Sixtieth Anniversary of the Opening of Vatican Council II
This past week we marked the 60th Anniversary of the Opening of the Second Vatican Council. Convoked by Pope John XIII, the Council opened with the pageantry of a painting of this Grand Procession.) grand religious procession into St. Peter’s on October 11th, 1962, the Feast of the Divine Maternity of Mary the Mother of God.
(The picture below is a painting of this Grand Procession.)


Pope John had chosen this date to underscore the entrustment to Our Lady’s patronage of the Council’s whole project. Just before the Council’s opening the Pope had made a pilgrimage to the Holy House of Our Lady of Loreto. Years before, while still a seminarian, he had made a pilgrimage to the Holy House.
The two photos here to the right show the young seminarian Angelo Roncalli, seated in the center and then the old man as Pope John XIII at the shrine of Loreto in October of 1962.


In the two photos on the opposite page you see a photo of the same Grand Procession which opened the Council. The second photo captures a thrilling moment on the night of October 11th. Boys and girls from Catholic Action came to St. Peter’s Square carrying burning torches. They formed themselves in the shape of a burning cross below the Pope’s window. Pope John opened his window gates and addressed them with familiar discourse.
Pope John’s well-known metaphor for the Vatican Council II as an “opening the windows” of the Church has to be understood according to the concrete way in which he used it. The windows he referenced are the shutters used to close against the sun. The Council was to figuratively open the shutters to the world in order that “they can see in and we can see out.” He did not use it in the sense that the Church was a place of stale, unhealthy air and someone needed to throw the windows open to the world in order for the “world” to air us out!

(PHOTO above: The Grand Procession which opened the Second Vatican Council on October 11th, 1962. PHOTO below: The torch-light procession of Catholic Action that same night.)

The event of the Second Vatican Council, which closed on December 8th, 1965, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady, was, for our Catholic Church, what historians call a “watershed event”. It ushered in a new era of church-life. We have become used to making of Vatican Council II a chronological divider: the Pre-Conciliar Church and the Post-Conciliar Church. What does the Council ultimately mean? What are its real fruits? We are still too close to the event to have enough perspective. It is good for us to affirm, however, that God’s Providence is in all things, and that an event so explicitly entrusted to Our Lady’s Patronage will show itself in the long-run to have been a fountain of grace.
POPE FRANCIS’ MESSAGE OF CONDOLENCE TO KING CHARLES III AND THE BRITISH ROYAL FAMILY ON THE DEATH OF QUEEN ELIZABETH
“Deeply saddened to learn of the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, I offer heartfelt condolences to Your Majesty, the Members of the Royal Family, the People of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth. I willingly join all who mourn her loss in praying for the Queen’s eternal rest, and in paying tribute to her life of unstinting service to the good of the Nation and the Commonwealth, her example of devotion to duty, her steadfast witness of faith in Jesus Christ and her firm hope in His promises….”
Pope Francis received Queen Elizabeth II at the Vatican in April of 2014. The occasion was the Centenary of the re-establishment of diplomatic relations between the United Kingdom and the Holy See in 1914. On that occasion the Queen presented Pope Francis with the gift of a food hamper filled with local delicacies and a bottle of Balmoral whiskey.
