Sunday, October 09, 2022

The Most Fruitless Search



There is a moment of epiphany on the road to Traddie-dom that occurs when you realize that the progressive junta that controls the Church does not actually care what Vatican II taught. 

I remember my mindset before this earthshaking revelation! I recall arguing that what we needed was fidelity to the conciliar documents, getting back to "what Vatican II really taught." I used to post essays exegeting the conciliar documents in an attempt to show "what they really mean." I was fully aboard the Weigelian Express, hoping, ever vainly, for a "real implementation of the Council." I thought patient explanation of the "real meaning" of these documents was a sufficient response to the Modernist crisis; that the reason priests and bishops allowed nonsense unchecked throughout their churches was because they honestly didn't know that Sacrosanctum concilium called for the preservation of Latin and chant, or sincerely didn't understand the real meaning of participatio actuosa.

But how many years can one exhaust themselves in such pursuits? How long can you beat your head on the wall? To be sure, it is important to understand the documents from a theological perspective; but it is another thing if we think that patiently explaining the documents in hopes that the "real Council" will emerge is anything other than chasing an elusive will-o-the-wisp. 

At a certain point I realized—as many of us have—that the progressives don't care what Vatican II said. They don't view the Council as a series of teachings; rather, they view it as an event. And not just any event, but an event whose nature is meta-historical. It is not merely another step in the long path of historical development; it is a paradigm shattering upheaval that breaks the fourth wall of history, purporting not just to change the historical trajectory of the Church, but to remove the Church entirely from the bounds of history and tradition. What do people with such lofty vision, such grandiose pretensions, care about the precise definition of participatio actuosa, the rubrics of the GIRM, or any other considerations that are merely textual?

Six years ago I was invited to the home of a mainstream Catholic apologist to deliver a talk on the role of Catholic Tradition (you can find the lecture on YouTube). Therein I argued—as I still argue today—that treating the Council like a collection of texts while failing to understand it as a historical event is the principal reason why "conservatives" make no headway against the progressive revolution. After the talk, one of the attendees, a notable hyperpapalist theologian, just kept shaking his head in disagreement, saying, "No, no, the documents matter!" as if it were a mantra. This fellow has been rightly lambasted in traditional Catholic outlets recently for ridiculous attempts to square the circle concerning Traditionis custodes. Six years later and he's still shaking his head and repeating the mantra.

When speaking of Sacred Scripture, St. Thomas Aquinas says we can have a meaningful disputation with an opponent only if they at least admit at least some of the truths of revelation. "Against those who deny one article of faith," he says, "we can argue from another." But what if the opponent does not grant any of the articles of divine revelation? Then argument becomes impossible, as there is no common ground, for, he continues, "if our opponent believes nothing of divine revelation, there is no longer any means of proving the articles of faith by reasoning, but only of answering his objections" (STh I, Q. 1, art 8).

Similarly, if it has become clear that progressive don't grant any authority to the texts of Vatican II, then upon what common ground can we stand? Upon what foundation do we plant our feet when we presume to uncover "what the Council really said" when our opponents do not care? We are not dealing with two different hermeneutical approaches to conciliar documents, but two different paradigms of the Council itself, between which there is a vast chasm fixed, that those who would pass from one to the other might not be able.

I can hear some objecting, "Trads don't grant authority to the texts of Vatican II either!" It is true that we do not grant it infallible authority, but this is hardly novel; it is nothing beyond what Paul VI himself taught, when he said:

"There are those who ask what authority, what theological qualification, the Council intended to give to its teachings, knowing that it avoided issuing solemn dogmatic definitions backed by the Church's infallible teaching authority. The answer is known by those who remember the conciliar declaration of March 6, 1964, repeated on November 16, 1964. In view of the pastoral nature of the Council, it avoided proclaiming in an extraordinary manner any dogmata carrying the mark of infallibility." (Pope Paul VI, General Audience of January 12, 1966)

Traditional Catholics are in fact the only segment of the Church attempting to construct an accurate interpretation of Vatican II, both in terms of the documents' meaning and authority. While understanding the documents were only part of the phenomenon known as Vatican II, we still affirm they have an objective content that should at least be understood. 

This is totally contrary to the progressive manner of utilizing the documents. The examples are legion, but to take one recent occasion, we could turn to this article from America magazine where a Jesuit cardinal waxes eloquent about the Amazon's newly approved "ecclesial conferences" that will replace the regional episcopal conference. These new conferences will incorporate lay people—men and women—in the governance of the Church. The cardinal says this arrangement "stems from the Second Vatican Council" and cites Lumen Gentium in justification. Lumen Gentium says nothing about lay people governing the Church; it specifically says that the bishops rule the Church by divine decree, and that lay people participate in the work of God through their secular work and family life. I do not want to revisit the whole matter here, but if you want my take I recently recorded a video breaking down this ridiculous article, which you can view here on the Unam Sanctam YouTube channel (apologies for the blurred video at some parts; blame my sketchy rural internet). The cardinal doesn't care what Vatican II teaches. "Vatican II" becomes a meaningless label assigned to any and every novelty.

