S
sw85
Guest
I don’t believe that Vatican II taught any errors. It was nevertheless unnecessary and a disaster for the Church.Can an Ecumenical Council that is called by and guided by the Holy Spirit be a bad thing?
If so then why stop at Vatican II?
Likewise, I don’t believe John XXIII or Paul VI were heretics – but I do believe they were terrible popes whose ineffectual governance of the Church resulted in its impregnation with the spirit of Protestantism (a condition that persists to this day). I believe Paul VI himself admitted to being an ineffective pope.
We are required to believe in the teaching authority of the Church. Their teaching ability, on the other hand, we are free to question. The total and really quite unprecedented collapse of vocations, the moral integrity of the laity, and the ecclesiastical discipline of the priests and bishops, in the postconciliar age cannot really be attributed to anything but Vatican II, or at least the “spirit of Vatican II” which the council itself released and which no one has done anything to reign in since then.
I have read before that Vatican II was regarded by John XXIII as experimental. If so, it is clear that the experiment has failed. It should be repudiated, at least in part.