Vatican II

 Pope John's Opening Speech to the Council

 THE ECUMENICAL COUNCILS OF THE CHURCH

 THE ORIGIN AND REASON FOR THE SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL

 PRINCIPLE DUTY OF THE COUNCIL: THE DEFENSE AND ADVANCEMENT OF TRUTH

 HOW TO REPRESS ERRORS

 THE UNITY OF THE CHRISTIAN AND HUMAN FAMILY MUST BE PROMOTED

 DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH - Lumen gentium

 CHAPTER I THE MYSTERY OF THE CHURCH

 CHAPTER II THE PEOPLE OF GOD

 CHAPTER lII THE CHURCH IS HIERARCHICAL

 CHAPTER IV THE LAITY

 CHAPTER V: THE CALL TO HOLINESS

 CHAPTER VI RELIGIOUS

 CHAPTER VII THE PILGRIM CHURCH

 CHAPTER VIII OUR LADY

 I. INTRODUCTION

 II. THE FUNCTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE PLAN OF SALVATION

 III. THE BLESSED VIRGIN AND THE CHURCH

 IV. THE CULT OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN IN THE CHURCH

 V. MARY, SIGN OF TRUE HOPE AND COMFORT FOR THE PILGRIM PEOPLE OF GOD

 APPENDIX ANNOUNCEMENT MADE BY THE SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE COUNCIL AT THE ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY THIRD GENERAL CONGREGATION 16 NOVEMBER, 1964

 PASTORAL CONSTITUTION: ON THE CHURCH IN THE MODERN WORLD - Gaudium et spes

 PREFACE

 INTRODUCTORY STATEMENT THE SITUATION OF MEN IN THE MODERN WORLD

 PART I THE CHURCH AND MAN'S CALLING

 CHAPTER I THE DIGNITY OF THE HUMAN PERSON

 CHAPTER II THE COMMUNITY OF MANKIND

 CHAPTER III MAN'S ACTIVITY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD

 CHAPTER IV THE ROLE OF THE CHURCH IN THE MODERN WORLD

 PART II SOME PROBLEMS OF SPECIAL URGENCY

 CHAPTER I FOSTERING THE NOBILITY OF MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY

 CHAPTER II THE PROPER DEVELOPMENT OF CULTURE

 SECTION 1 The Circumstances of Culture in the World Today

 SECTION 2 Some Principles for the Proper Development of Culture

 SECTION 3 Some More Urgent Duties of Christians in Regard to Culture

 CHAPTER III ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL LIFE

 SECTION 1 Economic Development

 SECTION 2 Certain Principles Governing Socio-Economic Life as a Whole

 CHAPTER IV THE LIFE OF THE POLITICAL COMMUNITY

 CHAPTER V THE FOSTERING OF PEACE AND THE PROMOTION OF A COMMUNITY OF NATIONS

 SECTION 1 The Avoidance of War

 SECTlON II Setting Up An International Community

 DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON DIVINE REVELATION - Dei verbum

 PREFACE

 CHAPTER I - REVELATION ITSELF

 CHAPTER II - HANDING ON DIVINE REVELATION

 CHAPTER III - SACRED SCRIPTURE, ITS INSPIRATION AND DIVINE INTERPRETATION

 CHAPTER IV - THE OLD TESTAMENT

 CHAPTER V - THE NEW TESTAMENT

 CHAPTER VI - SACRED SCRIPTURE IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH

