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Decades in the making, Richard A. Zmuda, a resident of Annapolis and a parishioner of St. Mary's Church, is the author of "The Mole of Vatican Council II: The True Story of Xavier Rynne." The book chronicles Redemptorist Father Francis X. Murphy's insider knowledge of Vatican II. Zmuda promised Father Murphy, who used the pseudonym "Axavier Rynne," that he would write his story during a visit the day before Father Murphy's death in 2002. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

Book details Redemptorist priest risking everything to reveal hidden dramas of Vatican II 

October 6, 2025
By George P. Matysek Jr.
Catholic Review
Filed Under: Books, Feature, Local News, News

When the Second Vatican Council opened in 1962, its proceedings were shrouded in secrecy. Bishops were sworn to silence and journalists were barred from covering internal debates that would reshape the Catholic Church for generations. For the wider world, the main access came through carefully curated Vatican summaries that revealed little of the council’s inner workings. 

Redemptorist Father Francis Xavier Murphy, pictured in a 1996 file photo, wrote a series of dispatches on the Second Vatican Council for The New Yorker magazine. Written under the pseudonym Xavier Rynne, his “Letters From Vatican City” caused a sensation by offering a behind-the-scenes look into the secret proceedings. (CNS file photo from The Catholic University of America)

Then, unexpectedly, a mysterious byline appeared in The New Yorker: Xavier Rynne. 

In a series of explosive dispatches, the anonymous insider revealed the council’s unseen conflicts – ultraconservative factions working to block reforms, Curial power plays and intense exchanges shaping the church’s future. 

Captivated by the intrigue, the world devoured “Letters from Vatican City.” Some church leaders, however, were scandalized and launched a hunt to unmask the author. 

Now, Richard A. Zmuda, a parishioner of St. Mary in Annapolis and author of “The Mole of Vatican Council II: The True Story of Xavier Rynne,” tells the tale behind the pseudonym: Redemptorist Father Francis Xavier Murphy, the priest who became Vatican II’s whistleblower. 

Based on years of meticulous research into Father Murphy’s life, Zmuda paints a portrait of a man whose conviction brought the hidden proceedings of the council into the open. 

“Every quote that was in The New Yorker was true,” Zmuda said. “They couldn’t dismiss it. It was written in fact. And Father Murphy just had the guts to put it out to the rest of the world. The Curia and the Vatican itself wanted everything to be just a secretive meeting before they made these decisions – but Father Murphy realized early on that unless some truth came out, Vatican II would fail.” 

Father Murphy, stationed at St. Mary in Annapolis from 1985 until his death in 2002 at age 87, spent part of his early priesthood as a chaplain at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. He went to Rome in 1948 as a researcher and ministered with Catholic War Relief Services, eventually serving as a U.S. Army chaplain. In the late 1950s, he began teaching patristic moral theology in Rome and was in the city when Pope St. John XXIII called the Second Vatican Council.  

A Bronx native and scholar of medieval history, Father Murphy had unlimited access to council proceedings while serving as a peritus, or theological adviser, for Bishop Aloysius Willinger of Monterey-Fresno, Calif., a fellow Redemptorist. 

“He had access to everything – conversations on elevators, conversations in coffee shops, meetings – and he literally wrote it all down,” Zmuda said. 

Richard A. Zmuda, a parishioner of St. Mary’s Church, works on his next manuscript in his Annapolis home. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

Father Murphy was fully aware of the risk of excommunication. Three years into the council, Archbishop Pietro Parente, assessor of the Vatican’s Congregation of the Holy Office, confronted him on behalf of a conservative cardinal, but Father Murphy “squirreled his way through” the meeting without excommunication, Zmuda said. Xavier Rynne would later come under the protection of Pope St. Paul VI, the author added.  

“They did take a vow of secrecy and he violated that,” Zmuda said. “There’s no question about it. But he looked for the greater good.” 

Father Murphy’s revelations emboldened reform-minded cardinals to challenge those who had held what Zmuda called a “stranglehold” on church doctrine and power. 

It would take more than two decades after Vatican II for Father Murphy to admit he was Xavier Rynne. His nom de plume drew from his middle name and his mother’s maiden name – a choice Zmuda called probably the “worst pseudonym in the world.”  

“It’s surprising that it took three years for the Curia to find out who he was,” Zmuda said.  

Investigators into Rynne’s identity had initially focused on cardinals, then bishops among the 2,500 council attendees, before zeroing in on the American delegation. 

“It was just a matter of time,” Zmuda said.  

Zmuda first met Father Murphy in Annapolis. Father Murphy, aware that Zmuda was a literature teacher, asked him to write the foreword to a book on Vatican II. While working on that project, Zmuda realized Father Murphy’s own compelling story was waiting to be told. 

Nearing the end of his life, struggling with cancer and Parkinson’s disease, Father Murphy asked Zmuda to share that story. Zmuda had access to Father Murphy’s personal files, manuscripts, detailed histories and personal correspondence. He made two trips to Rome, where he was given access to secret files on Father Murphy. 

Pope St. John XXIII leads the opening session of the Second Vatican Council in St. Peter’s Basilica Oct. 11, 1962. (OSV News photo/L’Osservatore Romano)

Zmuda remembered his friend, buried at the Redemptorist cemetery at St. Mary, as smart, confident and outgoing. 

“He was social,” said Zmuda, whose book is written as a historical novel and was awarded first place this year by the Catholic Media Association for best book by a small publisher. 

“He loved a good time,” Zmuda said. “He was an Irishman and he could tell a tale. You could just picture him at a dinner party holding forth and laughing.” 

Father Murphy, a former adjunct professor of politics at The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,  had a photographic memory for names, events and personalities, Zmuda added. 

“He was passionate about the Catholic Church and he was passionate about the changes that had to take place in the Catholic Church,” Zmuda said. 

And what would Father Murphy make of the church today and how it’s evolved from Vatican II? 

“He would love it,” Zmuda said. “He would absolutely love it.”  

Email George Matysek at gmatysek@CatholicReview.org 

Click play below to listen to a Catholic Review Radio interview with Richard A. Zmuda

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