Kristin Colberg, Αssociate Professor at Saint John’s University and School of Theology and the College of Saint Benedict. Theological Studies, Volume 83, Issue 1, March 2022, Pages 70-83.
Abstract
Pope
Francis calls the church to greater synodality to build up practices of
communion, participation, and mission at every level of the church’s
life. Proponents of synodality often interpret Vatican I’s definition of
papal primacy as an obstacle to the synodal path. Recent scholarship,
however, suggests ways that Vatican I need not present a stumbling
block; rather, when properly contextualized and interpreted, Pastor Aeternus
has the potential to illumine the inherent dynamism between primacy and
synodality. This study explores how fresh approaches to Vatican I and
synodality can direct us to more responsive ecclesial structures in the
diverse and changing church of today.
Pope
Francis has consistently promoted the language and practices of
synodality in the pastoral, theological, and administrative life of the
church throughout his pontificate, and this ecclesiological vision
reaches a new point of emphasis with his calling a Synod of Bishops on
this topic. The synod’s work involves a multiyear, global process of
intra-ecclesial listening aimed at a spiritual conversion of the church
through renewed practices of communion, participation, and mission at
every level of its life. The papacy and its exercise of authority
naturally belong to this synodal work; pointedly, Francis’s exercise of
authority is the condition under which synodal renewal has become
possible. Nevertheless, understandings and expressions of robust papal
authority, particularly those grounded in Vatican I’s Pastor Aeternus,
can seem to resist or oppose movements toward greater synodality.
Successful progress along the synodal path, which includes a “conversion
of the papacy” in service to a synodal church, cannot detour around
Vatican I’s voice.1
This study advocates a re-reception of Vatican I that offers a nuanced
and historically contextualized understanding of the council, including
elements of its reception at Vatican II, which illumine its potential
utility for the work of synodality. Rather than seeing primacy and
synodality as competing interests, this essay reenvisions their
relationship by broadening three horizons: the meaning of “synodality,”
interpretations of Vatican I’s teaching on papal primacy, and the
exercise of primacy in a synodal church.
Horizon 1: The Meaning of Synodality
Pope
Francis’s vision of synodality is rooted in the theology of the Second
Vatican Council, yet what Francis means by this term is significantly
more expansive than its typical use in the conciliar texts. Vatican II
most often uses the word “synod” self-referentially, speaking of itself
as a “sacred synod” (synodos), a term which it understands as interchangeable with the word “council” (concilium).2
Accordingly, Vatican II generally references synods as gatherings where
all bishops come together with the Bishop of Rome to teach and govern
the whole church. The term less frequently denotes smaller gatherings at
the national, regional, and global levels as instruments of governing
and teaching by the bishops. Both usages underscore episcopal
collegiality and reflect Vatican II’s effort to balance papal primacy
and episcopal collegiality by calling for greater collaboration and
dialogue.3
Nevertheless, the council’s presentation of synods generally envisions
decision making that flows unidirectionally from the bishops, in
communion with the pope, to the faithful.4
While Francis recognizes these types of meetings among members of the
hierarchy as important “points of convergence” in synodal processes,
they do not in themselves capture his idea of synodality.5
Francis’s
vision of synodality “crosses a threshold” from the discrete language
of Vatican II’s documents to a more capacious vision emanating from the
council itself.6
This enriched notion of synodality draws from the council’s emphasis on
the church as animated by the Holy Spirit and constituted through
baptism rather than hierarchy. Two examples illustrate this pattern: (1)
the choice to invert the material in draft chapters of Lumen Gentium
to consider the dignity and coresponsibility of all the baptized prior
to the hierarchy that serves them, and (2) the decision to foreground
the church as the communion of the faithful (communio fidelium) as the basis and context for communion within the college of bishops (communio hierarchica) and among local churches (communio ecclesiarum).7
These shifts locate ecclesial authority as service to the people of God
under the direction of the Holy Spirit. Ultimately, Vatican II’s
theology of the people of God serves, for Francis, as “the normative
criterion” that determines and evaluates the relationships, modes of
communication, and structures in a synodal church.8
Vatican
II’s overarching purpose and style further expands and informs
Francis’s idea of synodality, especially in the ways that the council’s
aims differ from those of its predecessors.9
More than articulating new dogma, Vatican II sought to deepen ecclesial
self-understanding and “awaken in the church a more lively and active faith” through a dual program of ressourcement (“return to the sources”) and aggiornamento (“updating”).10
These shifts positioned the council to ask new questions—questions not
only about the “what” of the church but also and ultimately about “how”
the church should be.11
Similarly, Francis does not approach synodality primarily as a series
of meetings oriented to the production of texts. Rather, synodality
cultivates a particular way of being church. Francis and his theological
advisors consistently favor the adjective “synodal” over the noun
“synod” because it aptly reflects that synodality is “first and foremost
. . . the particular style that qualifies the life and mission
of the Church, expressing her nature as the people of God journeying
together and gathering in assembly, summoned by the Lord Jesus in the
power of the Holy Spirit to proclaim the Gospel.”12
This journey does not conclude in 2023 with the general assembly of the
Synod of Bishops in Rome, nor is it manifest in one particular end. The
synodal path constitutes an ongoing style or practice of walking
together in which all the faithful, through processes of listening and
communal discernment, strive to understand God’s desires for the church
in particular times and places. Francis seeks a permanent and radical
conversion of how the church walks together to realize a more authentic version of it.
