T
Thomas_White
Guest
I don’t think the spirit of an ecumenical council can be understood by analysis. Here is what Pope Benedict has actually said:So how is the spirit of an ecumenical council defined? Does every ecumenical council have a ‘spirit’? How does one determine what is part of the spirit of an ecumenical council and what is not? And surely the spirit cannot contradict the letter?
Benedict XVI explained that the true spirit of Vatican II must only be found in the letter of the documents. If it is viewed otherwise then the spirit of Vatican II could be anything any individual wanted it to be as there is no authoritative interpretation of it. Each individual effectively becomes his own magisterium applying his own interpretation according to how he feels about it.
"In the 1985 book The Ratzinger Report, the then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger distinguishes the true spirit of the council from false interpretations, blaming the disappointed hopes for renewal on “those who have gone far beyond both the letter and the spirit of Vatican II…”
What Pope Benedict XVI is saying is that the true spirit of the council is found not solely in “the progressive thrust” of the documents but also in the traditional elements they also express. He certainly does not reject “the spirit of the council”, and what Pope Benedict does not say is that “the spirit of Vatican II must only be found in the letter of the documents”. He recognizes that an interpretation of the progressive thrust of the documents is necessary.