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benefan
Thursday, March 23, 2006 11:36 PM
BEAUTIFUL 'YEAR-1 REPORT CARD'

Beautiful report card, true. But what a beautiful face in the photo above. He would get top marks from me just for his gorgeous appearance.
benefan
Friday, March 24, 2006 5:44 AM
The Pope's New Cardinals

You can tell a lot about Benedict XVI from the people he has elevated. A guide to the new men in red hats

By JEFF ISRAELY/ROME
Time Online
Thursday, Mar. 23, 2006

With all the shiny red hats and vestments, the elevation Friday of 15 new Cardinals reveals a lot about the (still) new man in white. Pope Benedict XVI’s first consistory comes less than a month before the one-year anniversary of his election, and the picture of the Pontiff is still taking shape. But his first additions to the top rung of the Church hierarchy — which include two prominent Americans, a Chinese prelate and Pope John Paul II’s personal secretary — give further clarity to both the form and substance of Benedict’s nascent reign.

First, it is worth noting one man who did not get his red hat. Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, the longtime president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, was thought by many to be in line for a Cardinal position. But last month, the Pope abruptly pulled the British-born Fitzgerald out of Rome and sent him to be the Vatican’s representative in Egypt, a "nuncio" posting that doesn’t come with a Cardinal promotion. Since Fitzerald had forged a rather soft policy as Rome's point man on Islam, the move was initially seen as another sign that Benedict is hardening the Vatican’s line on relations with Islam. In fact, the move was as much an administrative realigment: two weeks after Fitzgerald's appointment, his former office was merged with the Pontifical Council for Culture — and two more Vatican offices (the Pontifical Councils for Justice and Peace, and for Migrants and Refugees) were shrunk into one. Message: Benedict’s much anticipated streamlining of the Roman Curia has begun.

The first new Cardinal to get his hat, former San Francisco Archbishop William J. Levada, was Benedict’s biggest surprise. Levada was named last August to take the Pope’s old job as the Church’s point man on all doctrinal issues as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a post that Cardinal Ratzinger held under John Paul for 24 years. When Benedict gave the job to Levada, a friend since the two worked together in Rome in the early 1980s, most Vatican insiders were shocked, having expected a European intellectual heavyweight in the post. Message: Benedict knows the kind of ship he wants, and on key personnel moves, he’ll take his own counsel above all.

Less surprising was Benedict’s appointment of John Paul’s long-time personal secretary, Stanislaw Dziwisz, to the Archbishop post of Krakow that Wojtyla held before becoming Pope. Dziwisz, who gets his red hat just eight days shy of the anniversary of his mentor’s death, is also looking forward to a visit from Benedict in Poland in late May. The new Pope, known as a true believer in set rules, surprised some last spring by skipping the usual waiting period to put John Paul on the fast-track to sainthood. Dziwsz is hoping that on his Polish trip Benedict will proclaim his predecessor Blessed, which is just one step short of Saint. Message: Benedict will continue to pay steady homage to John Paul, hoping that lets him carve his own course.

The Bishop of Hong Kong, Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, becomes Cardinal as the Vatican tries to walk a delicate path toward re-establishing diplomatic relations with Beijing. The Pope had invited four Chinese bishops to the Synod of Bishops in October, only to see the government block their departure at the last minute. Many in Rome’s office of the Secretary of State have pushed for a more flexible approach to the Chinese, who until now only recognize the so-called "Patriotic Church" made up of Catholics not obedient to Rome. China also insists on the Vatican cutting ties with Taiwan. But Benedict’s choice of Zen, who has been a vocal critic of human rights abuses and an advocate of religious liberty, could be seen as a direct challenge to Beijing. Message: Benedict’s diplomacy is armed with both carrots and sticks.

Overall, the new batch of Cardinals continues John Paul’s geographical mix and stern line on doctrine. Benedict’s first consistory is also notable for its dimensions, with far fewer Cardinals than was John Paul's custom, and with a more intimate principal ceremony indoors, in contrast to those his predecessor led in St. Peter’s Square. Some believe Pope Ratzinger may choose smaller, more regular (perhaps annual) consistories to keep the College of Cardinals consistently close to the 120 limit. It also would be a chance for regular encounters with all his men in red hats. Benedict may be a Pope not only eager to choose Cardinals, but work with them as well.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, March 24, 2006 10:58 PM
CARDINAL LEVADA SPEAKS IN BEHALF OF THE NEW CARDINALS
Here is a translation of the words addressed by Cardinal William Levada, Prefect of the Cognregation for the Doctrine of The faith, to the Holy Father at the Public Consistory today. By virtue of the office he occupies, he was the first-named among the 15 new cardinals.
--------------------------------------------------------------

Most Holy Father,
It is with a heart full of emotion, thanks and trepidation that in the name of the cardinals created by Your Holiness, I wish to express to you our sentiments at this solemn and challenging hour in our humble lives, which already through Holy Orders are entirely consecrated to the Lord and to his service within the Holy Church.

You, Holy Father, through an act of sovereign and loving fatherhood – which has shone in all your acts in this first year of your luminous and serene Pontificate – have decided to distinguish us with the Roman Purple [the Italian term is Porpora Romano, which idiomatically translates to "Roman royalty", as the cardinals are considered "Princes of the Church"], calling us to become part of the College of Cardinals, which for more than a millennium has offered the Vicar of Christ the humble contribution of its own collaboration towards the fulfillment of the Pope’s Universal Apostolic Ministry as Successor to the Apostle Peter.

In this, the first year of your Pontificate, we are the first group of Cardinals created to continue along with the other most eminent cardinals the work of collaborating with your Holiness in the Roman Curia and in the Episcopal seats scattered all over the globe.

Becoming titular heads today of various Roman churches unites us even more closely to the Church of Rome and him who “presides in charity”, making us collaborators of Your Holiness not only in the mission of uniting the Church but as witnesses to its catholicity, since we have been called from all over the globe.

We feel profoundly this mission of grave responsibility which requires supplemental dedication, and precisely for this, postulates an unceasing commitment of total love and unconditional loyalty to Christ the Lord and to the Christian people, to whom our apostolate and our pastoral service are addressed.

This love for Jesus Christ and His Church, this loyalty to the searching man who has an ardent thirst for truth above all – we wish, Most Blessed Father, to place in your hands, and together we promise you, Holy Father, like sons to a most beloved father, ur loving and devoted faith, without limits or any reservations, free of concern for ourselves and our own lives, as the cardinal-red color will always remind and admonish us.

I would like to recall a passage from the catechesis that Your Holiness gave on February 22 on the Feast of Peter’s Chair. Referring to the apse of St. Peter’s Basilica where the monument to Peter’s Chair is found, a mature work by Bernini, you, Holy Father, invited the faithful to stop in front of this splendid and suggestive work to admire it and pray specially for the ministry that God has entrusted to you.

Today, in a special way, we invoke the Holy Spirit so that he may with his light and strength sustain the Apostolic Ministry of Your Holiness and give to all of us, who have been called to cooperate in the service of Peter’s Successor, as well as those who accompany us with their presence, their prayers and their affection, the generosity of Christian commitment and the joy of feeling ourselves and continuing to be servants of the Gospel.

May the Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church and Queen of the Apostles, assist us on the even of the Liturgical Solemntiy of the Annunciation. Let her ‘fiat' be ours too!

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/03/2006 6.28]

benefan
Friday, March 24, 2006 11:16 PM
Chávez plans to meet with Pope Benedict XVI

From El Universal.com

Venezuelan ambassador to the Vatican Iván Rincón Urdaneta confirmed they are making all necessary steps for President Hugo Chávez to meet with Pope Benedict XVI this year.

"Doors have been open always, but when Chávez visited Europe (last October), they were celebrating the bishops' synod, and the Pope could not meet with him," Rincón explained.

Catholic Church sources told El Universal that Chávez' visit to the Vatican is imminent. The date would be set "depending on the agendas both of the Pope and the President." They suggested the meeting is likely to take place in the second quarter this year.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, March 25, 2006 4:01 AM
CONSISTORY WRAP-UP


It's been surprisingly hard to find a good overview story on today's public consistory, and the following AP story is the closest I have seen so far. In connection with the preceding story about Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez wanting to meet the Pope, there is a pragraph in this overview about the new Venezuelan cardinal's thoughts on prospects for dialog between Church and State in his country.
--------------------------------------------------------------

VATICAN CITY, Mar. 24, (AP) Pope Benedict XVI warmly embraced 15 new cardinals when he placed crimson hats on their heads in a ritual-filled ceremony Friday, tears welling in his eyes as he gripped the shoulders of the Polish prelate who faithfully served his predecessor for 40 years.


The moving moment in tribute to Pope John Paul II drew long applause from the crowd in St. Peter's Square as Benedict elevated Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, the late pontiff's private secretary, as well as key churchmen from Hong Kong, Boston, Venezuela and the Philippines. They are now members of the elite group who will eventually choose the German pope's successor.

Coming from North and South America, Europe and Asia, they showed the worldwide reach of the 1 billion-member Roman Catholic Church.

One by one, they walked up to Benedict, who was seated on the steps of St. Peter's Basilica, knelt before him and received a "biretta," a four-sided hat with three distinct ridges on its upper side whose crimson color signifies their willingness to shed blood for the church. When the 87-year-old Peter Poreku Dery of Ghana was brought up in a wheelchair, the pope rose from his throne to embrace him.


"I felt wonderful, especially when the pope stood up and gave me a kiss," Dery said.

Archbishop Sean O'Malley, who was brought in to clean up the church in Boston after a major sex abuse scandal, was among the new cardinals, along with William Levada, formerly the archbishop of San Francisco and Portland, Ore. Levada took over Benedict's old job as prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican's chief doctrinal watchdog.

The new cardinals also included Hong Kong Bishop Joseph Zen, a champion of religious freedom in China, Archbishop Jorge Liberato Urosa Savino of Caracas, Venezuela, who has sought to reduce tensions between the church and President Hugo Chavez, and Archbishop Gaudencio B. Rosales of Manila, Philippines, the Catholic bastion of Asia.


"The Holy Father loves China and I hope to be of service to him," the Hong Kong cardinal told The Associated Press at a reception for the new "princes" of the church in the frescoed rooms of the Apostolic Palace.The pope has been reaching out to China, which broke relations with Vatican after the Communists came to power.

"The church in Venezuela, the bishop conference and me, we are trying to promote dialogue," the Caracas clergyman said. "We hope the actual government may move toward freedom, justice and peace and inclusion of all Venezuelans, without the exclusion of anyone and with an attitude of tolerance."

Thousands stood in line to greet the new cardinals, with many pushing and shoving to try to reach John Paul's longtime secretary.

"I thought of the 2,000 years of history of the church, of St. Peter who gave up his life," said O'Malley. "And now there I was. ... Who would have thought?

Boston's Sean O'Malley, the Capuchin cardinal, gets his biretta.

Earlier, he was asked what was said when he passed by Cardinal Bernard Law, his predecessor in Boston, upon receiving his red hat. "I don't recall the exact words but they were words of congratulations," O'Malley replied.

Benedict told the prelates he was counting on them to spread the principles of love and charity that he had highlighted in his first encyclical, "God is Love."

"May the scarlet that you now wear always express Christ's charity, inspiring you to a passionate love for Christ, for his church and for all humanity," he said. "I am counting on you, dear brother cardinals, to ensure that the principle of love will spread far and wide, and will give new life to the church at every level of her hierarchy."

"I am counting on you to see to it that our common endeavor to fix our gaze on Christ's open heart will hasten and secure the path toward the full unity of Christians," he said.