Expanding the horizon of how the church journeys together as the people of God includes questions about what
structures best support institutional expressions of the synodal way.
Pope Francis speaks of a desire to invert prevailing hierarchical models
and create a church where “as in an inverted pyramid, the top is
located beneath the base . . . [with the] faithful people, the college
of bishops, the Bishop of Rome: all listening to each other, and all
listening to the Holy Spirit, the ‘Spirit of truth,’ in order to know
what [the Spirit] says to the Churches.”13
Francis’s inverted pyramid does not eliminate structural differences in
the church. It subordinates them to the powerful reality that all the fideles are united in a common baptism and so share in the universal priesthood of Christ as well as the offices of prophet and king.14 Concomitantly, Francis’s call for a synodal conversion of the church resists the opposition of either synodality or primacy—the choice between either embracing a habit of listening to the whole church or
maintaining a robust vision of the papacy. Synodal structures must
integrate all levels of authority in the work of listening and communal
discernment; this necessarily includes the Bishop of Rome. In fact, the
Bishop of Rome plays a vital role in modeling this style and
coordinating discernment, dialogue, and listening at all levels, even as
his office moves from the top of the pyramid to a position beneath its
base. This sense of synodality as a conversion of the whole church
requires a re-reception of Vatican I to discern ways that papal primacy
supports and sustains synodal structures.
Horizon 2: Vatican I and Papal Primacy
Misinterpretations have plagued Vatican I’s reception since the gathering’s premature prorogation in 1870.15
Noncontextual readings of the documents have often distorted them,
rendering the impression that the council’s position on papal authority
is severe and unyielding.16
However, Vatican I’s texts stand open to a considerably more flexible
interpretation when framed (1) in relation to the council’s historical
and theological setting and (2) within the larger textual settings of
the council’s teachings. To the first point, advances by John O’Malley
and Stephen Schloesser in interpreting Vatican II yield comparable value
for reading Vatican I. O’Malley argues that one must recognize how Vatican II expresses its teaching, giving attention to its form or style, to understand what it teaches.17 Stephen Schloesser recommends a further perspectival step to attend to the council’s historical context: readers must consider why Vatican II taught in addition to how it taught.18 Regarding Vatican I, all of these questions—why it taught, how it taught, and what it taught—are often answered incorrectly. Understanding the why, how, and what
of Vatican I begins with observing the radically defensive posture that
dominated the Vatican’s self-understanding in the decades preceding the
council.
During much of the long nineteenth
century, the papacy understood itself as threatened by a myriad of
political, social, and philosophical developments, famously termed “the
three traumas of Rome.”19
In response to these traumas and uncertainties, Pius IX announced his
intention to convene the twentieth ecumenical council that would
“provide in this extraordinary way for the extraordinary needs of the
Christian flock.”20
The plan for this gathering called for a comprehensive decree on the
church that would demonstrate its ability to withstand the challenges of
the day. To this end, the Theological-Dogmatic Preparatory Commission
produced an elaborated schema on the church entitled Primum schema constitutionis de ecclesia Christi (generally known as Supremi Pastoris).21
The original draft did not specifically address the issue of papal
infallibility; however, one chapter treated ecclesial indefectibility
and a subsequent chapter focused on papal primacy. Not long after the
schema was distributed to the council fathers, the looming specter of
military conflict in Italy—with Italian national troops advancing on
Rome—convinced many council fathers of the need to rearrange the
council’s agenda and focus its discussions on the question of papal
authority. A majority of the council fathers reasoned that doing so
would provide the church with a powerful tool before the council’s
premature suspension; a minority of bishops disagreed, worrying that
disconnecting the papacy from its rightful place within a wider
consideration of the church distorted an already sensitive topic.22
Eventually, Pius accepted the majority’s recommendation for a
reordering of the agenda, and on April 29, 1870, it was announced that
the discussion on the Roman pontiff’s primacy and infallibility would be
moved to the beginning of the debate. Vatican I’s choice to focus on
papal authority and its teachings on this topic cannot be understood
apart from the context of distress and anxiety wrought by traumas
emanating from the ecclesial, political, and philosophical spheres or
the acute threat of military intervention in the moment of the council (why it taught). This, in turn, shaped the style the council employed in responding to these pressures (how it taught, as we will see below).
