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Lay Witness
THE
ECCLESIOLOGY OF VATICAN II
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
From L'Osservatore Romano, January 23 2002,
Weekly Edition
Conference of Cardinal
Ratzinger at the opening of the Pastoral Congress of the Diocese
of Aversa (Italy)
On the afternoon of 15 September 2001, at
the invitation of Archbishop Mario Milano, His Eminence, Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith, opened the Pastoral Congress of the Diocese
of Aversa (Italy) dedicated to a re-reading of the documents
of the Second Vatican Council. This is a translation of Cardinal
Ratzinger's opening lecture in Italian.
Just
after the First World War, Romano Guardini coined an expression
that quickly became a slogan for German Catholics: "An
event of enormous importance is taking place: the Church is
awakening within souls". The result of this awakening
was ultimately the Second Vatican Council. Through its various
documents it expressed and made part of the patrimony of the
whole Church something that, during four decades full of ferment
and hope (1920 to 1960), had been maturing in knowledge gained
through faith. To understand Vatican II one must look back
on this period and seek to discern, at least in outline, the
currents and tendencies that came together in the Council.
I will present the ideas that came to the fore during this
period and then describe the fundamental elements of the Council's
teaching on the Church.
I.
The Church, the Body of Christ
1. The
Image of the Mystical Body
"The
Church is awakening within souls". Guardini's expression
had been wisely formulated, since it finally recognized and
experienced the Church as something within usnot as
an institution outside us but something that lives within
us.
If
until that time we had thought of the Church primarily as
a structure or organization, now at last we began to realize
that we ourselves were the Church. The Church is much more
than an organization: it is the organism of the Holy Spirit,
something that is alive, that takes hold of our inmost being.
This consciousness found verbal expression with the concept
of the "Mystical Body of Christ", a phrase describing
a new and liberating experience of the Church. At the very
end of his life, in the same year the Constitution on the
Church was published by the Council, Guardini wrote: the Church
"is not an institution devised and built by men ... but
a living reality.... It lives still throughout the course
of time. Like all living realities it develops, it changes
... and yet in the very depths of its being it remains the
same; its inmost nucleus is Christ.... To the extent that
we look upon the Church as organization ... like an association
... we have not yet arrived at a proper understanding of it.
Instead, it is a living reality and our relationship with
it ought to belife" (La Chiesa del Signore,
[English translation: "The Church of the Lord"];
Morcelliana, Brescia 1967, p. 160).
Today,
it is difficult to communicate the enthusiasm and joy this
realization generated at the time. In the era of liberalism
that preceded the First World War, the Catholic Church was
looked upon as a fossilized organization, stubbornly opposed
to all modern achievements. Theology had so concentrated on
the question of the primacy as to make the Church appear to
be essentially a centralized organization that one defended
staunchly but which somehow one related to from the outside.
Once again it became clear that the Church was more than thisshe
is something we all bring forward in faith in a living way,
just as the Church brings us forward. It became clear that
the Church has experienced organic growth over the centuries,
and continues to grow even today. Through the Church the mystery
of the Incarnation is alive today: Christ continues to move
through time. If we were to ask ourselves what element present
from the very beginning could still be found in Vatican II,
our answer would be: the Christological definition of the
Church. J.A. MöhIer, a leader in the revival of Catholic
theology after the devastation of the Enlightenment, once
said: a certain erroneous theology could be caricatured with
the short phrase: "In the beginning Christ created the
hierarchy and had thus taken adequate care of the Church until
the end of time". Opposed to this concept is the fact
that the Church is the Mystical Body; Christ and His act of
founding are never over but always new. In the Church Christ
never belongs just to the past, He is always and above all
the present and the future. The Church is the presence of
Christ: He is contemporary with us and we are His contemporaries.
The Church lives from this: from the fact that Christ is present
in our hearts and it is there that Christ forms His Church.
