they called “a
hermeneutics of continuity,” emphasizing the diachronic solidarity of the
council with the whole Catholic tradition.
To overcome polarization and bring about greater consensus, Pope John Paul II
convened an extraordinary assembly of the Synod of Bishops in 1985, the 20th
anniversary of the close of the council. This synod in its final report came up
with six agreed principles for sound interpretation, which may be paraphrased as
follows:
1. Each passage and document of the council must be interpreted in the context
of all the others, so that the integral teaching of the council may be rightly
grasped.
2. The four constitutions of the council (those on liturgy, church, revelation
and church in the modern world) are the hermeneutical key to the other
documents—namely, the council’s nine decrees and three declarations.
3. The pastoral import of the documents ought not to be separated from, or set
in opposition to, their doctrinal content.
4. No opposition may be made between the spirit and the letter of Vatican II.
5. The council must be interpreted in continuity with the great tradition of the
church, including earlier councils.
6. Vatican II should be accepted as illuminating the problems of our own day.
These principles seem to me to be sound. Applying them, I should like to propose
12 points on which I believe that the council has been rather generally
misunderstood.
1. It is widely believed that the council taught that non-Christian religions
contain revelation and are paths to salvation for their members. A careful
examination of the documents, however, proves the contrary. The council taught
that salvation cannot be found in any other name than that of Jesus (Acts 4:12;
cf. Ad Gentes, the “Decree on the Church’s Missionary Activity” [1965], No. 9,
and Gaudium et Spes, the “Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern
World” [1965], No. 10). In solemn language it declared: “This sacred Synod
professes its belief that God has made known to mankind the way in which men are
to serve him, and thus to be saved in Christ and come to blessedness”
(Dignitatis Humanae, the “Declaration on Religious Freedom” [1965], No. 1).
Without denying that there are truths and values in other religions, the council
asserted that these truths and values are commingled with serious errors, and
that even the truths have salvific value only to the extent that they are
preparations for, or reflections of, the Christian Gospel (Lumen Gentium, the
“Dogmatic Constitution on the Church” [1964], No. 16; AG, No. 9).
2. Regarding the means by which revelation is transmitted, many theologians have
argued that the council gave priority to Scripture as the written word of God,
and demoted tradition to the status of a secondary norm, to be tested against
the higher norm of Scripture.
An impartial reading of Vatican II’s Dei Verbum, the “Dogmatic Constitution on
Revelation” (1965) indicates on the contrary that the council gave a certain
priority to tradition. It asserts that the Apostles and their successors, the
bishops, by their preaching and teaching have faithfully preserved the word of
God. Scripture is an inspired and privileged sedimentation of tradition but not
an independent or separable norm. Scripture and tradition together constitute a
single indivisible channel of revealed truth, in which neither element could
stand without the other (DV, No. 9).
3. A third error relating to revelation is the view that, according to the
council, God continues to reveal himself in secular experience through the signs
of the times, which therefore provide criteria for interpreting the Gospel.
Vatican II, in fact, rejected the idea of continuing revelation. It taught that
revelation became complete in Jesus Christ and that no further public revelation
is to be expected before the end of time, when Christ returns in glory (DV, No.
4). In Gaudium et Spes the council spoke of the church’s duty to interpret the
signs of the times, but it specified that these signs are to be interpreted in
the light of the Gospel (GS, No. 4).
4. Turning now to the church, we can put the question of its necessity. It has
become almost a platitude to say that the council, reversing earlier Catholic
teaching, taught that the church is not necessary for salvation. But in reality
the council affirmed that faith and baptism are necessary for salvation (Mk
16:16; Jn 3:5), and that, since baptism is the door to the church, the church
too is necessary. The council went on to say that anyone who knows that the
church is necessary has the obligation to enter it and remain in it as a
condition for salvation (LG, No. 14).
Vatican II did, however, face the question whether persons who have no
opportunity to hear the Gospel are necessarily lost. It replied that they can be
“associated with the paschal mystery” if, with the help of God’s grace, they
consistently strive to do God’s will as it is known to them (GS, No. 22). But
because people outside the church fall frequently into sin and error, the Gospel
and the church could greatly help them on their way to salvation (LG, No. 16).