 DECREE ON THE APOSTOLATE OF LAY PEOPLE - Apostolicam Actuositatem

 CHAPTER I THE VOCATION OF LAY PEOPLE TO THE APOSTOLATE

 FOUNDATIONS OF THE LAY APOSTOLATE

 THE SPIRITUALITY OF LAY PEOPLE

 CHAPTER II

 OBJECTIVES

 THE APOSTOLATE OF EVANGELIZATION AND SANCTIFICATION

 THE RENEWAL OF THE TEMPORAL ORDER

 CHARITABLE WORKS AND SOCIAL AID

 CHAPTER III

 THE VARIOUS FIELDS OF THE APOSTOLATE

 CHURCH COMMUNITIES

 THE FAMILY

 YOUNG PEOPLE

 APOSTOLATE OF LIKE TOWARDS LIKE

 THE NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL LEVELS

 CHAPTER IV

 THE DIFFERENT FORMS OF THE APOSTOLATE

 INDIVIDUAL APOSTOLATE

 INDIVIDUAL APOSTOLATE IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES

 GROUP APOSTOLATE

 VARIOUS TYPES OF GROUP APOSTOLATE

 CATHOLIC ACTION

 SPECIAL COMMENDATION

 CHAPTER V

 THE ORDER TO BE OBSERVED

 RELATIONS WITH THE HIERARCHY

 RELATIONS WITH THE CLERGY AND WITH RELIGIOUS

 SPECIAL COUNCILS

 COOPERATION WITH OTHER CHRISTIANS AND NON-CHRISTIANS

 CHAPTER VI

 TRAINING FOR THE APOSTOLATE

 THE NEED FOR TRAINING

 PRINCIPLES OF TRAINING

 THOSE WHO TRAIN OTHERS FOR THE APOSTOLATE

 FIELDS CALLING FOR SPECIALIZED TRAINING

 AIDS TO TRAINING

 EXHORTATION

 THE CONSTITUTION ON THE SACRED LITURGY - Sacrosanctum Concilium

 INTRODUCTION

 CHAPTER I

 I. THE NATURE OF THE SACRED LITURGY AND ITS IMPORTANCE IN THE LIFE OF THE CHURCH

 II. THE PROMOTION OF LITURGICAL INSTRUCTION AND ACTIVE PARTICIPATION

 III THE REFORM OF THE SACRED LITURGY

 A. General Norms

 B. Norms Drawn from the Hierarchic and Communal Nature of the Liturgy

 C. Norms Based on the Educative and Pastoral Nature of the Liturgy.

 D. NORMS FOR ADAPTING THE LITURGY TO THE TEMPERAMENT AND TRADITIONS OF PEOPLES

 E. PROMOTION OF THE LITURGICAL LIFE IN DIOCESE AND PARISH

 F. PROMOTION OF PASTORAL LITURGICAL ACTION

 CHAPTER II

 THE MOST SACRED MYSTERY OF THE EUCHARIST

 DECREES

 CHAPTER III

 THE OTHER SACRAMENTS AND THE SACRAMENTALS

 THE DIVINE OFFICE

 CHAPTER V

 THE LITURGICAL YEAR

 CHAPTER VI

 SACRED MUSIC

 CHAPTER VII

 SACRED ART AND SACRED FURNISHINGS

 APPENDIX A DECLARATION OF THE SECOND VATICAN ECUMENICAL COUNCIL ON REVISION OF THE CALENDAR

 GUIDELINES ON RELIGIOUS RELATIONS WITH THE JEWS (N.4)

 I. DIALOGUE

 II. LITURGY

 III. TEACHING AND EDUCATION

 IV. JOINT SOCIAL ACTION

 CONCLUSION

 FOOTNOTES

 DECLARATION ON RELIGIOUS FREEDOM - Dignitatis humanae

 DECREE ON THE PASTORAL OFFICE OF BISHOPS IN THE CHURCH - Christus Dominus

 INTRODUCTION

 CHAPTER I

 THE BISHOPS IN THEIR RELATION TO THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH

 I. THE ROLE OF THE BISHOPS IN THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH

 II. BISHOPS AND THE APOSTOLIC SEE

 CHAPTER II

 BISHOPS IN RELATION TO THEIR OWN CHURCHES OR DIOCESES

 I. DIOCESAN BISHOPS

 II DIOCESAN BOUNDARIES

 III. THOSE WHO COOPERATE WITH THE DIOCESAN BISHOP IN HIS PASTORAL TASK

 A. Coadjutor and auxiliary bishops

 B. The diocesan curia and councils

 C. The diocesan clergy

 D. Religious

 CHAPTER III

 CONCERNING THE COOPERATION OF BISHOPS FOR THE COMMON GOD OF MANY CHURCHES

 I. SYNODS, COUNCILS AND ESPECIALLY EPISCOPAL CONFERENCES

 II. THE BOUNDARIES OF ECCLESIASTICAL PROVINCES AND THE ERECTION OF ECCLESIASTICAL REGIONS

 III. BISHOPS DISCHARGING AND INTER-DIOCESAN FUNCTION

 GENERAL DIRECTIVE

 DECREE ON THE MEANS OF SOCIAL COMMUNICATION - Inter mirifica

 CHAPTER I

 CHAPTER II

 CONCLUSIONS

 DECREE ON ECUMENISM - Unitatis Redintegratio

 Introduction

 CHAPTER I CATHOLIC PRINCIPLES ON ECUMENISM

 CHAPTER II THE PRACTICE OF ECUMENISM

 CHAPTER III CHURCHES AND ECCLESIAL COMMUNITIES SEPARATED FROM THE ROMAN APOSTOLIC SEE

 I. The Special Consideration of the Eastern Churches

 II. Separated Churches and Ecclesial Communities in the West

 DECREE ON THE CATHOLIC CHURCHES OF THE EASTERN RITE - Orientalium Ecclesiarum

 Preamble

 THE INDIVIDUAL CHURCHES OR RITES

 PRESERVATION OF THE SPIRITUAL HERITAGE OF THE EASTERN CHURCHES

 EASTERN RITE PATRIARCHS

 THE DISCIPLINE OF THE SACRAMENTS

 DIVINE WORSHIP

 RELATIONS WITH THE BRETHREN OF THE SEPARATED CHURCHES

 CONCLUSION

 DECLARATION ON CHRISTIAN EDUCATION Gravissimum Educationis

 Introduction

 1. The Meaning of the Universal Right to an Education

 2. Christian Education

 3. The Authors of Education

 4. Various Aids to Christian Education

 5. The Importance of Schools

 6. The Duties and Rights of Parents

 7. Moral and Religious Education in all Schools

 8. Catholic Schools

 9. Different Types of Catholic Schools

 10. Catholic Colleges and Universities

 11. Faculties of Sacred Sciences

 12. Coordination to be Fostered in Scholastic Matters

 Conclusion

 DECREE ON THE MISSION ACTIVITY OF THE CHURCH - Ad Gentes

 PREFACE

 CHAPTER I - PRINCIPLES OF DOCTRINE

 CHAPTER II MISSION WORK ITSELF

 ARTICLE 1: Christian Witness

 ARTICLE 2: Preaching the Gospel and Gathering together the People of God

 ARTICLE 3: Forming the Christian Community

 CHAPTER III - PARTICULAR CHURCHES

 CHAPTER IV MISSIONARIES

 CHAPTER V PLANNING MISSIONARY ACTIVITY

 CHAPTER VI COOPERATION

 CONCLUSION

 DECREE ON THE MINISTRY AND LIFE OF PRIESTS -- Presbyterorum ordinis

 PREFACE

 CHAPTER I - THE PRIESTHOOD IN THE MINISTRY OF THE CHURCH

 CHAPTER II - The Ministry of Priests

 SECTION I - Priests' Functions

 SECTION 2 - Priests' Relationships with Others

 SECTION 3 - The Distribution of Priests, and Vocations to the Priesthood

 CHAPTER III - The Life of Priests

 SECTION 1 - The Vocation of Priests to the Life of Perfection

 SECTION 2 - Special Spiritual Requirements in the Life of a Priest

 SECTION THREE - Aids to the Life of Priests

 CONCLUSION AND EXHORTATION

 DECREE ON PRIESTLY TRAINING - Optatam Totius

 I THE PROGRAM OF PRIESTLY TRAINING TO BE UNDERTAKEN BY EACH COUNTRY

 II THE URGENT FOSTERING OF PRIESTLY VOCATIONS

 III. THE SETTING UP OF MAJOR SEMINARIES

 IV. THE CAREFUL DEVELOPMENT 0F THE SPIRITUAL TRAINING

 V THE REVISION OF ECCLESIASTICAL STUDIES

 VI. THE PROMOTION OF STRICTLY PASTORAL TRAINING

 VII. TRAINING TO BE ACHIEVED AFTER THE COURSE OF STUDIES

 CONCLUSION

 Second Vatican Council II Closing Speeches and Messages

 COUNCIL CLOSING SPEECH DECEMBER 8, 1965

 COUNCIL CLOSING MESSAGES DECEMBER 8, 1965

 BY POPE PAUL TO COUNCIL FATHERS

 TO RULERS

 TO MEN OF THOUGHT AND SCIENCE

 TO ARTISTS

 TO WOMEN

 TO THE POOR, THE SICK AND THE SUFFERING

 TO WORKERS

 TO YOUTH

 APOSTOLIC BRIEF IN SPIRITU SANCTO' FOR THE CLOSING OF THE COUNCIL - DECEMBER 8, 1965