That is why the first word of the Church is Christ, and not
herself. The Church is healthy to the extent that all her
attention is focused on Him. The Second Vatican Council placed
this concept masterfully at the pinacle of its deliberations;
the fundamental text on the Church begins with the words:
Lumen gentium cum sit Christus: "since Christ
is the Light of the World ... the Church is a mirror of His
glory; she reflects His splendour". If we want to understand
the Second Vatican Council correctly, we must always go back
to this opening statement....
Next,
with this point of departure, we must establish both the feature
of her interiority and of her communitarian nature. The Church
grows from within and moves outwards, not vice-versa. Above
all, she is the sign of the most intimate communion with Christ.
She is formed primarily in a life of prayer, the sacraments
and the fundamental attitudes of faith, hope and love. Thus
if someone should ask what must I do to become Church and
to grow like the Church, the reply must be: you must become
a person who lives faith, hope, and charity. What builds the
Church is prayer and the communion of the sacraments; in them
the prayer of the Church comes to meet us. Last summer I met
a parish priest who told me that for many years there hadn't
been a single vocation to the priesthood from his parish.
What ought he do? We cannot manufacture vocations, it is the
Lord who raises them up. Should we therefore stand by helpless?
The priest decided to make a pilgrimage every year, a long
and difficult pilgrimage to the Marian Shrine of Altötting
to pray for vocations, and invited those who shared in this
intention to join him in the pilgrimage and common prayer.
Year after year the number of participants in this pilgrimage
grew until finally, this year, the whole village with great
joy, celebrated the first Mass in living memory said by a
priest from the parish....
The Church
grows from within: this is the meaning of the expression "Body
of Christ". The phrase implies something more: Christ
has formed a body for himself. If I want to find Him and make
Him mine, I am directly called to become a humble and complete
and full member of His Body, and, by becoming one of His members,
becoming an organ of his Body in this world, I will be so
for eternity. The idea of liberal theology that whereas Jesus
on his own would be interesting, the Church would be a wretched
reality, contradicts this understanding completely. Christ
gives Himself only in His body, and never as a pure ideal.
This means that He gives Himself, and the others, in the uninterrupted
communion that endures through time and is His Body. It means
that the Church is not an idea, it is a Body. The scandal
of becoming flesh that Jesus' incarnation caused so many of
His contemporaries, is repeated in the "scandalous character"
of the Church. Jesus' statement is valid in this instance:
"Blessed is he who is not scandalized in me".
The
communitarian nature of the Church necessarily entails its
character as "we". The Church is not somewhere apart
from us, it is we who constitute the Church. No one person
can say "I am the Church", but each one of us can
and ought to say, "we are the Church". This "we"
does not represent an isolated group, but rather a group that
exists within the entire community of all Christ's members,
living and dead. This is how a group can genuinely say: "we
are the Church". Here is the Church, in this open "we"
that breaches social and political boundaries, and the boundary
between heaven and earth as well. We are the Church. This
gives rise to a co-responsibility and also the possibility
of collaborating personally. From this understanding there
derives the right to criticize but our criticism must be above
all self-criticism. Let us repeat: the Church is not "somewhere
else"; nor is she "someone else". We ourselves
build the Church. These ideas matured and led directly to
the Council. Everything said about the common responsibility
of the laity, and the legal forms that were established to
facilitate the intelligent exercise of responsibility, are
the result of this current of thought.
Finally,
the concept of the development and therefore of the historical
dynamic of the Church belongs to this theme. A body remains
identical to itself over the course of its life due to the
fact that in the life process it constantly renews itself.
For the great English Cardinal, Newman, the idea of development
was the true and proper bridge to his conversion to Catholicism.
I believe that the idea of development belongs to those numerous
fundamental concepts of Catholicism that are far from being
adequately explored. Once again it is Vatican II to which
we owe the first solemn formulation of this idea in a Magisterial
document. Whoever wants to attach himself solely to the literal
interpretation of the Scriptures or to the forms of the Church
of the Fathers imprisons Christ in "yesterday".
The result is either a wholly sterile faith that has nothing
to say to our times, or the arrogant assumption of the right
to skip over 2,000 years of history, consign them to the dustbin
of mistakes, and try to figure out what a Christianity would
look like either according to Scripture or according to Jesus.