Benedict has said unifying all Christians is a priority of his pontificate.

The cardinals also were each assigned a "titular" church in Rome to cement their links to the Eternal City. The new cardinals will get their rings during a Mass on Saturday in St. Peter's Square.

Cardinal Levada was the first to get his biretta.

Levada spoke on behalf of the new cardinals, telling the pope they gave him their unconditional loyalty, "free of concern for ourselves and our own lives, as this scarlet (robe) unceasingly reminds and warns us."Benedict announced Feb. 22 that he was naming the new cardinals, 12 of whom are under age 80 and thus eligible to vote in a conclave. The additions raised the total number of cardinals to 193, 120 of whom can vote.

While electing a pontiff is the primary task of cardinals, they also are called on to advise the pope on running the church.

Following Friday's ceremony, Europe will still have the vast majority of cardinals at 100, 60 of whom are of voting age. Latin America is next with 20 voting-age cardinals, followed by North America with 16. Asia has 13, Africa nine and Oceania two.
----------------------------------------------------------------
AP reporters Daniela Petroff and Marta Falconi in Rome contributed to this article.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/03/2006 6.31]

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/03/2006 7.20]

benefan
Saturday, March 25, 2006 4:14 AM

@Teresa: "It's been surprisingly hard to find a good overview story on today's public consistory..."

Benefan: I agree. I am always surprised that reporters don't talk to the principal players more after the fact to get the full emotional impact of the event. They do a very sketchy job. I have also been waiting to hear more of what was said at the brainstorming session yesterday but pitiful little has been reported on that and nothing really about who said what on the topics being discussed. Oh well, tomorrow will be the ring ceremony, more good Papa photo ops.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, March 25, 2006 3:17 PM
ON THE CHURCH'S MARIAN PRINCIPLE


Benedict XVI consigned the ring, “a nuptial sign,” to the 15 new cardinals at a concelebrated Mass in St. Peter's Square today. The Pope said that today’s celebration of the Annunciation helps to consider the giving of the rings, "which emphasizes the Petrine principle of the Church, in the light of the other principle, the Marian one, which is even more fundamental”. From www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=5738:
----------------------------------------------------------------

Everything in the Church
goes back to Mary’s “Here I am”

25 March, 2006

Vatican City (AsiaNews) – “Everything” in our personal lives, and in ecclesial activity, “is inspired by charity and leads to charity”, the same which inspires the love of God and the “here I am” of Mary on the Day of the Annunciation, a “prelude” to the Incarnation, “from which everything comes”.

The “providential” coincidence, of the first Eucharistic concelebration of the 15 new cardinals with the feast of the Annunciation, underpinned Benedict XVI’s reflection for the consignment of rings to the new cardinals. A “nuptial sign” of love, on the day emphasizing that “everything in the Church, every institution and ministry, including that of Peter and his successors, is ‘included’ under the Virgin's mantle, within the grace-filled horizon of her ‘yes’ to God's will”.

The sun was shining over St Peter’s Square, greeted with a humorous remark by the Pope, who entered the square in procession from the bronze door. This unusual move – usually the pope arrives from the basilica – was probably owing to his desire to “accompany” the cardinals through 30,000 jubilant people who participated in the mass, together with the entire College of Cardinals, hundreds of bishops and the diplomatic corps.

People among the crowd waved the national flags of the new cardinals, including an unexpected one from North Korea, brought by someone in honour of Cardinal Cheong, Archbishop of Seoul, who is also apostolic Administrator of the northern part of his still divided country. A Chinese girl in the offertory procession marked the presence at the ceremony of Cardinal Zen’s suffering church as well.

There was the ritual linked to the consignment of the ring – a symbol of dignity and of special union with the See of Peter – by the Pope to the new cardinals, who received it, one by one, kneeling before him.

Shortly beforehand, in his homily, Benedict XVI had said: “May your acceptance of the ring be for you a renewal of your ‘yes’, your ‘here I am’, addressed both to the Lord Jesus who chose you and constituted you, and to his holy Church, which you are called to serve with the love of a spouse.”

The Pope continued: “What a great gift, dear Brothers, to be able to conduct this evocative celebration on the Solemnity of the Lord's Annunciation! What an abundance of light we can draw from this mystery for our lives as ministers of the Church! You above all, dear new Cardinals, what great sustenance you can receive for your mission as the eminent ‘Senate’ of Peter's Successor! This providential circumstance helps us to consider today's event, which emphasizes the Petrine principle of the Church, in the light of the other principle, the Marian one, which is even more fundamental.

“The importance of the Marian principle in the Church was particularly highlighted, after the Council, by my beloved predecessor Pope John Paul II, in harmony with his motto Totus tuus. In his spirituality and in his tireless ministry, the presence of Mary as Mother and Queen of the Church was made manifest to the eyes of all. More than ever he adverted to her maternal presence in the assassination attempt of 13 May 1981 in Saint Peter's Square. In memory of that tragic event, he had a mosaic of the Virgin placed high up in the Apostolic Palace, looking down over Saint Peter's Square, so as to accompany the key moments and the daily unfolding of his long reign. It is just one year since his pontificate entered its final phase, full of suffering and yet triumphant and truly paschal.

“The icon of the Annunciation, more than any other, helps us to see clearly how everything in the Church goes back to that mystery of Mary's acceptance of the divine Word, by which, through the action of the Holy Spirit, the Covenant between God and humanity was perfectly sealed.

"Everything in the Church, every institution and ministry, including that of Peter and his successors, is ‘included’ under the Virgin's mantle, within the grace-filled horizon of her ‘yes’ to God's will. This link with Mary naturally evokes a strong affective resonance in all of us, but first of all it has an objective value.”

The theme of the relationship between the Petrine and Marian principles “is also found in the symbol of the ring which I am about to consign to you. The ring is always a nuptial sign. Almost all of you have already received one, on the day of your episcopal ordination, as an _expression of your fidelity and your commitment to watch over the holy Church, the bride of Christ (cf. Rite of Ordination of Bishops). The ring which I confer upon you today, proper to the cardinalatial dignity, is intended to confirm and strengthen that commitment, arising once more from a nuptial gift, a reminder to you that first and foremost you are intimately united with Christ so as to accomplish your mission as bridegrooms of the Church. May your acceptance of the ring be for you a renewal of your ‘yes’, your ‘here I am’, addressed both to the Lord Jesus who chose you and constituted you, and to his holy Church, which you are called to serve with the love of a spouse. So the two dimensions of the Church, Marian and Petrine, come together in the supreme value of charity, which constitutes the fulfilment of each. As Saint Paul says, charity is the ‘greatest’ charism, the ‘most excellent way’ (1 Cor 12:31; 13:13).

“Everything in this world will pass away. In eternity only Love will remain. For this reason, my Brothers, taking the opportunity offered by this favourable time of Lent, let us commit ourselves to ensure that everything in our personal lives, and in the ecclesial activity in which we are engaged, is inspired by charity and leads to charity.

"In this respect too, we are enlightened by the mystery that we are celebrating today. Indeed, the first thing that Mary did after receiving the Angel's message was to go ‘in haste’ to the house of her cousin Elizabeth in order to be of service to her (cf. Lk 1:39). The Virgin's initiative was one of genuine charity, it was humble and courageous, motivated by faith in God's word and the inner promptings of the Holy Spirit.

"Those who love forget about themselves and place themselves at the service of their neighbour. Here we have the image and model of the Church! Every ecclesial community, like the Mother of Christ, is called to accept with total generosity the mystery of God who comes to dwell within her and guides her steps in the ways of love. This is the path along which I chose to launch my pontificate, inviting everyone, with my first Encyclical, to build up the Church in charity as a ‘community of love’ (cf. Deus Caritas Est, Part II).

Imposition of the rings

Photomontage by Sylvie. Photos: www.catholicpressphoto.com/servizi/2006-03-25-anelli-concistoro/p...

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 25/03/2006 23.09]

TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, March 25, 2006 6:07 PM
BRAINSTORMING WITH THE CARDINALS



BENEFAN - About your comment last night that "I have also been waiting to hear more of what was said at the brainstorming session yesterday but pitiful little has been reported on that and nothing really about who said what on the topics being discussed" - nothing else really has emerged, but John Thavis, whose CNS story you posted in NEWS ABOUT THE CHURCH on 3/23, subsequently updated that story to include what took place in the afternoon session. Here is the updated story from http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0601674.htm
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Pope, cardinals discuss several issues,
including dialogue with Islam


By John Thavis
Catholic News Service


VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI and most of the world's cardinals sat down for closed-door discussions on a number of administrative and pastoral questions, including dialogue with Islam.

The pope presided over the day of reflection and prayer March 23, the day before he was to hold a public consistory to induct 15 new cardinals. The cardinals-to-be, dressed in bishops' purple, were also invited to the meeting in the Vatican's synod hall.

There was no formal agenda, but in an opening talk the pope mentioned three specific concerns for discussion, according to a Vatican press statement:

-- "The condition of retired bishops."

-- "The question raised by (Archbishop Marcel) Lefebvre and the liturgical reform desired by the Second Vatican Council."

-- "Questions connected with the dialogue between the church and Islam."

The pope invited the cardinals to raise issues of their own. Given the time constraints, global poverty was the only other topic that generated substantive discussion, cardinals told Catholic News Service.

In the morning session, several cardinals spoke about recent Vatican efforts to reconcile with the followers of the late Archbishop Lefebvre. Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, head of the Congregation for Clergy, described in broad terms his recent efforts to bring the Lefebvrites back into communion with the church.

The comments were varied, with some questioning the terms on which such a reconciliation could and should occur. More than one cardinal reportedly questioned the idea of granting personal prelature status to the Lefebvrites' Society of St. Pius X.

In an interview with CNS, Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick of Washington said the cardinals were in favor of reconciliation, but that no definite consensus emerged on how to do it. There was a strong sense that an eventual agreement must bring real unity, he said.

"We all feel certainly that there is one faith and one church, and we all want to avoid having two churches and two faiths," Cardinal McCarrick said.

Cardinal Wilfrid F. Napier of Durban, South Africa, told CNS that he did not think the pope was looking for a "yes or no" response from the cardinals on the Lefebvrites.

For one thing, Cardinal Napier said, the situation among Lefebvrites is so different in various parts of the world that a thorough investigation would probably be needed before any global solution is reached.

Another topic raised by the pope was the possibility of an enhanced role in the church for retired bishops.

As one cardinal explained to CNS, bishops have a triple office of teaching, sanctifying and governing, and the question is how those gifts can be best used for the church, even among retired bishops. One bishop suggested raising the retirement age from the current limit of 75 years.

Cardinal McCarrick said the discussion on Islam reflected the shared recognition that "somehow we've got to relate to Islam, because it's such a major force in the world."

"I think (the pope) is concerned that fundamentalist Islam is hostile to every other faith. That's a concern of all of us and was brought up by a number of us
," Cardinal McCarrick said.

He said participants were worried about the fate of Christian minorities in some Muslim countries.

In his own remarks to the assembly, the cardinal said he stressed the need to encourage moderate Islamic leaders to "speak out and proclaim an Islam which is tolerant and able to work with others."

Others said that, while interfaith dialogue was important, perhaps more important right now is practical cooperation with Muslims -- as a sign of dialogue in action.

Cardinal McCarrick said the pope listened carefully in both sessions. At the end of the meeting, the cardinal said, the pope took off his glasses and spontaneously offered a "masterful" and precise summary of their discussions.

