Jeff Mirus's critique of Henri de Lubac
Dr. Jeff Mirus, "
Henri de Lubac's fascinating notes on Vatican II" (
CatholicCulture.org, August 18, 2015):
Here I explore the notes made by the French theologian Henri de Lubac
as he prepared for and participated in the Second Vatican Council. I
will gradually add revealing excerpts and comments from successive
stages of de Lubac’s involvement. Each stage will be linked below. They
will be announced in City Gates as they are added.
Introduction [top]
I’ve been wondering how to handle the decision of Ignatius Press to
publish the notebooks kept by Henri de Lubac, SJ on his participation in
the Second Vatican Council. Volume I has been released, which covers de
Lubac’s observations between July 25, 1960 and September 2, 1963.
In printed form, these observations run to nearly 500 pages, and they
include everything from physical descriptions of people he met to brief
points of analysis concerning key issues facing the Council. To comb
the text searching for particular information would be difficult, and to
read the whole thing slowly enough to take my own notes would be
unlikely to repay the effort.
And yet de Lubac (1896 - 1991) is a pivotal figure in Catholic
theology in the mid-20th century, a man unwillingly locked in a battle
on two fronts. On the one side were the largely misguided systematic
Thomists who dominated the Roman Curia, expending great energy to secure
condemnations of every insight that did not fit conveniently into their
own excessively abstract system—almost a philosophy rather than a
theology, and increasingly divorced from the sources of theology in
Scripture and the Fathers. On the other roamed the Modernists, rapidly
rising to leadership in the Jesuit Order and elsewhere, who for many
good reasons distrusted the narrow establishment in Rome, but who
spiraled into an unbridled secularism which has seriously undermined the
Faith.
So some notice must be taken of this new and important resource for
understanding the questions, problems, personalities, and even hostile
forces surrounding the work of the Council. What I have decided to do,
therefore, is read through the notebooks at my leisure, mostly for
enjoyment, marking brief passages which shed light on issues of
continuing importance. Then, in a series of “interventions” of my own
(not to the body of bishops but to my readers in this space), I will
present and sometimes comment on what I have found to be of special
interest.
To make things easier for readers, who will have to digest this
material in fits and starts according to my own schedule, I will use
internal links which lead to the beginning of each new and dated
addition of highlights. In addition, italics will be used to indicate my
own comments. Paragraphs in regular type are de Lubac’s own words. But
before I begin to notice the most interesting aspects of the notebooks, I
will offer just a little bit of background.
Theological Background [top]
I have already traced in the introduction the broad outline of the
theological controversy which afflicted the Church for a generation or
two before the Second Vatican Council. This was an age of religious
formalism, very frequently affecting not only theological thought, but a
common attitude toward the life of faith, personal piety, and liturgy.
As an historian, I would suggest that three powerful influences
contributed to the problem.
A purely theological influence would be the tendency of the followers
of St. Thomas Aquinas to devote themselves to extending his theological
system through logical reasoning on previously established points,
rather than taking the kind of fresh look at the Christian sources which
always characterized the method of St. Thomas himself. This insistence
that everything be derived from and fit into a particular system was
rendered even more problematic by the fact that much of the system
building was based on the initial commentaries by major early figures
like Cardinal Cajetan, who—on a number of key points—simply
misunderstood Thomas’ thought.
A more immediate historical influence might be attributed to the two
world wars of the twentieth century. Throughout the West, people came to
have a profound respect for military precision and obedience, and all
the habits of thought associated with soldiering. Those who can remember
the 1950s will remember a society still interested in precise dress,
short military hair cuts, and punctilious manners when it came to rank,
not to mention the need to concern oneself primarily with one’s own
duties, while accepting unquestionably the larger decisions of
authority. This lent the entire culture a quality of systemic formalism.
A far broader influence was the long, slow secularization of Western
civilization, so that by the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, much
had been drained away from the heart of the Christian life.
Increasingly, this life consisted of a series of virtuous habits shored
up not so much by interior conviction as by social expectations devoid
of active spiritual judgment. Every period has its own problems;
remember that I am talking here about pervasive cultural trends. A
common approach to the spiritual life in those days has been famously
captured in a stock question which really was often asked: “Just tell me
what I need to do to get to purgatory.” The first half of the twentieth
century has been justly described as a period in which Catholicism
tended to be lived “prescriptively”, with little immersion in the
mystery of God’s life within.
Interestingly, some of the world’s best theologians from the 1930s through the 1950s began to see quite clearly that this prescriptivism
was partly a response to the false view of the natural and the
supernatural which characterized the reigning Thomist school. This
school, which had enormous power in Rome, had concluded that there was a
state of pure nature in which man was created and placed. Adherence to
this concept was considered essential (which it was not) to protecting
the idea that salvific grace is always gratuitous—that man cannot claim
it as something he is owed.
It was actually de Lubac himself who struck the death blow to this
naturalist error, and he did it partly through bypassing the schoolmen
and going back to St. Thomas himself. De Lubac insisted (rightly) that
the natural order must be understood not as a separate order but as a
part of the overall order created by God, that is, as a component or
aspect of a single supernatural order. Thus human nature is not in its
essence cut off from grace; it is not isolated in a fundamentally
different order of being. Rather, human nature has been created and
formed such that each person who possesses it tends toward God, depends
upon and is designed for receptivity to grace, and finds fulfillment in
Divine union.
De Lubac advanced his thesis in one of the more famous theological treatises in any age of the Church, simply entitled Supernatural, or as it is always referred to in the original French, Surnaturel.
One of the results of the reigning error, which ties in closely with
the rest of the background I have presented, was that this strict
division between the natural and supernatural orders had led to a vast
theoretical framework defining a whole separate set of ends natural to
man, while categorically refusing any possible intrinsic orientation to
God. (I can actually recall this excessive insistence upon separate
natural ends in my youth in the 1950s and early 1960s.)
Far from attempting to weaken the concept of the supernatural, De
Lubac saw this unwarranted separation as a clear theological cause of
secularization—the same secularization which was already reducing
religion to a kind of formalism, devoid of interior life, rather like a
suit of clothes draped over our real natures. Once this happens, of
course, Christianity is easily swept away altogether.
Ever since the 1960s we have been hearing how the Council caused this
or that tragedy of secularization, but this is a gross distortion of
causation. In fact, good bishops were already mentioning from the start
of the Council that their priests had fallen out of the habit of prayer,
and that Catholicism was increasingly being lived mechanically, with
little or no inner substance. Already the better bishops were hoping
that the Council would find a solution—a renewal. We now know that many
bishops were themselves spiritually ennervated, which makes very
striking the difference between what they decided at the Council and how
they allowed those decisions to be derailed after they returned home.
(This may be taken as a practical proof of the work of the Holy Spirit
in an ecumenical council.) Still, a good and by no means isolated
example of the better type of bishop can be identified in the auxiliary
bishop from Krakow, Karol Wojtyla (who became Pope John Paul II).
In any case, the critical shift in theological perception argued by
de Lubac (and others) was ultimately embraced by the Council. But for
that to happen, the Council fathers had to reject the many preparatory
documents created by the Curia, dominated as it was by commentary-based
Thomists of the strict secondary observance—narrow system men. Thus the
Council fathers found it necessary to redraft just about everything, and
those theologians who had long advocated what is called resourcement—the
return to the sources in Scripture and the Fathers for fresh insights
and a more secure foundation—finally came into their own.
De Lubac was one of these. Throughout the 1950s, he had been subject
(and obedient) to a censor and other limitations on his teaching and
writing because of the distrust of the dominant Roman Thomists. It was
not until Pius XII died and John XXIII became Pope that de Lubac was
called back into the light. He was invited to serve on the committee
doing preparatory work for the Council, right along with men who had
condemned him, who had circulated vicious rumors about his lack of
faith, and who had brought about his not atypical but decidedly unjust
censure.
De Lubac himself rarely permitted himself to express bitterness. But
the bitter fruit of these years was ripening in many others who would
end by vomiting up the faith along with the sour system of petty curial
control. To take just one example, consider the rebellion against Humanae Vitae
in 1968 at Catholic University in Washington, DC. This became the
dominant trend of the immediate post-conciliar period as chanceries,
universities and religious orders fell into the hands of
previously-secret Modernists, basking in the secularist glow of
post-1960 culture, who had rooted themselves not in the faith but in
worldly ideals. It meant that de Lubac would soon have as many powerful
enemies on the “left” as he had once had on the “right”.
By the time Henri de Lubac, SJ was made a cardinal by Pope John Paul
II in 1983, the great theologian had charted a truly ecclesial course
between the Scylla and Charybdis of the modern world. But we need go no
further here, since almost everything of
continuing interest reported in his Council notebooks can now be
understood. These notes begin with his unexpected summons to Rome.
Preparing for the Council: Notebook Highlights through the end of 1961 (presented 5/1/2015) [top]
JAM: These notes cover much of the period in which de Lubac
served on the Preparatory Theological Commission to help organize the
conciliar program and establish preliminary drafts of proposed texts.
June 25, 1960: I received an official notice,
signed: Tardini, that names me as a consultor for the Preparatory
Theological Commission at the council. I had heard about this some time
earlier, through an issue of La Croix, read in the parlor of a convent, but I wondered if this astonishing piece of news could be correct.
August 6: I received a letter from Cardinal
Ottaviani, explaining the role of the consultors on this commission and
enjoining me to secrecy from now on.
November 15: I swore an oath on the Gospel that Cardinal Ottaviani held on his knees.