The only possible result will be an artificial creation that
we ourselves have made, devoid of any consistency. Genuine
identity with the beginning in Christ can only exist where
there is a living continuity that has developed the beginning
and preserved the beginning precisely through this development.
2. Eucharistic
Ecclesiology
Let
us go back and look at developments in the pre-Conciliar era.
Reflection on the Mystical Body of Christ marked the first
phase of the Church's interior re-discovery; it began with
St Paul and led to placing in the foreground the presence
of Christ and the dynamics of what is alive (in Him and us).
Further research led to a fresh awareness. Above all, more
than anyone else, the great French theologian Henri de Lubac
in his magnificent and learned studies made it clear that
in the beginning the term "corpus mysticum" referred
to the Eucharist. For St Paul and the Fathers of the Church
the idea of the Church as the Body of Christ was inseparably
connected with the concept of the Eucharist in which the Lord
is bodily present and which He gives us His Body as food.
This is how a Eucharistic ecclesiology came into existence.
What
do we mean today by "Eucharistic ecclesiology"?
I will attempt to answer this question with a brief mention
of some fundamental points. The first point is that Jesus'
Last Supper could be defined as the event that founded the
Church. Jesus gave His followers this Liturgy of Death and
Resurrection and at the same time He gave them the Feast of
Life. In the Last Supper he repeats the covenant of Sinaior
rather what at Sinai was a simple sign or prototype, that
becomes now a complete reality: the communion in blood and
life between God and man. Clearly the Last Supper anticipates
the Cross and the Resurrection and presupposes them, otherwise
it would be an empty gesture. This is why the Fathers of the
Church could use a beautiful image and say that the Church
was born from the pierced side of the Lord, from which flowed
blood and water. When I state that the Last Supper is the
beginning of the Church, I am actually saying the same thing,
from another point of view. This formula means that the Eucharist
binds all men together, and not just with one another, but
with Christ; in this way it makes them "Church".
At the same time the formula describes the fundamental constitution
of the Church: the Church exists in Eucharistic communities.
The Church's Mass is her constitution, because the Church
is, in essence, a Mass (sent out: "missa"), a service
of God, and therefore a service of man and a service for the
transformation of the world.
The
Mass is the Church's form, that means that through it she
develops an entirely original relationship that exists nowhere
else, a relationship of multiplicity and of unity. In each
celebration of the Eucharist, the Lord is really present.
He is risen and dies no more. He can no longer be divided
into different parts. He always gives Himself completely and
entirely. This is why the Council states: "This Church
of Christ is truly present in all legitimate local communities
of the faithful which, united with their pastors, are themselves
called Churches in the New Testament. For in their locality
these are the new People called by God, in the Holy Spirit
and with great trust (cf. 1 Thes. 1,5).... In these communities,
though frequently small and poor, or living in the diaspora,
Christ is present, and in virtue of His power there is brought
together one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church" (Lumen
Gentium, n. 26). This means that the ecclesiology of local
Churches derives from the formulation of the Eucharistic ecclesiology.
This is a typical feature of Vatican II that presents the
internal and sacramental foundation of the doctrine of collegiality
about which we will speak later.
For
a correct understanding of the Council's teaching, we must
first look more closely at what exactly it said. Vatican II
was aware of the concerns of both Orthodox and Protestant
theology and integrated them into a more ample Catholic understanding.
In Orthodox theology the idea of Eucharistic ecclesiology
was first expressed by exiled Russian theologians in opposition
to the pretensions of Roman centralism. They affirmed that
insofar as it possesses Christ entirely, every Eucharistic
community is already, in se, the Church. Consequently, external
unity with other communities is not a constitutive element
of the Church.
