Vatican II Uprooted
A God diminished, emptied out, cut down, Will
not appeal.
Christ must regain his crown.
I have just
been re-reading Michael Davies’ Pope John’s Council, written in 1977 and hardly
needing to be up-dated nearly 40 years later. If anything, Michael Davies was
too kind to the Council, but there are many home truths in the book, so that it
can be warmly recommended to anybody beginning to study the Council. Especially
interesting is the Appendix VI consisting of a review by Professor Louis
Salleron from 1936 of the French philosopher Jacques Maritain’s (1882–1973)
then recently appeared book, Integral Humanism. This book so interested an
Italian priest, Giovanni-Battista Montini, that he translated it into Italian.
Later he became Pope Paul VI, the main architect of Vatican II. Thus Salleron
uncovers the roots of the Council, 26 years before it began.
Integral
Humanism presents Maritain’s vision of a new future for a remodeled
Christendom. Bourgeois civilisation is doomed, but instead of the Church
continually condemning the man-centered humanism which gave rise to the French
Revolution (1789) which gave rise to that bourgeoisie, the Revolution needs to
be recognised as part of an on-going and inevitable historical process with
which Christianity can and must come to terms. By this means, while the whole
course of modern history cannot be stopped, nevertheless by Christ the humanism
can be made truly, fully human, becoming “integral humanism.” Christianity thus
rebuilt on modern foundations will bring Christ to modern man and modern man to
Christ, the admirable intention of Maritain and Paul VI and Bishop Fellay.
But “the way
to Hell is paved with good intentions,” says the wise old proverb. Salleron
admires all kinds of things in the book of Maritain, who was a philosopher
skilled in Thomism and knew well, says Salleron, how to present any idea in such
a way as not to contradict Catholic doctrine. But Salleron objects strongly to
Maritain’s reading of modern history and calls it “Marxist.” Karl Marx
(1818–1883) also started out from the rot of bourgeois civilization but
concluded that it must be completely torn down by on-going Revolution to make
way for the dream of the classless society, which worked out in reality as the
nightmare of Communism. So Maritain rejected Marx’ conclusion but accepted his
analysis of history, so as to fashion a new compromise Christianity that would
work for modern man: neither modernity on modern foundations (Marx – and
Wagner), nor Christ on Christ’s foundations (Pius X – see especially his Letter
on the Sillon – and Archbishop Lefebvre), but Christ on modern foundations. The
result is that Newchristianity which is to be found throughout the documents of
Vatican II, namely Christ is the true fulfillment of man – not man is ordered
to Christ and to God, but God and Christ are ordered to man.
Alas,
compromise solutions do not work with Our Lord. He says, “Let your speech be
yes, yes or no, no: and that which is over and above these, is of evil” (Mt. V,
37). And “He that is not with me, is against me” (Mt. XII, 30). A man-centred
religion of the true God is a contradiction in terms. Salleron points out that
there is nothing inevitable in the march of modern history such as Marx and
Maritain imagined. If modern man is going to the Devil, it is by man’s own free
choice. What liberals like Maritain and Paul VI and Bishop Fellay do not grasp
is the reality of evil. They do not grasp that modern man simply does not want
Christ, and God will not force man to do so. Liberals will diminish God so as
to make him appealing to modern man, but most modern men will turn away, in
indifference or disgust. Vatican II has been a colossal failure, and “integral
humanism” has been just one more example of disintegrating humanism, because it
is not centered on God.
Politics,
economics, the banks, finance, the arts, medicine, law, agriculture, the whole
of modern society must come back under the Social Kingship of Christ the King.
That was Archbishop Lefebvre’s solution. It is the only solution.
Kyrie
eleison.
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