Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning
The death of John Paul II and the election of Benedict XVI constituted undoubtedly two important elements in the broad theological and ecclesiastical landscape of the debate about Vatican II in the last few years. This change of pontificate has also nourished the journalistic and political dispute about Vatican II, its history and its legacy, and not only the historiographical and theological debate.
Brief accounts of the history of Vatican II have reached the public at large but the research on Vatican II is already proceeding forward and beyond the state of knowledge about the council reached at the end of the nineties. Even if some observers seem to be satisfied with the present knowledge, for twenty-first century church historians and theologians interested in understanding contemporary Catholicism in the light of Vatican II, the intellectual undertaking is still evolving.
The book gives a comprehensive presentation of the theological and historiographical debate about Vatican II. The attempt to go beyond “the clash of interpretations”—Vatican II as a rupture in the history of Catholicism on one side and the need to read Vatican II in continuity with the tradition on the other—is necessary indeed because the ongoing debate about Vatican II is largely misrepresented by the use of “clashing interpretations” as a tool for understanding the role of the council in present-day Catholicism.
1110784471
Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning
The death of John Paul II and the election of Benedict XVI constituted undoubtedly two important elements in the broad theological and ecclesiastical landscape of the debate about Vatican II in the last few years. This change of pontificate has also nourished the journalistic and political dispute about Vatican II, its history and its legacy, and not only the historiographical and theological debate.
Brief accounts of the history of Vatican II have reached the public at large but the research on Vatican II is already proceeding forward and beyond the state of knowledge about the council reached at the end of the nineties. Even if some observers seem to be satisfied with the present knowledge, for twenty-first century church historians and theologians interested in understanding contemporary Catholicism in the light of Vatican II, the intellectual undertaking is still evolving.
The book gives a comprehensive presentation of the theological and historiographical debate about Vatican II. The attempt to go beyond “the clash of interpretations”—Vatican II as a rupture in the history of Catholicism on one side and the need to read Vatican II in continuity with the tradition on the other—is necessary indeed because the ongoing debate about Vatican II is largely misrepresented by the use of “clashing interpretations” as a tool for understanding the role of the council in present-day Catholicism.
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Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning

Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning

by Massimo Faggioli
Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning

Vatican II: The Battle for Meaning

by Massimo Faggioli

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$14.95 
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Overview

The death of John Paul II and the election of Benedict XVI constituted undoubtedly two important elements in the broad theological and ecclesiastical landscape of the debate about Vatican II in the last few years. This change of pontificate has also nourished the journalistic and political dispute about Vatican II, its history and its legacy, and not only the historiographical and theological debate.
Brief accounts of the history of Vatican II have reached the public at large but the research on Vatican II is already proceeding forward and beyond the state of knowledge about the council reached at the end of the nineties. Even if some observers seem to be satisfied with the present knowledge, for twenty-first century church historians and theologians interested in understanding contemporary Catholicism in the light of Vatican II, the intellectual undertaking is still evolving.
The book gives a comprehensive presentation of the theological and historiographical debate about Vatican II. The attempt to go beyond “the clash of interpretations”—Vatican II as a rupture in the history of Catholicism on one side and the need to read Vatican II in continuity with the tradition on the other—is necessary indeed because the ongoing debate about Vatican II is largely misrepresented by the use of “clashing interpretations” as a tool for understanding the role of the council in present-day Catholicism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780809147502
Publisher: Paulist Press
Publication date: 03/01/2012
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.38(w) x 8.00(h) x (d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vi

1 A Short History of the Debate on Vatican II 1

The Debate on an Epoch-Making Council 1

What Vatican II Said about Vatican II (1960-65) 3

Vatican II: Acknowledged, Received, Refused (1965-80) 6

Vatican II: Celebrated and Enforced (1980-90) 11

Vatican II: Historicized (1990-2000) 15

Toward a New Fight over Vatican II? 17

2 Questioning the Legitimacy of Vatican II 19

Opposite Extremisms 19

Vatican II: A Reform Council 21

The Traditionalists: Opposition and Rejection of the Council 24

The Lefebvrian Schism and Vatican II 29

Different Destinies for Vatican II's Fringe Groups 35

3 Vatican II: Beyond Rome 38

Vatican II as the Beginning 38

Vatican II and Its Ecumenical Appraisal 39

Concilium, Communio, and Post-Vatican II Theology 50

Liberation Theology and Feminist Theology 53

Catholic Theology in New Places: Vatican II in Africa, Asia, and Australia 59

4 The Church and the World: Augustinians and Thomists 66

From Vatican II to Post-Vatican II: The New "Two Tendencies" 66

Neo-Augustinian Receptions of Vatican II 68

"Progressive" Neo-Thomists 75

The Debate at the 1985 Synod 83

5 The Clash of Narratives 91

Post-Synod Research on What Actually Happened at Vatican II (1985-2005) 91

Ecclesiology: Collegiality and "Subsistit in" 97

Liturgy and the "Reform of the Reform" 102

Conflicting Conciliar Narratives 106

Ongoing Research 112

6 Macro-Issues of the Debate About Vatican II 118

Vatican II: The End of or the Beginning of the Renewal? 119

The Intertextual Dynamic of the Council Documents 125

Change and Historicity in the Church and in Theology 133

Epilogue 139

Notes 145

Bibliography 187

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