Fr Ambrose:
I think I may just stick with the documents of Vatican II. I understand that they are infallible, but infallibility is not claimed for the CCC.
I still prefer the conciliar documents as the primary source. The CCC is only a popular version of the same, so why talk to the monkey when you can talk to the organ grinder?
Primary sources are good, I understand your motive. However, it would be a misunderstanding to see the CCC as a scaled-down version of the documents of Vatican II.
If indeed you wished to read all of the primary sources that went into the Catechism you would have to read the equivalent of the Lord of the Rings trilogy literally every day for the next twenty years.
The CCC is a reflection and compact
synthesis by the Catholic Church Herself of Her own teaching across 20 centuries. If you look through the vast footnotes (there are easily more than a thousand, probably several thousand), you will see that it draws from: Scripture (of course); the documents of
21 Church councils (not just Vatican II, although Trent and V2 are quoted more than any others); patristic, medieval and modern theology and philosophy; the spiritual writings of Saints from the East and West from all 20 centuries; the encyclicals of John Paul II and much, much more!
The CCC is made up of four parts:
(1) THE PROFESSION OF FAITH – uses the Apostles’ Creed as a framework.
(2) THE CELEBRATION OF THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERY
– the Sacraments and the Sacred Liturgy. This section involves quite a bit of “side by side” of the practices of the Eastern Churches and the Roman Church.
(3) LIFE IN CHRIST – uses th Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes as a framework.
(4) CHRISTIAN PRAYER – uses the
Our Father as a framework.
By the way, it’s not quite correct to describe the Catechism as being a
popular text, as really it is written at a post-college reading level. That’s not to say that parts of it aren’t accessible to even high school students, but I know doctors and lawyers who struggle with the density (and profundity) of the text. That’s not to say it is written in an unclear or obtusue or deliberately difficult manner. Rather, if it wasn’t written with such density and compactifying vocabulary, it would surely be three to four times its current length.
It’s a bit of a misunderstanding too that the CCC isn’t infallible. Sure, it wasn’t published with a “blanket
ex cathedra” declaration in the preface. But there is actually very little in there that would be understood as “debatable” or non-definitive when it comes to doctrine and dogma. Whenever a paragraph or sentence in the CCC is “defining” something it nearly always directly quotes or unambiguously paraphrases a Church document or declaration that does enjoy infallibility. The parts of the Catechism that are “up for grabs” then are usually very easy to recognize and they make up less than 1% of the text (that’s my guess at least).
Finally, let me say that I understand your hesitation to commit your time such a project. But if your primary reason for declining to tackle the CCC is an understanding that going straight to the documents of Vatican II is “better,” then I hope this message will make clear your error. The Vatican II documents are a “piece” of the CCC, which is a grand exposition of every facet of the Catholic Faith as expressed in the Roman Church (the V2 documents themselves are not). And too it includes innumerable insights from the Eastern Fathers and Churches, which are integrated in a truly organic and “both lungs” fashion.
In the Hearts of Jesus and Mary.