Therefore,
they concluded that unity with Rome is not a constitutive
element of the Church. Such a unity would be a beautiful thing
since it would represent the fullness of Christ to the external
world, but it is not essential since nothing would be added
to the totality of Christ. The Protestant understanding of
the Church was moving in the same direction. Luther could
no longer recognize the Spirit of Christ in the universal
Church; he directly took that Church to be an instrument of
the anti-Christ. Nor could he see the Protestant State Churches
of the Reformation as Churches in the proper sense of the
word. They were only social, political entities necessary
for specific purposes and dependent on political powersnothing
more. According to Luther the Church existed in the community.
Only the assembly that listens to the Word of God in a specific
place is the Church. He replaced the word "Church"
with "community" (Gemeinde). Church became
a negative concept.
If
we go back now to the Council text certain nuances become
evident. The text does not simply say, "The Church is
entirely present in each community that celebrates the Eucharist",
rather it states: "This Church of Christ is truly present
in all legitimate local communities of the faithful which,
united with their pastors, are themselves called Churches".
Two elements here are of great importance: to be a Church
the community must be "legitimate"; they are legitimate
when they are "united with their pastors". What
does this mean? In the first place, no one can make a Church
by himself. A group cannot simply get together, read the New
Testament and declare: "At present we are the Church
because the Lord is present wherever two or three are gathered
in His name". The element of "receiving" belongs
essentially to the Church, just as faith comes from "hearing"
and is not the result of one's decision or reflection. Faith
is a converging with something I could neither imagine nor
produce on my own; faith has to come to meet me. We call the
structure of this encounter, a "Sacrament". It is
part of the fundamental form of a sacrament that it be received
and not self-administered. No one can baptize himself. No
one can ordain himself. No one can forgive his own sins. Perfect
repentance cannot remain something interiorof its essence
it demands the form of encounter of the Sacrament. This too
is a result of a sacrament's fundamental structure as an encounter
[with Christ]. For this reason communion with oneself is not
just an infraction of the external provisions of Canon Law,
but it is an attack on the innermost nature of a sacrament.
That a priest can administer this unique sacrament, and only
this sacrament, to himself is part of the mysterium tremendum
in which the Eucharist involves him. In the Eucharist, the
priest acts "in persona Christi", in the person
of Christ [the Head]; at the same time he represents Christ
while remaining a sinner who lives completely by accepting
Christ's Gift.
One
cannot make the Church but only receive her; one receives
her from where she already is, where she is really present:
the sacramental community of Christ's Body moving through
history. It will help us to understand this difficult concept
if we add something: "legitimate communities". Christ
is everywhere whole. This is the first important formulation
of the Council in union with our Orthodox brothers. At the
same time Christ is everywhere only one, so I can possess
the one Lord only in the unity that He is, in the unity of
all those who are also His Body and who through the Eucharist
must evermore become it. Therefore, the reciprocal unity of
all those communities who celebrate the Eucharist is not something
external added to Eucharistic ecclesiology, but rather its
internal condition: in unity here is the One. This is why
the Council recalls the proper responsibility of communities,
but excludes any self-sufficiency. The Council develops an
ecclesiology in which being Catholic, namely being in communion
with believers in all places and in all times, is not simply
an external element of an organizational form, it represents
grace coming from within and is at the same time a visible
sign of the grace of the Lord who alone can create unity by
breaching countless boundaries.
ll.
The Church, as the People of God
After
the initial enthusiasm that greeted the discovery of the idea
of the Body of Christ, scholars analyzed and gradually began
to refine the concept and make corrections in two directions.
We have already referred to the first of these corrections
in the work of Henri de Lubac. He made concrete the idea of
the Body of Christ by working out a Eucharistic ecclesiology
and opened it in this way to concrete questions about the
juridical ordering of the Church and the reciprocal relations
between local Churches and the universal Church. The other
form of correction began in Germany in the 1930's, where some
theologians were critical of the fact that with the idea of
the Mystical Body certain relationships were not clear between
the visible and the invisible, law and grace, order and life.
They therefore proposed the concept of "People of God",
found above all in the Old Testament, as a broader description
of the Church to which one could more easily apply sociological
and juridical categories. While the Mystical Body of Christ
would certainly remain an important "image", by
itself it could not meet the request of theology to express
things using "concepts".