5. Turning now to the ecumenical problem, we must evaluate the common impression
that the council, in stating that the church of Christ “subsists” in the Roman
Catholic communion (LG, No. 8), implied that the former is wider and more
inclusive than the latter. Cardinal Ratzinger, rejecting this view, argues that
because the church of Christ has its subsistence in Roman Catholicism, it cannot
subsist anywhere else. This reading coheres well with the full teaching of the
council. Certain endowments of the church can, to be sure, exist in other
Christian communions, bringing their members into “imperfect communion” with the
Catholic Church (Unitatis Redintegratio, the “Decree on Ecumenism” [1964], No.
3). Non-Catholic communities that have a genuine apostolic ministry and a valid
Eucharist are properly called churches, but they should not be reckoned as
constituent parts of the one and catholic church in which the true religion
subsists (DH, No. 1).
6. The doctrine of collegiality is frequently misunderstood as though it
restricted the powers of the pope, requiring him to establish a consensus of the
world’s bishops before deciding important issues. Vatican II did indeed affirm
that the bishops as a college, when acting together with their head, the pope,
enjoy supreme authority, but it affirmed that the pope likewise has supreme
authority as successor of Peter and head of the college. The full power of the
college is present in the pope alone, who is always free to exercise his
primatial office according to the grace given to him. The college, on the other
hand, cannot act except when summoned to collegial action by the pope. Its
decisions have no efficacy without the pope’s approval. Thus the primacy of the
pope, as it had been defined by Vatican I, remains intact. His power is in no
way limited by that of the episcopal college (LG, No. 22).
7. Passing to another point, we may ask whether the council recognized that
theologians and others have a right to dissent from noninfallible teachings of
the magisterium. Some Catholic theologians, while admitting that all the
faithful are obliged to submit to infallible teaching, contend that faithful
Catholics are entitled to reject noninfallible teaching when it conflicts with
their private judgment.
Vatican II never mentioned dissent, but by implication rejected it. It stated
that even when the pope and the bishops do not speak infallibly, their
authoritative teaching is binding, and that the faithful are required to adhere
to it with a “religious submission of mind” (LG, No. 25). Vatican II, therefore,
cannot be quoted as favoring dissent.
8. Regarding the laity, the council did much to clarify their active role in the
worship and mission of the church and their vocation to refashion secular
society according to the norms of the Gospel. At several points Vatican II urged
pastors to consult the laity and to listen to them when they speak within their
competence (LG, No. 37; GS, Nos. 43, 62). But at no point did it suggest that
the hierarchy have any obligation to accept the recommendations of the laity
with regard to matters pertaining to the pastoral office. While encouraging
cooperation with priests, deacons and laypersons, the council placed the powers
of authoritative teaching, sacramental worship and pastoral government squarely
and exclusively in the hands of the hierarchy (Christus Dominus, the “Decree on
the Bishops’ Pastoral Office in the Church” [1965], No. 30).
9. It is often said that with Vatican II the church, reversing its earlier
position, acknowledged marriage as a vocation no less blessed than celibacy. The
council wrote eloquently of the sacrament of matrimony as a sacred bond
mirroring the union between Christ and the church (GS, No. 48), but it also
reaffirmed the teaching of Trent that it is better and more blessed to remain in
virginity or celibacy than to be joined in matrimony—a doctrine that Trent
traced back to Jesus (Mt 19: 11-12) and to Paul (1 Cor 7:25-26, 38, 40). In
Optatam Totius, the “Decree on Priestly Formation” (1965), Vatican II declared
that seminarians “should acquire a right understanding of the duties and dignity
of Christian marriage, as representing the love between Christ and his church
(cf. Eph 5:22-33). They should, however, realize the greater excellence of
virginity consecrated to Christ, so that by a maturely considered and
magnanimous free choice they may consecrate themselves to the Lord by an entire
dedication of body and mind” (OT, No. 10). If this passage had been better
understood and more energetically taught, the present crisis of vocations to the
priestly and religious life might be less severe.
