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By Bishop Robert E. Tracy
Special To The Georgia Bulletin
The Most Reverend Robert E. Tracy is Bishop of Baton Rouge, La.
He is attending the third session of Vatican Council II and graciously
consented to send along this dispatch concerning the opening ceremonies.
The first thing to deal with in approaching an experience like a
session of an Ecumenical Council is the matter of mood. What is the mood of
this Third Session as compared with those of the other two sessions? Let me put
it this way: In my view, the first session was, for most of us United States
bishops, a period of uncertainty. After all, we were new at this sort of thing.
We were looking around and making observations and preparing a stance. It was
exhilarating all right, but we were feeling our way just the same.
Ecumenical Councils were gatherings we had learned about in Church
History classes. Assemblies to be viewed with awe from afar, making infallible
pronouncements, fulminating anathemas and on the whole very formidable, any way
you chose to look at them. To find ones self directly involved in such an
historical setting was rather unsettling to say the least at first. So we were
all enveloped in a mood of uncertainty as we pulled down the kneelers and
picked up the electronic pencils to mark ourselves present at the first
session, then the second session.
This was quite a different period. Painters, I understand go
through different moods (The Blue Mood, The Green Mood and so forth). Well, so
do Council Fathers and our mood during the second session was quite different
from the uncertainty of the first. In September 1964, we had found our sea legs
and could move about without too much fear of toppling over. The scene had
become familiar, not to mention the curious Council procedure, which had never
been in the same room with Parliamentary Law. We began to be with it, and I
think we succeeded in making ourselves heard in an effective way. In the second
session, much of the hearing was obtained in ways that never reached the press
but it was effective, nonetheless. Lines were drawn, stances defined and
advances made during the second session, but in my view, much of this matter
then went to commission and remained there, and there was a stalemate in
December, 1963, but now we have the third session and the mood at first is hard
to measure or define.
I talked with a wide grouping of experts this morning just after
the opening session came to an end at the press center at no. 54 Via Delia
Conciliazione. Present were Father Fred McManus, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Novak,
Monsignor John Naughton, Baton Rouge press chief. There was no consensus on the
prospects for vital significant action at the third session. My own opinion,
however, is that we cant miss a confrontation with extremely vital
problems in this session. Personally, I am looking forward to fireworks as we
get down to beating out some highly explosive issues like the world
collegiality of the bishops, religious liberty, the Jews, and so forth. At any
rate all this must wait for further reporting today. Let us confine our remarks
to what actually happened at St. Peters this morning.
Well, first of all, some new features were well publicized long in
advance of the opening session, so you have all heard about them, such as the
concelebration of Mass by the pope with 24 bishops from all around the world,
including two archbishops from the United States, Archbishop Krol of
Philadelphia and Archbishop Shehan of Baltimore.
Then there was the matter of admitting women observers to the
Council for the first time in history, and the new rules for speaking in the
Aula. All these things were duly reported in the NCWC News Services and there
is no need to expand upon them, but let me give you an observers view of
exactly what happened this morning. Well, my traveling companions, Monsignor
Naughton and Monsignor J. J. Gillespie and his brother, Father Augustine
Gillespie, on my advice reported to Saint Peters at 7:30 a.m., and as I
had predicted were ushered to seats much better than my own. I had to content
myself with a seat back of the cardinals while my companions were chock-a-block
with the Protestant observers, which means that they had ringside seats. But I
took great consolation out of the fact that four archbishops who came a little
later had to be satisfied with squatting on steps in the aisle -- Archbishops
Hakin (Bagdad), Damiano (Camden, New Jersey), Conway (Armagh, Ireland), and
Heenan (Westminster, London). This was the batting order on the steps just
opposite my position.
The grand ceremony began just a little after 9 a.m. Pope Paul
entered the Basilica of Saint Peters attended by the usual splendid
entourage so customary at papal functions for ages. But there was a difference;
the pope is clearly against demonstrations in Saint Peters and he blessed
the crowd as he passed, thus making it extremely difficult for anybody to clap
hands (did you ever try blessing yourself and clapping hand at the same time?).