November 17: Had lunch at the embassy…. Mr. de
Sayve, adviser to the [French] ambassador, exhorted me to prepare a
“revolutionary” council; I asked him what he meant by that.
[On a visit later in the afternoon to the Reformed Cistercians] I
gave a talk in front of about thirty young monks. Interventions from Dom
Jean Leclercq and from Dom Olivier Rousseau…. The atmosphere was
fervent, very pleasant. As we were beginning to speak about the study of
the Church Fathers, an American, no doubt a student at the Angelicum,
stood up and said to me: “But the Church tells us to study the doctrine
of St. Thomas!” Clarifications from Dom Leclercq, Dom Rousseau, and
myself.
JAM: I cannot fail to note the name Jean Leclercq (above), a
brilliant French Benedictine (1911-1993). He wrote a seminal book on
monasticism, published in 1961, that I was required to read in a
medieval history course at Rutgers in, roughly, 1968. It was a
requirement for which I am still profoundly grateful, eclipsed only by
the assignment of the Confessions of Augustine in the same
course, which I declined to read on the class schedule, much preferring
to take it very slowly as spiritual reading. The Leclercq title is The Love of Learning and the Desire for God.
I was 20, a damp-eared Catholic apologist who was, sadly, only
beginning to discover the interior life; but Leclercq’s book remains the
classic in this field.
November 19: Lunched at the Gregorian…. Fr. Henri Vignon showed me, with a good deal of commentary, the Gregorian’s Vota
for the council [these were the “wishes” of the conciliar Fathers and
of the faculties of canon law and theology, collected shortly before the
preparatory phase]. It was insane. These good Fathers would each like
to canonize in solemn fashion their own little obsessions. Sectarianism
and puerility. Fr. Édouard Dhanis composed in particular a votum
on revelation and the formulae of dogma. No sense of the simple
grandeur of the Church’s faith that is to be proclaimed. A strange
diminishment (to say nothing more) of faith in Christ. Another votum
would like to see condemned those who hope that God might have an
ordinary means of saving infants who have died without baptism, etc.
These are the kinds of things that are going round and round in many [de
Lubac later changed “many” to “some”] Roman heads since the
announcement of the council!
February 11, 1961: I went to Monte Verde Vecchio to
see Fr. L. de Peretti, superior general of the Canons Regular of the I.
C..... Fr. de Peretti praised John XXIII for his simplicity. He was
troubled by the decline in the spirit of faith and of prayer among the
French clergy, secular and regular, and wondered if the future council
would be able to provide a remedy for this profound ill. We spoke for a
long time on that subject.
February 12: At the end of the afternoon, a visit
from Fr. Dhanis…. If he is to be believed, he had almost nothing to do
with the Fourvière business [an earlier unjust condemnation of another
theologian], he had neither read the texts of Fr. General [of the
Jesuits] nor censured my books, etc. Perhaps only “once or twice” he had
been called on to “give an opinion”, etc. This is his way of keeping
the secrets to which he doubtless feels himself bound. Following his
visit, I wrote him a letter reminding him of some indisputable facts,
telling him his present duty, explaining to him also my position in
matters of faith, and drawing his attention to the spiritual ruins that
result from certain attitudes. On reflection, I did not send my letter.
February 16: In the morning, in subcommittee in the
premises of the Holy Office. In the middle of the meeting, a coffee
break. Then I withstood a hard combat (against Msgr. Piolanti and Fr.
Dhanis, who want the condemnation of Fr. Teilhard de Chardin at all
costs).
JAM: This will be disturbing for some. In a rare case in which I
disagree with de Lubac, he always insisted on the fundamental orthodoxy
of Teilhard. To his credit, he did recognize that almost everyone who
read Teilhard immediately went off in bizarre directions incompatible
with the Faith. But he believed this was entirely unintended by
Teilhard, who was guilty of no more than using a kind of vague and
poetic language to explore significant mysteries.
It is possible that he is correct, but my question would be
whether Teilhard was worth defending. I favor the judgment of the great
Thomist Etienne Gilson, a lay friend and frequent correspondent of Fr.
de Lubac who shared all of his fundamental concerns. In a letter of May
13, 1962, Gilson thanked de Lubac for sending him a copy of his book on
the religious thought of Teilhard, but he confessed that he still could
not find much to like in him. The complete text of his comments, along
with notes by de Lubac, is preserved in the Ignatius edition of Letters of Étienne Gilson to Henri de Lubac (p. 59ff). It is well worth reading. Here I present only an excerpt. Gilson wrote:
I have asked myself a hundred times what the meaning of
these [Teilhard’s typically bizarre and novel] terms could possibly be.
Their obvious sense seems to me to be that Christ has always been and
still is the cutting edge of a cosmic evolution, of a religiosity which
must sooner or later either pass away or replace itself with something
entirely different…. [I]f “métachristianisme” means anything at all, it
means that Christianity is something that must disappear…. I don’t doubt
for a second that he died in the love of Christ; here, it’s a matter of
discussing thought and knowledge, not whether he loved the Christ of
the Gospel—there can be no further question of that—but what I want to
know is what he thought of Christ. I never did understand Teilhard; even
after having read him I still don’t, and maybe you don’t understand him
too well yourself.
September 19 and 20: Everything essential, in this
Theological Commission, is done by a small group of Roman theologians.
Sometimes they argue among themselves, but on the basis of a common
mentality, common reflexes. They know their field, but little more. One
senses among them a certain indifference toward Scripture, the Fathers,
the Eastern Church; a lack of interest and of concern regarding current
doctrines and spiritual trends contrary to the Christian faith. They
are, it seems, too sure of their superiority; their habit of judging
does not encourage them to work. This is the milieu of the Holy Office….
The result is a small academic system, ultra-intellectualist without
any great intellectuality; the Gospel is forced to fit this system,
which is the constant a priori. Father Dhani, who plays an important
role, seems to want to minimize in every respect the Person of Jesus
Christ: the latter is no longer anything more than one of the “legatores
divini”; he is designated thus, in anonymous fashion, in the chapter on
revelation…. Several times, formulae are put forward that are intended
to make equivalent the progress of revelation up to Christ and dogmatic
progress within the Christian revelation.
It is this little system, pushed to the point of madness, that for
the past twelve years some have wanted to impose on us as the only
orthodox one. Because I will not bow to this, everything I write is
distorted. By his personal Votum (wrongly said to be the wish
of the Gregorian, despite the protestations of more than one professor),
by the composition of several passages of the preconciliar schemas that
have been entrusted to him, by his many oral interventions in the
commission, F. D. is seeking to make this system prevail and to have
those in the Church condemned who resist this in some way….
Their “dogmatics” itself seems to lose interest in the great central
dogmas; it refuses to recognize the Christian Mystery in its profound
unity; it is transformed more and more into an ideology of pulverized
assertions….
For example: The text of a profession of faith was being studied:
Paragraph on the Redemption: “Christ satisfied the justice of God.” It
is proposed (by Philippe de la Trinité) that the adverb “misericordite”
[mercifully] be added. Refusal. Why? – Because that is evident, it goes
without saying, no one denies it, etc. – so, neither by this adverb nor
in any other manner will this text on the redemption make allusion to
the divine mercy. It will speak only of justice. Anyone who then wants
to speak of mercy will be accused of wishing to contradict or at the
very least weaken the solemn text.
JAM: This extraordinarily revealing commentary has attached to
it, in a footnote, a further elucidation by de Lubac which is also
valuable. But I will content myself with this blistering insight: “Our theologians love diminished truths, ones that they think are surer, easer to delimit conceptually.”
Here we have a point which tells against thinkers on both sides: the
“hyper-orthodox” who effectively deny the mystery of Christ through
excessive definition; and the Modernists, who effectively deny anything
that cannot be understood in the ordinary concepts of the dominant human
culture. These are two sides of the same coin. Both seek to assert
their total intellectual control over a reality which transcends human
comprehension.
September 28: Several, as always, have a tendency to
think that the role of a council is to make doctrine more “specific”,
that is to say, in practical terms, to make it narrower, to
conceptualize it to an extreme degree, on precisely those points where
many put forward new difficulties. This is what they call timely
clarifications and condemnations, as to respond to the errors of our
time.
JAM: This remark was made following a discussion about settling
the question of children who die without baptism. When some urged
caution and prudence, others—referred to above as “several”—insisted on a
definitive statement. Fortunately the majority of bishops on the
relevant committee opposed this, but Fr. Dhanis and others, generally
supported by Cardinal Ottaviani, were apparently confident that it could
be settled within their system.
As most people know by now, the Church has not yet found herself
capable of making a definitive statement, even after 50 more years of
intense study on this very point. There remains even now a grave danger
among (dissident) Traditionalists of reducing everything to definition,
mirroring the Modernist reduction of everything to contemporary cultural
categories, as if the Divine mind can be fully expressed in human
terms.
Final Preparations: Highlights from 1962 until the Council opened on October 11th (presented 5/8/2015) [top]
JAM: De Lubac continued his work in March of 1962 in the last
plenary session of the Preparatory Theological Commission. When this
preparatory work was finished, he was not certain of actually
participating in the Council itself. His superiors found a bishop who
was willing to take him on as an episcopal theological advisor (peritus), but this proved unnecessary as Pope John XXIII ultimately named him as a papal peritus.
Therefore he returned to Rome just before the Council opened. (Note
that, as the preconciliar discussions were in Latin, de Lubac typically
quotes them in Latin in his notes, but I have changed the quotes to
English.)