A second line of misinterpretation stems from noncontextual readings of Pastor Aeternus’s
decrees, especially the tendency to exposit the final lines of its
final chapter with no reference to the overarching framework of the
decree.23
This constitutes an interpretive mistake because the constitution’s
prologue provides vital “hermeneutic rules” that set the interpretive
horizon for the definitions that follow.24 The prologue begins with the assertion that Christ, the “eternal shepherd (Pastor Aeternus)
and guardian of our souls,” determined to build a church where all the
faithful should be united by the bond of “one faith and charity.”25
This initial line introduces the document’s key theme: ecclesial unity
for the sake of salvation. It also serves as both the condition for the
possibility of and the normative rule for the exercise of papal
authority. Stressing that the council’s presentation of the papacy does
not represent an innovation, the prologue concludes that the teachings
that follow should be “believed and held by the faithful” in accordance
with “the ancient and unchanging faith of the whole church.”26 Thus, the prologue indicates that what Pastor Aeternus
teaches is a “theology of salvation within the context of the church”;
in that context the text addresses the special role of the pope in this
redeeming work.27
This introduction frames the purpose of papal authority, sets its
limits, and gives shape to its expressions as means to these ends.28
Ultimately, the prologue offers three interpretive rules governing the
text’s teachings: (1) the papacy should be seen in light of God’s desire
for ecclesial unity; (2) the context for understanding the papacy is
ecclesiological and soteriological; and (3) what is proposed affirms,
and is not intended to conflict with, the church’s tradition.29 These rules serve as the backdrop for the succeeding chapters.
The
two chapters following the prologue intentionally draw on scriptural
and theological traditions to situate their presentation of papal
authority within the context of a soteriological ecclesiology. For
example, chapter 2 underscores that the gifts given to Peter are “for
the continual and permanent benefit of the church” and that they must,
of necessity, “remain forever by Christ’s authority in the church which
as it is upon a rock, will stand firm until the end of time.”30
The origins of this belief in the church’s indestructibility, known as
the doctrine of indefectibility, are grounded in New Testament
testimonies that convey the earliest Christian communities’ conviction
that Christ will never abandon them and that Christ assures the church
not only of its continuing existence but also of its ongoing fidelity to
the Gospel (Eph 5:25–29). Francis Sullivan, for example, argues that
faith in the church’s indestructibility is “a corollary of the far more
basic Christian belief that ‘Jesus is Lord.’”31
Believing that Jesus is Lord includes the belief that he “is risen and
glorified at the right hand of the Father, that he has won a decisive,
‘eschatological’ victory over the powers that are hostile to God in this
world, and that no enemy will ever be able to snatch from him the
fruits of this glorious victory.”32
Therefore, while the church may fail in certain concrete instances, as a
whole, it can never totally cleave away from the truth of the Gospel or
cease to exist as Christ’s church.33
Ecclesial indefectibility is thoroughly pneumatological as well. These
early Christian accounts regularly observe that the Holy Spirit is
indissolubly united to the church and preserves it in unity, holiness,
and catholicity while leading it to all truth (Jn 16:13). The belief
that God guides the church as an essential part of the work of
redemption includes a belief that God provides means for the church to
know and express its identity in ways that the community recognizes as
authentic. Christian traditions do not generally dispute the need for
authoritative expressions of divine guidance. Their affirmation of the
church’s ability to determine the norms of faith and maintain unity in
the apostolic tradition follows as a necessary consequence of Christ’s
promises and the Spirit’s guidance.34 At issue is precisely which instruments or authorities concretize this gift and express it authoritatively. Pastor Aeternus
addresses this question, framing it within the context of ecclesial
indefectibility: God sends teachers inspired by the Spirit to make
permanently present the saving work of redemption and to preserve
ecclesial unity. This is realized, in part, through the Petrine
ministry.
Chapter 3 of Pastor Aeternus
establishes the definition of papal primacy, but as it does so, it
adopts a different style from the ecclesiological and soteriological
framework provided in the prologue and first two chapters. Chapter 3
adopts a markedly juridical tone. The substance of what Vatican I
teaches is as follows: “the Roman Church possesses a pre-eminence of
ordinary power over every other Church, and that this jurisdictional
power of the Roman Pontiff is both episcopal and immediate.”35
The clergy and the faithful must submit to this authority in matters of
faith and morals as well as in matters of ecclesial discipline and
governance. After ascribing these powers, the text states that primacy
does not detract from the divinely given authority of episcopal
jurisdiction, which is also ordinary and immediate. In fact, it affirms
that a purpose of the pope’s power is to “assert, support and defend”
the offices and authority of his brother bishops.36 Notably, Pastor Aeternus
does not define these episcopal rights and powers. The decree gives
theological affirmation to episcopal dignity without juridical
specification.
