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Leo Cardinal Suenens says the Second Vatican Council finished the
work on the Church which was left incomplete by Vatican I.
Vatican I Stressed the role of the Pope, the primate
of Belgium told a large audience at the Cathedral Center last Friday, and
now Vatican II finished the work on the body for a more complete vision.
The Constitution on the Church stressed the idea of the People of God. It was a
spiritual revolution of the Holy Spirit.
Cardinal Suenens said Vatican II was a significant event.
But if you ask me: Has the council resolved all problems? I
would say no. Obviously, problems remain and the Church must go on, and there
will be in one form or another, a Vatican III and IV.
This is the debt we must pay to human weakness which must
resolve problems in so far as they are present and pressing. But I think I am
entitled to say that Vatican II was a significant event, one which has left its
mark on all of us, and for which we can render thanks to the Lord. But this
very fact obliges the Church to look forward and to report with St. Paul:
I have not yet reached perfection, but I press on, hoping to take hold of
that for which Christ once took hold of me.
In his address, the cardinal, the first Catholic prelate to
receive an honorary degree from Emory University, a Methodist institution, said
there are two aspects of the councillight and darkness.
We are still living in the light of Pope John XXIII
he
remains the light for other men and the Church.
The Holy Spirit was really at work in the Council and one of
the moments was at the time of the Constitution on the Church.
He said members of the Church need a sense of balance. Every
10 years we should stress the opposite of what we did for the past 10 years. We
need liturgical prayer, but we need personal, private prayer.
We need love for Christ and love for His Blessed Mother; we
need scripture and we need tradition.
In discussing the aspect of darkness, Cardinal Suenens said the
devil was also at the council and said the confusion brought by changes is a
problem. More than ever we have to live the fullness of our faith,
he commented.
Cardinal Suenens who was a principal speaker at Ministers
Week at the Candler School of Theology said in a speech on campus that the
Church must face the major social problem of the time
the fact that
three-fourths of the human race is threatened by hunger and ignorance, living
in a condition which ought to be called subhuman.
We cannot bypass this problem as the Levite did on the way to
Jericho, leaving humanity wounded and nearly bleeding to death.
No man with a heart can accept the fact that two-thirds of the
world, two thousand out of very three thousand men, never achieves that level
of human existence which allows the normal flowering of his personality, such
as technology confers upon those who are privileged.
We must break at any price the vicious circle which results in the
fact that the greater part of mankind is poor because it produces but little,
and produces little because it is too poor to produce more.
Cardinal Suenens said the problem of the Third World
requires an essentially ecumenical approach. All Christian communities
are represented among the wealthier Atlantic nations. All Christian bodies have
been involved in one way or another with the colonial phase of recent western
history. Most of them have sent their missionaries to these countries and were
confronted with the intricate problems of separate evangelization and
colonialism.
The field of world poverty and progress is one in which
Christians can work closely together without being immediately confronted with
difficult doctrinal and historical problems which could undermine their sense
of fellowship. |