March 4, 1962: [Noting rumors circulating about the
reception of the Theological Commission’s work by the preconciliar
Central Commission:] Cardinal Ottaviani and Fr. Tromp are said to have
endured some harsh attacks there…. The plans of the Theological
Commission seemed to be in peril. But…in fact, Ottaviani has supposedly
been allowed personally, together with some members of the commission,
to revise the criticized texts; these texts would then be submitted to a
commission of five cardinals named by the pope. It appears that these 5
cardinals, who are hardly theologians (among them, Micara, known to be
useless), will prove to be very accommodating.
March 5: We…then passed on to the chapter of De Ecclesia:
“On the relations between the Church and the State on religious
tolerance”…. Gagnebet, quoting in particular Taparelli d’Azeglio, held
that the State cannot officially profess Christian worship unless it
represents the moral unanimity of the citizens (“cives fere omnes”). To
the contrary, Fr. Dhanis, supported by Cardinal Ottaviani and Msgr.
Piolanti, thought that the State did not need this near-unanimous
consent; it should only need to have the majority; even then, there was
here no question of principle, for governments can make use of their
authority without consulting those who have elected them. Fr. Dhanis
returned to the attack several times; Cardinal Ottaviani continued to
support him against the objections of the other party, saying: “The
council must not give an opening to the secularists.”...
In the session of the commission this afternoon, concerning
tolerance, Msgr. Philips had intervened against Fr. Dhanis. Citing the
example of Belgium (both of them are Belgian and Flemish), he had said
to him: According to your principles, if a Belgian government obtains a
majority of 51%, and if its members are personally Catholics, the
government can and must impose Catholicism as the state religion!
Etc.—After the meeting, I found myself on the bus with Msgr. Philips; he
said to me: “I have been discouraged from intervening; doing so makes
me seem like a heretic, and the very people who pushed me to it were
very careful to say nothing.” Then he gave me the names of two members
who had strongly complained to him about the “harshness” of the draft
and who, in fact, did not open their mouths in the meeting.
March 6: Toward the end of that morning meeting,
Archbishop Hermaniuk, metropolitan of the Ruthenian Catholic Church in
North America, asked to speak. He deplored the one-sided character of
the chapter on the magisterium, its exclusive concern to exalt the pope
alone, its tendency to diminish the council, etc. He proposed a new
draft, more balanced, taking better account of tradition, better suited
to show the Eastern Churches the true Catholic doctrine. He also asked,
as several others had done, that it be made clear that when the pope
defines a doctrine of the faith, although he should do it “ex sese,
etc.” [an ex cathedra statement is irreformable in itself (ex sese)
rather than from the consent of the Church], he nevertheless is
speaking as the head of the episcopate…. Father Tromp answered him:
“What Your Reverence says is certainly very true, but very
dangerous.”...
One senses that, for the group of theologians connected with the Holy
Office, “unum est necessarium” [one thing is needful]: the power of
Rome, which is their power. They sincerely believe that safety lies in
this alone. Hence, through all sorts of formulas, with some quibbling
from the canon lawyers, their tendency to diminish the doctrinal role of
the bishops, in order to magnify that of the Roman congregations and
their own. At the end of the meeting, Bishop Griffiths, auxiliary bishop
of New York, asked to be allowed to speak; the president made everyone,
already standing for the prayer, sit down again; then the bishop made
this simple statement: “Might I be permitted to remark humbly that on
the day of Pentecost, there were bishops in the Upper Room, but there
were no Roman theologians.”
We had a discussion, in the context of the Roman congregations, on
the Holy Office. Several people criticized the planned text, which said
that the pope “committere solet” [is accustomed to entrust] certain
matters to the congregations. One cannot say that about the Holy Office,
they explained; the Holy Office always judges in the name of the pope,
it is in the same category as the pope, and not simply charged by him
with certain tasks. This torrent of subtleties achieved its end: the
text was modified as a consequence.—From this it is clear that the Holy
Office, with its theologians, wants to be the supreme power in the
Church.
March 9: Once again, here and there, as in other
chapters, some texts from Scripture were deleted, based on the critical
objections raised by our two principal experts on exegesis: Msgr.
Cerfaux (Louvain) and Msgr. Garofalo. With their “principium proximum”,
which resides solely in the pontifical documents of about the last
hundred years, most of the members of the commission have no need to
look at Scripture or tradition or to inform themselves about any science
at all. It must be confessed that our exegetes, in commission or
outside, withdraw into a philological and critical role; they are pure
specialists; they do not know how to bring out the doctrines that stem
from the Bible or to show its spirit. As for our theologians, if one
brings to their attention a consideration of a more or less scientific
order, they respond as Tromp did: “Debemus procedure theologice” [we
must proceed theologically]—an attitude that does not prevent them, for
example, on the subject of human origins, from wanting to decide the
degree of certitude or probability of scientific transformism
[evolutionary theory as opposed to creationism].
March 10: Next came the schema De jure et officio Ecclesiae praedicandi evangelium omnibus gentibus [On the right and the duty of the Church to preach the Gospel to all peoples].
The relator was Father Gagnebet. He said to me before the meeting that
he had taken careful account of my observations. In fact, he started by
changing the title, which became: De necessitate annuntiandi Evangelium [On the necessity of proclaiming the Gospel], etc., and from one end to the other, I observed that the juridical point of view of the original schema was softened....
Then we ate. During the meal, I continued to chat (as we had already
done many times) with Father Häring, a good, evangelical man, who sees,
perhaps to excess, the faults of the Roman milieu. He is upset over the
spirit of our draft documents. We need, he said to me, to pray a great
deal. He noted that the Roman theologians are motivated, without their
even knowing it, by a spirit of power and domination….
After the meal, in the middle of the large vestibule, Archbishop
Parente amiably rushed up to me. (I had noticed earlier that Cardinal
Ottaviani had pointed me out to him.) Seeing that, the cardinal drew
near to us: On all sides, people were watching our trio. I said to
Archbishop Parente: “Your Excellency, I have not yet had the honor of
meeting you; but I already knew you; you have written some nasty things
about me. Rest assured, I do not hold it against you.” He was rather
taken aback; then he poured out a flood of kind remarks about my books,
my erudition, my “beautiful Méditation sur l’Église”….
The whole schema of the constitution De re sociali (On the social question)
remained to be studied. The subcommission that was charged with the
task, too few in number, was divided into two irreconcilable parties:
the one, “liberalizing”, led by Fr. Grunlach; the other, “socializing”,
led by Msgr. Pavan (the principal author, so Fr. Gagnebet tells me, of
the encyclical Mater et magistra). There is hope that by enlarging the subcommission, a compromise might be reached later.
JAM: This remark is telling. It is another demonstration that it
has been, over the past century and more, very difficult for Catholics
to think clearly about the social order without being excessively
influenced by the secular categories of liberalism and socialism, both
of which make strong (rhetorical) appeals on behalf of the poor. The
Church has struggled to articulate a “Catholic way” ever since Pope Leo
XIII, and yet some questionable influences are nearly always reflected
in episcopal and even Vatican statements on social issues. Even the
great social encyclicals find it difficult to avoid confusion, owing to
the difficulty of applying genuine Catholic and natural law insights
when both authors and readers are so conditioned by conflicting habitual
social attitudes. Combining key principles, real conditions, and
prudence, Catholic social teaching remains extraordinarily difficult to
craft, once it goes beyond the broad principles on which it is based.
March 12: There is a dangerous opposition within a
certain current “theology” between safe truths and dangerous truths. It
is more than the necessary pedagogy for the intellectual life as for the
spiritual life. This comes down in the end to an opposition between
truth and safety.
Theology, such as I have seen it operate in Rome, is more and more a
specialty that grows complicated and rigid. It is not renewed, it does
not change the old conception of itself as “queen of the sciences”: it
turns its back on science—without having lost anything of its
pretensions to rule over the sciences, that is, to dismiss them, in an
arrogant and systematic ignorance.
In this kind of theology, the questions that touch on the government
of the Church are overdeveloped…. Certain of them, considered to be
clever theologians, seem not to have reflected for a single instant of
their existence on the mystery of faith; such a reflection, moreover,
would be incompatible with their work as they understand it.
As for those who devote themselves to other parts of theology, their
concerns all tend toward the requirements…of academic and primary
instruction. They are sometimes reproached for their “rationalism”, a
very great and very noble word, to designate their verbalism. But the
fact that their wild imaginings are as empty of spiritual sense as of
any reference to historical reality is only too true.
Whenever anyone asks them to take some note of some particular point
of the social sciences, they arrogantly respond that they are proceeding
doctrinally, theologically, that they are pronouncing truths in
absolute terms; that they have no need to think historically or
sociologically or psychologically; they do not consent to descend into
the domain of the relative.—That is all well and good. That would have
some value if they occupied themselves with deepening the mystery of the
faith. But, in fact, incessantly busy with expanding the field of the
“truths” to be imposed on the faithful, they deal with problems that
demand some serious scientific knowledge and more humane methods.
Without being aware of it, they put in the place of Dogma a theology
that usurps its place and that can satisfy neither the scholar nor the
believer.
”Natural theology” often interests them more than revealed mystery.
It seems to them to be an area more propitious for their hairsplitting
method and, on the other hand, to provide a more “secure” base for the
government of souls. They are thereby closely akin to their brothers,
the canon lawyers. It is very characteristic of their way of proceeding
that, in the chapter De Deo (On God) of the schema De deposito fidei (On the deposit of faith),
they did not make the least allusion to God’s revelation in Christ; and
that, having finally decided to make a slight concession to the
objections that had been addressed to them, they only mentioned, as the
end of this supernatural revelation, the “service” of God. Thus they
think to facilitate submission to the leaders of the Church—whom they
think to have well in hand through their doctrinal consultation.
