Dublin, September 2012. Constantinian dame and former President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, has recently launched her first book since leaving the Presidency in 2011. The book, Quo Vadis, is a study of how Vatican II’s teachings on collegiality, or how power and responsibility were to be shared between the Pope and the college of bishops within the Catholic Church, have either been sidetracked or not yet come to fruition, depending on how you interpret the events that followed the Council, up to the present day.
Vatican II embraced a fresh new vision of the Church as the People of God, turning away from the rigidly hierarchic structure of the past. It left a clear picture of the Church as communio or community, but no clear road-map of how to get there. While it sowed seeds of confusion, it also infused into the Church an expectation of broader ecclesial participation and co-responsibility, which has impacted in many different ways.
Fifty years on from Vatican II, however, there is neither an orderly progression nor a fully choate story. Some commentators caution that Vatican II must be seen as a “slow burn” with still unharvested potential for change. Others see the debate about collegiality as over, either because the Church, in their view, already has ample collegiality or because collegiality has died on the vine.
Quo Vadis is a timely contribution to the ongoing debate within the global church on where we are going, and against the background of ‘silencings’ by the Vatican of Irish priests, and the results of the Association of Catholic Priests’ recent survey of Catholic attitudes. It delivers a thoughtful and balanced assessment of what happened to the notion of sharing power and decision-making within the church.
Quo Vadis? is priced at €19.99/£16.99 and can be found at https://www.columba.ie/ and https://www.columba.ie/eBooks/