"I think he was pleased with it," Cardinal McCarrick said. "He was very impressive. We have such a brilliant Holy Father
."

New York Cardinal Edward M. Egan described the talks as "worthwhile and helpful."

"The Holy Father spoke, but mainly let the cardinals who stood up speak," Cardinal Egan said. Others said the pope at times encouraged comments from cardinals from different geographical areas, making sure that no region was left out of the discussion.

"The atmosphere was very friendly and offered many opportunities for interaction with the cardinals," said Cardinal William H. Keeler of Baltimore.

It was the pope's idea to convene the meeting, and Vatican sources said it signaled a strong advisory role for the world's cardinals under the new pontificate.

Cardinal Angelo Sodano, dean of the College of Cardinals, opened the encounter by thanking the pontiff for seeking their advice on "the great pastoral challenges of the present hour."

"The convocation of the present consistory reveals to us how much importance Your Holiness attributes to the College of Cardinals," Cardinal Sodano said.

The first part of the meeting, including 20 minutes of prayer, was broadcast in a live feed to journalists. At the end of his remarks, Cardinal Sodano said the pope would list a few primary themes; when it was the pope's turn to speak, the live feed was cut.

For many cardinals, the meeting was a reunion of sorts, evoking their daily encounters ahead of the conclave last April. Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger -- the future pope -- presided over those meetings, too.

When the cardinals began filing into the synod hall before 9 a.m., they were each handed a green folder that contained a prayer book, notepaper, applications for permission to speak and two lists of cardinals -- one alphabetical, the other by seniority.

Before taking seats, the cardinals warmly greeted each other and chatted informally. They rose and applauded the pope when he entered the room at 9:30, then recited prayers together.

The pope sat facing the cardinals and was flanked by three officials of the College of Cardinals: Cardinal Sodano, the dean; Cardinal Roger Etchegaray, the vice dean; and Archbishop Francesco Monterisi, the secretary.

It fell to Archbishop Monterisi to explain a few practical details: where to tune into simultaneous translations in four languages -- English, French, Italian and Spanish, how to request the microphone and how to turn up the headphone volume on the consoles.

Above the pope's dais was a relief of Mary and Jesus and a large crucifix. To the side were several flat-screen monitors that focused on each speaker as he took the floor.

Each cardinal was allowed four minutes to speak; a bell rang out the expired time, then the microphone was turned down. In the afternoon session, some cardinals were allowed to speak a little longer, sources said.

Although the pope's plan to streamline the Roman Curia was on the minds of many cardinals, it did not come up for detailed discussion during the meeting, one cardinal said.

Contributing to this story was Cindy Wooden.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, March 25, 2006 10:11 PM
POPE WRITES KARZAI
Ratzigirl posted this brief item from ANSA, the Italian news agency today, here in translation -

Pope Benedict XVI has written Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai asking clemency for Abdul Rahman, the 41-year-old Afghan man who was convicted to death by an Afghan court for having converted to Catholicism.

Sources said that the Pope's letter was sent to Kabul through the office of the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Angelo Sodano.

The letter appeals to Karzai to respect human rights as stated in the preamble to the new Afghan Constitution.

An update from the German newspaper DIE WELT adds:

A high-ranking Afghan government official in Kabul gave assurances today that Karzai personally supports Rahman.
"The President is personally working for a peaceful resolution," the official said, adding he has been consulting
several different authorities.

He said it was possible Rahman could be set free tomorrow, Sunday.

Rahman converted to Catholicism while living in Germany where he stayed for 9 years, returning home in 2002. His own family denounced him for his conversion which is a crime under Muslim law.
----------------------------------------------------------------

A good perspective on the story is provided by AsiaNews on 3/24/06 in www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=5736 :

Karzai reassuring as to
the fate of the Afghan convert,
but the ulemas want him dead


Afghanistan’s constitution recognises the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and thus freedom of religion; however, it also states that no law can contradict Islam. We will call on the people to tear him into pieces so there's nothing left, says an ulema.

Kabul (AsiaNews/Agencies) – The fate of Abdul Rahman, the Afghan man who converted to Christianity, remains in the balance, the death penalty still hanging over his head.

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke with Afghan President Hamid Karzai about the issue and urged him to seek a favourable resolution to the case at the earliest possible moment.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Karzai himself reassured him as to the outcome.

Senior Afghan clerics, however, threaten street protests to have “justice” done.

“We will not allow God to be humiliated,” said Abdul Raoulf, a member of the Ulemas Council, Afghanistan’s main clerical organization. “We will call on the people to tear him into pieces so there's nothing left.”

According to Afghan sources, thousands of young people are already converging on Kabul to demand the “apostate” be killed for renouncing Islam.

Muslim clerics don’t believe that Afghanistan’s constitution is an impediment. Even though Art. 7 says “The state shall abide by the UN charter, international treaties, international conventions that Afghanistan has signed, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”, Art 3. clearly provides that “no law can be contrary to the beliefs and provisions of the sacred religion of Islam.”

Islam, the ulemas explain, requires that anyone who asserts the truth (i.e. Islam itself) and then rejects and denies it commits an act that can only be punished with death. Indeed, apostasy has been a capital crime ever since Muhammad’s times and there is no disagreement between all Islamic schools of jurisprudence on this point.

Speaking to Asia Times Online, Ahmad Shah Ahmad Zai said that “[r]egardless of the court decision [whether or not he is hanged], there is unanimous agreement by all religious scholars from the north to the south, the east to the west of Afghanistan, that Abdul Rahman should be executed”.

A former prime minister in 1996 before the rise to power of the Talebans, Ahmad Shah added that there “is widespread dissent among the masses against the activities of Christian missionaries. These missions exploit the poverty of Afghan people and pay them to convert. These activities will only translate into a fierce reaction since Afghans do not tolerate anything against their religion”.

Government officials though seem inclined to have Mr Rahman undergo psychological tests in order to have him declared mentally insane and thus not punishable under the law.


[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 26/03/2006 1.24]

mag6nideum
Sunday, March 26, 2006 1:41 AM
Islam in Afghanistan
Horrible. Is dialogue with Islam at all possible? I doubt it.
gracelp
Sunday, March 26, 2006 2:01 PM
great news tidbits about Papa!he is just brilliant and a gift from God!i hope Islam dialogue would push through but i know it isnt that easy:(
benefan
Monday, March 27, 2006 10:32 PM
College of Cardinals to convene again for consultations soon

Mar. 27 (CWNews.com) - Pope Benedict XVI met with the families of the newest members of the College of Cardinals in a private audience on Monday morning, March 27.

During the audience, the Pope announced his plans to repeat the session of March 23, at which he had called together the world's cardinals to ask for their perspectives on critical issues facing the Church. Such meetings, he said, are "privileged moments to seek together how best to serve the Church entrusted by Christ to our care."

The Pope spoke in several different languages, to communicate directly with the families from different countries. He spoke in Italian, English, French, Spanish, Polish, and Slovenian. Of the 15 cardinals who received red hats at the consistory of March 24, only one was missing from the Monday audience. Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard had left for New York, where he had a previous commitment to participate in a Jewish-Catholic conference. After his general remarks to the crowd of about 3,000 people-- in which he addressed each new cardinal in turn-- the Pope was introduced by each cardinal to his family members.

mag6nideum
Monday, March 27, 2006 11:46 PM
Isn't it sweet and wonderful ...
[G][/G] that Papa spoke and met the family members of the cardinals. And he spoke several languages again. Friends have asked me which languages Papa know and speak. Because I've nowhere come upon the exact facts I fumbled a bit and came out with the following, guessing really! German, Italian, French, Spanish, English, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, perhaps Portugese, some Polish(?)
Do we know for sure which he SPEAKS and which he reads and understands well? I have this feeling that he is a "speaker" of the first 8 in my list (don't know about Hebrew though!)
mag6nideum
Monday, March 27, 2006 11:48 PM
Forgive the grammar errors...
in my post above Was in a hurry....
TERESA BENEDETTA
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 12:30 AM
PAPA'S LANGUAGE SKILLS
MAG6 - We know for sure he is conversant in the first six languages you mentioned (up to Latin). He may be in Greek as well (classic or demotic, or both, I do not know) because he knew it well enough to compose satirical poems in Greek about his Nazi superiors as a teenager doing his military service. I wouldn't know if he is conversant in Hebrew but I think I read somewhere he knows enough to read texts directly. As his Spanish is excellent, I am sure Portuguese should give him no problems but whether he "speaks" it as well as he does Spanish, I do not know. I also read somewhere he was learning Polish (I think because it has been obligatory for him to include something in Polish when he does these multilingual greetings). So I imagine at "family day" today with the new cardinals' kin, he may have had to use some other language - or interpreters - to speak to the Poles and the Slovenians.

By the way, I posted the translation of all his greetings (the Vatican gave Italian translations of the Polish and Slovenian parts) in HOMILIES, DISCOURSES, MESSAGES this morning.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 28/03/2006 21.12]

TERESA BENEDETTA
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 3:29 AM
RATZINGER'S VATICAN REVOLUTION
Following is a translation of an article that is a bit more daring than the other articles that have appeared so far on the reforms that the Pope is contemplating for the Roman Curia. The article was published on 3/24/06 in Manifesto, the official newspaper of the Italian Communist Party - an unlikely paper for this kind of article, as rightly noted by Ratzi-Lella who posted it in the main forum.
----------------------------------------------------------------

Ratzinger's Vatican revolution:
The Pope's project will radically change
the structure of the Roman Curia


By MIMMO DE CILLIS

ROMA
Perhaps in his meditations, he was inspired by Bezaleel, the Biblical architect of the Ark of the Alliance. Or it could have been Antonio Gaudi, the Catalan architectural genius behind the Church of the Holy Family in Barcelona, an artist on the way to beatification, who inspired a project so courageous and forward-looking.

But Joseph Ratzinger has long harbored the idea of the need to profoundly reform the Roman Curia - since the Second Vatican Council, when as a brilliant theologian, the studied and wrote about the future of the Church. His ideas were consolidated during the years he lived in the sacred palaces as a leading protagonist in the quarter century of the Wojtyla Papacy.

Now, at the top of the Church hierarchy, with the full powers vested in him as Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Christ, Supreme Pontifex and sovereign of Vatican state, Benedict XVI is in a position to undertake one of the most complex and articulated structural reforms of the last several decades of Christian history.

Ratzinger is a man of study and prayer. Precisely because of this, when he has something in mind that he has meditated on enough, it would be difficult to expect him to change his ideas. He would not have lacked for support from the Bible, and the book of Exodus would have given his proposed 'architectural' effort some gloss: “I have filled Bezaleel with the Spirit so that he might have wisdom, intelligence and knowledge in every kind of work, to conceive projects and execute works in gold, silver and bronze, to carve gemstones to be mounted,” the Lord says in the holy book.

Gaudi likewise, art critics have noted, “was capable of inventing totally new forms, using avant-garde techniques on artisanal work in stone and steel.” And yes, even Papa Ratzinger has found himself confronted with men of “steel and stone.” He has encountered obstacles and contradictions from his "Holy Family’ at the Vatican. Those who have sought to dissuade him from his project include men who, with the planned new architecture, could lose chunks of economic and political power, or find themselves moved about or demoted.

But Ratzinger has been moving along his chosen course. One like him knows to perfection the mechanisms of the curial machine, often smothered in bureaucracy and personal power plays, contaminated by that “filth” which is against the “spirit of service” that should mark all work at the Holy See.

Benedict knows the men of bad faith, he has experienced official as well as underground opposition, he knows about factions in the Vatican, and knows therefore how to neutralize dangers.