On the other hand, they are, each according to his character, good
people, and they can be virtuous. Their number, even in Rome, is not
great; but they dominate. Without even wishing to (at least not always),
they instill fear. An entire system of habits, of rites, of language,
makes a frank discussion very difficult; they are “at home”, they
understand each other, even when they argue. They are unaware of what
they lack. Their self-sufficiency is extreme, and their good faith is
not in question. There is in this a situation that appears to me
disturbing. What will this council be?
JAM: These extended reflections on Roman theology were written
after the last preparatory work session. De Lubac had just returned to
France, and did not yet know if he would have any further role in the
Council. One senses his perplexity. But in the actual event, he returned
to Rome six months later, in October, to take part in the Council as a peritus.
October 7: According to the Assistant [to the Jesuit
Father General], it was the pope himself who wanted to put me on the
list of experts (“periti”). “The Holy Father does not want to depend on
the Roman Congregations during the council; so he chose some theologians
capable of understanding and supporting his thought.”…
JAM: De Lubac was provided with a rule book for how the Council would be conducted. Under “Duties of the conciliar periti (experts)” it says “a. The periti
of the council are present during the General Congregations and do not
express their opinion unless asked. b. According to the designation of
the presidents of the commissions and the subject under discussion, the
conciliar periti zealously serve any commission by working with its members on the schemas to be examined and on the reports to be drafted.”
October 8: Cardinal Tisserant told him [Fr. Paul
Poupard, employed at the Vatican Secretariat of State], even somewhat
violently, of his opposition to the plan to have Pius IX canonized by
the council; but it appears that the pope and Cardinal Ottaviani are
united in this; the pope seems very insistent on it and has made
frequent allusions to it; even his trip to Loreto, it is said, was an
allusion to it.
Father Poupard confirmed to me that John XXIII wants reforms in the
Roman congregations. Too much hope on this subject would be unrealistic;
but an attainable reform would consist of implementing at least what
already exists in theory; only it would be necessary for the bishops to
insist on it. So, for example: Why are foreign cardinals not even
advised of the meetings of the congregations to which they nominally
belong? Why are there never any cardinals who are not Italians at the
Holy Office? etc., etc. If the cardinals of the entire world, who belong
to the household of the pope, were effectively associated with the
course of affairs in Rome, that would already be a very important
reform.
JAM: In comparing these remarks with the obvious dissatisfactions
of John XXIII, the subsequent isolation of Paul VI, the modest reforms
begun by John Paul II, the feeling by Benedict XVI that a significant
curial reform was beyond his strength, and the election of Pope Francis
at least partly because it was thought he would reform the Curia, one
begins to realize how difficult it has been to fully overcome the
entrenched powers of this Vatican administrative apparatus, which is
supposed to serve the servant of the servants of God.
... Jungmann [Joseph Andreas Jungmann, SJ, an Austrian, was one of the
major architects of the twentieth-century liturgical movement, and a
member of the Preparatory Commission for the Liturgy] told me also that,
in his circle, many are critical of the doctrinal schemas: they
complain that they only set forth a narrow, by-the-book theology,
without taking account of anything that has been published in the past
century by the best theologians. He would like the council to concern
itself first with liturgical questions and other practical matters,
postponing the discussion of the doctrinal texts, which would allow time
for other ones to be drafted and proposed.
There is, it seems, at the Secretariat of State, an entire service
officially dedicated to the writing of “briefs to the Christian
princes”; the staff is chosen from among the good Latinists. But there
are fewer and fewer princes in the world, the princes are less and less
Christian, and when every now and then the pope writes to Princess Grace
of Monaco or someone else, he composes his letter in French, the
diplomatic language of the Holy See; the Secretaries of State come and
go, without anyone thinking to or daring to eliminate these positions.
It is true that the personnel have some small, alternative tasks....
At the time of the afternoon siesta, saw Fr. Robert Rouquette, of Études,
who has come as a journalist for the session of the council…. He tells
me that the question of Orthodox observers has not yet been settled;
Rome has not yet been notified of the definite refusal, published in the
press. Msgr. Willebrands, secretary of the Secretariat for Unity (Card.
Bea) has gone to Moscow; it is not known what response he will bring
back. The patriarch of Constantinople, Athenagoras, personally very
favorable, does not want to break the union of the patriarchates he has
accomplished, which is why he is yielding to the refusal; but at least
he will send a personal representative….
According to Fr. Rouquette, the Dutch bishops might not have any
influence, because they are too violent. It is also commonly said that
in order to neutralize the French, one only needs to get them a little
excited; then they speak too sharply and are ruined. Fr. Rouquette
regrets that the French episcopate has taken so little interest in the
preparation for the council…. He also fears that Archbishop Felici,
secretary general, does not understand the necessity of keeping the
journalists, who have come in great numbers, many of them not Catholic,
well informed….
At 5 P.M., the profession of faith and the taking of the oath by the periti….
October 9: There are complaints from different sides
about a point of order with regard to the council: “The president of
the commission will choose a person from among the experts in theology
or canon law at the council who will perform the function of secretary”
(art. 6, no. 5). Since the president of each commission is in fact a
cardinal of the Roman Curia, that reinforces the domination of the
Curia. Cardinal Ottaviani, president of the Commission De doctrina fedei et morum [On the teaching of faith and morals],
has already chosen Fr. Sébastien Tromp. So, through this, the most
important commission, the Holy Office, would be able to dominate.
October 10: Fr. [Henri] Daniélou was invited
privately by some French bishops. It appears that the draft of a sort of
manifesto has been submitted to them, to be proclaimed by the council
at its opening. According to them, this text was written by Fr. Chenu,
Cardinal Liénart approved of it, and it has already been proposed to the
Holy Father. Fr. Daniélou appeared very reticent; according to what he
told me about it, I would be, too. I fear something demagogic, of a
naturalistic spirit in its tone—as if the Church, seeing that she can no
longer interest people with the message of Christ, the Christian
mystery, were looking for an alternative activity in order to survive.
Everything must follow from the Faith; it is the Faith that must be
explicit and foremost, especially in a council.
JAM: This proposed opening statement was substantially modified
before the Council formally opened on October 11, 1962. The schemas were
prepared and distributed. The opening ceremony was impressive. But I
will record two notes from the very next day which suggest the broad
range of issues for which it was still possible to feel unprepared.
October 12: Still impossible to find time to write a few remarks on the schemas of the first printed volume. I only have rough notes....
Fr. Rondet went this afternoon with Archbishop Dalmais to pay a visit
to the Melchite patriarch Maximos. The patriarch did not attend the
opening ceremony, because they would not accord him precedence over the
cardinals; not out of a superficial concern over precedence, it was
explained to us, but because the Orthodox have their eyes on the Eastern
Churches united to Rome: if they yield their rights, hopes for union
will be lost. Moreover, the patriarch has announced that if the Orthodox
unite with Rome, he will step down and give place to the leader of the
largest community.
Early Weeks of the Council [top]
[JAM: From the opening of the Council on October 11th through the
end of October, de Lubac’s notebooks are full of observations on two
things: First, the maneuvers attempted by various parties to ensure that
discussions and voting would favor their own agendas; second, the
discussions of the first schema, the text of what would become the
Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy. As the bishops made their
“interventions” on this text, de Lubac summarized each man’s argument.
Note that the opinions were mixed, and were essentially the same as they
are now: on the use of Latin, on celebrating Mass facing the people, on
communion under both species, on the length of the fast before Mass, on
the nature and frequency of the homily, on the level at which decisions
should be made (Holy See, episcopal conference, local bishop), and so
on. These discussions are still so familiar that it would serve little
purpose to quote much on this topic.]
October 13, 1962: It was immediately announced that
they were going to proceed to the vote on the commissions [the groups
responsible for working directly on the text of the documents]. Each
bishop was asked to put 16 names on each of the 10 sheets of paper he
had received, for the ten commissions. The bishops had already started
to fill out their sheets. But Cardinal Liénart, who was at the table
with the Board of Presidency, got up; in a very clear, firm voice he
said that he at least, and some others, were uneasy, since they had not
had time to become better informed. He then asked for a delay. Much
applause. He immediately made a positive proposal: that each episcopal
commission (conference) draw up a list to propose to the others, etc. He
pointed out three advantages of this procedure: 1. The bishops would
have time to become better informed; 2. They would give each other proof
of their mutual confidence; 3. The vote would be more rapid, and time
would be saved. More applause, very hearty….
After one or two minutes,
Archbishop Felici, general secretary, took the floor to declare that the
Board of Presidency (which had just deliberated quickly on the spot)
supported the proposal and asked that the Fathers come together for the
vote on Tuesday morning, the 16th, at 9 a.m. There was more applause,
and everyone left.
Canon Martimort (Institut Catholique of Toulouse), who was beside me
in the gallery, whispered to me that he had himself suggested that
procedure to Cardinal Liénart. He was pleased. Another said: “That was
imperative; otherwise the bishops would have had to vote haphazardly.”
On that, a prelate (a relator from the Congregation of Rites), smiling,
said: “That was precisely what they wanted.” (They = certain Romans, the
Holy Office). This dramatic little episode is spoken of as a victory of
the bishops over the Holy Office. Other victories will no doubt be more
difficult.