10. Opponents of Paul VI’s encyclical Humanae Vitae (1968) make much of the fact
that Vatican II was silent on the morality of contraception. The council did not
explicitly condemn contraception because the pope had reserved this question to
a special commission outside the council. But after declaring that the full
sense of mutual self-giving and human procreation must be preserved in marital
intercourse, the council declared: “Such a goal cannot be achieved unless the
virtue of conjugal chastity is sincerely practiced. Relying on these principles,
sons and daughters of the church may not undertake methods of regulating
procreation which are found blameworthy by the teaching authority of the church
in its unfolding of the divine law” (GS, No. 51). At this point the fathers
inserted footnotes referring to documents of Pius XI and Pius XII forbidding
contraception. If this passage had been written after Humanae Vitae, no revision
would have been needed except the addition of a reference to that document in
the footnote.
11. The council’s teaching on religious freedom has been poorly understood. It
is widely believed that the council recognized that members of non-Catholic and
non-Christian religious bodies have a right to believe as they do and to
propagate their beliefs freely. But the council declared no such thing. In its
“Declaration on Religious Freedom” it rejected coercion by the state in the area
of religion, but it did not set all religions on the same level. The “one true
religion,” it stated, “subsists in the Catholic and apostolic church to which
the Lord Jesus committed the duty of spreading it abroad among all men” (DH, No.
1). Other religious and churches do not have the same mandate. The late John
Courtney Murray, S.J., stated in his commentary: “Neither the declaration nor
the American Constitution affirms that a man has a right to believe what is
false or to do what is wrong. This would make moral nonsense. Neither error nor
evil can be the object of a right, only what is true and good. It is, however,
true and good that a man should enjoy freedom from coercion in matters
religious.”
12. Turning in conclusion to the liturgy, I shall limit myself to one question.
Vatican II is frequently praised or blamed for having authorized the translation
of the Latin liturgy into the vernacular. But the matter is not so simple. In
Sacrosactum Concilium, its “Constitution on the Liturgy” (1963), the council
declared: “The use of the Latin language is to be preserved in the Latin rite,
except where a particular law might indicate otherwise” (SC, No 36, Paragraph
1). In the following two paragraphs the constitution went on to say that
competent local ecclesiastical authorities may determine that certain readings,
instructions, prayers and chants be translated into the mother tongue of the
people. The council fathers would not have anticipated that in the space of a
few years the Latin language would almost totally disappear. It would be well if
Catholics could be familiar with the Mass in Latin, the official language of the
Roman rite. But since there are sound pastoral reasons for the vernacular,
faithful translations of high quality should be provided. We may hope that such
translations are in the making.
Because the hermeneutics of discontinuity has prevailed in countries like our
own, the efforts of the Holy See to clarify the documents have regularly been
attacked as retrenchments. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was
denounced for its declaration on infallibility, Mysterium Ecclesiae (1973), for
the new profession of faith issued in 1989, for its ecclesiology of communion in
Communionis Notio (1991) and for its document on Christ and the Church, Dominus
Iesus (2000). The Roman document on the collaboration of the laity in the sacred
ministry (1997) was angrily dismissed, as was, in some quarters, John Paul II’s
apostolic constitution Apostolos Suos, on the status and authority of episcopal
conferences (1998). In each of these cases there was a clamor of protest, but
the critics did not convincingly show that the official teaching had departed
from the teaching of Vatican II, interpreted according to the principles set
forth in the Extraordinary Synod of 1985.
I am not seeking in this brief article to defend the teaching of Vatican II on
points that someone or other might wish to challenge. My authority could not add
anything to that of the council, which spoke with the promised assistance of the
Holy Spirit. I can say only that I find the teaching of Vatican II very solid,
carefully nuanced and sufficiently flexible to meet the needs of our own time
and place. The artful blending of majority and minority perspectives in the
council documents should have forestalled the unilateral interpretations. There
is no reason today why Vatican II should be a bone of contention among
Catholics.
History, of course, does not stop. Just as Vatican II made important changes
reflecting new biblical studies, the liturgical movement and the ecumenical
movement, we may expect future developments in doctrine and polity. Progress
must be made, but progress always depends upon an acceptance of prior
achievements so that it is not necessary to begin each time from the beginning.
___________________________________
Cardinal Avery Dulles, S.J., is the Laurence J. McGinley Professor of Religion
and Society at Fordham University, New York City. This article is based on
lectures given in October 2002 at Loyola University in New Orleans and
Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.