Digital Continent Winter 2019 | Page 39

In a later essay in 1956, Professor Rahner would continue this thought, writing, The Church has functions to perform which in fact--above all, in our own situation— cannot be adequately carried out by priests, even though in the office of priesthood there are interior elements of a perduring nature which will always be essential to the Church. From the testimony of Scripture and Tradition the diaconate is not simply a mere stepping stone by which a man attains priestly ordination, only to have his diaconal role end upon completion of this transition to the priesthood. Rather, in its essence the diaconate is a distinct office sharing in the one Order, an office which can and even should represent a permanent and lifelong commission for a man. 52 Interest in a permanent diaconate soon spread beyond Germany. In 1956, at an international congress of pastoral liturgy in Assisi, Italy, Bishop von Bekkum of Indonesia proposed the possibility of restoration of a permanent diaconate, for the better unfolding of the liturgy and for worship services without a priest. It was clear by these statements that the topic of a permanent, perhaps married ordained diaconate was international. Unfortunately, in 1957, Pope Pius XII although sympathetic, declared that “the time was not yet ripe.” 53 Not yet ripe, however, the support for a permanent married, ordained ministry, the need of the afflicted around the world together with the lack of enough priests to answer this need contributed to the inclusion of a permanent diaconate in the discussions of the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican. On January 25, 1959, Pope John XXIII announced his intention to convene Concilium Oecumenicum Vaticanum Secundum, the Second Ecumenical Council of the Vatican, of the Roman Catholic Church (Vatican II). It was to be an opportunity for spiritual renewal. The Council would have two fundamental intentions, “aggiornaménto” and “ressourcement” In an address to a group of Blessed Sacrament fathers Pope John XXIII expressed hope that the Council would accomplish an updating of the Church or, “aggiornaménto”, “to bring the Good News of Jesus Christ proclaimed by the tradition into the world of today, addressing the 52 53 Ibid. 19 Josef Hornef, “The Genesis and Growth of the Proposal,” in Foundations for the Renewal of the Diaconate, 20. 31