…
Received a visit from a young Spanish priest, a professor of Church
history at the Gregorian. With an ardor that was a bit carried away, he
expressed his wish that the council would put an end to the integrism
that currently reigns in the Curia; otherwise, he told me, we will be
lost for a long time. He thought it very important that it be decided
that no one will be able to be condemned without a hearing; that is
wise; but the Holy Office has got around that difficulty in advance, by
taking or forcing others to take all sorts of measures that are not
official condemnations, that do not stir up great collective emotions,
and are all the more effective by the fact that their victims are
Catholics of the better sort, who spontaneously submit. – The arrogant
rut in which a clan of Roman theologians is mired is equaled only by the
suffocating system that it tries to make prevail—knowing full well
today that it is acting against the desire of the Holy Father.
[JAM: Note that the term “integrism”, while first used under Pope
Pius X by Modernists to describe the approach of those who opposed
them, gradually came to mean a narrow system of thought which claims to
describe the integrality of the world from a few axioms. This was its
use at the time of the Council—in other words, the narrow systematizing
tendencies, without reference to Scripture and the Fathers, which de
Lubac so strongly opposed in the Holy Office at that time. De Lubac
suggests its defining qualities in the following passage.]
October 14: One gets used to saying: “the terrible
Cardinal Ottaviani”, “the rigidness of his doctrine”, to call him the
leader of the integrists, etc. That is an extreme oversimplification;
Cardinal Ottaviani appears to me to be a strong personality, one that
cannot be reduced to the traits of integrism. On the other hand, these
expressions presuppose that one accepts a division that is harmful and
not well-founded. There seems to be a belief that integrism is
characterized by a greater firmness in the doctrine of the faith, by a
refusal of any impoverishing human concessions, etc. This is false. One
ought really to say: “the poverty of this doctrine”, its ignorance of
our great tradition. Building and multiplying barriers around a void:
that is how one could almost define the action of certain theologians of
the Holy Office and those like them. They hold, they vigorously defend,
only:
b) diminished truths. For example, they prefer the “God of nature” to
the Christian God; an abstract idea of revelation to the revelation of
Christ; they teach that God reveals himself to us “in order that we
might serve him”, not in order that we might become his children; sin,
original or actual, is nothing other than an infraction of the law, not
the refusal to our divine vocation, etc.
b) human theories, most often ones that are rather recent, puerile,
or outdated, to which they are just as much if not more attached than to
dogma, on which they dig in their heels, and which make them forget the
essential part of the Christian mystery.
October 15: It has been confirmed that the Curia had
its list for the commissions all ready. Cardinal Liénart’s intervention
ruined their plan.
October 16: Next we talked about the dogmatic
schemas, their preparation, then about the role, recognized de facto, of
the “ecclesiastical conferences” in the preparation of the first vote:
Fr. Raes sees in this an encouraging sign of a certain
“decentralization”, recognizing some autonomy in certain groups of the
Western Church: the only means, he believes, capable of preparing for
reunion with the Eastern Churches.
October 17: An article by Henri Fesquet in Le Monde sets me in opposition to Father Gagnebet, the principal author of the enormous schema De Ecclesia.
That can only hinder me in my relations with Fr. Gagnebet, which I want
to be good; he has more than once in the last two years asked for my
collaboration, and he has shown himself more moderate than some others.
[JAM: We are accustomed to lamenting the ways in which media
coverage of councils, synods, etc. makes it far more difficult for
Catholics around the world to recognize what is really being decided by
the bishops. This note indicates the problems such coverage can cause
also within the assembly itself.]
Father Gauthier spoke to me about Nazareth and about the booklet that
he has printed to distribute to a certain number of the Fathers on the
Church and the poor at the present time. The intention is excellent. I
am a little afraid that there are some ideology and propaganda in it
that are indiscreet.
October 19: Bishop Elschinger told me that Cardinal
König had received some time ago a notice from the Holy Office banning
him from speaking on ecumenical questions. Other subjects of
conversation, after the meeting: the faith and the social milieu—the
Theological Commission—the troubles made for Fr. Rahner, Fr. Congar’s
illness, etc. I had the impression that several were not rising enough
above their one-sided concerns.
October 21: People have reported to me some words
from Fr. Sébastien Tromp [a key theologian of the Holy Office]. After a
meeting of the Central Commission where his plans had been shaken:
“Everything is lost…. There is nothing more to do but pray to the Holy
Spirit!”—These last few days, seeing the direction that the council
seemed to be taking: “And here are these outsiders who want to impose
their ideas on us!”
October 22: A decision is said to have been made regarding the periti.
Those who were on a preconciliar commission would be offered to the
corresponding conciliar commission. The others would be evenly allotted
among the particular commissions. So I would be on the Commission on the
Faith. Where will Father Daniélou be?
On Sunday, Frs. Rahner, Congar, and Daniélou met, following the
meeting organized around Bishop Volk. Congar is preparing a totally new
schema, as a sort of general proooemium, that they would try to have
accepted by the Commission for Extraordinary Affairs. Rahner and
Daniélou are preparing a revision of the existing texts, as a fall-back
position in case Congar’s schema should be rejected on principle.
[JAM: Jean Daniélou, later a Cardinal, was de Lubac’s friend,
countryman and fellow Jesuit, another brilliant theologian, beloved by
orthodox Catholics in the immediate post-conciliar Church. Yves Congar,
also French, was a Dominican who served as a military chaplain and was a
prisoner of war from 1940-1945. A theologian who was marginalized as de
Lubac was in the 1950s, he too was called upon by Pope John XXIII at
the time of the Council, and was later recognized for the depth of his
Catholic thought by being made a Cardinal. Karl Rahner, a German Jesuit,
was one of the most influential academic theologians of the 20th
century, despite being under suspicion as a proponent of the “new
theology” in the years before the Council. His notion of the “anonymous
Christian” influenced the Council’s treatment of the relationship of
Christ and the Church to non-Christians. Although some of Rahner’s ideas
(such as transfinalization instead of transubstantiation) were rejected
by the Church, once any question was settled, he never dissented.
[In this Rahner differed from, for example, Fr. Bernard Häring, a
German Redemptorist also occasionally mentioned by de Lubac, who became
the most prominent dissenter in 1968 against Paul VI’s teaching on the
immorality of contraception. Another member of this group of “outsiders”
mentioned by de Lubac was Marie-Dominique Chenu, OP, founder of the
Institute for Medieval Studies in Montreal, who seems to have been, at
the very least, unfortunate in his more notorious students. These
included Gustavo Gutiérrez (liberation theology), Matthew Fox (creation
spirituality), and Edward Schillebeeckx (rather clearly a Christological
Modernist).
[There is a significant lesson here: Among the many scholars
unjustly under suspicion in the 1940s and 1950s for rejecting the modern
scholastic system and advocating a return to the sources to rejuvenate
Catholic theology (including a return to St. Thomas directly, instead of
the commentaries), it was very difficult in the early 1960s to discern
which ones would prove in the end to be careless of the Magisterium. By
the late 1960s and 1970s, this would become agonizingly clear. Anyway,
these theologians were among the “outsiders” through whom Pope St. John
XXIII wished to offset the excessively narrow approach of the staff of
the Holy Office, in shaping the theological basis of the Conciliar
program of renewal.]
The newspapers are full of gross inaccuracies, often tendentious.
The pope supposedly said jokingly, while showing some people the
first volume of the schemas open on his table to one of the chapters of De deposito fidei: “Look, I have just measured it; there are 25 centimeters of condemnations there!”
October 23: [A particularly interesting episcopal
intervention on the liturgy] Bishop Argaya, Spanish, expressed a wish
“de dolemnibus…formis simplificandis” [concerning the solemn forms to be
simplified]…the norms should be: pietas, simplicitas, et dignitas
[piety, simplicity, and dignity]. Let everything be brought back to the
spirit of the Gospel, especially in the Pontifical. We should eliminate
everything that in dress and ceremonies resembles “alicui pompae humanae
et mundanae” [some human and worldly pomp].
October 24: [Another interesting intervention] Adam
Kozlowiecki (Lusaka, Northern Rhodesia). In chap. 1, no. 3 is not clear
or well-organized; the first schema and Mediator Dei were
better. On no. 24: thanks to Cardinals Tisserant and Bea. Let the
episcopal conferences have the right to introduce the vernacular
“propter rationes practicas” [for practical reasons]. –At no. 21 and
elsewhere: “Sancta Sedes, sancta Sedes…” [Holy See, Holy See…]; it is
unsettling. “Auctoritatem Petri non timeo, set aliquando timeo
Secretarium Petri” [I do not fear the authority of Peter, but I
sometimes fear Peter’s secretary].
October 25: The cardinal primate of Spain is
supposed to have written the pope to complain that no Spaniard was
elected to the Commission on the Faith; it appears that this was the
result of a maneuver by Cardinal Antoniutti, former nuncio to Madrid,
and of his friend Ottaviani: they supposedly saw to it that the first
two names proposed on certain lists were deleted, as not being
sufficiently in conformity with their point of view; thus the votes of
the electors were scattered.
Conversation with Archbishop de Furstenberg [Belgian], from the
Secretariat of State: we spoke of Fr. K. Rahner and his great notoriety;
of the council; of the pope, who gives indications concerning what he
wants and makes his leanings manifest by significant gestures, but he
does not press, he gives no precise orders, with the result that the
pope can say one thing and “the Holy See” do the opposite, etc.
Many are concerned about the working procedure that has been
announced for the council, which permits neither the outright rejection
of a schema nor a vote on the general observations.
October 29:The October 28 edition of the Espresso
has a long article on the council. Title: “Versa la nuova teologia”.