Vatican I’s historical setting (why it taught) adds vital context for Pastor Aeternus’s shift to juridical language for its presentation of papal authority (how
it taught). It deploys precise definitions when describing the power to
teach infallibly so as to capacitate the pope to act with efficient and
ultimate authority. In the council’s deliberations, a majority of
bishops argued that any lack of clarity or potential loopholes could be
exploited by the church’s critics and blunt the very weapon that the
definition was intended to provide. Some of the majority bishops further
opposed including theological concerns on the grounds that they did not
fit the genre of conciliar definitions that traditionally operate in a
legal mode.37 Therefore, for reasons of practicality, strategy, and genre, the decree employed juridical or legal language.38
Vatican I’s definitions do not intend to capture either the full
reality of papal authority or the full character of the relationship
between the Bishop of Rome and local churches. This was clear to the
majority of the council fathers who recognized that the council’s work
was incomplete even in relation to its own goals.39 Rather, Pastor Aeternus’s
definitions affirm—and provide some of the conditions whereby—the pope
is able to exercise the power of authoritative intervention when the
unity and saving work of the church require it. Ultimately, the
council’s presentation of the papacy expresses a close and reliable
connection between Christ and the church, maintained in the Spirit, that
affords the latter protection, stability, and a particular access to
truth.
In short, this discussion has shown that what Pastor Aeternus presents is a true but incomplete presentation of papal primacy. How it presents this is with a style chosen for clarity and efficiency. Why
it presents papal infallibility is to secure the church’s authority and
independence at a time of perceived internal and external threats. More
work needs to be directed at setting the juridical expression of papal
primacy within the context of the hermeneutical parameters established
in the constitution’s prologue. A contextualized reading shows that Pastor Aeternus
provides christological and pneumatological grounding for the nature
and mission of the church, including its juridical structure and
exercise of authority, which is often overlooked. This vantage point
offers potentially generative connections between Vatican I’s teachings
and Francis’s vision of synodality.
Horizon 3: The Exercise of Papal Primacy in a Synodal Church
Renewing
the relationship between primacy and synodality requires fresh ways of
understanding the exercise of primacy. Here, given the limits of space,
we shall briefly identify two fundamental aspects of its exercise in a
synodal church—the first related to the balance between papal and
episcopal authority, and the second to the role of pastoral
responsibility in relation to the people of God.
First,
the proper exercise of papal authority in a synodal church requires
achieving greater equilibrium between papal and episcopal authorities.
The imbalance follows, in part, from inverse deficiencies at Vatican I. Pastor Aeternus’s
juridical construction of papal primacy requires theological and
pastoral development, while its theological affirmation of episcopal
authority requires juridical specification—for example, regarding its
nature individually, in regional bodies, and as a college in relation to
the pope. Vatican II begins to address the incomplete and unbalanced
expression of its predecessor by offering sustained reflection on
episcopal authority. This effort unfolds across the council’s
deliberations and decrees, but the third chapter of Lumen Gentium stands as the epicenter of this work.40
After affirming Vatican I’s teaching on the papacy, it sets this
teaching in a wider conception of church that includes episcopal
collegiality.41
Here, the council fathers make the critical affirmation that “the order
of bishops, which succeeds to the college of apostles and gives this
apostolic body continued existence, is also the subject of supreme and
full power over the universal Church, provided we understand this body
together with its head the Roman Pontiff and never without this head.”42
By affirming the bishops’ responsibility for the whole church and
placing the pope within the college, Vatican II moves beyond a deeply
entrenched tendency to view papal and episcopal authority competitively
in the manner of a zero-sum game. Moreover, it retrieves a communio
model of the first millennium that views the church as a communion of
churches and situates Vatican I’s teaching on the papacy in that
context. Vatican II’s efforts at contextualizing Vatican I make it
possible to properly hear the latter’s voice and see it as an asset for
synodality.43
While Lumen Gentium
significantly advanced efforts toward achieving equilibrium between
papal and episcopal authority, Francis rightly notes that this work
remains unfinished. Toward this end, he emphasizes the need to develop
regional churches in the form of episcopal conferences. In Evangelii Gaudium, he writes,
The Second Vatican Council stated that, like the ancient patriarchal churches, episcopal conferences are in a position “to contribute in many and fruitful ways to the concrete realization of the collegial spirit.” Yet, this desire has not been fully realized since a juridical status of episcopal conferences which would see them as subjects of specific attributions, including genuine doctrinal authority, has not yet been sufficiently elaborated. Excessive centralization, rather than proving helpful, complicates the Church’s life and her missionary outreach.44
Papal
primacy on the synodal path could empower episcopal conferences to
listen more effectively and act on what they have heard. Examples of
such empowerment might include allowing episcopal conferences, in
certain circumstances, to submit ideas for synodal agendas, appeal
decisions of the Holy See, and consult on aspects of doctrinal decision
making.45 Similarly, the synodal church must seek greater equilibrium between the sensus fidelium and other forms of ecclesial authority by promoting structures of mutual accountability.46
While papal primacy retains its own theologically and juridically
distinctive roles in the synodal church, it must also exercise its
authority to recognize and promote the sense of the faithful. Examples
of empowerment here might include developing, and in some instances even
