
This Book Sheds Further Light On The Nature Of Church Reform And The Roots Of The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) Through A Study Of Eighteenth-century Catholic Reformers Who Anticipated The Council. The Most Striking Of These Examples Is The Synod Of Pistoia (1786), The High-water Mark Of Late Jansenism. Most Of The Reforms Of The Synod Were Harshly Condemned By Pope Pius Vi In The Bull Auctorem Fidei (1794), And Late Jansenism Was Totally Discredited In The Ultramontane Nineteenth-century Church. Nevertheless, Much Of The Pistoian Agenda - Such As An Exaltation Of The Role Of Bishops, An Emphasis On Infallibility As A Gift To The Entire Church, Religious Liberty, A Simpler And More Comprehensible Liturgy That Incorporates The Vernacular, And The Encouragement Of Lay Bible Reading And Christocentric Devotions - Was Officially Promulgated At Vatican Ii. The Career Of Bishop Scipione De'ricci (1741-1810) And The Famous Synod He Convened Are Investigated In Detail. The International Reception (and Rejection) Of The Synod Sheds Light On Why These Reforms Failed, And The Criteria Of Yves Congar Are Used To Judge The Pistoian Synod As True Or False Reform. This Book Proves That The Synod Was A Ghost Present At Vatican Ii. The Council Fathers Struggled With, And Ultimately Enacted, Many Of The Same Ideas. This Study Complexifies The Story Of The Roots Of The Council And Pope Benedict Xvi's Hermeneutic Of Reform, Which Seeks To Interpret Vatican Ii As In Continuity And Discontinuity On Different Levels With Past Teaching And Practice. Vatican Ii, Second Vatican Council, Ressourcement, Jansenism, Synod Of Pistoia, Scipione De'ricci, Yves Congar, Benedict Xvi, Development Of Doctrine, Catholic Enlightenment-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates the historical connection between the eighteenth-century Synod of Pistoia and the reforms enacted during the Second Vatican Council. Shaun Blanchard, a scholar of Catholic history, utilizes the career of Bishop Scipione de'Ricci and the theological framework of Yves Congar to argue that the Pistoian agenda served as a precursor to the modernizing efforts of Vatican II. By examining the condemnation of the Synod in the bull Auctorem fidei and its subsequent influence, the author explores the complex relationship between continuity and discontinuity in Catholic doctrine.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and theologians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Catholic reform and the intellectual history of the Second Vatican Council. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous use of primary source documentation to bridge the gap between eighteenth-century debates and modern conciliar theology.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
New York, NY : Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190947829
ISBN-13:
9780190947828
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