Initially
this criticism of the idea of the Body of Christ was somewhat
superficial. Further study of the Body of Christ uncovered
its positive content; the concept of "People of God",
along with the concept of the Body of Christ, entered the
ecclesiology of the Council. One wondered if the image of
the Mystical Body might be too narrow a starting point to
define the many forms of belonging to the Church now found
in the tangle of human history. If we use the image of a body
to describe "belonging" we are limited only to the
form of representation as "member". Either one is
or one is not a member, there are no other possibilities.
One can then ask if the image of the body was too restrictive,
since there manifestly existed in reality intermediate degrees
of belonging. The Constitution on the Church found it helpful
for this purpose to use the concept of "the People of
God". It could describe the relationship of non-Catholic
Christians to the Church as being "in communion"
and that of non-Christians as being "ordered" to
the Church where in both cases one relies on the idea of the
People of God (Lumen Gentium, nn. 15, 16).
In
one respect one can say that the Council introduced the concept
of "the People of God" above all as an ecumenical
bridge. It applies to another perspective as well: the rediscovery
of the Church after the First World War that initially was
a phenomenon common to both Catholics and Protestants. Certainly
the liturgical movement was by no means limited to the Catholic
Church. This shared character gave rise to reciprocal criticism.
The idea of the Body of Christ was developed within the Catholic
Church, when the Church was designated as "Christ who
continues to live on earth" and so the Church was described
as the incarnation of the Son that continues to the end of
time. This idea provoked opposition among Protestants who
saw in the teaching an intolerable identifying of the Church
herself with Christ. According to Protestants the Church was
in a way adoring herself and making herself infallible. Gradually,
the idea struck Catholic thinkers who, even though they did
not go that far, found that this understanding of the Church
made her every declaration and ministerial act so definitive
that it made any criticism appear to be an attack on Christ
himself and simply forgot the human, at times far too human,
element of the Church. The Christological distinction had
to be clearly emphasized: the Church is not identical with
Christ, but she stands before Him. She is a Church of sinners,
ever in need of purification and renewal, ever needing to
become Church. The idea of reform became a decisive element
of the concept of the People of God, while it would be difficult
to develop the idea of reform within the framework of the
Body of Christ.
There
is a third factor that favoured the idea of the "People
of God". In 1939 the Evangelical exegete, Ernst Käsemann
gave his monograph on the Letter to the Hebrews the title,
The Pilgrim People of God. In the framework of Council discussions,
this title became right away a slogan because it made something
become more clearly understood in the debates on the Constitution
on the Church: the Church has not yet reached her goal. Her
true and proper hope still lies ahead of her. The "eschatological"
import of the concept of Church became clear. The phrase conveys
the unity of salvation history which comprises both Israel
and the Church in her pilgrim journey. The phrase expresses
the historical nature of the pilgrim Church that will not
be wholly herself until the paths of time have been traversed
and have blossomed in the hands of God. It describes the unity
of the People of God amid the variety, as in all peoples,
of different ministries and services; yet above and beyond
all distinctions, all are pilgrims in the one community of
the pilgrim People of God. In broad outline, if one wants
to sum up what elements relating to the concept "People
of God" were important for the Council, one could say
that the phrase "People of God" conveyed the historical
nature of the Church, described the unity of God's history
with man, the internal unity of God's people that also goes
beyond the frontiers of sacramental states of life. It conveys
the eschatological dynamic, the provisional and fragmentary
nature of the Church ever in need of renewal; and finally,
it expresses the ecumenical dimension, that is the variety
of ways in which communion and ordering to the Church can
and do exist, even beyond the boundaries of the Catholic Church.
