John W. O'Malley, SJ, is one of the most highlyrespected and widely read Roman Catholic historians in the United States. He isthe author of Four Cultures of the West (Harvard University Press) and TheFirst Jesuits (Harvard University Press), among others. Joseph A. Komonchak holds the John and Gertrude Hubbard Chair in Religious Studies at The Catholic University of America. Neil J. Ormerod is professor of theology at Australian Catholic University, Strathfield, N.S.W. Stephen Schloesser, S.J., is associate professor of history at Boston College.David G. Schultenover, S.J., is professor of theology at Marquette University and editor-in-chief of Theological Studies.
America magazine review/analysis
(David Shultenover)
"After the Second Vatican Council, Yves Congar was concerned that we might become complacent in our theological endeavors, thinking that texts of council would be viewed as fixing once and for all the aims of the aggiornamento called for by Pope John XXIII. In this regard, Congar would have welcomed the four essays contained in this book...In the encyclical
Tertìo Mìllennìo Advenìente, Pope John Paul II held that the central task of the church in the new millennium would be to work toward an authentic assimilation to the teaching of the Second Vatican Council. What we have in this brilliant and much-needed book are four superb thinkers who are doing just that." —Maureen Sullivan,
America The National Catholic Weekly, March 3, 2008 (Maureen Sullivan)
"The essays in Vatican II by John W. O'Malley, Stephen Schloesser, Joseph A. Komonchak, and Neil J. Ormerod provide vigorous challenges to the so-called amnesiac approach of the restorationists." —Terrence W. Tilley,
Commonweal, April 11, 2008 (Terrence W. Tilley)
"...With its rich reflections on developments in Catholic religion, world politics, and culture, this is a valuable contribution. Summing Up: Highly Recommended. Upper-level graduates through faculty/research." — H. J. John, CHOICE, June 2008, Vol. 45 No. 10 (H. J. John)
"This collection of essays deserves the serious attention of all intelligent Catholics who are probably troubled and perplexed by the diverse interpretations that are currently being given to the Second Vatican Council." —
Worship (R. Kevin Seasoltz)
"These thoughtful essays, marshaling arguments from the ecclesiologically progressive perspective, seek to stay the ascendant conservative voices that have risen in response to many clear signs that Vatican II's results have led not to a New Pentecost but to bare ruined choirs, and that efforts to make the Church relevant have instead been disasters. The essays ask important questions and make sophisticated arguments that merit serious attention, and the book should be in all academic libraries." - Daniel Boice,
Catholic Library World, September 2008 (Daniel Boice
Catholic Library World)
"...The title of the book, from Father John O'Malley's article, indicates this preference for "experience" over content. He labours the obvious point that the language of Vatican ll indicates a new openness towards the non-Catholic and secular worlds Stephen Schlosser...accounts for the change by placing it in the context of the 1960s when the threat of a nuclear disaster had produced world-wide feeling of angst...Yes, of course, but we hardly need a book to inform us of notions that over years have become threadbare with use. Everyone knows that the sixties were tumultuous, that the last forty years have been difficult...What we look for in these intelligent and learned Catholics is beyond linguistics and sociology; we want theology...The tepid conclusion of the book—"the Church is now faced with the need to bring about change in itself...while seeking to put the breaks [sic] on the pace of change in the world" (p.176)—should worry these learned gentlemen, given what the Lord said to the lukewarm Christians in Laodicea (Rev 3:16)." —Father Daniel Callam, C.S.B.,
Catholic Insight Magazine, January 2009 (Negative)
"Overall, this book is a useful teaching tool for examining the historical and theological questions raised by the changes that resulted from the Second Vatican Council. For undergraduate students or even for younger theologians, it offers a fascinating look at a tumultuous time in the history of the Church and the world that they did not experience first hand." —Jason Paul Bourgeois,
Horizons, Fall 2008
"Did anything happen at Vatican II? The question is beguilingly simple, but inordinately complex—and yet after reading this work, one cannot help but assert an answer in the affirmative." — Patrick J. Hayes,
Catholic Books Review, 2009
"It will remain useful for understanding the interpretation of Vatican II to have such a valuable collection readily available on library and personal shelves." —Michael Attridge,
Theological Studies, March 2009