At the same time, it is true that as the Pope who was favored and sponsored by major supporters in the Roman Curia, he also needs to acknowledge that support.

First criterion: discretion. Architect Ratzinger’s ideas, clear and precise, should (first) be studied and concretely verified in order to identify the right solution to problems, the right time to move, the right persons for the right positions.

It was necessary to have the assistance of a faithful squire, and the choice fell on a bishop who is outside the circle of the closest papal aides: Attila Nicora, who had first served in the Italian bishops conference and was later called to to the Vatican to administer its patrimony.

The dossier on Benedict’s reforms is said to be in his hands, and his frequent meetings with the Pontiff, off limits to everyone else, have created a climate of anticipation, ferment and even turmoil. Especially because nothing has leaked out of this “work in progress:” the two movers of the project, Ratzinger and Nicora, have their mouths zipped.

The declared objective is to streamline the bureaucracy and effect a more rational division of competencies in internal Vatican affairs and in its relationships with other states.

Under closest scrutiny, above all, is the work of the Secretariat of State, which too often has substituted itself to deal with the most delicate matters rather than the dicastery that is most directly involved and charged with a particular mission. This includes relations with bishops around the world, their economic problems, even text drafts! In effect, a centralist and centralized organism!

The responsibility of the trio from State, Sodano-Sandri-Lajolo, for this state of affairs, though not in dispute, does not completely explain why things have failed to function well.

Among the most important congregations, that for the Doctrine of the Faith represents the Ratzingerian stronghold, and the man he chose to head it, Cardinal Levada, is one of the Pope’s most faithful men. The intention is to amplify the congregation's range of action and make it a true and proper “ideological steering wheel”, not merely to control or censure unorthodox doctrine, but to orient the theological reflections of bishops and theologians.

The Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples (now under the so-called “red Pope” Cresencio Sepe) has been for years stalled, and the vastness of its administrative entities (more than a thousand around the world) suggests the need for new propulsive mechanisms.

Even the dicastery for Oriental Churches has often found its hands tied in the nations of the Middle East, where political circumstances have pushed pastoral issues to the background, to the detriment of the Christian minorities who live in the area.

Different dicasteries and offices of the Curia deal with related matters, so the Pope is thinking of consolidations which may benefit the internal structure. Thus, the office of papal liturgy should be absorbed into the Congregation for Worship, while the discateries for Bishops, Clergy and the Consecrated Life are obviously “close cousins.”

Ratzinger has already incorporated, in effect, the offices for “inter-religious dialog” and for “culture”, on the one hand, and on the other, “justice and peace” with the ministry for migrants. One may add here Cor Unum (the charity arm of the Church) and the health ministry, which form part of a macro-area that is social in nature.

Other changes may include the union of the organisms which oversee the laity and families, and above all, the creation of a super-dicastery for communications and mass media which should unite under one editorial responsibility the Press Office, Osservatore Romano, Radio Vatican, the Itnerent Office, the Vatican television center and the Vatican publishing house.

Some prelates have started to pay the price for the Pope’s intended reforms. First “victim” par excellence was Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, who headed the dicastery for inter-religious dialog and has now been assigned Apostolic Nuncio to Egypt. The other is the Japanese Cardinal Stephen Hamao, one of the rare curial officials from the Land of the Rising Sun, who finally was allowed to retire after the fusion of the dicastery he presided, that for migrants, with the Pontifical Council on Justice and Peace.

Few in the Curia now feel sure about their positions. This restructuring, the fusion of some dicasteries, the streamlining of the bureaucracy may well cost the following their jobs: Archbishop Paul Cordes at Cor Unum; Walter Kasper, at Christian Unity; Javier Lozano Barragan, in the health ministry. Also at risk are Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, of the discastery on the family; John Patrick Foley, who is about to leave the council for social communications; and Cardinal Sepe, at the Congregation for Evangelization.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 28/03/2006 21.10]

mag6nideum
Tuesday, March 28, 2006 10:09 PM
BEING A POPE...
[G][/G] must surely, from a purely human perspective, be one of the loneliest positions imaginable.
Try and put yourself in this pope's place.... he has to change things, it affects human beings, colleagues. He (you) are in the depths of your being a gentle man, and you know some colleagues won't be happy at all with your decisions. But it has to be done for the greater good of the Church, and therefore, for God's Kingdom.

Can you, just for moment, put your tired head on someone's shoulder, or ask him/her: "Please hug me for 5 seconds" or "Could you be so kind to massage my aching neck and shoulders, please?" Nope. Everyone is sucking spiritual sustenance from you. Your every facial tick is registered globally for believers and non-believers to stare and gape at. Every word or little spontaneous comment you utter can be general knowledge within minutes or hours, analysed by geniuses or by fools. It can also be studied and evaluated in centuries to come. You're still alive, by the grace of God, but in fact you're already a figure of history. How will history judge you? And, infinitely more important, how will God judge you? These questions sometimes worm themselves into your thoughts. You're only human after all.

Fortunately, as a profound theologian and child of God with deep faith, you know the answer to the last question will be unconditionally positive.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Wednesday, March 29, 2006 1:04 AM
THE 'POLITICS' OF BENEDICT, Part 2
In some Italian press reports that we have posted here recently, the Corriere della Sera, Italy's 'leading' newspaper, has been identified as being at the vanguard of the Italian big-media triumvirate (along with La Repubblica and La Stampa) leading the laicistic anti-Catholic movement in Italy. However, the newspaper has published many positive accounts about Benedict XVI. Last week, I posted a translation (Post #1667, The Popes and Italian Politics) of a Corriere interview published 3/17/06 with a historian and church scholar, who thinks Benedict's primary concern is to safeguard the patrimony of the Catholic faith and to cleanse it, and that in the process, because he confronts contemporary thought directly, also helps to shake us out of our spiritual indolence.

Here is a second interview done by the same writer, published in the Corriere of 3/27/06, this time with a political science professor who stands up for Benedict's realistic and modern view of politics and its uses, as well as the myths that contemporary thought has constructed about science, liberty and progress.

---------------------------------------------------------------
Science, liberty, progress-
Ratzinger defies the new myths

A political scientist says the Pope
looks at these concepts with a modern eye

Interview conducted by
Gian Guido Vecchi


MILAN – “I remember an almost prophetic anticipation by our Giancarlo Brasca who wrote John Paul II a letter three days before the latter died: ‘Your Holiness had the task of opening a new epoch in the history of the Church and the world,’ he noted. “'It is a great gift and a great hope for all.’ “

In the studio that once was Father Gemelli’s, Prof. Lorenzo Ornaghi, lecturer in political science and rector of the Catholic University in Milan, looks up and smiles: “There it is – gift and hope. In the long years of the Wojtyla pontificate, we came to understand what those words mean, what is a gift, what is hope. The famous words, ‘Don’t be afraid’ were both. Through his personal witness, his life, John Paul II made us understand that it is possible to give a real and concrete answer even to some questions that are unexpressed or inexpressible, especially from young people. One year later, the affection for Papa Wojtyla is greater than ever, and that is one of the reasons.”

Does Papa Ratzinger offer the same?
“Very much so. There’s an extraordinary continuity in this. Benedict XVI probably states it with even greater force. He says – you don’t need to be afraid of the truth. Very often, the Augustinian roots of this Pope are stressed, namely, having an almost pessimistic vision of man marked by original sin, in which ‘politics’ must promote the remedy to sin.”

“But I would call Benedict’s vision realistic rather than pessimistic. The idea of not being afraid of the truth is the prerequisite to loving the truth and therefore deriving joy from it. It is this insistence on the joy which faith gives that marks the continuity between Wojtyla and Ratzinger.”

And politics?
“That is the crux of the discussion: Benedict XVI’s concepts cannot be reduced simply to Augustinian pessimism…”

In general, the two paradigms are Augustine and Thomas Aquinas
“And Thomas follows Aristotle: politics is something natural, it has a positive role, namely, to recover rationality at its ancient roots. Basically, modern thought cannot be understood without Augustine and Aquinas. But the turn towards modern lay thinking came, for example, with Grozio, whose premise “etsi Deus non daretur,” as if God did not exist, opened the way for rationalization which ended with Max Weber’s disenchantment. And so in the 19th century, politics began to be studied as a social science.”

And in this respect, where is Ratzinger positioned?
“His vision, rather refined, reflects the relationship between the Church and contemporary times. It is born out of a confrontation with modern thought, its doctrines and praxis. His vision is wary of mythifications, what one might call ‘darkenings of reason.’ The then-Cardinal Ratzinger made a very interesting speech on political myths in 2002….”
(In it he said that) “the spirit of partisanship, which accompanies power, continually produces myths in different forms which are presented as the truth of moral reality in politics, but they are actually masks or ways of dressing up power….The great ideologies of Nazism and communism have collapsed, but an insidious ‘mythification’ remains, insidious because it involves real values such as science, liberty, progress.

“One may think: here Ratzinger has his finger on the problem of relating to the modern world. So it is, but only in part. When he reflects on these values, on how they have been mythified unilaterally, what he is really doing is to recall the importance of such values in their most authentic roots. He does not criticize modern thought completely nor offer a purely negative critique. He is saying that politics can recover itself in its most authentic structure.

And this would be?
Politics is not an instrument to save man, as modern and contemporary thought often thinks it is. Benedict XVI has a concept of politics that goes back to the Greek philosophers – the idea that the authentic nature of politics lies in responding to the needs and desires of individual persons, rather than the concrete prosecution of the common good in a collective sense – aware that it cannot possibly cover the entire horizon of a man’s life, let alone that of nations. Therefore, the salvation of man is never left to politics, never!”

Does that not indicate a closing-off from the contemporary?
“On the contrary. It criticizes the automatism of the ‘magnificent progressive types’ (whose notions) cancel out man’s will to orient progress, to give it a sense. The disenchantment of the Western world imprisons us in the present. As someone intuited in this respect, that which could perhaps be considered reactionary is really revolutionary. Here (in Ratzinger) is a realistic conception of politics, the ‘long view’ of someone who looks beyond modernity, to the decades in our immediate future.”

But there is also the fear of being uprooted.
“Yes, certainly. That is the highest traditional concept that this Pope has been affirming and articulating. Benedict XVI seems to be saying: tradition is not a burden that one generation places on the shoulders of the next, but rather, it is where you will find your roots – the Christian event, and the perennial values of Christian humanism. It is is not a small effort. To show that the vitality of tradition lies precisely in that ‘long view’ across centuries is extraordinary even from the practical point of view: it responds to the needs that contemporary societies – albeit confusedly – are vaguely aware of and seek to formulate. And this seems to me like another element of continuity with John Paul II – both Popes are ‘in love’ with the present but also tell us, 'be aware that the future is already here and it is our responsibility to build it'.”

Some would equate Christianity with the West. How does Benedict see it?
“I don’t think he does. It’s hard for me to see him taking a geopolitical viewpoint. Even in this, in line with Wojtyla and perhaps with more insistence, Benedict XVI appears to be affirming the Church as catholic, apostolic and Roman. On the subject of universality and relations with other religions and the large geographical areas, his greatest emphasis is on the primacy of Peter.”

Doesn’t this present an obstacle to dialog?
“Perhaps it makes it easier. It is the point of reference that connotes the universality of the Church and keeps it from restricting itself necessarily to one part or the other, to be more friendly to one than to the other, according to contingencies and historical convenience!”