However,
commentators very soon completely handed the term "people"
in the concept "People of God" to a general political
interpretation. Among the proponents of liberation theology
it was taken to mean "people" in the Marxist sense,
in opposition to the ruling classes, or more generally, it
was taken to refer to popular sovereignty at long last being
applied to the Church. This led to large-scale debates on
Church structures. On occasion the expression was understood
in a peculiarly Western sense as "democratization"
or more in the sense of the so-called Eastern "People's
Republics". Gradually this "verbal fireworks"
(N. Lohfink) died down either because the power games ended
in exhaustion and gave way to the ordinary work of parish
councils, or because solid theological research had irrefutably
demonstrated the impossibility of politicizing a concept that
had arisen in an entirely different context. Bochum Werner
Berg provides an example of the meticulous exegesis that characterized
this theological research when he affirmed: "in spite
of the small number of passages that mention the 'People of
God' (it is a rare expression in the Bible) one common element
is immediately apparent: the expression 'People of God' describes
the relationship with God, the connection with God, the link
between God and those designated as the People of God, it
is therefore a 'vertical relationship'. The expression does
not lend itself easily to a description of the hierarchical
structure of this community, especially if 'People of God'
is used in "contrast" to the ministers
"
If we begin with the biblical meaning of this expression it
can no longer be easily understood as a cry of protest against
the ministers: "We are the People of God". Josef
Meyer zu Schlochtern, the Professor of Fundamental Theology
at Paderborn, concludes his discussion of the concept "People
of God" with an observation on Vatican II's Constitution
on the Church. The document concludes by "depicting the
Trinitarian structure as the foundation of the final determination
of the Church
". The discussion is brought back
to the essential point: the Church does not exist for herself;
rather, she is God's instrument to gather mankind in Himself
and to prepare for that time when "God will be all in
all" (I Cor 15,28). The very concept of God was left
out of all the "fireworks" surrounding this expression,
thus depriving the expression of its meaning. A Church which
existed only for herself would be useless. People would realize
this immediately. The crisis of the Church reflected in the
expression "People of God" is a "crisis of
God". It derives from our abandoning the essential. All
that remains is a struggle for power. This sort of thing is
already abundantly present in the worldthere is no need
for the Church to enter this arena.
III.
The Eccelesiology of Communion
Around
the time of the extraordinary Synod of 1985 which attempted
to make an assessment of the 20 years since the Council there
was a renewed effort to synthesize the Council's ecclesiology.
The synthesis involved one basic concept: the ecclesiology
of communion. I was very much pleased with this new focus
in ecclesiology and I endeavoured, to the extent I was able,
to help work it out. First of all one must admit that the
word ''communio" did not occupy a central place in the
Council. All the same if properly understood it can serve
as a synthesis of the essential elements of the Council's
ecclesiology. All the essential elements of the Christian
concept of "communio" can be found in the famous
passage from the First Letter of Saint John (1,3); it is a
frame of reference for the correct Christian understanding
of "communio". "That which we have seen
and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may have fellowship
(communio) with us; and our fellowship is with the
Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. And we are writing this
that our joy may be complete". The point of departure
of communio is clearly evident in this passage: the union
with the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who comes to mankind through
the proclamation of the Church. Fellowship (communio)
among men is born here and merges into fellowship (communio)
with the One and Triune God. One gains access to communion
with God through the realization of God's communion with manit
is Christ in person. To meet Christ creates communion with
Him and therefore with the Father in the Holy Spirit. This
unites men with one another. The goal of all this is the fullness
of joy: the Church carries in her bosom an eschatological
dynamic. This expression "fullness of joy" recalls
the farewell address of Jesus, His Paschal mystery and the
Lord's return in the Easter apparitions which prefigure His
definitive return in the new world. "You will be sorrowful,
but your sorrow will turn into joy ... I will see you again
and your hearts will rejoice ... ask, and you will receive,
that your joy may be full (Jn 16, 20.22.24). If this verse
is compared to the invitation to prayer in St Luke (Lk 11,13)
it is apparent that "joy" and the "Holy Spirit"
are equivalent. Although John does not explicitly mention
the Holy Spirit in his first Epistle (1,3) he is hidden within
the word "joy". In this biblical context the word
"communio" has a theological, Christological, soteriological
and ecclesiological characteristic. It enjoys a sacramental
dimension that is absolutely explicit in St Paul: "The
cup of blessing which we bless, is it not a communion in the
blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it not a communion
in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who
are many are one body ... " (I Cor 10,16ff.). The ecclesiology
of communion at its very foundation is a Eucharistic ecclesiology.
