Vatican City, 1 December 2015 (VIS) –
This morning in the Holy See Press Office, a press conference was
held to present the International Study Convention “Vatican Council
II and its protagonists in the light of the archives” (Vatican
City, 9 to 11 December 2015), organised by the Pontifical Committee
for Historical Sciences. The speakers were Fr. Bernard Ardura, O.
Praem., and Professor Philippe Chenaux, respectively president and
member of the Committee.
Fr. Ardura explained that the event is
a follow-up to the Convention held in 2012, with the collaboration of
the Centre for Research and Study on the Council, on the theme
“Vatican Council II: starting again from the archives”, which
offered the exceptional opportunity to bring together archivists and
university teachers to present the very diverse situations of
conservation, cataloguing and use of the legacy of the conciliar
Fathers. This second event is dedicated instead to the protagonists
of the Council, “casting light on the various networks of opinions
that had a not insignificant role in forming the convictions of many
Council Fathers, both at the level of the episcopal conferences, and
at the level of communities of thought. Indeed, the personal notes of
many of the Council Fathers enable us at times to follow the
evolution of their thought and their opinions gradually over the
passage of time, highlighting the guiding themes that were
consolidated in the sixteen documents drawn up by the Council”.
“In the programme of this Convention,
we have also tried to take into account not only the diversity, but
also the divergences which emerged during the Council. The unanimity
Paul VI strongly desired for the approval of the conciliar documents
left in the shade the opinions of a minority that was however
well-organised; therefore we wanted some of the protagonists of this
current to be presented in these days”.
Philippe Chenaux reiterated that the
most arduous task for the historian in the interpretation of this
event is the change of majority between the beginning and the end of
the council. “To explain this 'inversion of tendency', without
falling into the trap of conspiratorial hypotheses, reference to the
concept of the 'conciliar experience' would appear fundamental. As
St. John Paul II said a number of times, the council had an unique
and unrepeatable meaning for those who took part. This represented,
for many bishops, not only an extraordinary experience of fraternal
communion under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, but also a school of
theological renewal”.
“How did the Council Fathers
experience the Council? What was their personal experience of the
event? In what way did the conciliar experience condition their way
of understanding the Church and their way of being bishops? Should we
speak about a simple 'evolution', or a full 'conversion'?” are some
of the questions that this Convention endeavours to answer. “Solving
the great 'interpretative enigma' – 'what happened during Vatican
Council II? - means the precise and meticulous reconstruction of the
activity of its protagonists”, comments Chenaux.
The first session on 10 December is
entitled “The protagonists revealed in the archives”. The second
session on the same day will be dedicated to “Networks of contacts
and opinions”, and will evaluate the consistency of the networks
for contact and the exchange of opinions established between the
participants. The third session, on 11 December, is entitled
“Evolutions during the Council”, and will explore the theme of
the evolution of thought among participants. There will be two
further working sessions, the inauguration and introduction, and the
conclusion, appraising the three sessions mentioned above.
In the inaugural session on 9 December,
after Fr. Ardura's introduction, five reports of a general nature
will be presented: by Cardinal Laurent Monsegwo Pasinya, archbishop
of Kinshasa, who will speak on Cardinal Malula and his “African
vision” of the Council; Bishop Filaret of Lviv and Galicia, of the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church, will speak about Vatican Council II and
the Russian Orthodox Church; and three historians, Professors John
O'Malley of Georgetown University (United States of America) Michael
Quisinsky of the University of Fribourg (Switzerland), and Philippe
Chenaux.
The final session on 11 December will
commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the conclusion of the
Council. There will be a round table discussion chaired by Fr.
Ardura, with interventions by Cardinal Georges Cottier, O.P.,
theologian emeritus of the Papal Household, and representatives of
various Christian churches: Bishop Filaret, Fr. Alexei Dikarev,
delegate of the Department for External Ecclesiastical Relations of
the Patriarchate of Moscow; His Grace Archbishop David Moxon,
representative of the Archbishop of Canterbury at the Holy See and
director of the Anglican Centre in Rome; and Philippe Chenaux. A
message from the chief rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni, will also be
read.
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