Many have said he is good for surprises.
“Yes, and when they say that I ask myself whether it is an analysis or a wish. I know that those who wished for an immediate surprise, perhaps in political terms, have not really read the writings of Cardinal Ratzinger, they know little of his thought, and probably, fail to appreciate him. And so they consider him a reactionary without seeing his openness to the world, (and he is open to the world) because Peter’s boat must be navigated through an open route.”

benefan
Wednesday, March 29, 2006 2:44 AM
BEING A POPE

@Mag6: "Can you, just for a moment, put your tired head on someone's shoulder, or ask him/her: "Please hug me for 5 seconds" or "Could you be so kind to massage my aching neck and shoulders, please?"'

Benefan: If Papa asked (or even if he didn't), there are 354 of us (at last count) who would jump at the chance to lend him a shoulder or, better yet, give him a hug. (Think of the little boy who wouldn't stop hugging Papa and had to be pried loose. That would be us.)

I hope the fact that there are people like us in great numbers around the world gives him some comfort when he feels discouraged, lonely, or sad.

[Modificato da benefan 29/03/2006 2.47]

mag6nideum
Wednesday, March 29, 2006 1:02 PM
Yes Benefan
...I'm sure he knows that he is loved by many. But it's still not the same as having Big Georg or Maria near you. Ach, I just worry about him sometimes.
TERESA BENEDETTA
Thursday, March 30, 2006 2:40 PM
POPE MEETS EUROPEAN PARLIAMENTARIANS
Pope Benedict XVI met at noon today in the Vatican's Hall of Benedictions with a delegation of European parliamentarians belonging to the Partito Popolare Europeo, an umbrella organization for European political parties of Christian inspiration.

Addressing them in English, he said that their support for the Christian heritage can "contribute significantly to the defeat of a culture that is now fairly widespread in Europe, which relegates to the private and subjective sphere the manifestation of one’s own religious convictions."

This meeting had become a subject of great polemics in the Italian media because it comes shortly before Italian national elections on April 9. However, the Vatican pointed out that the meeting was arranged long before an election date was set. It coincides with the annual meeting of the PPE, held in Rome this year.

Italian leftist and laicistic politicians have claimed that the Vatican's advocacy of Christian principles at issue in the political field constitutes interference in affairs of State.

Thje Pope met this crticism head-on:
"When Churches or ecclesial communities intervene in public debate, expressing reservations or recalling various principles, this does not constitute a form of intolerance or an interference, since such interventions are aimed solely at enlightening consciences, enabling them to act freely and responsibly, according to the true demands of justice, even when this should conflict with situations of power and personal interest."

The Pope used the occasion to rally the parliamentarians to an active defense of "non-negotiable principles" that the Catholic Church stands for, as follows:

"- Protection of life in all its stages, from the first moment of conception until natural death;

"- Recognition and promotion of the natural structure of the family - as a union between a man and a woman based on marriage - and its defence from attempts to make it juridically equivalent to radically different forms of union which in reality harm it and contribute to its destabilization, obscuring its particular character and its irreplaceable social role;

"- Protection of the right of parents to educate their children.

"These principles are not truths of faith, even though they receive further light and confirmation from faith," the Pope underscored. "they are inscribed in human nature itself and therefore they are common to all humanity."

---------------------------------------------------------------
The full text of the Pope's address is posted in HOMILIES, DISCOURSES, MESSAGES.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, March 31, 2006 6:22 AM
THE RATZINGER METHOD: MESSORI LOOKS AT YEAR-1 OF B16'S PAPACY
Italy's leading newspaper,Corriere della Sera , devoted its weekly magazine today (published with the newspaper on Thursdays) to a review of Year-One of Benedict XVI's Papacy. The central article - a great one! - is an evaluation by Vittorio Messori in the form of a colloquy with staff writer David Petrillo. Here is the article in translation:



Benedict XVI: A post-modern intellectual
Colloquy with Vittorio Messori by David Perillo
The word of an expert who knows him well
and who also knew Wojtyla well.
Who hazards a parallel between the two Popes.
Example: “For John Paul II, faith was evident, it did not require reasoning.
For Ratzinger, faith is a daily discovery, which must always be explained by reason..”
A balance sheet on the first year of a pontificate that got off to a slow start
but which is revolutionizing the Church from the inside -
Much more than the preceding one did!



“Look, I understood Ratzinger’s method much better last summer after I spent a few days at a health spa in the German-speaking part of Switzerland.”

Excuse me, but what does the Pope have to do with hot springs?
“For one week, the doctors did nothing but visit me, four or five times, without telling me anything. No therapy. That started later. First, they needed to arrive at a diagnosis.”

And that’s the Ratzinger method, as seen by someone who knows him well. He is Vittorio Messori, writer and journalist who has been called (in truth) “the most widely read Catholic writer in the world”, and who spent entire days in discussion with Karol Wojtyla and Joseph Ratzinger (separately), producing out of those encounters two worldwide best-sellers (“Crossing the Threshold of Hope” with John Paul II and “The Ratzinger Report” have sold millions of copies).

Few can match Messori’s personal interaction with two Popes. Therefore, the right person to draw up a balance sheet.

It has been one year since the death of John Paul II, who on April 2,2005, ended the third longest pontificate in history (26-1/2 years), and the election of Benedict XVI, who is totally different from his predecessor. It is a few days since the consistory at which he created 15 new cardinals – some of them surprise choices – accelerating the pace taken by Papa Ratzinger these past few weeks.

Since the end of January, the following have happened: the first encylical (Deus caritas est); the confirmation of Cardinal Ruini as head of the Italian bishops; some “cuts” in the Vatican “ministries”; the annoumcement of a full-bodied reform of the Curia. Not bad for a Pontiff who in the months following his election appeared to be cleaning house at a deliberately slow pace.

Many observers had predicted massive and radical changes appropriate to the Panzerkardinal, who according to the vulgate version, “reigned” for 24 years at the ex-Holy Office. But Benedict XVI managed to make it clear early on that he does not work with war machines! One would rather say, he works with a plough! Slow going, but steady, constant, tilling the earth, not levelling it. And he does this so that he can sow later.

“I must be honest,” Messori confesses. “How many times in the past months did I surprise even myself by thinking, ‘Holiness, give us a sign.’ It seemed to me he was not doing much, but of course, that is not so. Benedict XVI is not a man who loves speaking from balconies and immersing himself in crowds. But he does what according to some observers, Wojtyla neglected – he studies the files. One of the criticisms made of John Paul II was that he was too preoccupied with the external world and not enough of the Church as institution. Ratzinger is the opposite. German-school, one might say – he takes time to make the diagnosis before prescribing the cure.”

But then he decides. And does so by himself. In the Vatican, they talk of him as someone who listens to everyone but who does not delegate decisions to anybody. Is it so?
“That's another difference between him and John Paul II. Eighty percent of what Wojtyla read or published was the work of his staff. He supervised. Ratzinger himself, on the other hand, writes whatever he says, at his desk. One sees that very clearly in Deus caritas est: one reads it in its German syntax, one sees his style all over it. The same thing goes for public occasions. Wojtyla always had guests for everything: private masses, lunches, meetings without end. Ratzinger, no – he has reduced private audiences by about 70% and seems to want to keep the foreign travels to 3 or 4 a year, no more.”

Does that mean he is a less accessible Pope?
“Only in a certain sense. Try to look at the photographs and films of Wojtyla in a crowd. You will see him press thousands of hands, but always in a hurry, hardly looking at the faces. Ratzinger, on the other hand, looks into the eyes, always. He tries to stop and talk to each one. He wants to know who is in front of him. It is a question of personality, obviously. But not simply. Wojtyla was a man of Christianity: he wanted the Gospel announced to all the world. For him, the crowd was his habitat. Ratzinger is a man of interiorness, a post-modern intellectual. Someone who, if possible, would always want to speak to others one-on-one.”

But even he draws crowds, contrary to still another mistaken assumption at the start of his Papacy. There were a million youth in Cologne, and St. Peter’s Square overflows with the crowds for the Angelus.
“That is true. Joaquin Navarro-Valls was telling me yesterday that attendance at the general audiences are between double and triple from before.”

And how do you explain that?
“Two reasons. First, a carry-over from his predecessor’s crowd-drawing power. Wojtyla managed to bring Christ back into the cetner of the world debate. In 1978, when he was elected, the crisis of the Church was at its peak. Only tourists came to St. Peter’s, not the faithful. Last year, at his funeral, we all saw what happened. “

And the other reason?
“The headline of a German newspaper during the WYD in Cologne said it well: ‘Ratzinger, the academic who can be understood'. Benedict XVI is a professor but he always has great respect for the person he is addressing. He speaks with density and absolute seriousness, but always tries to make himself understood. He does not want to conquer but to convince. [It sounds even better in Italian – Non vuole vincere, ma convincere.] Because of this, the crowds are attracted to him.”

A baroque bureaucracy. Let us open the files on the Church. Even in this respect, Ratzinger’s first moves have been pitched to the same leitmotif: streamline and simplify. Is that a correct impression?
“Right. One time I asked him, 'Eminence, I imagine that you as a Bavarian would be happy if the center of the Church were not in Rome but in Germany.’ He looked at me a bit surprised and said, 'Oh please, as it is, we already have a Church that is too organized! Too much organization suffocates the spirit.’ The truth is that Ratzinger does not like the baroqueness of the Curia and its bureaucratic hypertrophy. He thinks the Church should be streamlined.”

How? Does that mean through a drastic reform of the Curia?
“To reform the Curia will require a motu proprio, an official document by the Pope. That takes time. He will do it, because he loves the Church. But I think that personally, he will find it diffcult.”

But it would be the opportunity to find new faces, maybe outsiders. As he did when he nominated the American William Levada to suceeed him at CDF…
“But basically, he himself is an outsider. It may seem paradoxical, because he has been in Rome a quarter of a century and as guardian of the faith no less, not just some ordinary monsignor. But he always remained a foreign presence in the Curia. He busied himself with his role and that was it. He prepared doctrinal documents. He studied. He wrote. He saw the Pope every week. He met with other cardinals from time to time. But he never really related to the machine. Therefore, also because of that, he has had to be careful about studying the situation. He may end up finding new faces. But he will not create a dense network about him.”

Changing of the guard. No clan, then. [The reference is to what the Vaticanistas refer to as the Polish clan whom John Paul II brought into the Vatican.] No German invasion in sight. Even his professional relationship with Don Georg Gaenswein, his personal secretary, is far from the almost comradely ties between Wojtyla and Stanislaw Dsiwisz, who was the true deus ex machina of the Wojtyla administration. But surely, there will be a changing of the guard soon. Even at the top levels.
“Vatican insiders know that the Pope and Cardinal Sodano, his Secretary of State, are not on the same wave length. He inherited Sodano, who will be 80 in 2008. They have different sensibilities, and they have taken opposing positions. When Ratzinger was at CDF, he was intransigent, knowing well the situation in Germany, against the presence of Catholic counsellors in German clinics where abortion was practised. Sodano, on the other hand, was an enabler. But the two cardinals differed even on other issues. Sodano was reconfirmed (after the Benedict’s election) but it is really pro tempore.”

Someone who was not reconfirmed was Mons. Michael Fitzgerald , who was reponsible for inter-religious dialog. Is it a sign that the Pope wishes to change the terms of discussion on this issue?
“The truth is that Ratzinger has always been a Eurocentric thinker. He is a Central European intellectual, a Western theologian who, even in his messages, in some way always addresses the Western world. He has no Third-World illusions. He knows that despite everything, the future of the Church lies at stake here, in Europe. It is more important to him to stay firm in some rural parish in the Marshes of Italy or to revive the Church in Brittany than to gain new converts in an African diocese.”