If you do watch, you will see that the ridiculous novelties the Vatican is churning out faster than the Fed churns out USD are more likely to elicit my laughter than my consternation these days. To be sure, I am deeply saddened and appalled at the state of my Holy Mother Church, but there is only so much a person can stand up to before their battle-worn face cracks into a smile, then breaks forth into laughter at the nonsense of it all. It is a strange but proper human response to absurdity, especially in situations where the severity has escalated to the point of ridiculousness. Saddle me with a ten thousand dollar debt and I will be concerned; saddle me with a ten million dollar debt and I am more likely to laugh in your face. 

There is no more useless endeavor than to search for "the real Vatican II." One has better chances finding the Fountain of Youth or the Ark of the Covenant. That's because there is no "real Vatican II" that can be found by documentary analysis alone, and it is a most fruitless search to think otherwise. Vatican II can't be found solely in the documents any more than the French Revolution can be found by reading the Declaration of the Rights of Man.

And so, I no longer engage in intellectual hand-wringing over the "real meaning" of Vatican II. I certainly acknowledge an objective meaning of the documents, and I am even capable of extrapolating upon it if I've had enough to drink. But I have long since jumped off the Weigelian Express, preferring rather to walk in "the ancient paths where the good way is" (Jer. 6:16), even if I move at a snail's pace, for I prefer the exile of the desert to the plunge off the precipice of irrelevance that the "real council" railcar is heading for.


7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well put. The V2 Nuchurch has jumped the shark, now presumes to ban the TLM, and still call themselves "Catholic". The idea is laughable, absurd, cannot be rationalized within the context of the One True Faith...as it existed before the V2 "Revolution within the forms". If there are no righteous priests to say the Mass, we have the Rosary. We are in chastisement. The ambiguous V2 documents never mattered, once the hierarchy was infiltrated, just as the US Constitution no longer matters to the infiltrated "gov't" bureaucracy. The change is begun with praxis, just as the US Constitution has been subverted by illegal praxis without consequence. People are conditioned to the Nuthink, bad music, bad/invalid liturgy. They know most people won't read the documents, and many have been raised to believe "my priest right or wrong". Besides, complain about the priest and the bishop will send a worse one.

P. O'Brien said...

Good comment, Anonymous. Paul VI banned the Traditional Mass and has been canonized. I am not a sede-vacantist back to 1958, but sometimes I wonder.

Caseybogs@gmail.com said...

Excellent article! A Trad can go thrree routes. One, argue ambiguity and contradiction or near contradiction to previous Church teaching, such as with ecumenism or religious liberty, and continually beat your head against the wall. Second, as Boniface states, try searching for the real Vatican II, and also beat your head against a wall. Or, go the third route pointed out by Boniface, getting out of the “real council” railcar as it heads towards the precipice. Given that we all have a limited time on this earth and a soul to save (along with trying to be instrumental in saving others), I think Boniface has illumined best way. His reference to Jeremiah 6:16 says it all - “the ancient paths where the good way is.”

cj said...

From Weigel to Chapp

See also: Re: https://www.osvnews.com/2022/10/07/60-years-after-the-opening-of-the-second-vatican-council-where-do-we-stand/

Greetings- It is as if Mr Chapp, in his, apologetic hypotraditionalism, never read Amerio's Iota Unum.
Apparently, for him, the winds of debacle only blow one way, in this turmoil of the project.

Anonymous said...

https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2022/11/17/angry-hypocrisy-and-convenient-ultramontanism-at-the-national-catholic-reporter/


See what I mean?

Anonymous said...

David C. Schindler's father passed away on November 16, 2022 at age 79.

Asked whether his father would fully embrace the integralist movement within the Church that has offered a strong critique of American liberal democracy, David Schindler offered a nuanced response.

“Integralists are on a spectrum, and he would never have taken the straightforward integralist position” and accepted “a Catholic monarchy as the sole political form,” he said.

“But he would have agreed with the broader recognition of the failure of modern liberalism, the inherent deficiency of the American founding, and the desire to go back to the deeper Catholic tradition.”

from: https://www.ncregister.com/news/he-was-a-great-soul-remembering-david-l-schindler

https://www.johnpaulii.edu/david-l-schindler-1943-2022/

++++

And Larry Chapp can't pass up the opportunity to slap the deceased's son on "neo-Thomism":
https://gaudiumetspes22.com/blog/on-the-passing-of-dr-david-l-schindler-some-words-from-dr-rodney-howsare-and-dr-larry-chapp

Anonymous said...

Pius X,Pius XII through Francis I,have all violated the Council of Trent,multiple times over.According to the Canons of Trent,anyone who violates their decrees are anathema,or condemned to Hell. Could this be why the Church & World are sliding into the Days of Noah?