What does it mean to say that Vatican II is pastoral rather than ecumenical?

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What does it mean to say that Vatican II is pastoral rather than ecumenical?

True that the Second Vatican Council was a pastoral one. It is equally an ecumenical council as well.

Vatican II remains unique in many ways.

The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) was a unique ecumenical council. The previous twenty were assembled to address particular doctrinal or ecclesial crises, while John XXIII called Vatican II to layout a new pastoral program for engaging the modern world. It was not a particular crisis but a general one, focused on finding a new way of conveying the Christian life in the modern world.

In the aftermath of the Council, both progressive and traditional wings viewed it as revolutionary, a sharp break from the previous practice of the Church. It did not help that the 1960s were a period of great cultural turmoil, adding fuel to the fire of confusion and disaffiliation that occurred in the Church.

Pope Benedict XVI, who as a peritus or theological expert at the Council had helped draft some of the documents as part of the progressive party, looked back with concern and identified two major ways of interpreting the Council: a hermeneutic of “discontinuity and rupture” and one of “reform” in continuity with the tradition. The “Spirit of Vatican II” belonged to the former interpretation and came to stand for a whole new way of thinking, praying, teaching, and living as a Catholic in the modern world, marked by a much greater openness to the world and aversion to traditional Catholic practices.

It seemed that the pontificates of John Paul II and Benedict XVI were steering the Church toward continuity, although Pope Francis has led a reemergence of the progressive camp.

Francis has repeatedly called attention to what he views as a growing rejection of the Second Vatican Council. Speaking to editors of European Jesuit journals on May 19, he related this view: “It is very difficult to see spiritual renewal using old-fashioned criteria. We need to renew our way of seeing reality, of evaluating it. . . . Restorationism has come to gag the Council. The number of groups of ‘restorers’ – for example, in the United States there are many – is significant. . . .They had never accepted the Council.” - What does it mean to reject Vatican II?

The Council was in itself quite traditional. What is unorthodox is in the manner in which modern Catholics interpreted the teachings of Vatican II. This should not be a shock to us for after each Ecumenical Council turmoil followed in one degree or another.

Vatican II not sole controversial council! They all dealt with hard issues facing the Church.

For example, not all Catholics accepted Vatican I and papal infallibility! We tend to over look these points!

There have been 21 ecumenical councils in the Church's history, at which, according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, "the college of bishops exercises power over the universal Church in a solemn manner." So Vatican II is totally and authentically an Ecumenical Council.

If we hold to the definition of what is an Ecumenical Council then Vatican II is just that an Ecumenical Council.

Ecumenical Councils are those to which the bishops, and others entitled to vote, are convoked from the whole world (oikoumene) under the presidency of the pope or his legates, and the decrees of which, having received papal confirmation, bind all Christians. A council, Ecumenical in its convocation, may fail to secure the approbation of the whole Church or of the pope, and thus not rank in authority with Ecumenical councils. Such was the case with the Robber Synod of 449 (Latrocinium Ephesinum), the Synod of Pisa in 1409, and in part with the Councils of Constance and Basle.

Thus Vatican II was both traditional in nature and ecumenical. It was however more pastoral and less dogmatic than previous Ecumenical Councils. As I stated above, the major problem is in how the interpretation of the Second Vatican Council documents were handled.... The Council in itself was amazing!

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