Maybe that is part of the reason he is trying to bring back the lefebvrians into the Roman Church and has been sending increasingly stronger signals to the Orthodox Churches. For him, ecumenism must come out of the unity of the Church.
“That’s right. And in the European frontier, Orthodoxy has a very important role. For many years, some bishops have mythified the dialog with the historically Protestant churches. But that’s a dialog with ghosts! Lutherans, Calvinists and Anglicans have become churches without people – they have professors, but no congregations. The Protestantism that is alive today are those that are on the fringe, over the top, like Adventists, evangelicals, or the Jehovah’s Witnesses (who are the third largest confession in Italy after Catholics and Muslims). And yet, the Church has not seemed to concern itself with them. The failure to dialog with this other reality of Protestantism has been ecumenically incorrect. But I don’t rule out that Ratzinger, as a realist, will open it up.”

And Islam?
“Even there, he is making a diagnosis. Certainly, he knows that the Muslims are not monolithic. Maybe only Bush thinks that. It may well come to a clash between the Vatican and the White House.”

But Islam is becoming more radical, especially in some “frontier” zones in which we are seeing more martyred priests and burned churches.
“Of course. Each day, dialog becomes more difficult. But the true difficulty is establishing whom one can talk to. To find the appropriate persons who are in a position to be effective. The Pope knows that. He is looking for them.”

Priest or showman? We are in a different time now. Meanwhile, the plough moves forward. And, to hear Messori, one feels that soon the plough will even move on to another garden, equally “sensitive.”
“Liturgy. For him, it remains a great torment. He considers it one of the worst betrayals of the Second Vatican Council – the attitude of considering the Mass as a show, with the priest as anchorman or emcee, who will close the event saying ‘Arriverderci all and good night.’ In effect, this happens in many churches now. For Benedict XVI, however, the power of liturgy lies very much in the power of repetition, of saying the same things every day in the same way, alternating gestures and silence. The priest is simply an instrument at the service of the people. Even the Pope is. In fact, Papal celebrations have become much simpler. I am told that the TV directors at RAI don’t quite know how to adjust.”

In what way?
“Ratzinger has re-introduced Eucharistic Adoration for instance – silence and prayer in front of the Blessed Sacrament. That’s the most anti-TV event you can imagine. What can they do with it? Keep the camera on the Host?”

But even the number of ceremonies has gone down. Beatifications will no longer be done at St. Peter’s, and the Pope himself will celebrate canonications only.
“That is precisely the point. Ratzinger wants to make the Church less Pope-centered. Wojtyla’s personal charisma worked in such a way that the entire Church became identified with one man, a cult of personality, even if it was not intended. Ratzinger is trying to be as minimally invasive as he can. He does not want the Church to be equated with the man who leads it. But perhaps, the most important difference between the Wojtyla and Ratzinger concerns the question of faith.”

In what sense?
“John Paul II paradoxically did not need to believe. He had a mystical temperament, and the mystic does not have much use for reason. He sees, he touches, he is aware. For the mystic, faith is evident. It doesn’t allow doubts or questions. Benedict XVI, on the other hand, is a post-modern intellectual - even in this respect. In him, faith is something rediscovered every day, something that must always be explained with reason. He is someone who asks questions about the faith and acknowledges the possibility of doubt. Not that he himself doubts. But he takes into account that majority of men in the Western world have doubts. And he wants to be able to answer them.”

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Messori's evaluation drives home John Allen's masterful insight, expressed in one of his recent lectures, that the cardinal electors could not have chosen anyone else but Joseph Ratzinger to succeed Karol Wojtyla because a giant had to be replaced by another giant. Anyone else would not have done!

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 01/04/2006 2.34]

TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, March 31, 2006 7:32 PM
JOHN ALLEN REVIEWS YEAR-1 OF BENEDICT XVI'S PAPACY
John Allen posted today what he calls his 'big-picture review' of the first 12 months of Benedict XVI's Papacy on http://nationalcatholicreporter.org/word/#one:
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As the one-year anniversary of Benedict XVI's election nears, I've been doing a round of interviews with newspapers, news magazines, and TV and radio outlets, trying to outline what the last 12 months have taught us about the new leader of the 1.1-billion strong Roman Catholic Church.

In many ways, such analysis depends on the level of magnification you want to employ. One could talk a great deal just about Benedict's catechesis, his papal "style," his approach to the Roman Curia, or even his positions on specific questions such as social justice or the interpretation of the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). An entire essay could be crafted just around Benedict's decision in early March to drop the title "Patriarch of the West," and the subsequent way in which it was presented -- reflecting Benedict's desire to expunge any ambivalence concerning the nature of the papacy, while at the same time holding fast to the desire for ecumenical progress.

Benedict is a supple thinker, and unpacking his approach on any given question requires nuance. Because his points of departure are the 2,000-year tradition of the church, coupled with his own judgments about the character of people under consideration, rather than the ideological categories of secular politics, his decisions will sometimes strike the outside world as surprising and out of character. Nor has his direction over the first year been entirely uniform, as if one can generalize from a single document or papal act to explain everything else.

All this, however, constitutes an "insider" perspective, crafted from the point of view of devotees of the papacy and of Vatican politics. Generally speaking, that's not what secular media outlets are after. What they want to know is, in the "biggest picture" sense possible, what are the most striking or surprising aspects of Benedict XVI's first year, and what do they teach us about where things are going?

That's the question I'll try to answer here. I'll organize my reflections under five broad headings:

What Hasn't Happened
Who's Paying Attention?
The Dictatorship of Relativism
Tough Love
Benedict the Teacher

WHAT HASN'T HAPPENED
In the "big picture" sense, perhaps the most important pope story of the first year is what hasn't happened.

When Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected on April 19, he was not an unknown quantity. After John Paul II, he was the most visible figure in Roman Catholicism over the last quarter-century, a man associated with all of the most important controversies in the church over that stretch of time -- liberation theology, the limits of dissent, battles over what theological sense to make of other religions, and so on. He was seen as the Vatican's "Enforcer" (a title I bestowed upon him in my 1999 biography), "God's Rottweiler," the "Panzer Cardinal," and the "German Shepherd."

Hence in the immediate aftermath of his election, most commentators fell back upon tried-and-true labels: "archconservative," "authoritarian," "hard-line."

Probably the best expression of all this came in an editorial cartoon in L'Unità, the newspaper of the old Communist Party in Italy. Understanding the cartoon requires a bit of background. In Italy, perhaps the most revered pope of modern times is John XXIII, know as il papa buono, "The Good Pope."

One treasured memory of John XXIII is an evening in October 1962, the opening of the Second Vatican Council, when the Catholic Action movement organized a torchlight parade that finished in St. Peter's Square. The pope was not scheduled to address the crowd, but when it arrived, John XXIII wanted to speak. He said something burned into the consciousness of most Italians, repeated endlessly on television and radio. Smiling down on the crowd, he said: Tornando a casa, troverete i bambini. Date una carezza ai vostri bambini e dite: questa è la carezza del Papa. It means, "When you go home, you'll find your children. Give them a kiss, and tell them that this kiss comes from the pope." It summed up the legendary love of the man.

Thus the L'Unità cartoon showed Benedict XVI at the same window, saying, "Tonight, when you go home, I want you to give your children a spanking, and tell them that this spanking comes from the pope."

It perfectly crystallized the expectations many had of this allegedly draconian, Darth Vader figure. Many people expected that if Ratzinger were elected on a Tuesday, by Wednesday priests would be saying Mass in Latin with their backs to the people, and one would hear a great flushing sound across the Catholic world as all the dissidents and liberals were washed out of the system.

The most striking thing about Benedict's first year, therefore, is how relatively little of this sort of thing we've seen.

To be sure, there have been tough moments. One came early on, when news broke that Jesuit Fr. Tom Reese had left America magazine under Vatican pressure; another came on Nov. 29, when the Vatican, with Benedict's approval, released its long-awaited document barring men with "deep-seated homosexual tendencies" from the priesthood. This is a pope with a strong sense of Catholic identity, who will insist that those who teach, preach and publish in the name of the church do so in fidelity to official church teaching.

Yet on the whole, Benedict's first year has not produced the swift, hard-line action many expected (or, depending upon one's point of view, feared). No theologian has been publicly censured, there have been no en masse firings of personnel, there is no discernible drift towards radically conservative figures either in bishops' appointments or in the Roman Curia, and there has been no earthquake in either liturgy or doctrine.

We even had the unanticipated spectacle on Sept. 24 of a friendly four-hour reunion between Benedict XVI and the enfant terrible of the Catholic left, Swiss theologian Hans Küng, old friends from their days together on the theology faculty in Tübingen.

This positive tone has been remarkably consistent. When Benedict went to Bari, Italy, for a Eucharist Congress, he did not lament liturgical abuses, but spoke movingly about the inner momentum of the Eucharist towards Christian unity. When he went to Cologne, he did not scold German dissidents or complain about youth not going to church, but described the Eucharist as a "kind of nuclear fission at the heart of existence" which sets off a chain reaction of acts of love.

How to explain this?

First, anyone who expected Benedict XVI to ride into town and turn the Catholic church on its ear had an overheated imagination. Benedict is profoundly conscious of himself as the carrier of a 2,000 year old tradition and as the universal pastor of a very large and complex global community, not as a president or prime minister elected to pursue a personal agenda.

In the homily for his installation Mass on April 24, Benedict said: "My real program of governance is not to do my own will, not to pursue my own ideas, but to listen, together with the whole church, to the word and the will of the Lord, to be guided by him, so that he himself will lead the church at this hour of our history
."

The surprise for some appears to be that he meant what he said.

Second, a key to understanding the mind of Benedict XVI is to realize that he makes a sharp distinction between what he considers matters of faith and morals, about which he is tenacious, and "judgment calls" in specific circumstances where there is no clear answer in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

In reality, probably 95 percent of the decisions a pope has to make fall into this second category
. Questions such as, "Who should be the bishop in this diocese?" "How should the Roman Curia be reorganized?" "What should our approach be to Islam?" "What line should we take on the reconstruction of Iraq?"

While there are doctrinal principles underlying these matters, specific choices draw upon the fallible, contingent judgment of the pope and his advisors.

On those sorts of things, Benedict has made it clear that he intends to operate on the basis of consultation and, where possible, consensus. We have seen his desire to listen at the Synod of Bishops last October, for example, where he created a period for "open discussion" each evening, and made a point of listening carefully to what the bishops had to say. The same thing happened in conjunction with last week's consistory, when Benedict asked the cardinals to come to Rome a day early for a business meeting to discuss Islam, the Lefebvrites, and retired bishops, in addition to whatever else was on their minds.

Moreover, there is evidence that he is acting on what he hears. To take just one example, he's spoken repeatedly about Africa over his first year, and announced plans to hold a special Synod for Africa, in part in response to heart-felt pleas made by African cardinals during the daily General Congregation meetings leading up to the April conclave.

The pope has also shown caution about moving forward with swift reconciliation with the traditionalist Society of St. Pius X, the grouped founded by the late French Archbishop Marcel Lefevbre, in part because of concerns among bishops about the group's attitude toward the teaching of the Vatican on religious freedom, ecumenism, and inter-religious dialogue. Those concerns were most recently voiced during the meeting of the cardinals last week.

All this means that Benedict XVI will, most of the time, come across as a much more cautious, consultative and moderate figure than some of the most fevered comments last April suggested.