It is very close to that Eucharistic ecclesiology that Orthodox
theologians so convincingly developed during the past century.
In itas we have already seenecclesiology becomes
more concrete while remaining totally spiritual, transcendent
and eschatological. In the Eucharist, Christ, present in the
bread and wine and giving Himself anew, builds the Church
as His Body and through His Risen Body He unites us to the
one and triune God and to each other. The Eucharist celebrated
in different places is universal at the same time, because
there is only one Christ and only a single body of Christ.
The Eucharist comprehends the priestly service of "repraesentatio
Christi" as well as that network of service, the synthesis
of unity and multiplicity which is expressed in the term "communio".
Without any possible doubt one could say that this concept
conveys a synthesis of ecclesiology which combines the discourse
of the Church with the discourse of God, and to life through
God and with God. This synthesis assembles all the essential
intentions of Vatican II ecclesiology and connects them with
one another in an appropriate fashion.
For these reasons I was both grateful and happy when the 1985
Synod placed "communio" at the centre of
their study. The following years demonstrated the fact that
no word is safe from misunderstanding, not even the best and
most profound word. To the extent that "communio"
became an easy slogan, it was devalued and distorted. As happened
to the concept 'People of God', one must point to a growing
horizontal understanding that abandoned the concept of God.
The ecclesiology of communion was reduced to a consideration
of relations between the local Church and the universal Church;
this in turn was reduced to the problem of determining the
area of competence of each. Naturally the egalitarian thesis
once more gained ground: only full equality was possible in
"communio". Here again was the exact same
argument that had exercised the disciples about who was the
greatest amongst them. Obviously this was something that would
not be resolved within a single generation. Mark's description
of the incident is the most forceful. On the road from Jerusalem
Jesus spoke to His Disciples about His coming Passion for
the third time. When they arrived at Capernaum He asked them
what they had been talking about on the road. "They were
silent" because they had been discussing who among them
would be the greatesta sort of discussion about the
primacy (Mk 9, 33-37). Isn't it just the same today? The Lord
is going towards His Passion, while the Church, and in her
Christ, is suffering and, we on the other hand are entangled
in our favorite discussion: who comes first with the power.
If He were to come among us and ask what we were talking about
we would blush and be silent.
This does not mean that there should be no discussion of good
government and the division of responsibility in the Church.
It is certainly true that there are imbalances that need correcting.
We should watch for and root out an excessive Roman centralization
that is always a danger. But questions of this sort ought
not to distract us from the true mission of the Church: the
Church should not be proclaiming herself but God. It is only
to assure that this is done in the purest possible way, that
there is criticism within the Church. Criticism should insure
a correlation between discourse on God and common service.
To sum it up, it is no accident that Jesus' words "the
first shall be last and the last first" occur more than
once in the Gospel tradition. They are like a mirror constantly
focused on us all.
Faced with the post-1985 reduction of the concept of "communio",
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith thought it
appropriate to prepare a "Letter to the Bishops of the
Catholic Church on Some Aspects of the Church Understood as
Communion". The Letter was issued on 28 May, 1992. Today,
any theologian concerned about his reputation feels obliged
to criticize all documents from the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith. Our Letter met with a storm of criticismvery
few parts of the text met with approval. The phrase that provoked
the most controversy was this statement: "The universal
Church in her essential mystery is a reality that ontologically
and temporally is prior to every particular Church" (cf.
n. 9). There was a brief reference to this statement being
based on the Patristic notion that the one, unique Church
precedes the creation of particular Churches and gives birth
to them. The Fathers were reviving a rabbinical concept that
the Torah and Israel were pre-existent. Creation was conceived
as providing space for the Will of God. This Will needed a
people who would live for the Will of God and would make it
the Light of the world. Since the Fathers were convinced of
the final identity of the Church and Israel, they could not
envision the Church as something accidental, only recently
created; in this gathering of people under the Will of God
the Fathers recognized the internal theology of creation.
