Women at Vatican II:
Surprising women, a surprising Council!
A recently published book on Catholic Women at the Second
Vatican Council attempts to explore the history of these women and their
contribution to the Council.
By Gudrun Sailer
The Second Vatican Council (1962-1965)
was to become a new Pentecost of the Catholic Church. The event also really
shed new light on the contribution and role of women: At the invitation
of Saint Pope Paul VI, 23 women took part in the Council as
auditors. But women believers also played a role in the larger context of the
Council. They shared their concerns for a reform of the Catholic Church,
formulating their expectations in petitions they sent to Rome; they advised
bishops, worked as hosts and networkers. At the conclusion of the Council, the
23 female auditors rightly saw themselves as multipliers of the results
achieved.
To find out more, Gudrun Sailer spoke to
church historian Regina Heyder, one of the authors of a
recently published book on Catholic Women at the Second Vatican Council
entitled Katholikinnen und das Zweite Vatikanische Konzil: Petitionen,
Berichte, Fotografien:
At the beginning of the Council in 1962 it seemed
impossible for women to participate. How did it come about that the Pope ended
up appointing women as auditors for the second half of the Council?
Pope Paul VI was the first pope to appoint lay auditors at a
larger scale. In 1963, 13 male lay auditors took part in the Council. Even
before the beginning of the Council, Catholic women had asked to be allowed to
participate. Now they intensified their activities: they wrote letters to
bishops and to the Council Secretariat, suggested participants, asked
subversive questions during press conferences and succeeded in winning
supporters for this idea. In his famous speech in October 1963, Cardinal
Suenens from Mecheln observed that women make up half of mankind and therefore
should be invited as auditors. Thus, the idea of female lay auditors gained
more and more plausibility.
When in 1964, women were welcomed by the Pope at the opening
of the third session of the Council, members of the General Secretariat were
still discussing who should be invited. It was not until a week later that the
respective letters of nomination were written. A few days later the first women
auditors arrived in the Council Hall.
What role did the Catholic women, the Catholic women's
groups and the female religious orders play in the Council?
The World Union of Catholic Women’s Organisations was the
first organisation to write a Conciliar petition. It served as a model for
several women’s organisations that also launched petitions and thus made the
concerns and wishes of women visible within the Council’s contexts and
networks.
During the Council, Catholic women travelled to Rome to talk
to their bishops, to meet non-Catholic observers, to participate in the masses
that were celebrated in St. Peter’s in the morning. And indeed, several bishops
intentionally consulted these women. In the end, women also participated in the
sub commissions for the various chapters of “Gaudium et spes” and thus
contributed to the text.
Women religious were among the lay auditors and contributed
to the decree “Perfectae caritatis” on religious life. The fact that various
women’s congregations hosted participants in their guest houses also played an
important part with regard to the atmosphere of the Council. Mother Superiors
influenced the international composition of the guests, and they even gave
talks to the bishops, who listened carefully to the nuns. When the constitution
on the Liturgy was to be implemented, the first celebrations quite often took
place in the chapels of the women religious. They proved to be interested,
liturgically trained congregations.
What were the greatest concerns of Catholic women at the
Council?
The World Union of Catholic Women’s Organisations, which
represented about 36 million Catholic women, wrote its first council petition
back in 1960. It listed very fundamental topics which the Council was to deal
with: the redefinition of the personal dignity of women and the position of
women in the family, society and Church. On the one hand, the representatives
of the association warned against idealizing women. On the other, they claimed
that the emancipation of women should not adopt male role models.
The other great concern regarded Christian family life.
Proposals ranged from the number of children to the age of confirmation
Which wishes of Catholic women at the Council were
fulfilled - and which were not?
Even in the 1960s, Catholic women did not always agree.
While German Catholics were extremely happy with the liturgical reform, English
Catholics preferred to keep the Latin Mass.
Contraception and embarrassing situations in the
confessional were a big question that was also debated internationally. Many
Catholic couples interpreted ‘Gaudium et spes’ in such a way that artificial
contraception was now permitted. When the encyclical “Humanae vitae” appeared
in 1968, it turned out that they had been wrong.
Again and again, Catholic women also suggested that women
should be involved in the training of priests. In other words, this meant that
they were dissatisfied with the pastoral work. As we know, this demand has
increasingly been taken up by bishops in recent years. Another often mentioned
desire was that of women deacons - a desire that still remains open after the
recent statements of Pope Francis. Cardinal Suenens said it will take 100 years
to implement the Council, and only half of the work has yet been done. So maybe
some of the women’s desires will be fulfilled in later years.
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