requiring, processes of communal discernment in relation to certain
questions or moments in a community’s life. The papacy could support
training and formation for listening as well as structures for feedback
that direct the sensus fidelium in an upward motion that informs
ecclesial teaching and governance. To that end, synodal listening
requires clearer structures of accountability that advance Francis’s
vision of balance and mutuality among papal primacy, episcopal
authority, and the sensus fidelium in order to call forth and discern what “the Spirit says to the Churches.”47
Second, a synodal church envisions papal primacy exercised primarily as a pastoral
primacy that builds relationships and fosters listening among the
faithful. This is consistent with Pope Francis’s call for a “pastoral
conversion” of “the papacy and the central structures of the church.”48
Pastoral primacy requires the Catholic Church to enlarge its
understanding of primacy beyond its near-exclusive association with
Vatican I’s emphasis on the primacy of jurisdiction, an expression that
is steeped in notions of political sovereignty popular in its time but
largely untenable today. Rather than consigning primacy to the juridical
categories of law, obligation, and obedience, pastoral primacy draws
its direction from synodality’s emphasis on the work of the Spirit and
the authority of the sensus fidelium. This shift necessitates
leaving the realm of ideas for the realm of lived realities. In the
context of synodality, the practical benefits of a universal ministry
dedicated to the cause of unity come to the fore. Pastoral primacy finds
expression, for example, in efforts to foster unity among Christians
and reconciliation among and within divided churches, speaking on behalf
of Christians worldwide on issues such as immigration or environmental
degradation, gathering people for international events such as World
Youth Day, and providing resources for protecting churches against
intrusions by the state or religious discrimination.49
These exercises of the Petrine ministry demonstrate their roots in the
witness of the Gospel, and their authenticity invites dialogue with
other Christians.50 Primacy in a synodal church must be experienced
as an authentic instrument for listening, unifying, and empowering
discipleship. It requires listening to diverse constituencies in the
church—including episcopal conferences and wider expressions of the sensus fidelium—to
discern what the Holy Spirit is revealing to the people of God. None of
this is to say that the juridical dimension of primacy should be
abandoned as if it were not an authentic dimension of this authority.
The pope’s expression of what he hears may necessarily unfold in
juridical terms. Nevertheless, in a synodal church, the juridical
dimension of primacy must serve its pastoral dimension to advance the
goals and relationships that constitute its very existence.51
Conclusion
When
interviewed about the preparations for the Synod, Cardinal Mario Grech,
the secretary general for the Synod of Bishops, stated, “To create a
synod one must be a synod!”52
In other words, extensive and careful listening is both the
precondition and hallmark of synodal progress. This study has argued
that working toward synodality requires listening to the voice of
Vatican I. A contextualized reception of the council understands its
affirmation of papal primacy as an extension of ecclesial
indefectibility that is at the service of church unity and its mission
to communicate and safeguard the good news of salvation. When set within
a wider context—a more expansive ecclesiology already envisioned at
Vatican I and advanced at Vatican II—papal primacy finds complementarity
with episcopal collegiality as well as the sensus fidelium.
Synodality aims to draw these authorities into greater mutuality so they
edify and support each other in the interests of the people of God,
journeying together. Against the horizon of a pneumatological and
soteriological ecclesiology, what seems to be a paradox—a robust view of
synodality and a strong role for papal primacy—is revealed to be a
fruitful and essential relationship. Working out the consequences of
this renewed relationship will not be easy, but it is an essential
component of the journey that Francis envisions and which God “expects
of the Church in the third millennium.”53
Kristin Colberg https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6823-7982
Footnotes
1.
Francis, “Address at Ceremony Commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the
Institution of the Synod of Bishops” (Vatican City, October 17, 2015), https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/speeches/2015/october/documents/papa-francesco_20151017_50-anniversario-sinodo.html (hereafter cited as “October 17, 2015 Address”).
2.
The council does not use the word “synodality” or the adjective
“synodal,” but it does use the noun “synod” 136 times. See Ormond Rush,
“Inverting the Pyramid: The Sensus Fidelium in a Synodal Church,” Theological Studies 78, no. 2 (June 2017): 299–325 at 303, https://doi.org/10.1177/0040563917698561.
3.
On this topic see Massimo Faggioli, “Vatican II and the Agenda for
Collegiality and Synodality in the Twenty-First Century,” in A Council for the Global Church: Receiving Vatican II in History (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2015), 229–53.
4. Rush, “Inverting the Pyramid,” 303.
5. Francis, “October 17, 2015 Address.”
6.
The International Theological Commission affirms this need in its text
“Synodality in the Life and Mission of the Church,” which states, “There
is, however, still a long way to go in the direction mapped out by the
Council. In fact, today the drive to find an appropriate form for a
synodal Church—although it is widely shared and has been put into
practice in positive ways—seems to be in need of clear theological
principles and decisive pastoral orientations. Hence the new threshold
that Pope Francis invites us to cross.” International Theological
Commission, “Synodality in the Life and Mission of the Church,” §8, https://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/cti_documents/rc_cti_20180302_sinodalita_en.html.
7. For an extended treatment of these decisions, see Rush, “Inverting the Pyramid,” 305–20.
8.
Rafael Luciani, “From the Synod on Synodality to the Synodalization of
the Whole Church: Towards a New Ecclesial Reconfiguration in the Light
of Synodality,” Iglesia Viva 287 (July–September 2021): 97–121 at 97.