I recall being on CNN immediately after the conclave, when Christiane Amanpour asked me if we were going to get "Ratzinger the hard-liner," or a "kindler, gentler" figure. The only honest answer, I said, was, "Both." When Benedict thinks the faith is at stake, he will be unyielding. When he's trying to make pastoral decisions on contingent matters, however, he'll be surprisingly open and flexible, with a real desire to listen.

So far, that's held up pretty well.

One consequence is that to date, the most serious criticism of the papacy has come from the Catholic right, which had the greatest expectations one year ago. Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, writing in First Things, has described a "palpable uneasiness" with the way Benedict XVI has allowed what he sees as spin and open dissent from the document on gay priests to proceed unimpeded.

To be sure, Neuhaus is an admirer of Benedict. Yet the comment suggests that in the end, it may be his constituency that's most disillusioned with the pontificate -- not for what it does, but for what it fails to do.

One prominent American conservative put it this way, speaking on background: "We thought we were electing Ronald Reagan, but so far we're stuck with Jimmy Carter."

WHO'S PAYING ATTENTION?
The second "big picture" observation about Benedict XVI is how little most of what I wrote above has registered on the broad public radar screen.

After the first year of the papacy of John Paul II, when it was clear that the modernization and reform unleashed by Vatican II would yield to a much more robust assertion of Catholic identity, the most important division was between those who liked what they saw and those who didn't. The dramatic arc of John Paul's charisma meant the world was paying attention, and he left few indifferent.

After Benedict's first year, on the other hand, the most important distinction appears to be between those who are paying attention and those who aren't, with the vast majority of people falling into the second category.

Papal aficionados, those who hang on every utterance, are by and large tremendously impressed with Benedict XVI, regardless of whether they come from the left, right or center. Benedict is an extraordinarily erudite figure, easily the most intellectually profound world leader on the stage today. He is a gifted writer, and his texts to date have been well received, both at the level of content and of tradecraft. He is also a surprisingly adept public figure, projecting an air of warmth and gentleness that people tend to find charming. He is, in short, a pope of whom Catholics seem to feel proud.


Yet he does not have the cinematic qualities of John Paul II. Indeed, the secret of his success to date has been that he has not tried to ape the approach of his predecessor, but has instead given himself permission to be pope his way -- more low-key, more cerebral, with fewer grand events and less elaborate road shows. That approach plays to his strengths, but it also means that he has not grabbed the world's attention as John Paul did, and hence attention to the papacy, outside a fairly small circle of motivated Catholics, has become more episodic and random.

If one were to stop the average Catholic in the United States, to say nothing of the average person, and ask, "What do you know about the new pope?" I suspect many could say that he put out something about gay priests, and quite a few would be aware that he wears Prada shoes -- and that's about it.

In terms of any real sense of what the pope's trying to say, or where he's trying to lead the church, most would be a blank slate.

Benedict's determination to "go positive" has also left the media, which thrives on stories of conflict and controversy, occasionally flummoxed about how to get its hands around this figure.

At the end of Benedict's first year, the Catholic church thus faces a new communications problem. For 26 years, the church had the best story in the world in John Paul II. Now, the church can no longer assume the world will pay attention simply because the pope says or does something. That poses the question of how to "sell" the pope -- how to be sure that people are aware of what he's actually saying and doing, as opposed to random aspects of his activity that happen to catch the interest of the talk shows and editorial pages, which can produce a terribly distorted image of his real priorities.

After a year, church officials are still grappling with this new challenge.

AGAINST THE DICTATORSHIP OF RELATIVISM
In terms of content, no one has to speculate about Benedict XVI's most important teaching concern. He told us, the day before his election, in his homily pro eligendo papa on April 18: the challenge to a "dictatorship of relativism" in the developed West.

Job number one of this pontificate, therefore, is the reassertion of objective truth in a culture often allergic to the very concept. The beating heart of his pontificate can be expressed in three core concepts: truth, freedom and love.

Truth, as the pope sees it, is the doorway a human person must walk through in order to be really free, meaning free to realize one's full human potential; and love is both the ultimate aim of freedom, and the motive for which the church talks about truth and freedom in the first place.

Because Benedict has not yet issued any dramatic jeremiads about the crisis of secularization in Europe, some wonder if he's forgotten about it. Quite often, reporters ask me, "When is he going to do something about this whole secularization business?"

In fact, he's been doing quite a lot.

No one realizes better than Benedict XVI that many people have a hard time today taking the church seriously on matters such as truth and freedom, because the tendency is to see all that talk as a rhetorical smokescreen for maintaining power over peoples' lives. The tendency in secular circles is to see the church as a defensive, authoritarian structure, fearful of both modernity and of what men and women might do once they learn to think for themselves.

The church faces a tough sell on issues such as homosexuality, the family, abortion, stem cell research and euthanasia, in part because some people can't help thinking that the church is simply afraid of change and afraid of freedom.

Benedict understands that one can't break through such perceptions with finger-wagging and condemnation, which reinforce the prejudice rather than challenging it. The church must first seem a credible witness to love.

The effort of this first year has to some extent been to put the church's teaching in a new context. That was the thrust of Deus Caritas Est, his first encyclical
, which surprised many people with its endorsement of eros, or human erotic love, and its overall positive tone.

Writing without anathema or interdict, Benedict argued that no one is more committed to human love than the Christian, but that the church wants people to love so deeply and so eternally that it pushes them to a deeper kind of love, a lasting love, expressed in caritas.

To put Benedict's point in street language, it boils down to this: You may not like what we have to say, but at least give us credit for our motives. We're not talking about truth because we want to chain you down, but because we want to set you free. It's not a matter of love and joy versus a fussy, legalistic church. It's a question of two different visions of what real love is all about -- Baywatch, so to speak, versus the gospel. We too want happy, healthy, liberated people, we just have a different idea of how to get there.

"Benedict's Wager" is that by reframing the debate in this way, the church can get a new hearing in a cultural milieu in which many people long ago made up their minds. Whether that's the case remains to be seen, but judging from the reaction to Deus Caritas Est, he at least seems to have some people scratching their heads, reconsidering impressions of Catholic teaching they long regarded as settled.

As a footnote, for all the talk about Benedict as an Augustinian pessimist, he actually seems to believe there are still people out there who can be persuaded by unadorned argument -- if you think about it, a rather optimistic stance.

'TOUGH LOVE' ON ISLAM
Again at the level of content, the dominant storyline in the transition from John Paul II to Benedict XVI is obviously continuity. He was elected with precisely that expectation.

There is, however, one intriguing area of contrast: Islam. To put it bluntly, Benedict is more of a hawk, pursuing a kind of interaction with Muslims one might call "tough love."

The new climate has in part been driven by widely publicized incidents of anti-Christian backlash in the Islamic world, most dramatically the Feb. 5 slaying of Italian missionary Fr. Andrea Santoro in Trabzon, Turkey, a small hamlet on the country's Black Sea coast. A 16-year-old Turk entered St. Mary's Church in Trabzon and pumped two bullets into Santoro's lungs and heart, shouting Allahu akbar, "Allah is great." He later said he had been agitated by the controversy surrounding the Danish cartoons.

Though the teenager's father told reporters his son is psychologically disturbed, most senior figures in the Vatican, where the Santoro murder made a deep impression, saw it as part of a rising tide of anti-Christian sentiment in fundamentalist Islamic circles. That impression was underscored by the recent death sentence for Abdul Rahman, a Christian convert from Islam in Afghanistan.

In his March 23 session with cardinals, much conversation turned on Islam, and there was general agreement with Benedict's policy of a more muscular challenge on what Catholics call "reciprocity." In essence, it means that if Muslim immigrants can claim the benefit of religious liberty in the West, then Christian minorities ought to get the same treatment in majority Muslim nations.

To take the most notorious example, if the Saudis can spend $65 million to build the largest mosque in Europe in Rome, in the shadows of the Vatican, then Christians ought to be able to build churches in Saudi Arabia. Or, if that's not possible, Christians should at least be able to import Bibles, and the Capuchin priests who serve the Arabian peninsula ought to be able to set foot off the oil industry compounds or embassy grounds in Saudi Arabia without fear of harassment by the mutawa, the religious police. The bishop in charge of the Catholic church in that part of the world recently described the situation in Saudi Arabia as "reminiscent of the catacombs."

It's the kind of imbalance that has long stuck in the craw of many senior figures in the Catholic Church, but these complaints were largely suppressed in the John Paul years as part of the pope's Islamic Ostpolitik. John Paul, who met with Muslims more than 60 times over the course of his papacy, and who during a 2001 trip to Damascus became the first pope to enter a mosque, believed in reaching out to Islamic moderates and avoiding confrontational talk.

Benedict XVI clearly wants good relations with Islam, and chose to meet with a group of Muslim leaders during his August trip to Cologne, Germany. Yet he will not pursue that relationship at the expense of what he considers to be the truth.

No doubt, Benedict intends this tougher line as a stimulus to Islamic leaders to take seriously the challenge of expressing their faith in a multi-cultural, pluralistic world. Whether it's received that way, or whether it simply reinforces the conviction of many jihadists about an eternal struggle with the Christian West, remains to be seen.

THE TWO POPES
I'll close this "big picture" review of Year One with one other contrast between Benedict XVI and John Paul II.

John Paul II will likely be remembered in history as a great evangelist. He took his show on the road, dramatically expanding the visibility and relevance of the papacy, awakening a much stronger sense among Catholics of the need to bring their faith convictions to their public and professional responsibilities. He was a pope who moved history as few have. His texts, however, could sometimes be a bit wooden and hard to follow, laden as they sometimes were with the vocabulary of philosophical personalism.

Benedict, on the other hand, is shaping up as a great teacher. It has struck many observers in Rome that he is still drawing larger-than-usual crowds for his Wednesday General Audience and for the Sunday Angelus address. Speaking afterwards with the people who show up, it's striking how often they give some version of the following reaction: "I can understand him."

Benedict has a remarkable capacity to express complex theological ideas with clarity and simplicity. To take just one example, during a meeting with Roman youth making their First Communion, a young man asked the pope how it's possible that Jesus is present in the bread and wine at the Mass, since he's not visible. Benedict responded that it's like electricity: we don't see the electricity directly, but we see the light. Similarly, we see Jesus in the effects he produces in us through communion, in the new "light" he brings into our lives.

To some extent, this contrast reflects the biographies of the two men. Had Karol Wojtyla not been a pope, he would have been an actor; if Joseph Ratzinger had not been a pope, he would have been a university professor.

The difference can be expressed this way: People came to see John Paul, they come to hear Benedict.

It is, I should acknowledge, a silly journalistic conceit to think that one can anticipate the legacy of any leader, let alone a pope, after just a year. In 1979, there were many defining elements of John Paul's pontificate yet to come into view, from his outreach to Judaism and other religions, to the long twilight of his life and the lesson it offered the world about bearing suffering with grit and dignity.

There will continue to be surprises, too, about Benedict XVI, though his caution and sense of consensus may make those surprises somewhat less frequent and less dramatic. Given how he has already confounded expectations and broken ground in unexpected areas, however, there seems ample incentive to heed that old broadcast adage: "Stay tuned."
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John Allen's review is for the most part unexceptionable, and he has been quite consistently positive about Benedict since his post-Conclave re-evaluation of the man he did not always treat kindly in his biography "Enforcer of the Faith."

However, I beg to differ on two counts.

First, the conclusion that the ordinary person knows far less of Benedict after one year in office than he did of John Paul II after a comparable period.

