Fiftieth Anniversary of the Opening of Vatican II (1962-2012) “I Was There” |
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(Fr. Alain Marchadour is an Assumptionist Scripture scholar who taught for many years at the Catholic University of Toulouse and served for 12 years as director of the Assumptionist shrine in Jerusalem, St. Peter-in-Gallicantu. He is the author of some ten books on the Bible, most notably a commentary on the Gospel of John, L’évangile de Jean.) In October 1962 the Second Vatican Council had just begun. With other students of my generation, I was lucky enough to be there, a humble observer of an historic event in the life of the Church. I can still remember October 11, 1962 and that evening when John XXIII opened the Council. From our house of studies nearby, located along the Tiber, facing Castel Sant-Angelo, I and my fellow Assumptionists in formation were well aware that we were a part of history in the making. That moonlit night we joined the throngs in Rome gathering in St. Peter’s Square. There were half a million people there and together with young people from the Catholic Action Movement we sang songs and carried torches aflame. I can still recall good Pope John addressing us in affectionate terms, not what we were used to from pontiffs, “It seems that even the moon, look at it, was in hurry to get here this evening to gaze upon this sight. We have come to the end of a long day of peace, yes, of peace….It is a brother who is speaking to you, a brother who has become a father by the will of Our Lord. When you get back to your homes and see your little ones, give them a hug and say to them, “this is a hug from the Pope.”
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Last Updated on Thursday, 21 June 2012 10:13 |