9.
As O’Malley has established, Vatican II’s goals were not envisioned in
terms of altering “observable behavior,” as was the case with its
predecessors whose procedures were based on models derived from the
Roman Senate; they sought interior conversion and a growth in holiness
among the faithful. See John O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008), 43–52, and When Bishops Meet: An Essay Comparing Trent, Vatican I and Vatican II (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2019), especially the chapter “What Do Councils Do?,” 13–34.
10. Ormond Rush, The Vision of Vatican II: Its Fundamental Principles (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2019), 32.
11. O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II,
305. In another place O’Malley expands on this point: “As modeled in
Vatican II, a council is a meeting in which the church takes time out to
explore its identity, to recall and develop its most precious values,
and to proclaim to the world its sublime vision for humanity. This is
new. This is a paradigm shift” (When Bishops Meet, 27).
12. International Theological Commission, “Synodality,” 70 (emphasis in original).
13. Francis, “October 17, 2015 Address.”
14. Lumen Gentium (November 21, 1964), §10, https://www.vatican.va/archive/hist_councils/ii_vatican_council/documents/vat-ii_const_19641121_lumen-gentium_en.html (hereafter cited as LG). On this point, see Sigrid Müller, “‘A Lantern on the Way’: Pope Francis’ Signposts for Ecclesial Ethics,” Ecclesiology 17, no. 2 (July 2021): 213–37 at 219, https://doi.org/10.1163/17455316%E2%80%9317020004, who stresses that “the comprehensive meaning of the sensus fidelium has consequences” for the synodal path and life of the church.
15.
Competing interests and conflicting interpretations have contributed to
a “web of error, misunderstanding and misinterpretation which have long
rendered it difficult to discern the council’s true meaning.” John
Tracy Ellis, “The Church Faces the Modern World: The First Vatican
Council,” in The General Council: Special Studies in Doctrinal and Historical Background, ed. William Joseph McDonald (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1962), 135.
16.
While Vatican I has generally suffered from studies that consider its
texts apart from their appropriate context or focus only on the
definition of papal infallibility, notable exceptions provide
contextualized and vital readings of the council, including Robert
Aubert, Vatican I (Paris: Éditions de L’Orante, 1964); Cuthbert Butler, The Vatican Council: The Story Told from Inside in Bishop Ullathorne’s Letters, 2 vols. (London: Longmans, Green, 1930); Klaus Schatz, Vaticanum I, 3 vols. (Paderborn, Germany: Ferdinand Schöningh, 1992–94); Giacomo Martina, Pio IX, 3 vols. (Rome: Pontificia Università Gregoriana, 1974–90); and Ulrich Horst, Unfehlbarkeit und Geschichte (Mainz, Germany: Matthias-Grünewald-Verlag, 1982).
17. O’Malley has considered this question in several forums. Among these are “Vatican II: Did Anything Happen?,” Theological Studies 67, no. 1 (February 2006): 3–33, https://doi.org/10.1177/004056390606700101, and What Happened at Vatican II.
18. Stephen Schloesser, “Against Forgetting: Memory, History, Vatican II,” Theological Studies 67, no. 2 (May 2006): 275–319, https://doi.org/10.1177/004056390606700203. Applying this methodology to the study of Vatican I is the focus of my book Vatican I and Vatican II: Councils in the Living Tradition (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2016).
19.
Hermann Pottmeyer identifies the three traumas as (1) conciliarism and
Gallicanism, (2) the system of a state-controlled church, and (3)
rationalism and liberalism. For his description of these, see his Towards a Papacy in Communion: Perspectives from Vatican Councils I and II
(New York: Herder and Herder, 1998), 13–35. Jeffrey von Arx goes as far
as to describe Rome’s reaction to these traumas as “something akin to
an institutional version of post-traumatic stress disorder.” See his “A
Post-Traumatic Church: Vatican I and the ‘Long 19th Century,’” America Magazine, June 2015, 22–24 at 22.
20. Butler, The Vatican Council, 1:81.
21. This text and a helpful commentary are found in Fidelis van der Horst’s Das Schema über die Kirche auf dem I Vatikanischen Konzil (Paderborn, Germany: Ferdinand Schöeningh, 1963). See also Patrick Granfield, “The Church as Societas Perfecta in the Schemata of Vatican I,” Church History 48, no. 4 (1979): 431–46, https://doi.org/10.2307/3164535, and Henri Rondet, Vatican I: Le Concile de Pie IX: La preparation, les méthodes de travail, les schémas restés en suspens (Paris: Lethielleux, 1962).
22. For an authoritative study on the position of the minority bishops, see Margaret O’Gara, Triumph in Defeat: Infallibility, Vatican I, and the French Minority Bishops
(Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1988). For an
exploration of the majority bishops’ position, consult Richard F.
