Saturday, October 10, 2020

A time to talk and a time to listen

The ‘Thinking Anew’ column in The Irish Times today.


Michael Commane

Tomorrow marks another significant moment in history. On October 11, 1962, the Second Vatican Council was formally opened by Pope John XXIII. 


It lasted three years and was closed by Pope Paul VI on December 8, 1965. In those three years much was discussed and written in Rome. The Vatican Council was summoned to address the relationship between the Catholic Church and the modern world.


It attempted to heal divisions and make the Word of God and those who serve it more accessible and  more real for all people of goodwill.


During the council meetings and in the years immediately succeeding it an atmosphere of great hope and enthusiasm was evident. It had many offshoots, including liberation theology, especially in the Latin American church. That coincided with the end of the conflict in Vietnam, when the youthful enthusiasm of young idealistic people helped turn US public opinion against the war.


The end of the conflict gave many idealistic people a new spring in their step. It opened up  new horizons, people could dream new dreams of propriety and goodness in international relations.


Last Saturday there were scaled-down celebrations in Potsdam to mark the 30th anniversary of German unity. It was a low-key event because of Covid-

19. In itself the peaceful unification of Germany has been successful. 


However the fall of the Berlin Wall was in many ways a marker in time that points to the development of an unease in the world. The demise of the Soviet Union and the collapse of east west frontiers has brought about new tensions. Right now the world seems on edge with itself. Maybe after all, there was an added symbolism to the scaled-down Potsdam celebrations.


We are all children of our own specific generation. It’s true to say that we are embedded in our own times. 


And from the end of the Second World War until soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, at least in the developed world, no matter how depressed things were, there were always those who offered a hope and an enthusiasm that seemed attractive and possible.


In tomorrow’s Gospel, Matthew (22: 1 - 14) tells the story of a king who throws a banquet for his son’s wedding. What happens? No one wants to come to it and those who eventually arrive are dressed in a disrespectful way. What seems a great occasion, an event that turns all eyes to the future, ends up in turmoil and disarray.


Is that simply the way of the world? Is it the state that we find ourselves in right now?


The Vatican Council tried to lift the church by its bootstraps into the modern world. It was an attempt at dusting down old tawdry habits and restoring the Word of God into the exciting and compelling message  that it originally contained.   As always happens some  mistakes were made.


But just like what’s happening right across the world, it seems right now that the church is in a tired place. 


This affords great opportunities to fanatical views of all shapes and sizes. Battalions of people have walked away. In the developed world, a significant number of fine young priests left ministry in the 1970s and ’80s, men who would have much wisdom to offer the church as priests today.


Listening to the rhetoric of Donald Trump and his followers, his call to make America great again, his refusal to disassociate himself from far-right white supremacist groups and how he appeals to evangelical and conservative Christians, I keep thinking that the world seems to be tired and there’s no one about who will genuinely carry the baton of the aspirations of the Vatican Council.  


We have come such a long way from the Vatican Council. We sorely need an impetus, a guiding star to bring us back to what the Vatican Council was attempting to do, a conversation between the church and the world. Pope Francis is trying to get that process going. And between  the churches, there is urgent need for open and real conversation. Right now the world needs us all to start talking to each other in love and truth. 


But I think we can be heartened. In the first reading (Isaiah 25: 6 - 9) in tomorrow’s liturgy the prophet Isaiah assures us that the “Lord of hosts will prepare for all people a banquet of rich food, a banquet of fine wines of food rich and juicy, of fine strained wines.”


People always talk to each other at banquets.


Let’s all try some pleasant talking.

1 comment:

Póló said...

Your reference to Vatican II gives me an opening to refer to a courageous woman who has just left us. Margaret Mac Curtain OP lived a life dedicated to peace and justice and the fostering of a true humanity. May she rest in peace and, as I have said elsewhere, give St John Paul II a hard time up there.

Your reference reminded me yet again of her very forthright criticism of the CDF, and how Vatican II was subverted, in a talk in St Mary's Haddington Road in 2012. I reported it in one of my blogs but took down the post when I realised the CDF had embarked on an orgy of suppression, in the course of which Tony Flannery CSsR was silenced. I did not want to be responsible for drawing the CDF's attention to this good and courageous woman. I put the post back up when Pope Francis was elected as I figured there was little likelihood of further silencings, whatever about the fate of those already silenced.

This is a LINK to that post.

I also attended and reported on the celebration of Margaret's 90th last year. It was a great tribute to her.

This is a LINK to that post.

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