No, the present popes mood is distinctly on the side of restraint in
external exhibitions. However, this is not the tradition of Rome and traditions
are not uprooted but only gradually removed. The impression is that Paul is
gradually removing a lot of things.
The ceremony of concelebration was most impressive -- twenty-four
bishops all saying Mass at once with the pope himself. How they did it is a
question. I would have been petrified. They all stood around the same great
altar under the great Bernini Ciborium and said the Mass together, using one
Host and one Chalice. However, additional Hosts were consecrated, large ones
for the bishops to receive communion and small ones for the faithful to
communicate. The text of the Mass was arranged by papal decree. A Low Mass
essentially, but with singing at certain points. Beautiful copies of the entire
Mass text were distributed to each bishop and there was most impressive
participation throughout. It was a truly great historic event harking back to
the earliest ages of Christianity and a truly great devotional act which was
not lost on the thousands who viewed it with hushed reverence.
After Mass, Archbishop Felici, the official starter at the
Council, got up onto his familiar tub and made a pack of announcements in Latin
like Cicero might have used addressing the Roman Senate, only more so.
Archbishop Felici handles Latin words like a monkey handles a coconut. Then the
Holy Father sat down on his throne and set the sights for all of us with a most
deeply thought out address.
This is what we had been waiting for. After all, it is the Holy
Father who sets the pace at the Council. It is he who decides the matter to be
taken up by the Fathers, and it is he who decides the spirit in which the
Council is to move. Today we got the word in no uncertain terms. Most important
in Pope Pauls address today were the words, The hour has sounded in
history when the Church which expresses herself in us and from us receives
structure and life must say of herself what Christ intended and willed her to
be and what the age long meditation of the fathers, pontiffs and doctors in
their wisdom has explored with piety and fidelity. The Church must give a
definition of herself and bring out from her true consciousness the doctrine
which the Holy Spirit teaches her thus must be completed, the doctrine which
the first Vatican Council was preparing to enunciate.
The discussion of this doctrine remains to be completed. The
Council has many subjects to treat of, but this seems to us to be the
weightiest and the most delicate, and then the Holy Father explained why he had
decided on concelebration to start the Council. We wanted to tune in with
Divine Providence in celebrating this historic moment by giving you our
brothers in the Episcopate the honor which our Lord desired to show to the
Apostles together with Peter. Now isnt that as nice a way to put it
as you could possibly imagine? But, the pope goes on, Our
position in no way defrauds you our Brother Bishops of your due authority.
Restrictions are imposed solely for the good of the Church which has
proportionately greater need for centralized authority. As its world wide
extension becomes more complete, this centralization is more of a service than
anything else and will always be balanced by an alert and timely delegation of
authority and faculties to local pastors of souls. Dispersed as you are
throughout the world you have a need of a center of unity, a principle of unity
in faith and Catholicity, a unifying power such as you find in the Chair of
Peter. Now the Council has many more important items to treat of; the nature
and mission of the pastors of the Church, the Constitutional prerogatives of
the Episcopacy, and the relations between the Episcopate and the Holy See, the
relations between East and West in the Church, the true nature of hierarchical
authority for the sake of our separate brethren, and so forth. But the central
objective of the third session remains among its many concerns to investigate
and clarify the nature of the Church, thus making of this third session of
Vatican II a logical continuation of the First Vatican Council. The pope
goes on in his opening one hour address to salute various groups, the auditors,
the guests, etc., who are present at this most solemn opening session, and
having addressed himself to all at hand, he finally calls upon everyone to join
with him in a fervent Veni Creator Spiritus (Come Holy Ghost).
Thus began the third session of the Second Vatican Council, I
think that in this session the fathers will enter the deep waters of the
Council, that is, those penetrating questions which will most greatly affect
the life of the Church for many years to come. But one thing seems certain,
Pope Paul VI has gotten action. The fathers have received schemata which are
completed in a tone that will almost certainly win quick approval from the
fathers assembled.
There will be battles on some questions still under debate. But
many a vital question like collegiality is no longer debatable. It remains only
to be voted on, and the result from this corner looks like a landslide.
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