One of the volunteers at RCIA told me that the lack of faith among Catholics (I’m thinking of things like the fact that the majority of so-called “Catholics” contracept and miss Mass without guilt) in recent decades is a result of poor catechesis, which happened because of the confusion that resulted from the changes of Vatican II.
Is this true? If so, then doesn’t that mean Vatican II is to blame for the weakening of the Church in the West?
Vatican II: not a bad thing. I, personally, think that some of the documents could have been written a bit more clearly, but that’s just a matter of personal taste.
The real “Vatican II” problem was not with the issuances from that council. The real problem was “the spirit of Vatican II” that ensued afterwards.
I was literally just a wee tot when the council happened, so I can’t speak first hand about attitudes before and after. But it appears to me that a lot of people appropriated the term “Vatican II” to justify all sorts of deviance and heresy. So-called “experts” used their positions of authority (both informal and formal) to make radical changes…and then claiming that Vatican II justified those changes.
Such radical changes would not have been possible had the Church not been plagued by the heresy of modernism (as defined by Pius X) for decades prior to the Council. The modernists condemned by Pius X in Pascendi were positioned perfectly to informally make the “reforms” that the council “meant to” make.
Remember, in a pre-Internet era, access to the documents, themselves, Not out of secrecy, but out of inaccessibility. Prior to the late 90s, in order to read Lumen Gentium, you would have to first, go to a Catholic bookstore (and pray that they stocked actual Church documents there), pay hard earned cash money for the document, and then take the time to study it. Never mind being able to study the footnotes (i.e., reading the earlier documents referenced). If you wished to read the earlier documents, you would need to repeat that exercise for each referenced document. And some of those references are pretty thick and, by the way, pretty pricey.
As an example, there are umpteen sources for the Summa Theologica available on line. Prior to the Internet, if you wanted your own copy, you’d have to shell out big bucks for a five volume set (
even now, it’s over $150). How many lay people are going to do that?
People were much more inclined to “leave it to the experts” because they did not have much of a choice. And as a result, they were led down a primrose path.