The article talks about the “program of the new theology”, its
condemnation in 1950 by Humani generis, its partial return in
1960 when Congar and Lubac were named as consultors, although they rank
lower than simple old-school types like Piolanti and Parente, etc. It
also says that my book on Teilhard has been censored; and that, despite
that, I was called with Daniélou as an expert to the council and that
Chenu is the theologian of a Malagasy archbishop. The article ends with a
long quotation from Parente’s speech at the Lateran in 1960 and the
threats that it contained: as one can see, it concludes, a great battle
is brewing.—Articles like this are well designed to create a battlefield
atmosphere, if not within the council, at least around it, in public
opinion, and to distort everything.
October 30: Despite wishes and rumors to the
contrary, it seems that the council will not start up again in January
[after the December recess], but only after Easter. One of the reasons
would seem to be that it is impossible to heat Saint Peter’s adequately
enough to permit a large number of old men to remain sitting there for
almost four hours at a stretch.
Discussing Revelation (Mid-November 1962) [top]
[JAM: By November 13th, the discussions of the liturgical schema
were completed, and the Fathers began to work on the controversial
doctrinal schema, which was destined to become the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation.
The schema began as a text that was focused on identifying and
condemning errors in the spirit of the Holy Office of the immediately
preceding era; but both Pope John XXIII and the majority of the Council
fathers wanted a document which would express a positive understanding
of Divine Revelation to attract souls, nurture Scriptural exegesis and
theology, and promote Christian unity.
At the heart of the debate was something we have encountered
before: The observation that Catholic teaching, as asserted by the Holy
Office, was excessively philosophical, less nourished by Scripture and
Tradition than by a particular systematic school of thought. In
addition, those who favored condemnations of errors argued that adopting
a “positive” or “pastoral” approach (for Vatican II was to be a
pastoral council) meant fudging the truth to accommodate the world—a
misconception as simplistic as it was common, but which, on all sides,
created serious problems for the Church in the immediate aftermath of
the Council.
The initial intervention by Cardinal Frings below captures the
main issues in the discussion. Moreover, by this time, a serious effort
was generally being made by the Fathers to get positive schemas that
they could work with, schemas which would enlighten, not condemn.]
November 14, 1962: Card.
Jos. Frings. “Schema non placet.” [meaning he would vote against it]
(1) The two doctrinal schemas are bad. The first pastoral duty is
doctrine, but how? In such a way as to attract men, or even though they
be driven away? At Vatican I, they rejected a schema that was too
professorial, and it was replaced. One does not hear in this schema the
voice of a Mother and Teacher, but a voice that is neither edifying nor
vivifying…. (2) In this schema there are two fundamental doctrines: a.
“De duobus fontibus” [on the two fonts or sources (of Revelation)]. This
manner of speaking is recent; it is not found in the Fathers or in the
scholastics (it is not in Saint Thomas) or in the councils; it is the
fruit of the historicism of the 19th century. In the order of knowledge,
one can speak of two sources, but in the order of being, the source is
unique [i.e., Christ]. Concerning this unique source, it is greatly to
be regretted that there is nothing in the schema. And from the very
first lines, by these “two sources”, our separated brethren will be
offended, a new gap will be created. (b) On the inerrancy of Scripture.
The doctrine is too rigid, approaching the doctrine of literal
inspiration. The schema is against scientific work, etc. On this subject
there are two opinions in the process of being debated: It is not the
tradition of the councils to resolve disputed questions; one school of
thought must not anathematize the other. It will no doubt be necessary
to condemn false opinions—but no more. (3) Nor do I approve the
excessive length of the schema. With all the others, it imposes an
impossible task on the council. It is necessary to omit, abridge, merge
sections. Let the first two schemas be combined into one, reduced to a
quarter.
Card. Léger. – One does not base a constitution on the fear of
error…. It is one school alone that wishes to substitute itself for the
others.
Card. Joseph E. Ritter, archbishop of Saint Louis (USA). The schema
should be rejected; let another one be proposed…. It lacks any evident
usefulness…. The whole schema suffers from a negative spirit, from
pessimism…. On those matters where solutions are not ready, let the
council keep silent.
Card. A. Bea. – I know how many eminent men worked on this schema for
a long time; it is all the more painful for me to have to say that I do
not approve it…. It does not correspond to the aim proposed for the
council by the Supreme Pontiff that things not be repeated at length….
It completely lacks any pastoral character. (Doctrine is the foundation,
but it is not in itself pastoral.) It has before its eyes, not modern
men, but, rather, theological schools.)…. It casts suspicion on them [i.e., exegetes]; it leads to fear of error everywhere, without going deeply into any problem.
Maximos IV Saigh, Melchite patriarch. – In this schema, everything is
envisaged from an angle that is limited, negative, contentious. Does it
respond to the wishes of the bishops and of the Catholic universities?
It was drawn up, rather, to resolve the questions debated among the
theological schools…. Some parts of the schema give the traditional
teaching, but in a negative, polemical form that condemns. Today we need
to have an exposition of salvation history that is dispassionate,
positive, rich. Finally, the schema makes no effort to prepare paths
toward unity but, rather, blocks them. It hardens even more the outdated
positions of the Counter-Reformation and of anti-modernism.
An archbishop from Indonesia [Gabriel Manek]. With modesty, but at
the same time with clarity, in the name of all the bishops of Indonesia,
I saw that the schema is so unsatisfactory that it must be rejected or
at least be radically amended. Several points are unnecessary. There are
some polemical condemnations, taking aim at several Catholic authors of
good repute; this is contrary to the usage of Trent and Vatican I. It
will create new obstacles to the dialogue with the separated brethren.
November 15: At 4
pm, with Fr. Rondet, visit to Fr. Lyonnet (Biblical Institute). We
exchanged news. Fr. Lyonnet insisted that I write some coherent remarks
on the essential deficiencies of the two dogmatic schemas, from the
doctrinal point of view. He will have need of them, he told me.
At 8 pm, a visit from Fr. Martelet [who] informed me about the
meeting of a certain number of representatives from various episcopal
conferences on the afternoon of the 13th, at the “Domus Mariae”…. It was
announced that Cardinal Bea was requesting a mixed commission, charged
with drafting the new schema that would replace De fontibus.
And each group said, in a few words, through its representative, what
its intention was on the subject of this schema. Spain: it is the Holy
Father’s schema; it must be accepted. – Italy (Castelli): it is
inopportune and illegitimate to give an opinion for the episcopal
conference; each will decide for himself. – Japan: the schema is
worthless; how do we get it rejected? – France (Veuillot): we hope that
there will be a vote after the discussion on the whole of it; the schema
is bad. – India: unanimously against the schema. – Mexico: doubts;
various opinions; but quite against it. – Germany: firmly against. –
Burma: divided. – All of Africa: firmly against. – Ceylon: it is
important not to close the paths for exegesis; therefore, against. – The
Philippines: against. CELAM [Latin America]: against. – Canada:
divided.
Another anecdote recounted at noon by Archbishop Assaf. Since he had
been in Rome, he has not succeeded in penetrating the Propaganda
[Propaganda Fide, the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith] to
deal with some urgent matters there. He ended up writing to the
secretary of the Congregation, more or less in these terms: “During the
five weeks I have been here, I have not been able to see you: in the
morning, I am at the council; in the afternoon. I find the door of the
Congregation closed. Thursday there will be no general congregation; so I
will come to you in the morning.” But around 11 am, immediately upon
leaving the Consistory, he hurried to the Spanish Square: the door of
the Congregation was closed, even the heavy outer door. – Fr. Kéramé in
this connection related to us the following joke. Someone said to a
monsignor of the Congregation: “So, in the afternoon, it seems that you
don’t do anything? – Excuse me, Excellency, that is a mistake: in the
afternoon, we are not there; it is in the morning that we do not do
anything.”
November 16: Card.
Cerejeira (Lisbon): I must confide to you my sad observation: our
debates have been disseminated in the newspapers. (He reminded everyone
of the obligation of secrecy, the safeguard of liberty.)
Card. McIntyre (Los Angeles, USA). There has been too much talk of
pastoral concerns: the essential thing, for pastors, is to guide the
faithful, priests, and especially young clerics…. Obedience and humility
are necessary in order to keep the doctrine without ambiguity. We must
preserve what has been handed down, against all kinds of strange
teachings, etc. (quotation from the Letter to the Hebrews).
Card. Rufinus Santos (Manila). Let us be able to examine and correct
the schema freely. The objections that have been made against it are not
valid. Our duty is to declare doctrine. “Pastoral” is an adjective; the
doctrine is the substance. Let the doctrine be certain, complete,
sound, uncorrupted.
Card. Jean Urbani, patriarch of Venice: What is said in the schema is
very useful and responds well to the necessities of this time, although
sometimes in a manner that is too scholastic. Let us set aside matters
that can be legitimately disputed: let our exegetes be praised and
paternally advised. Let the doctrine on tradition be affirmed in a
clearer way—as well as the connection between the magisterium and
Scripture.
Card. Raoul Silva Henriquez (Santiago, Chile). In the name of all the
bishops of Latin America, especially of Chile: the pastoral character
is lacking…. This schema is completely lacking in that regard. It seeks
to promote a single school of thought: not only will it not serve unity
in the Church, it will provoke arguments among Catholics. It has a
flavor of professorial distortion, as is said today.
