Pope John XXIII

COMMENTARY: Joseph Ratzinger, the last of the traditional popes

By A. James Rudin — February 14, 2013
(RNS) Joseph Ratzinger perhaps will be best remembered as a quiet theologian and intellectual. But he was not, as some critics charge, a ``transitional'' pope.

Vatican II: The beginning of the end of Catholic anti-Semitism

By A. James Rudin — October 25, 2012

(RNS) In the 50 years since the Second Vatican Council, much has been accomplished in building a new relationship between Catholics and Jews. What Pope John XXIII began in 1962 represented the beginning of the end of anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism within the Catholic Church. By A. James Rudin. 

ANALYSIS: 50 years ago, Vatican II changed the Catholic Church — and the world

By John Pope / The Times-Picayune — October 10, 2012

(RNS) In a massive display of solemn ecclesiastical pomp, hundreds of Catholic leaders strode into St. Peter’s Basilica 50 years ago, the start of an historic three-year assembly that would change the way the world’s largest Christian body viewed itself and the rest of the world. By John Pope.

Guest Voices: 50 years after Vatican II, should Pope John XXIII be a saint?

By Greg Tobin — October 2, 2012

(RNS) Fifty years after he opened the revolutionary Second Vatican Council, Pope John XXIII, known as the Good Pope, is on the verge of being declared a saint. Perhaps the key question is: Should he be? By Greg Tobin.

Legacy of Vatican II at heart of dispute between Vatican, U.S. nuns

By Kim Lawton — August 6, 2012

AMITYVILLE, N.Y. (RNS) Some critics say many Catholic sisters have been using the Second Vatican Council to justify positions and activities that are in conflict with official church teachings, but some nuns say they are living by Vatican II's call to get out of the convent and into the community. By Kim Lawton of Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly.

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