Registration is required. Open to current university students and faculty. A PDF of the assigned readings will be provided.
The purpose of the seminar is to deepen understanding of the historical course of the relationship between councils and popes through an examination of four key texts published at four key moments in the ongoing dialectic between these two institutions. Our time together will be spent on a close reading and discussion of the texts, trying to understand them in their historical contexts. We will read them also with an eye to their possible relevance to the situation of the Catholic Church today. In recent years, for instance, the word synodality has entered our ecclesiastical vocabulary. Synod is the Greek form of the Latin word for council. The two words are, therefore, synonyms. What should this mean for us?
PRIMARY READINGS
- The Council of Constance, 1415
- The Four Gallican Articles, 1652
- Pastor Aeternus, Vatican Council I, 1870
- Lumen Gentium (Chapter three), Vatican Council II, 1964
BACKGROUND READINGS
- Council of Constance: Francis Oakley, The Conciliarist Tradition (Oxford, 2003).
- Gallican Articles: Richard F. Constigan, The Consensus of the Church and Papal Infallibility (Catholic UP, 2005).
- Pastor Aeternus: Austin Gaugh, Paris and Rome: The Gallican Church and the Ultramontane Campaign (Oxford, 1986). John W. O’Malley: Vatican I: The Council and the Making of the Ultramontane Church (Harvard, 2018).
- Lumen Gentium: John W. O’Malley, What Happened at Vatican II (Harvard, 2008).
SCHEDULE
1:30pm Coffee & Tea
2:00pm Session I
3:25pm Break
3:35pm Session II
5:00pm Wine & cheese reception
6:00pm End
John O’Malley also gave a lecture on October 11 and participated in a symposium on October 13.