"There was the Council of the Fathers the real Council
but
there was also the Council of the media"
Vatican City, February
22, 2013 (Zenit.org) | 1389
hits
Here is the
fourth and final part of a Vatican translation of the reflection Benedict XVI
gave Feb. 14, when he met with the clergy of Rome. The Holy Father delivered
the reflection extemporaneously, recounting some of his memories of the Second
Vatican Council.
The second part
of the Council was much more extensive. There appeared with great urgency the
issue of today’s world, the modern age, and the Church; and with it, the issues
of responsibility for the building up of this world, of society, responsibility
for the future of this world and eschatological hope, the ethical
responsibility of Christians and where we look for guidance; and then religious freedom, progress,
and relations with other religions. At this moment, all the parties of the
Council really entered into the discussion, not just America, the United
States, with its powerful interest in religious freedom. In the third session
the Americans told the Pope: we cannot go home without bringing a declaration
on religious freedom voted by the Council. The Pope, however, had the firmness
and the decision, the patience, to take the text to the fourth session, for the
sake of greater discernment and the fuller consent of the Council Fathers. I
mean: it was not only the Americans who intervened forcefully in the unfolding
of the Council, but also Latin America, well aware of the extreme poverty of
its people, on a Catholic continent, and the responsibility of the faith for the
situation of these people. Likewise, Africa and Asia saw the need for
interreligious dialogue; problems arose which we Germans – I have to admit –
had not foreseen. I cannot describe all of this now. The great document Gaudium et Spes analyzed very well the issue
of Christian eschatology and worldly progress, and that of responsibility for
the society of the future and the responsibility of Christians before eternity,
and in this way it also renewed a Christian ethics, the foundations of ethics. But
– let us say unexpectedly – alongside this great document there arose another
document which responded in a more synthetic and more concrete way to the
challenges of the times, and this was the Declaration Nostra Aetate. From the beginning our Jewish
friends were present, and they said, primarily to us Germans, but not to us
alone, that after the tragic events of the Nazi period, the Nazi decade, the
Catholic Church had to say something about the Old Testament, about the Jewish people. They said: even if it is
clear that the Catholic Church is not responsible for the Shoah, it was
Christians for the most part who committed those crimes; we need to deepen and
renew Christian awareness of this, even though we know full well that true
believers have always resisted these things. Thus it was clear that our
relationship with the world of the ancient People of God needed to be an object
of reflection. Understandably, too, the Arab countries – the bishops of the
Arab countries – were unhappy about this: they feared somewhat a glorification
of the State of Israel, which naturally they did not want. They said: fine, a
truly theological statement about the Jewish people is good, it is necessary,
but if you speak about that, speak of Islam too; only then will there be a
balance; Islam too is a great challenge and the Church also needs to clarify
her relationship with Islam. This was something that, at the time, we did not
much understand: a little, but not much. Today we know how necessary it was.
When we began
to work also on Islam, we were told that there were also other world religions:
the whole of Asia! Think of Buddhism, Hinduism…. And so, instead of a
declaration as initially conceived, concerning only the People of God in the
Old Testament, a text was created on interreligious dialogue, anticipating what
only 30 years later would be demonstrated in all its intensity and importance.
I cannot enter now into this theme, but if one reads the text, one sees that it
is very dense and prepared truly by people who were familiar with the
realities, and it indicates briefly, in a few words, what is essential.
Likewise it indicates the foundation of dialogue, in difference, in diversity,
in faith, on the unicity of Christ, who is one, and it is not possible for a
believer to think that religions are all variations on a single theme. No,
there is one reality of the living God, who has spoken, and there is one God,
one incarnate God, thus one word of God, that is truly God’s word. But there is
religious experience, with a certain human light from creation, and therefore
it is necessary and possible to enter into dialogue, and thus to become open to
one another and to open everyone to the peace of God, the peace of all his sons
and daughters, the peace of his entire family.
Therefore,
these two documents, on religious freedom and Nostra Aetate, linked to Gaudium et Spes, make a very important trilogy
whose importance has been demonstrated only after decades, and we are still
working to understand better the interlinked realities of the unicity of God’s
revelation, the unicity of the one God incarnate in Christ, and the
multiplicity of religions, by which we seek peace and also hearts that are open
to the light of the Holy Spirit, who illumines and leads to Christ.
I would now
like to add yet a third point: there was the Council of the Fathers – the real
Council – but there was also the Council of the media. It was almost a Council
apart, and the world perceived the Council through the latter, through the
media. Thus, the Council that reached the people with immediate effect was that
of the media, not that of the Fathers. And while the Council of the Fathers was
conducted within the faith – it was a Council of faith seeking intellectus,
seeking to understand itself and seeking to understand the signs of God at that
time, seeking to respond to the challenge of God at that time and to find in
the word of God a word for today and tomorrow – while all the Council, as I
said, moved within the faith, as fides quaerens intellectum, the Council of the
journalists, naturally, was not conducted within the faith, but within the
categories of today's media, namely apart from faith, with a different
hermeneutic. It was a political hermeneutic: for the media, the Council was a
political struggle, a power struggle between different trends in the Church. It
was obvious that the media would take the side of those who seemed to them more
closely allied with their world. There were those who sought the
decentralization of the Church, power for the bishops and then, through the
expression "People of God", power for the people, the laity. There
was this threefold question: the power of the Pope, which was then transferred
to the power of the bishops and the power of all – popular sovereignty.
Naturally, for them, this was the part to be approved, to be promulgated, to be
favoured. So too with the liturgy: there was no interest in liturgy as an act
of faith, but as something where comprehensible things are done, a matter of
community activity, something profane. And we know that there was a tendency,
not without a certain historical basis, to say: sacrality is a pagan thing,
perhaps also a thing of the Old Testament. In the New Testament it matters only
that Christ died outside: that is, outside the gates, in the profane world.
Sacrality must therefore be abolished, and profanity now spreads to worship:
worship is no longer worship, but a community act, with communal participation:
participation understood as activity. These translations, trivializations of
the idea of the Council, were virulent in the process of putting the liturgical
reform into practice; they were born from a vision of the Council detached from
its proper key, that of faith. And the same applies to the question of
Scripture: Scripture is a book, it is historical, to be treated historically
and only historically, and so on.
We know that
this Council of the media was accessible to everyone. Therefore, this was the
dominant one, the more effective one, and it created so many disasters, so many
problems, so much suffering: seminaries closed, convents closed, banal liturgy
… and the real Council had difficulty establishing itself and taking shape; the
virtual Council was stronger than the real Council. But the real force of the
Council was present and, slowly but surely, established itself more and more
and became the true force which is also the true reform, the true renewal of
the Church. It seems to me that, 50 years after the Council, we see that this
virtual Council is broken, is lost, and there now appears the true Council with
all its spiritual force. And it is our task, especially in this Year of Faith, on the basis of this Year of
Faith, to work so that the true Council, with its power of the Holy Spirit, be
accomplished and the Church be truly renewed. Let us hope that that the Lord
will assist us. I myself, secluded in prayer, will always be with you and
together let us go forward with the Lord in the certainty that the Lord will
conquer. Thank you!
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