Two interesting, related articles on this:
- Côme Prévigny, "Tectonic shifts: For the Roman Curia, the end of the 'super-Council'" (Rorate Caeli, September 17, 2011)
- Fr. Z, "CNS makes the same “Copernican Revolution” error about the CDF’s “Doctrinal Preamble” for the SSPX" (WDTPRS, September 23, 2011)
If there is anything new in the last sixty years, it has been the widespread opinion promoted by liberal dissenters that Vatican II -- or, more precisely, "the spirit of Vatican II" -- represents some new sort of "litmus test" of politically correct thinking to which all right-thinking Catholics must conform their thinking. This has never been true. Vatican II was a pastoral council whose stated aim was to address the vision and task of the Church in the modern world. Good Catholics can disagree over how well this aim was realized, since, as the former Cardinal Ratzinger declared, the Council "defined no dogma at all."
5 comments:
Rome may not have changed her position on what is de fide, but it is telling that it took half a century before the pope or any prelates of the curia gave a single nod of recognition to the abiding value or even legitimacy of the Mass of Ages. The vast majority of priests and bishops still do not.
This sentence speaks volumes about Ratzinger's negativity toward Vatican II.
How would one know if Vatican II defined dogma? It is not after all the decision of later popes like Ratzinger to pass judgment on.
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