Smelling the conciliar coffee
Since this Year of Faith marks the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council, I’d like to publish more posts concerning the Council this year.
Today I would like to share a little anecdote concerning the Council I came across in Archbishop Fulton Sheen’s autobiography, Treasure In Clay:
“Under the two great tiers which seated about 1,200 bishops on each side of the basilica, there were two coffee bars. It was not long before the Fathers found names for them. One was called Bar-Jona, which was part of the Hebrew name for St. Peter” – Fulton Sheen, Treasure In Clay, Page 302
How adorable is that?! Archbishop Sheen later writes that there was a lot of humour at the Council and that there were little poems written and passed around throughout the gathering. At the close of the Council, Bishop John P. O’Loughlin wrote the following:
As we bishops depart from old Roma
We can proudly display our disploma
At the Council’s finale
We say “buon natale”
And “goodbye” to Bar-Jona’s aroma
I think they called the other caffe bar “Bar-Abbas.” No kidding.
hahaha….
This website agrees…
http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/remembering-women-vatican-ii
…but this website says that the other one was called “Bar Mitzvah”:
http://www.firstthings.com/article/2007/11/004-beyond-political-intrigue-22
…and this one says that a third one was opened for the auditors, and because some of them were women it was dubbed “Bar Nun”