 ADAPTATION AND RENEWAL OF RELIGIOUS LIFE - Perfectae caritatis

 DECLARATION ON THE RELATION OF THE CHURCH TO NON-CHRISTIAN RELIGIONS - Nostra aetate

CHAPTER VI RELIGIOUS

43. The teaching and example of Christ provide the foundation for the evangelical counsels of chaste self-dedication to God, of poverty and of obedience. The Apostles and Fathers of the Church commend them as an ideal of life, and so do her doctors and pastors. They therefore constitute a gift of God which the Church has received from her Lord and which by his grace she always safeguards.

Guided by the Holy Spirit, Church authority has been at pains to give a right interpretation of the counsels, to regulate their practice, and also to set up stable forms of living embodying them. From the God-given seed of the counsels a wonderful and wide-spreading tree has grown up in the field of the Lord, branching out into various forms of religious life lived in solitude or in community. Different religious families have come into existence in which spiritual resources are multiplied for the progress in holiness of their members and for the good of the entire Body of Christ.[1]

members of these families enjoy many helps towards holiness of life. They have a stable and more solidly based way of Christian life. They receive well-proven teaching on seeking after perfection. They are bound together in brotherly communion in the army of Christ. Their Christian freedom is fortified by obedience. Thus they are enabled to live securely and to maintain faithfully the religious life to which they have pledged themselves. Rejoicing in spirit they advance on the road of love.[2]

This form of life has its own place in relation to the divine and hierarchical structure of the Church Not, however, as though it were a kind of middle way between the clerical and lay conditions of life. Rather it should be seen as a form of life to which some Christians, both clerical and lay, are called by God so that they may enjoy a special gift of grace in the life of the Church and may contribute, each in his own way, to the saving mission of the Church.[3]

44. The Christian who pledges himself to this kind of life binds himself to the practice of the three evangelical counsels by vows or by other sacred ties of a similar nature. He consecrates himself wholly to God, his supreme love. In a new and special way he makes himself over to God, to serve and honour him. True, as a baptized Christian he is dead to sin and dedicated to God; but he desires to derive still more abundant fruit from the grace of his baptism. For this purpose he makes profession in the Church of the evangelical counsels. He does so for two reasons: first, in order to be set free from hindrances that could hold him back from loving God ardently and worshipping him perfectly, and secondly, in order to consecrate himself in a more thoroughgoing way to the service of God.[4] The bonds by which he pledges himself to the practice of the counsels show forth the unbreakable bond of union that exists between Christ and his bride the Church. The more stable and firm these bonds are, then, the more perfect will the Christian's religious consecration be.

Being means to and instruments of love,[5] the evangelical counsels unite those who practice them to the Church and her mystery in a special way. It follows that the spiritual life of such Christians should be dedicated also to the welfare of the entire Church. To the extent of their capacities and in keeping with the particular kind of religious life to which they are individually called, whether it be one of prayer or of active labour as well, they have the duty of working for the implanting and strengthening of the kingdom of Christ in souls and for spreading it to the four corners of the earth. It is for this reason that the distinctive character of various religious institutes is preserved and fostered by the Church.

