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Saturday, December 27, 2008
Conciliar Disputes
Chronicle of a Council (Wall Street Journal December 25, 2008) -- Fr. Edward T. Oakes reviews John W. O'Malley's What Happened at Vatican II (Belknap Press. September 2008), a book I'm almost finished reading. Oakes' appraisal of the book is spot-on. As far as his editorial bias, O'Malley is unabashedly on the side of the 'progressives'. Unfortunately, I don't think I can concur with Rourke's confidence ("his liberal advocacy never impairs his acutely observed history of the Council".
I found it to be a decent enough introduction to the lead characters and controversies; the disputes between the 'conservative' minority and the 'progressive' majority; the language and style of the documents that gave the Council its innovative character. But I'd also admit something does get lost in the condensation -- and Novak seems to agree as well (A Spirit of Affirmation Washington Post October 5, 2008): Based on my experience of the same events [Novak was a correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter during the second session], O'Malley does a truly superior job of reporting the crucial details and capturing the moods and passions of that time. Secondly, he has the advantage of many testimonies not known to us back then. These, too, he handles deftly. As Novak states, Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI have in the course of four decades become the council's chief interpreters -- striving to repair the damage wrought by the progressives. O'Malley's work might have benefited from an examination of their critiques.
A great difference between the Lamb and Levering hermeneutic and the O’Malley hermeneutic is that the former is primarily theological and attuned to what is believed to be divinely revealed truth as it has been handed on and its understanding faithfully developed over the centuries. The O’Malley interpretation is dominantly sociological, psychological, and linguistic, aimed at demonstrating how the council moved beyond “the status quo.”I found Neuhaus' conclusion is particularly insightful: Some essays in the Lamb and Levering volume weigh in so heavily on the side of the hermeneutics of continuity that one might get the impression that not much happened at Vatican II. Obviously, that is not the case. After allowing that the liberal leaders at the council were sometimes elitist and manipulative, O’Malley gives this telling reflection on how the council is interpreted:During the council, the media often pilloried “the conservatives” for obscurantism, intransigence for being out of touch, and even for dirty tricks. One thing can surely be said in their favor. They saw, or at least more straightforwardly named, the novel character and heavy consequences of some of the council’s decisions. The leaders of the majority, on the contrary, generally tried to minimize the novelty of some of their positions by insisting on their continuity with tradition. It is ironic that after Vatican II, conservative voices began insisting on the council’s continuity, whereas so-called liberals stressed its novelty.There is indeed irony, but it is not the irony that O’Malley proposes. What Happened at Vatican II is a 372-page brief for the party of novelty and discontinuity. Its author comes very close to saying explicitly what is frequently implied: that the innovationists practiced subterfuge, and they got away with it. Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and his Society of St. Pius X are right: The council was a radical break from tradition and proposed what is, in effect, a different Catholicism. The irony is in the agreement between Lefebvre and the liberal party of discontinuity. O’Malley and those of like mind might be described as the Lefebvrists of the left.
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