Beginning with Christology this image was amplified and deepened:
they explained historyunder the influence of the Old
Testamentas a story of love between God and man. God
finds and prepares a Bride for His Sonthe unique Bride
who is the unique Church. In the light of Genesis 2,24, where
man and woman become "two in one flesh" the image
of the Bride merges with the idea of the Church as the Body
of Christan analogy derived from the Eucharistic liturgy.
The unique Body of Christ is prepared; Christ and the Church
will be "two in one flesh", one body and in this
way "God will be everything to everyone". The ontological
priority of the universal Churchthe unique Church, the
unique Body, the unique Bridevis-à-vis the empirical,
concrete manifestations of various, particular Churches is
so obvious to me that I find it difficult to understand the
objections raised against it. These objections only seem possible
if one will not or cannot recognize the great Church conceived
by Godpossibly out of despair at her earthly shortcomings.
These objections look like theological ravings. All that would
remain is the empirical image of mutually related Churches
and their conflicts. This would mean that the Church as a
theological theme is cancelled. If one can only see the Church
as a human institution, all that remains is desolation. In
this case one has abandoned not only the ecclesiology of the
Fathers, but the ecclesiology of the New Testament and the
understanding of Israel in the Old Testament as well. It is
not just the later deutero-Pauline letters and the Apocalypse
that affirm the ontological priority of the universal Church
to the particular Churches (reaffirmed by the Congregation
for the Doctrine of Faith). This concept can be found in the
great Pauline letters: in the Letter to the Galatians, the
Apostle speaks about the heavenly Jerusalem not as something
great and eschatological, but as something which precedes
us: "This Jerusalem is our mother" (Gal 4,26). H.
Schlier comments that for St Paul, inspired by Jewish tradition,
the Jerusalem above is the new aeon. For St Paul this new
aeon already exists "in the Christian Church. For him
the Church is the heavenly Jerusalem in her children".
Let
me conclude. To understand the ecclesiology of Vatican II
one cannot ignore chapters 4 to 7 of the Constitution Lumen
Gentium. These chapters discuss the laity, the universal
call to holiness, the religious and the eschatological orientation
of the Church. In these chapters the inner goal of the Church,
the most essential part of its being, comes once again to
the fore: holiness, conformity to God. There must exist in
the world space for God, where he can dwell freely so that
the world becomes His "Kingdom". Holiness is something
greater than a moral quality. It is the presence of God with
men, of men with God; it is God's "tent" pitched
amongst men in our midst (cf. Jn 1,14). It is a new birthnot
from flesh and blood but from God (Jn 1,13). Orientation towards
holiness is one and the same as eschatological orientation.
Beginning with Jesus' message it is fundamental for the Church.
The Church exists to become God's dwelling place in the world,
to become "holiness". This is the only reason there
should be any struggle in the Churchand not for precedence
or for the first place. All of this is repeated and synthesized
in the last chapter of the Constitution on the Church that
is dedicated to the Mother of the Lord.
As
everyone knows, the question of dedicating a specific document
to Mary was widely debated. In any event I believe it was
appropriate to insert the Marian element directly into the
doctrine on the Church. In this way the point of departure
for our consideration is once more apparent: the Church is
not an apparatus, nor a social institution, nor one social
institution among many others. It is a person. It is a woman.
It is a Mother. It is alive. A Marian understanding of the
Church is totally opposed to the concept of the Church as
a bureaucracy or a simple organization. We cannot make the
Church, we must be the Church. We are the Church, the Church
is in us only to the extent that our faith more than action
forges our being. Only by being Marian, can we become the
Church. At its very beginning the Church was not made, but
given birth. She existed in the soul of Mary from the moment
she uttered her fiat. This is the most profound will of the
Council: the Church should be awakened in our souls. Mary
shows us the way.
L'Osservatore
Romano
Weekly Edition in English
23 January 2002, page 5
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