Costigan, The Consensus of the Church and Papal Infallibility: A Study in the Background of Vatican I (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2005); Jeffrey von Arx, ed., Varieties of Ultramontanism (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1998); and Gisela Fleckenstein and Joachim Schmiedel, eds., Ultramontanus: Tendenzen und Forschung (Paderborn, Germany: Bonifatius, 2005). Two important sources on the overall debate include John O’Malley’s Vatican I: The Council and the Making of the Ultramontane Church (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018) and Hermann Pottmeyer’s Unfehlbarkeit and Souveränität: Die päpstliche Unfehlbarkeit im System der ultramontanen Ekklesiologie des 19. Jahrhunderts (Mainz, Germany: Grünewald, 1975).
23. While the focus here is on Pastor Aeternus and its presentation of papal authority, the same hermeneutical pitfalls pertain to Dei Filius
when interpreters focus on its final treatment of revelation with
little attention to the context established in the preceding chapters.
See O’Malley, Vatican I, 133–79.
24. Walter Kasper stresses the importance of Pastor Aeternus’s
prologue as a lens for reading the text. He employed the term
“hermeneutic rules” in an email to the author on December 11, 2018.
Kasper treats this topic in his “Introduction to the Theme and Catholic
Hermeneutics of the Dogma of the First Vatican Council,” in The Petrine Ministry: Catholic and Orthodox in Dialogue, ed. Walter Kasper (Mahwah, NJ: Newman Press, 2006), 7–23.
25. Vatican I, Pastor Aeternus, 812. All references to Pastor Aeternus are taken from Norman Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, vol. 2, Trent to Vatican II (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1990), 811–16. The Latin can be found here: https://www.vatican.va/content/pius-ix/la/documents/constitutio-dogmatica-pastor-aeternus-18-iulii-1870.html.
26. Vatican I, Pastor Aeternus, 812.
27. Gerard Kelly, “The Roman Catholic Doctrine of Papal Infallibility: A Response to Mark Powell,” Theological Studies 74, no. 1 (February 2013): 129–37 at 132, https://doi.org/10.1177/004056391307400107.
28. See Michael Buckley, Papal Primacy and the Episcopate: Towards a Relational Understanding (New York: Crossroad, 1998), 45.
29. On these rules and their impact on Pastor Aeternus’s interpretation, see Kristin Colberg, “Looking at Vatican I’s Pastor Aeternus 150 Years Later: A Fresh Consideration of the Council’s Significance Yesterday and Today,” Horizons 46, no. 2 (December 2019): 323–47, https://doi.org/10.1017/hor.2019.57.
30. Vatican I, Pastor Aeternus, 813.
31. Francis A. Sullivan, Magisterium: Teaching Authority in the Catholic Church (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1983), 5.
32. Sullivan, Magisterium, 5.
33. Karl Rahner connects Vatican I’s teachings with the doctrine indefectibilitatis ecclesiae,
arguing that while some opponents of the council’s definitions
portrayed them as a “blank cheque” and a modern innovation, they are
instead a consequence of the Christian belief in “the indestructability
of the believing church, which itself is the outcome of the unique and
eschatologically victorious event of Christ.” Rahner, “On the Concept of
Infallibility in Catholic Theology,” in Theological Investigations, vol. 14 (New York: Crossroad, 1976), 66–84 at 75.
34.
Expressions of ecumenical agreement about ecclesial indefectibility are
numerous. In fact, this agreement is frequently used as the basis for
approaching disputed questions. For an example of this, see the Group of
Farfa Sabina, Communion of Churches and Petrine Ministry: Lutheran–Catholic Convergences
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2016). Also valuable for a discussion of fault
lines among offices and authorities for different Christian communities
is Peder Nørgard-Højen’s “Introduction,” in How Can the Petrine Ministry Be a Service to the Unity of the Universal Church?, ed. James Puglisi (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010), 1–10.
35. Vatican I, Pastor Aeternus, 814.
36. Vatican I, Pastor Aeternus, 814.
37. See Costigan, The Consensus of the Church and Papal Infallibility, 35–62.
38. The critical text for understanding this debate and the arguments for employing juridical language is Bishop Vincent Gasser’s relatio at the council. This is published in James T. O’Connor, ed., The Gift of Infallibility: The Official Relatio on Infallibility of Bishop Vincent Gasser at Vatican Council I (Boston: St. Paul Editions, 1986).
39. Many bishops voted in support of Pastor Aeternus’s
definitions motivated by a trust that once the council resumed, its
teachings on the papacy would receive necessary contextualization
through developing a more comprehensive ecclesiology as was intended.
