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An undated photo shows prelates during the Council Hall in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican during the third session of the Second Vatican Council. (OSV News photo/Ernst Herb, KNA)

A look at highlights of Vatican II on 60th anniversary of its wrap

December 7, 2025
By Alexander Brüggemann
OSV News
Filed Under: Ecumenism and Interfaith Relations, Feature, News, Vatican, World News

The Second Vatican Council, which after three years of dialogue and document drafting closed on Dec. 8, 1965, changed the face of the church, and opened it to the modern world. The council, opened under Pope John XXIII and closed under his successor, Pope Paul VI, initiated a comprehensive renewal, with major council texts released on hot-button church issues. As the church commemorates 60 years since the closing of Vatican II, here are seven key issues and documents that serve as its legacy for future generations.

Pope Paul VI sits in the “cathedra” or bishop’s chair during the Second Vatican Council in July 1965 in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. (OSV News photo/Ernst Herb, KNA)

Understanding of the church: “Lumen gentium” (1964), one of the four primary constitutions of the council, sets out the new self-understanding of the Roman Catholic Church. It defines the church as a community of believers, as the “people of God” on their journey through time. In this constantly reforming church, a “common priesthood” of all believers is emphasized — something realized in different forms with clergy and laity. The constitution emphasizes the role of the college of bishops who lead the church “with Peter and under Peter,” as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI, reminded years later. In several decrees, the council drafted guidelines for a contemporary form of Christian life and service in spiritual vocations for priests, religious and laity. The importance of the vocation of the laity is emphasized by the council fathers and the training of priests was reorganized. The church’s missionary activity was given a new theological foundation in the decree “Ad gentes.” In the decree “Christus dominus” (1965), on the episcopal pastoral office in the church, the leadership function of the bishop in his diocese was strengthened.

Liturgy: The constitution “Sacrosanctum concilium” (1963) calls for more use of the respective national language in church services. While “the liturgy is considered as an exercise of the priestly office of Jesus Christ,” the constitution says that the faithful should be actively involved in the liturgy as a congregation. The council fathers emphasized the value of Bible preaching and church music in the service. The new Roman Missal of 1969 goes further and replaces the old Tridentine Mass, in which the priests celebrate the sacrifice of the Mass with their backs to the congregation.

Religious freedom: The declaration “Dignitatis humanae” (1965) refers to the unbreakable human dignity of each individual and recognizes the civil right of all people to choose their religion freely according to their own conscience. Nevertheless, the council emphasizes the conviction that the “one true religion subsists in the Catholic and Apostolic Church.” “Dignitatis humanae” also “envisions religious freedom as a right that corresponds to an obligation, and thus it implies that religious freedom is not simply a trump card that someone can pull out to protect any activity,” Bishop Kevin Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend, then-chair of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee for Religious Liberty, said during an address in 2024. “In that sense, there is a kind of limit to religious freedom based on what the right is for,” he added.

Prelates are seen during the conclusion of the Second Vatican Council on Dec. 8, 1965, in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican. (OSV News photo/Ernst Herb, KNA)

Ecumenism: The council fathers carried out a fundamental theological opening toward Orthodox Christians and Protestants. The decree “Unitatis redintegratio” (1964) is a milestone in the Roman church’s willingness to engage in ecumenical dialogue. In a joint declaration on the penultimate day of the council, Pope Paul VI and the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Athenagoras I, canceled the mutual excommunication sanctioned by their predecessors in 1054.

Judaism and other non-Christian religions: The declaration “Nostra aetate” (1965) clarifies the relationship between the Roman church and other religions. A landmark Catholic document, credited with greatly advancing Catholic-Jewish relations in the decades that followed, “Nostra aetate” clearly rejects antisemitism. The text was the Catholic Church’s first formal denunciation of “hatred, persecutions, displays of anti-Semitism, directed against Jews at any time and by anyone,” while affirming the “spiritual patrimony common to Christians and Jews.” The document emphasizes the links with other religions without diminishing its own claim to truth. The Catholic Church, it says, rejects nothing that is “true and holy” in the religions. Christians, Jews and Muslims are encouraged to clear up mutual misunderstandings in dialogue.

Church and the world: The constitution “Gaudium et spes” (1965) attempts a comprehensive definition of the position of the “church in the modern world,” presenting her as the gateway through which society receives life in Christ. Its drafting led to heated discussions among the council fathers. Important topics included the relationship between armament, war of aggression and self-defense, a condemnation of communist atheism, and a combination of scientific and economic progress with lived solidarity. As Deacon Omar F.A. Gutierrez put it at OSV News, it was a “culmination of what the Second Vatican Council hoped to accomplish, the capstone of the council.” The modern world needed the church, and “Gaudium et Spes” responded to that need, Deacon Gutierrez wrote, as the pastoral constitution embodied “the church’s open hand.” In another timely document, “Inter mirifica” (1963), the council fathers encouraged Catholics to acquire media skills, pass them on and thus make Christian positions heard in society via the media.

Bible and divine revelation: The dogmatic constitution on divine revelation, “Dei verbum” (1965), paved the way for a new scientific approach to the Bible by authorizing historical-critical interpretation. The document attempts to create a balanced relationship among Holy Scripture, church tradition and the teaching authority of the church. Revelation is understood as God’s self-communication in words and deeds. Meeting on the eve of the 60th anniversary of the document, Pope Leo asked members of the group to reflect on how they individually and as a federation respond to the call “to hear the Word of God with reverence and to proclaim it with faith.”

OSV News contributed to this report.

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