• About

Notes from the Wasteland

Notes from the Wasteland

Monthly Archives: July 2015

The missionary council — what Vatican II was about

24 Friday Jul 2015

Posted by Christopher Zehnder in Theological musings

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Catholic Church

By Christopher Zehnder

The following article, which I wrote a few years ago, was first published in New Oxford Review

Many are the opinions about the Second Vatican Council and its effects on the Church – some Catholics praising them and others deploring them. But, while many have discussed and debated what the council did, few seem to take interest in what the council said, and what it intended to accomplish.

Council Fathers

It is generally thought that the council set out to “update” the Church – and this is true, but not in the crude sense it which it sometimes is taken. The intent of the Second Vatican Council was to outfit the Church so that she could better promote and cultivate communion – a more intense communion among the members of Christ’s body, the Church, and between the Church and the world. In seeking communion with the world, the council called for some accommodation on the part of the Church, but not to confound the Church with the world; rather, the council wanted to better equip the Church to draw the world to herself, and through herself, to Christ. The council had an essentially missionary, evangelical thrust. Its inspiration was the Great Commission, not the craven and abject spirit of capitulation.

Continue reading →

Pope Gregory XVI: A 19th Century Environmentalist

04 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by Christopher Zehnder in Culture, Social justice

≈ 1 Comment

By Christopher Zehnder

Well, I’ll admit that the title of this essay is not just a little inaccurate – if we take “environmentalist” in the narrow sense we understand it today. But if we understand “environment” more broadly – as those conditions that surround us and influence us – then, I think, calling Pope Gregory XVI an “environmentalist” is not too far off the mark.

Gregory XVI.jpg

Pope Gregory XVI

Indeed, Gregory took the “environment” of his day very seriously; some might say, too seriously. One might think, in fact, that he fit well the stereotype of the modern environmentalist – that he lacked balance and perspective, confusing the essential with what is merely external and contingent. For, he vehemently opposed republican government and would accept no lay participation in the government of his Papal States. His 1832 encyclical, Mirari Vos condemned liberty of conscience and the freedom to publish any and all opinions. He stood resolutely against every revolution in his time – even the rebellion of the Catholic Poles against their persecutor, the Orthodox tsar of Russia. Why, Gregory XVI was so reactionary that he even forbade the building of a railroad and the installing of gas lights in the the Papal States! He despised railroads. He called them chemins d’enfer (“roads to hell”) – a pun on the French chemin de fer, “iron road.” (This, of course, suggests that Gregory had a sense of humor, which he did. Those close to him knew him to be jovial, friendly, and a lover of good conversation – thus demonstrating that even reactionaries can be fun.) Continue reading →

Recent Posts

  • We’re Not in This Alone: The Common Good, Community, and the Image of God: Part 2
  • We’re Not in This Alone: the Common Good, Community, and the Image of God: Part 1
  • Of the Incarnation and Henry David Thoreau
  • More consumer than not: Why we skipped Thanksgiving this year
  • The anti-culture of America

Archives

  • August 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • March 2018
  • September 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • January 2013
  • May 2012
  • March 2012

Categories

  • Culture
  • Social justice
  • Theological musings
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Blog at WordPress.com.