All the members of the Church should unflaggingly fulfil the duties of their Christian calling. The profession of the evangelical counsels shines before them as a sign which can and should effectively inspire them to do so. For the People of God has here no lasting city but seeks the city which is to come, and the religious state of life, in bestowing greater freedom from the cares of earthly existence on those who follow it, simultaneously reveals more clearly to all believers the heavenly goods which are already present in this age, witnessing to the new and eternal life which we have acquired through the redemptive work of Christ and preluding our future resurrection and the glory of the heavenly kingdom. Furthermore the religious state constitutes a closer imitation and an abiding reenactment in the Church of the form of life which the Son of God made his own when he came into the world to do the will of the Father and which he propounded to the disciples who followed him. Finally this state manifests in a special way the transcendence of the kingdom of God and its requirements over all earthly things, bringing home to all men the immeasurable greatness of the power of Christ in his sovereignty and the infinite might of the Holy Spirit which works so marvellously in the Church.

The state of life, then, which is constituted by the profession of the evangelical counsels, while not entering into the hierarchical structure of the Church, belongs undeniably to her life and holiness.

45. It is the task of the Church's hierarchy to feed the People of God and to lead them to good pasture (cf. Ezek. 34:14). Accordingly it is for the hierarchy to make wise laws for the regulation of the practice of the counsels whereby the perfect love of God and of our neighbour is fostered in a unique way.[6] Again, in docile response to the promptings of the Holy Spirit the hierarchy accepts rules of religious life which are presented for its approval by outstanding men and women, improves them further and then officially authorizes them. It uses its supervisory and protective authority too to ensure that religious institutes established all over the world for building up the Body of Christ may develop and flourish in accordance with the spirit of their founders.

With a view to providing better for the needs of the whole of the Lord's flock and for the sake of the general good, the Pope, as primate over the entire Church, can exempt any institute of Christian perfection and its individual members from the jurisdiction of local ordinaries and subject them to himself alone.[7] Similarly they can be left or entrusted to the care of the appropriate patriarchal authorities. Members of these institutes, however, in fulfilling the duty towards the Church inherent in their particular form of life must show respect and obedience towards bishops in accordance with canon law, both because these exercise pastoral authority in their individual churches and because this is necessary for unity and harmony in the carrying out of apostolic work.[8]

Besides giving legal sanction to the religious form of life and thus raising it to the dignity of a canonical state, the Church sets it forth liturgically also as a state of consecration to God. She herself, in virtue of her God-given authority, receives the vows of those who profess this form of life, asks aid and grace for them from God in her public prayer, commends them to God and bestows on them a spiritual blessing, associating their self-offering with the sacrifice of the Eucharist.

46. Let religious see well to it that the Church truly show forth Christ through them with every-increasing clarity to believers and unbelievers alike--Christ in contemplation on the mountain, or proclaiming the kingdom of God to the multitudes, or healing the sick and maimed and converting sinners to a good life, or blessing children and doing good to all men, always in obedience to the will of the Father who sent him. [9]

At the same time let all realize that while the profession of the evangelical counsels involves the renunciation of goods that undoubtedly deserve to be highly valued, it does not constitute an obstacle to the true development of the human person but by its nature is supremely beneficial to that development. For the counsels, when willingly embraced in accordance with each one's personal vocation, contribute in no small degree to the purification of the heart and to spiritual freedom: they continually stimulate one to ardour in the life of love; and above all they have the power to conform the Christian man more fully to that kind of poor and virginal life which Christ the Lord chose for himself and which his Virgin Mother embraced also. This is proved by the example of the many holy founders of religious institutes.

Let no one think either that their consecrated way of life alienates religious from other men or makes them useless for human society. Though in some cases they have no direct relations with their contemporaries, still in a deeper way they have their fellow men present with them in the heart of Christ and cooperate with them spiritually, so that the building up of human society may always have its foundation in the Lord and have him as its goal. otherwise those who build it may have laboured in vain.[10]

For this reason, then, this sacred council gives its support and praise to men and women, brothers and sisters, who in monasteries or in schools and hospitals or in missions adorn the bride of Christ by the steadfast and humble fidelity of their consecrated lives and give generous service of the most varied kinds to all manner of men.

47. Let everyone who has been called to the profession of the counsels take earnest care to preserve and excel still more in the life in which God has called him, for the increase of the holiness of the Church, to the greater glory of the one and undivided Trinity, which in Christ and through Christ is the source and origin of all holiness.