The chief reforms in the church from the second Vatican Council were: the use of the vernacular language instead of Latin in the Holy Mass; the church tabernacle displaced from the central aisle and the usage of revised Eucharistic prayers in the church. There were the direct reforms.
The Second Vatican Council said nothing about beverages in Church.
The Second Vatican Council was only held fifty years ago, in the Church's history, that is practically overnight. The influence of the Second Vatican Council will not be able to be evaluated for another 50 to 100 years.
There were exactly no doctrines defined at the Second Vatican Council. The Second Vatican Council was the first purely pastoral council ever held in the Church.
The Second Vatican Council was a pastoral Council, it made no changes to Church doctrine, or to the structure of the Church itself.
After the Second Vatican Council (Vatican II).
Pope Blessed John XXIII convoked the Second Vatican Council.
Pope John XXIII's legacy successfully convened a Second Vatican Council that brought about reforms in church life, liturgy and theology. The Catholic church resolved to cooperate with Christians from other denominations.
This council is generally called the Second Vatican Council or simply Vatican II. It is a council that was held for Roman Catholics, but it is not accepted or recognized by the Eastern Orthodox Church.
The language of the Church is Latin. Vatican II changed the Mass to be in the language of the people of the country. Latin remains the universal language of the church.
Pope John XXlll said this at the Second Vatican Council
"Second Vatican Council" refers to the 21st ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church held between 1962 and 1965 in Vatican City. It brought significant changes to the Church's practices and doctrines, emphasizing dialogue with the modern world and promoting ecumenism.
Yes, it was an ecumenical council.