Archbishop Alfred Bengsch (Berlin). Non placet. It cannot even be
corrected. Its intention cannot satisfy us. Its manner of speaking is
such that the faithful would not recognize their mother in it, but only a
harsh teacher. It contradicts, at least in part, the words of the
pope…. I speak also in the name of my experience. In East Germany, as in
many other countries, there is an imminent danger of materialism. The
faithful expect from us help and consolation. This was a superb
opportunity: to speak to them about the revelation of Christ, open wide
for them the divine treasure, explain to them as well how the Redeemer
can reach great numbers of men who have not outwardly received the good
news, etc. But on all of this, nothing or almost nothing in the schema. –
It adds new obstacles to union. There are those who tell our faithful
that the Christian faith is no longer anything more than an antiquity,
something that belongs in a museum; they speak to them in a completely
different language that seems new and stirring. This schema is made to
support that kind of talk. – The Gospel of Christ, that is the good
news: it must be proclaimed, and there indeed is the task of the
council….
Archbishop Guerry (Cambrai), In the name of the bishops of France.
Certain points should be removed that are perilous, ambiguous, etc. It
is not at all a question, as some have claimed, of sacrificing doctrine.
This opposition between doctrinal and pastoral necessities is false.
There is an equivocation about the word “adapt”. In one sense, it
signifies to accommodate, compromise: This would be a crime. But in
another sense, it is about an adaptation of the doctrine’s presentation,
so that evangelical truth might shine.
At 4:30 pm, lecture by Hans Küng, who is a professor at Tubingen, on
the collegiality of the episcopate and ecclesiastical decentralization.
He spoke with a juvenile audacity; it was strange to hear that sort of
thing resounding in Rome. I would have preferred a little more calm and
interiority.
November 17: Bishop
Schmitt of Metz. After the mostly negative propositions of Vatican I, we
need a more positive language, which emphasizes the traditional
doctrine. Therefore I will propose three guiding principles for this: 1.
– All revelation consists in the person of Christ, who is himself the
word of God to men and the revelation of God. Christ is not only a very
high-ranking envoy, the whole of his life, death, Resurrection is divine
revelation. From Pentecost until the end of the world, the Church will
never cease to search the Depths of the Mystery of Christ…. – 2. – The
Christian revelation is the Gospel. There is a danger of reducing the
Christian faith to an ideology if one does not see that it is faith in
the Good News, in an economy of salvation. – 3. – This Gospel of
salvation responds completely to today’s needs. Come, and believe with
us in the Gospel. We must not show men “truths”, but Christ himself, who
is the Truth, Savior, and Judge of the living and the dead. The
Christian faith is greater than an intellectual adherence to some
truths.
Bishop George Hakim of Akka (Palestine Israel). These schemas are
foreign…. They monopolize the universal faith in aid of a particular
theology. One does not see in them the Mystery of Christ, the economy of
salvation unfolding in history. Theological explanations must not be
detached from Scripture and the Fathers. One must not lose sight of the
concrete character of the Word of God, of which the Church is the
authentic place [i.e., the locus].
At 7 pm, I arrived at the Canadian College…. We had dinner together
in a small restaurant very close by. Next, a visit to Cardinal Léger. A
simple and open welcome…. [T]he cardinal got up, went to his desk to get
a large notebook, came back and sat down across from me, and read out
to me the notes he had taken on the spot during the first meeting of the
Doctrinal Commission, Wednesday afternoon. The meeting was a stormy
one. Card. Ottaviani was presiding; Fr. Sébastien Tromp was beside him.
Everything began with a long diatribe, harsh, haughty, violent, by Fr.
Tromp, directed at all those who were criticizing the schema: a retort
to each of the bishops who had sent “remarks”…an indignant condemnation
of some theologians as traitors and troublemakers…. When Tromp had
finished, Card. Léger requested the floor; he said: I thought I was
coming to the meeting of a commission working in the service of the
council; I did not think I was being summoned before a tribunal. I am
neither a heretic nor a traitor. But I insist on remaining free to speak
according to my conscience. If I cannot be free here, I would prefer to
tender my resignation.
November 18: I was
invited to the “Mater Dei” boarding house by Bishop Volk of Mainz. There
were about 18 of us: 6 German bishops…; 4 French bishops…; theologians
from Germany, France, Belgium, Holland…. Bishop Volk: This is an
absolutely private meeting, to examine freely among ourselves how we can
get out of this impasse. There are various misunderstandings within the
council. Three in particular. 1. On the word “pastoral”: it is not a
question of using pastoral perspectives as a pretext for diminishing
doctrinal density and fullness – 2. On scholasticism: To criticize a
language that is too scholastic in a conciliar text is not to find fault
with scholasticism as a science; we must nonetheless insert into the
schema certain elements of the faith that cannot be translated into the
language of the Schools and that are nevertheless doctrinally necessary.
– 3. On the ecumenical aspects: the impression could be given that
there might be a willingness to dilute the doctrine to make it
acceptable; no; on the contrary, we want to express the totality of
Catholic doctrine, of which there are important elements among our
separated brothers. We want to reclaim the totality of the Catholic
patrimony. The Eastern Churches and the Protestants have been led to go
more deeply into certain elements than we have.
Ratzinger [at the meeting]: One thing is essential: let us make sure
that periti of diverse tendencies are heard within the commission.
Without that, there will be no real and sincere work.
[JAM: Note that the above intervention, at a planning meeting,
while certainly excellent advice, is included mainly because it came
from the thirty-five year old theologian, Joseph Ratzinger, who later
became Pope Benedict XVI.]
November 20: Msgr.
Lafortune recounted a joke to me that is going around: A ship, which has
as passengers Ottaviani, Ruffini, and Siri, has just gone down in a
storm; someone asks: Who was saved? One would have to respond: The Holy
Church.
Titular Bishop Fidel Gracia Martinez, (Spain): All the Fathers agree
that we must profess the whole of our doctrine. But is it necessary to
condemn certain debated opinions? Instead of interminable discussions
article by article, let a commission be formed, truly representative of
diverse opinions.
Card. Frings: In the name of the Board of Presidency, a proposal of
great importance. We should soon come to a discussion of the schema’s
chapters, one by one. But since some Fathers think that this is not
timely, it has seemed to the Board of Presidency that it would be good
to get the Fathers’ votes on the matter.
At the end of the session, the result of the vote was obtained, and
Archbishop Felici announced it. Those present: 2,200 and some; for
sending it back: 1,368; for moving to an immediate discussion of the
articles: 800 and some [the exact figures were 2,209; 1,368; 822; and 19
invalid ballots]. As the necessary two-third majority was not reached
for sending the schema back, we will continue tomorrow with the
discussion of its articles.
At 3 pm, a working meeting on the first chapter of the De fontibus,
and especially on tradition, in a room in the Angelicum. There were
fifteen of us, half bishops, half theologians. We talked about 3 or 4
possible interventions that were allocated and whose terms were
outlined. Father Congar was at the helm. Each of us freely expresses his
opinion. Frs. Labourdette and Camelot, OP, were there. Among the
bishops, Bishop Pourchet (Saint-Flour). At 4:30 it was decided that the
next meeting would be on Friday. Fr. Congar told us that it would not be
at the Angelicum; the master general had just forbidden all private
meetings on the premises. They say that he was sensitive to a complaint
by Card. Ottaviani, who is afraid of “seditious” meetings.
November 21: Cardinal
Ruffini was presiding. He announced a message from the secretary
general. Archbishop Felici then read a rather long text. This is what I
understood and remembered of it, in summary: By mandate of the cardinal
of the Secretariat for Extraordinary Affairs: yesterday’s ballot seems
to have given rise to some anxiety…. (1) This vote was not without some
bending of the rules…; (2) Various factors suggest that we will come up
against great difficulties in the discussion. Therefore it is necessary
that the schema be better explained. The Supreme Pontiff, taking account
of these reasons, etc., has decided to hand the matter over to a
commission.
[JAM: There followed a number of general interventions.]
Card. Ruffini: All those who had asked for the floor have had their say. So the discussion of the schema De fontibus revelationis is closed.
[JAM: While awaiting with considerable interest the formation of the special commission which would, in fact, completely rework De fontibus, the Council Fathers moved on to a discussion of the next schema, De instrumentis communicationis socialis, which would become the Decree on the Means of Social Communication.]
De Lubac’s Closing Chapter: The End of 1962 (presented 8/18/2015) [top]
November 23, 1962: An article in Témoignage chrétien relates that “250 black bishops” (!) rejected the schema De fontibus.
It also reports that “some texts were already in circulation, one
attributed to Fr. de Lubac, the other to Fr. Rahner” (!) Oh, the
newspapers!
November 24: [In discussing the document on social communications:] Card. Suenens (Malines). 2. “The passivity of the faithful is very harmful [maxime damnosa].”
Let us educate them so that they might play an active role, found
associations, etc. Lamenting on the evil of the times serves no purpose.
– 3. Religious news is for the most part superficial and extrinsic
(ceremonies, blessing of bells, etc.). It should above all be concerned
with fundamental matters of faith and Christian life. To this end, a
certain theology of the news is necessary. Let the lay writers
understand their duty here.
November 26: Bishop
Abdul Ahad Sana [Chaldean bishop of Alquoch, Iraq]: To give directives
is insufficient. We must give the means of practical action, etc.
Improvements to be desired for Vatican radio: programs, and technical
aspects.
Voting was by sitting or standing. Everyone stood up.
[Discussing the schema De Ecclesiae unitate (On the Unity of the Church):]
Cardinal Liénart. – The more certain our Church is that she is in the
right, the more she must feel an obligation to talk with others, not auctoritativo modo [in an authoritarian manner], but through a true dialogue.
Cardinal Ruffini. It is hard to see why this schema is separate from the dogmatic constitution De Ecclesia.