This trust was bolstered by the efforts to develop a second constitution
on the church to be called constitutio secunda. This text was to be a revision of the first schema on the church, Supremi Pastoris,
in light of the remarks made by the council fathers over the course of
the debate. German philosopher and theologian Joseph Kleutgen was tasked
with drafting this text, which came to be known as Tametsi Deus. Tametsi Deus
consisted of ten chapters and sixteen canons, but it was never
distributed to the council fathers due to the outbreak of the
Franco–Prussian War. The text was largely forgotten until it reemerged,
with a relatio by Kleutgen, in 1927. Thereafter it gained
considerable attention among theologians as it provided insight into the
thinking of the council fathers, demonstrating a less polemical and
more balanced view of the church. Renewed attention to the schema
advanced an awareness among many of those who would serve as periti
at Vatican II of the fact that Vatican I remained unfinished and needed
to be completed with a reflection on the relationship between episcopal
collegiality and papal primacy. The text for Tametsi Deus is found in Giovan Domenico Mansi et al., eds., Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, 53 vols. (Florence: Antonio Zatti, 1759–1927), 53: 308–17. For sources on Tametsi Deus, see Granfield, “The Church as Societas Perfecta”; John Joy, On the Ordinary and Extraordinary Magisterium from Joseph Kleutgen to the Second Vatican Council, vol. 84, Studia oecumenica friburgensia (Münster, Germany: Aschendorff Verlag, 2017); and Henri Rondet, Vatican I: Le Concile de Pie IX.
40.
The importance of this chapter was such that it was judged as “the
backbone of the council” and the “center of gravity of Vatican II.” See
Cardinal P. Eyt, “La collégialité épiscopale,” in Le deuxième concile
du Vatican 1959–65. Actes du colloque organisé par l’École francaise de
Rome en collaboration avec l’Université de Lille 3 (Rome: École
Française de Rome, 1989), 54. In regard to this chapter, Yves Congar
noted in his journal, “Vatican I has received its necessary complement.”
Congar, My Journal of the Council, ed. Dennis Minnis, trans. Mary John Ronayne and Mary Cecily Boulding (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2012), 590.
41. For an extended treatment of the way that the third chapter of Lumen Gentium
seeks to bring balance to Vatican I’s teaching on the primacy by
placing it within the context of episcopal collegiality, see Karl
Rahner, “The Hierarchical Structure of the Church, with Special
Reference to the Episcopate,” in Commentary on the Documents of Vatican II, ed. Herbert Vorgrimler, vol. 1 (New York: Herder and Herder, 1966), 186–218. See also Colberg, “Vatican I’s Impact on What and How Vatican II Taught,” in Vatican I and Vatican II, 115–36.
42. LG, §22.
43.
The connection between Vatican II’s view of episcopal collegiality and
Francis’s notion of synodality is the topic of Massimo Faggioli’s “From
Collegiality to Synodality: Promise and Limits of Francis’s ‘Listening
Primacy,’” Irish Theological Quarterly 85, no. 4 (November 2020): 352–69, https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0021140020916034.
44. Francis, Evangelii Gaudium (November 24, 2013), §32, https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/apost_exhortations/documents/papa-francesco_esortazione-ap_20131124_evangelii-gaudium.html (hereafter cited as EG).
45. See Hervé Legrand, “Communio Ecclesiae, Communio Ecclesiarum, Collegium Episcoporum,” in For a Missionary Reform of the Church: The Civiltà Cattolica Seminar, ed. Antonio Spadaro and Carlos Marìa Galli (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2018), 159–95 at 184.
46. On this topic, see Dario Vitali’s “The Circularity between Sensus Fidei and Magisterium as a Criterion for the Exercise of Synodality in the Church,” in Spadaro and Galli, For a Missionary Reform of the Church, 196–217. Two other important sources on the exercise of the sensus fidelium are Ormond Rush, The Eyes of Faith: The Sense of the Faithful and the Church’s Reception of Revelation
(Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2009); and
Richard Gaillardetz’s “What Is the Sense of the Faithful?,” in By What Authority: Foundations for Understanding Authority in the Church (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2018).
47. Francis, “October 17, 2015 Address.”
48. EG, §32.
49. This is further developed in Legrand, “Towards a Common Understanding of Papal Ministry,” in Puglisi, Petrine Ministry, 330–34.
50.
On this point, Pottmeyer writes, “I am therefore convinced that—more
than any other efforts—it is incumbent on the Catholic Church itself to
give its Petrine ministry a convincing form to make it possible for
other Christians to share this experience.” Hermann Pottmeyer,
“Historical Development of Forms of Authority and Jurisdiction: Papal
Ministry—An Ecumenical Approach,” in Puglisi, Petrine Ministry, 98–107 at 106.
51. See Buckley, Papal Primacy, 62–74.
52. Andrea Tornielli, “Cardinal Grech: The Church Is Synodal Because It Is a Communion,” Vatican News, July 21, 2021, https://www.vaticannews.va/en/vatican-city/news/2021-07/cardinal-grech-synod-synodality-interview-communion.html.
Biographies
Kristin Colberg
is an associate professor at Saint John’s University and School of
Theology and the College of Saint Benedict. She serves as a member of
the Anglican-Roman Catholic International Commission (ARCIC) and on the
theological commission supporting the Synod on Synodality. She is
currently working on a book on ecclesial indefectibility.
SOURCE Theological Studies
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου
Σημείωση: Μόνο ένα μέλος αυτού του ιστολογίου μπορεί να αναρτήσει σχόλιο.