Vatican Council II: Church History, Unit 8
Vatican Council II: Church History, Unit 8
In 1958 Cardinal Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli was elected Pope and took the name John XXIII. He was a jolly man who enjoyed people and a good joke. He was also a serious student of history. He realized that the Church needed a new approach to the people of the world that she was called to serve. Pope John XXIII called Vatican Council II, an Ecumenical Council, to address the role of the Church in the world in light of modern issues.
Vatican Council II included 2,450 voting delegates from around the world. Nonvoting attendees included a broad range of advisers and observers, such as Protestant church leaders Orthodox church leaders Lay theologians, including women
Pope John XXIII called Vatican Council II to ensure that the Church would continue to carry the message of the Gospel into a changing world in new and pastoral ways: Our duty is not only to guard this precious treasure, as if we were concerned only with antiquity, but to dedicate ourselves with an earnest will and without fear to that work which our era demands of us, pursuing thus the path which the Church has followed for twenty centuries. (Pope Johns Opening Speech to the Council, in
Walter M. Abbott, ed., The Documents of Vatican II, page 715)
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Between the first and second sessions of the Council, Pope John XXIII died. Cardinal Giovanni Montini was elected Pope Paul VI. Pope Paul VI guided Vatican Council II to its completion and oversaw the early efforts to implement the Councils changes and reforms, such as changes in the liturgy.
Vatican Council II produced three types of official documents: Constitutionsconcerned doctrine and dogma; restated teachings in modern language Decreesconcerned renewal of some aspect of Church life; required further action Declarationsprovided general instruction on vital topics in the Church and the world, with implementation left up to local bishops The constitutions provided the foundation for the decrees and declarations.