November 28: Joseph
Knoury, Maronite Archbishop of Beirut. – This decree does not even
concern all the Eastern Churches; it is rather a decree “for the Greeks.
There are several Churches in the East.”… Several of these Churches,
heirs of ancient patriarchates, have always been very different from the
Byzantine Church.
Melchite Archbishop Michel Assaf of Petra (Jordan). – This is a reminder of what Leo XIII said in the encyclical Orientalium dignitas.
But let us reread the context. Our Church has no intention of
introducing innovations in the rite without the agreement of our
Orthodox brothers. – Again at no. 25: it is stressed, in order to
reassure the Eastern Churches: they will find in the Catholic Church
their own home. A beautiful, ecumenical declaration, and obvious
besides. What is less obvious is the actual reality in our Eastern
countries. What a situation, where we act and speak as if the Catholic
Church was the sole Latin Church! I deliberately refrain from explaining
what I mean. Let our intentions be followed by effects. We rely on the
collaboration of everyone, with the grace of God.
November 29: Archbishop
Dalmais (of Fort-Lamy)…. He thinks it is an error to want to deal with
the Blessed Virgin outside of any ecclesiological reference and that a
hasty discussion on the Blessed Virgin might cause a good number of
arguments instead of manifesting unity. In South America, it appears
that an enormous number of Masses have been offered to obtain the
definition of Mary as mediatrix.
Msgr. Spada, president of the Italian Catholic Press, wanted me to write an article on the council. I declined.
November 30: I met
Archbishop Hermaniuk of the Ruthenians in Canada; he asked me my
impressions and gave me his. He was a member of the Preparatory
Theological Commission. I was never given any idea, he told me, of the
offers from the Secretariat for Unity. He, too, had harsh words for the
methods of Ottaviani, Tromp, and some others. He does not believe that
mental attitudes have matured enough to draw up a satisfactory
constitution on the Church.
Card. Wyszy?ski: “The schema is, in general, good; it is very well
distinguished from the schema on the Church.” It needs a certain
breadth. Let us proclaim the urgency of unity. In our time, concern
about Christian unity is in the heart of all. The question is of
interest to all Churches and confessions, especially the Christians who
bear witness to Christ. The materialism of daily life is more dangerous
than doctrinal materialism.
Card. Bea. …this schema also contains things similar to those treated by the other documents on ecumenism.
[JAM: Note that one of the problems in discussing this schema on
the unity of the Church was getting the balance right between how to
consider Protestant denominations and how to consider the Eastern
Churches not in union with Rome. They are, as the Council ultimately
made surprisingly clear, very different ecclesial realities. Thus the
following:]
Archbishop John Heenan of Liverpool. – De facto, it is perhaps more
difficult to speak of the Eastern Churches than of the Protestants,
because they are closer to us. – The virtue of humility is essential, on
both sides…. Let us pray that all Christians, after the council, feel
closer to each other and, what is still more important, closer to
Christ. (Some applause.)
Bishop Nicolas Elko of the Ruthenians in Pittsburgh. My experience,
especially at Mount Athos, has shown me that the Orthodox agree with us
on doctrine, except for the dogma of infallibility and the primacy of
the pope. We need to show them Catholic discipline and unity; I have
known some who have been converted on seeing this….
At 4:30 PM, I was received by Father General (J. B. Janssens).
Yesterday morning, he sent me a jar of honey from Sicily, through his
private secretary, Fr. Van der Brempt, who was saying that he had
noticed my cough. (This good Father General does not know how much this
shows me his affection, considering his past severity.) It was a good
conversation starter…. He spoke to me also about a newspaper article in
which it was said that Rahner, Congar, and Holstein rejected tradition
in the name of Scripture alone; he understood very well that this
interpretation of their rejection of the “two sources” view was
tendentious; I explained to him how it was entirely false, and I laid
stress on the text of the Council of Trent. On this subject he said to
me that his old professor of theology, Father De Villers (whom I also
got to know in Louvain in 1930), taught him to read and interpret
strictly the conciliar texts, and he was surprised to see so many
bishops and theologians so little versed in this art.
[JAM: I have emphasized again and again in today’s controversies
that this is the essential feature of proper method in resolving
doctrinal disputes. It is not what we think Magisterial documents sort
of say, or what someone says they say, or how prominent theologians have
interpreted them in the past, or what we take them to mean given our
own assumptions. What matters is what is actually either required or
excluded by the specific words of the relevant texts, and by them
alone.]
December 1: Bishop Verwimp, S.J. …asked me what the story was with regard to the things reported by Le Libre Belgique
(of yesterday). I told him what I knew. He said to me that there was a
lot of subterranean maneuvering going on around the council, and he did
not hide from me that he did not think much certain Italian
ecclesiastics.
In Saint Peter’s…Father Gagnebet gave me some alarming news about the
health of John XXIII. In Rome, he told me, it is a convention, as long
as the pope is not on his deathbed, to say that he is doing well or that
he is only slightly ill.
[JAM: Ha! Who says things have changed since 1960! Now the council fathers moved on to discuss the schema of the constitution De Ecclesia.]
Bishop Frani?. – He is going to set out the schema in summary form.
The intention was to treat only the questions posed by the majority of
bishops. – Chap. 1: No real distinction between the juridical and the
pneumatic [related to the action of the Holy Spirit] Church,
between the Roman Church and the Mystical Body. – Chap. 2, on the
Members of the Church: nothing is said about what could be disputed
concerning non-Catholics, “members in an improper way and by analogy”….
Chap. 7: “In order to respond to current needs”, it speaks also of the
auxiliary magisterium of theologians, priests, preachers. Here, as at
the end of every other chapter, we could not keep silent about certain
errors…. Everything is treated “in a positive way. But, not without very
grave reasons,” we had to condemn errors and point out dangers, so that
these would be very clear to all. The schema has been approved by the
pope. Condemning errors is the best way to shed more light on what is
true. We have worked on this schema over the course of nearly 100
meetings.
Card. Liénart. – Let the identity of the Mystical Body and the Church
not be affirmed to the point of wanting to enclose the whole of the
Mystical Body within the limits of the Roman Church. The grace of Christ
overflows these limits, and no one is saved who is not incorporated
into Christ…we must not forget any longer all baptized Christians.
Bishop Arthur Elchinger, coadjutor of Strasbourg. “A point on the
general spirit of this schema. The faithful also are expecting from us
an explanation of the Mystery of the Church, even those who do not
belong to the Catholic Church. For many, today, the Church is a veil
rather than the revelation of Christ. The pastoral intention is not
opposed to the doctrinal intention; on the contrary, it must animate the
doctrinal exposition itself.” Today’s questions are not those of
yesterday; other aspects need to be explored and set forth. We have in
particular to show “that the Church is not only an institution, but also
a communion. Yesterday, one spoke especially of the pope; today we must
also speak of the bishops, including the titular ones.” (I am one of
them.) “Yesterday, of the bishop alone; today, of the college of
bishops. Yesterday, of the hierarchy; today, of the Christian people
also.
Yesterday, of the causes of division among Christians; today, in
the first place, of the points in common. Yesterday, the Church was
depicted as bringing salvation to those within her; today, in a certain
way, also to those who are outside her. We must also purify in the
Church the modes of action according to the Gospel…: the Church does not
want to dominate but to serve. None of these things are innovations;
this is a return to the Fathers, to Scripture, to the full Catholic
tradition.”
December 3: [JAM: Following is an interesting intervention which is clearly a combination of insight and naïveté .]
Bishop G. Huyghe of Arras. – “This schema is of such great importance
that it can be called the center of the council.” So many men today do
not know the Church or fight against her! Why? She seems like an enemy
to them. It depends on the way we present her. The world is expecting
that the Church through this council, will tell it what she is.... Our
answer will be known everywhere Thanks to the means of communication,
the situation today can no longer be as it was with other councils. Our
texts will immediately go everywhere. The Church will be judged
according to our texts. Now, although the schema presents some positive
elements, it does not at all respond to what the world is asking.
In the afternoon, conversation with Dr. Joseph Ratzinger, who gave me
various pieces of information on things as seen from the German point
of view.
December 4: There is a lot of talk these days about a Pastoral Letter written by Cardinal Montini [the future Pope Paul VI] deploring the poor preparation for the council. The Tempo
has taken some quotations from it that some have called tendentious.
Some members of the Curia are making a show of saying that it is
insulting to the pope. In reality, the campaign for the election of the
successor of John XXIII is underway, and this is what explains certain
things.
December 5: There is
a little joke about Ottaviani going around. He is supposed to have
said: “I want to die soon.” – “What’s that, Your Eminence?” – “Yes,
soon; I would like to die before the end of the council.” – “But why,
Your Eminence?” – “Oh! I would very much like to die a Catholic!”
[JAM: The first session of the Council closed in December of
1962. Most of 1963 was devoted to finishing up work from Session 1 and
preparing for Session 2. De Lubac has brief notes on this period. But
his journal ends with the following entry.]
September 2, 1963: After my recent hospital stay [first for appendicitis and then for a prostate operation],
the provincial (Arminjon) wrote to the Assistant [to the Jesuit Father
General] to have me exempted from attending the second session of the
council.
[Hat tip to G. N.]
1 comment:
How many times have I implored, "Could somebody explain to me why anybody thinks DeLubac is so significant?"
But DeLubac is so widely esteemed my query always meets with... well, if not disdain, than with complete avoidance. Did someone make a noise?
Enter Jeff Mirus. I have to say, here is someone who by his attention silently seems to give some credibility to my query. There Vatican II guys, just what was/is the deal...?
Not sure he makes much headway, but at least he tries!
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