I think that is casting the aura of John Paul's entire 26-year Papacy backward onto his first 12 months. I dare say that just as the man-on-the-street today may say all he knows about Benedict now is that he wears red Prada shoes or some such trivia, all that most people knew about John Paul after his first year in office was that he came from Poland.

The world today in terms of communications is light years ahead of what it was in 1978! And as sparse, restricted and/or distorted media reporting may be about Benedict, there are conceivably and most probably tens of millions more aware of who he is and what he is saying than there would have been about Wojtyla in 1978.

Moreover, although people always need a learning curve with a new leader, this was favored and accelerated in the case of Benedict because of his high visibility in the days following John Paul's death and culminating in his own election to the Papacy. The tens of millions who followed John Paul's funeral also followed the succession - they saw and heard more of Benedict in the three weeks dating from his homily at John Paul's funeral to his own installation Mass than they ever did of any other Pope except John Paul!

My second objection is to the facile statement "People came to see John Paul but they come to hear Benedict."

I have no doubt that the faithful who come to St. Peter's are there to see and hear and experience firsthand the presence of a Pope, whoever he is. How can anyone say that the faithful who came to see John Paul were not interested in what he had to say, or that the crowds that flock today to St. Peter's are not there to see and experience the presence of the Pope first-hand as well as to listen to him?

Other than these two sticking points, I also find it remarkable that Allen chose not to touch the subject of reforms in the Church, whether it be in its structure or in liturgy.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 01/04/2006 7.05]

benefan
Friday, March 31, 2006 7:47 PM
Pope's home town attracts visitors

March 31 2006 at 10:37AM
IOL.co.za, South Africa

Marktl, Germany - It seems a long time since Marktl-am-Inn was just another dull little German town.

Now it is a changed place as a steady stream of visitors curious about the origins of Pope Benedict XVI has been coming for the past year to see the house there where Joseph Ratzinger was born.

Marktl's transformation has been emblematic of the prestige that comes from even the most fleeting association with the head of the Catholic church: boys named Benedict walk a little taller, and the pope's German compatriots notice greater courtesy when abroad.

In Rome, even German atheists report that they are no longer viewed as punctilious Teutons who carefully count their change.

'The Puzzling Pope'

"Oh, how nice! You're a German, just like the pope," the Roman shopkeepers and officials beam to the bemused visitors.

Benedict's election as pope a year ago caught most Germans by surprise. One German popular newspaper, Bild, played on the "We are the champions" theme to trumpet: "We are the pope." But there was little public jubilation at the time.

Unlike Poles, who viewed their pope, John Paul II, as both a religious revivalist and national liberator, Germans have shown no broad yearning for a rebirth of faith, and do not expect any practical benefits from having a fellow countryman as pope.

Most Germans are not Catholic: the church only has about 26 million adherents out of a population of 80 million, and only 15 percent of German Catholics are at mass on a Sunday, according to Bishops Conference statistics.

Germans remain ambivalent about whether Joseph Ratzinger was the right choice for pope, Ludwig Ring-Eifel, the maker of a documentary to screen on German and French television in April, says.

A year ago, it fell to the citizens of Marktl to appear on the TV news as the Germans most delighted by the pope's election.

Free beer was served in a tent outside the house where Joseph Ratzinger was born, and the town's gun club donned folk dress to fire saluting pistols into the air.

There was no discussion of the new pope's doctrines; it was enough that a native son had made good.

Tourists visiting Bavaria to see the places associated with the young Joseph Ratzinger soon discover that Marktl plays only a slight role in his early memories. He spent practically all his childhood in another town, Traunstein.

When Benedict visits Germany this September, his principal revisit to a childhood haunt will take place at Altoetting, a town where Bavarians have come for centuries to pray to St Mary for cures.

Altoetting has a 1 250-year-old history as a religious centre. For 500 years it has been the home to a Black Madonna image of the Blessed Virgin venerated by pilgrims in the town's Chapel of Grace.

As a child, Ratzinger was often among them, so Altoetting could be described as the birthplace of his religious identity.

Marktl, 12km away, has pushed hard for Ratzinger to come "home" in September, but according to Bishop Wilhelm Schraml of Passau, a visit to Marktl is not firmly scheduled.

Benedict and his staff may regard that stop as non-essential, despite moves by the German Catholic hierarchy to establish a Pope Benedict XVI Birthplace Museum in the two-storeyed house in Marktl where Ratzinger's village policeman father worked and lived in 1927.

A church-backed foundation is near to buying the Alpine-style house from its private owner and stocking it with Benedict photographs and mementos.

Catholic officials say the cash-strapped church can afford the project because a rich Catholic family, the Frings, will donate the purchase price.

The town of Marktl welcomes the museum, which is expected to boost tourism in the area close to the Austrian border.

There is no mistaking Benedict's affection for a Bavarian city 100km north of Munich, Regensburg, which can fairly claim to be his "home town". He will make a prolonged stop there.

"His bond to the city and diocese of Regensburg, where he used to be a theology professor, comes through his family," explains Cardinal Friedrich Wetter of Munich. "His brother lives there. His parents and sister are buried there."

The media are expected to be excluded when he visits their graves.

Benedict owns a suburban house near Regensburg, but is unlikely to ever need it again, since popes stay in office till they die.

The September 9-14 trip will be limited to Bavaria, which is part of Germany's Catholic heartland, but Catholics from other states and neighbouring nations are being urged to attend the papal masses.

Television coverage of the events may boost enthusiasm among Protestants and non-Christians for Benedict, who displayed wit and grace during a visit to Cologne as pope last year when he introduced his message of Christian love and unity.

In September, the pope will have to be careful to avoid snubbing Germany's 25 million Lutherans, who have grown angry in the past couple of years at what they perceive as Vatican arrogance.

While Germany is happy to share the glory of having one of its own as pope, Benedict the shy intellectual remains an enigma to many Germans.

Ring-Eifel's documentary, "The Puzzling Pope," to screen in German on the Arte television channel on April 15, will assemble a mosaic of eyewitness testimony about Ratzinger's life from friends and opponents with no one view over-riding.

The commentators include Eberhard von Gemmingen, head of Vatican Radio's German service, who recalled a moment of doubt after the conclave a year ago as whether Ratzinger could accomplish the transition from cardinal to pope.

"When he stood on the balcony and spread out his arms to the crowd, I said to myself, 'Thank God. He knows the right way to act'."

Also commenting will be Swiss-born theologian Hans Kueng, who is a former academic colleague and remains a trenchant critic of the papacy.

Last year Benedict underlined his desire for greater church unity by hosting Kueng to lunch and a long one-on-one chat.

Ring-Eifel said of the documentary, "When the work was done, the pope remained an enigma to me. I still cannot grasp his character at all."



[Modificato da benefan 31/03/2006 19.48]

benefan
Friday, March 31, 2006 8:39 PM
Pope Benedict gets favourable report card

Independent Online
March 31 2006 at 09:45AM

Vatican City - Initially billed as a stern and somewhat unsympathetic intellectual, Joseph Ratzinger has proved surprisingly popular during his first year as Pope Benedict XVI.

Vatican data shows that record crowds have been attending his weekly audiences while Italians have given the German-born pontiff 8 marks out of 10 so far, according to a recent opinion poll.

And though his pontificate is still taking shape, he has eased comfortably into his new role, smiling and looking relaxed as the tens of thousands of faithful gather in St Peter's Square to hear him preach with clear and gripping words about Christian love, peace or the need to place people above profits. Never forgetting to keep alive the teachings of his much-loved predecessor, John Paul II.

Benedict strengthened his image as a conservative
Unlike John Paul, however, Benedict has vowed to travel less, write less and to favour substance over form.

So what does this new papacy look like, and what has 78-year-old Benedict actually achieved since his election of April 19, 2005?

On the theological front, there has been little in the way of novelty so far. This was to be expected.

As Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Ratzinger spent nearly a quarter of a century defending Church orthodoxy.

And even after his election as pope, he has remained strongly against what he calls "the dictatorship of relativism", at the same time not appearing at all inclined to relax the Church's traditional opposition to gay marriages, priest celibacy or contraception.

In fact, Benedict has perhaps strengthened his image as a conservative, for instance by seeking to restore more traditional ways of celebrating Holy Mass or by scolding bishops who water down moral doctrine.

At the same time, his agreeing to meet famous Catholic dissidents like Hans Kueng or excommunicated Lefebvrite Bishop Bernard Fellay shows that he is unexpectedly willing to dialogue with those who do not share his views.

On the international front, he has made steps forward towards re-establishing ties with China - which were cut off in 1951 - by promoting Hong Kong Bishop Joseph Zen Ze-kiun to the post of cardinal and there is growing talk of a possible visit to Russia amid slowly improving relations between the Roman Catholic and Russian Orthodox churches.

Benedict has certainly followed in John Paul's footsteps when it comes to fostering ties with Jews. He made a point of visiting Cologne's main synagogue during his first trip abroad and has met with Italian and American Jewish leaders on several occasions. He has also hinted at a possible trip to the Holy Land during talks with visiting Israeli officials.

His position towards the Islamic world, however, appears less clear-cut. Vatican experts note that while he has rejected the "clash of civilisations" paradigm and has criticised the publication in the western media of controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed, his decision to give the head of the Pontifical Council for Culture temporary control over dialogue with Muslims has been seen by some as a downgrading of dialogue.

Which brings us to one of the most closely-watched revolutions expected of Benedict: the reform of the Curia - the central administration governing the Roman Catholic Church.

Ratzinger was never a fan of bureaucracy and many Vatican insiders hoped that the new pope would make significant changes to an over-inflated body that has in the past been accused of underestimating the impact of far-away problems, such as the sex scandals that have implicated Catholic priests in the United States and elsewhere.

Benedict has indeed began to streamline the Curia by merging together several pontifical councils, but his most significant new appointment to date remains that of former San Francisco Archbishop William J Levada as his successor at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Experts like Sandro Magister of Italian weekly L'Espresso claim that Benedict is somewhat isolated within the Curia and has his fair share of critics within.

One area in which changes are notable is in his handling of demands for greater "collegiality" - a Church term used to describe a form of social organisation based on shared and equal participation of all its members as opposed to a hierarchical, pyramidal structure.

He convened a Synod of Bishops in October, in which he encouraged prelates to discuss some of the thorniest issues facing the Church, and has vowed to consult more with cardinals, the Church's highest-ranking dignitaries after the pope himself.

But perhaps one of the biggest criticisms directed at Benedict are his failure to address the chronic shortage of priests facing the Church today and the steady decline in the number of church-goers, both in the western world and in other traditionally Catholic parts of the world like Latin America.

However, as one Vatican insider noted, while "Benedict recognises that he is not going to devise a policy or programme that will bring people back to Mass, he has, in his own way, been explaining why Mass is important, hoping that his teachings will filter down to Catholics around the world."

In fact, people like Magister argue that virtually every act by Benedict so far has been aimed at "restoring to the truth of Jesus Christ its primacy and splendour".

This was particularly evident in his most important document to date, the encyclical Deus Caritas Est (God is Love), in which has sought to explain Christian love while slamming the secular idea of sex as a commodity.

The message of Deus Caritas Est, Magister argues, was also directed at non-believers, not just practising Catholics.

"What Benedict is trying to say with this encyclical is that with a God like this, you may have the strength to live "as if God exists", even if you do not have the strength to believe."

benefan
Friday, March 31, 2006 8:48 PM
A year after John Paul death, Benedict makes his mark -- surprising left and right

By: NICOLE WINFIELD - Associated Press

VATICAN CITY ---- Pope John Paul II's death a year ago ---- April 2, 2005 ---- left many Roman Catholics expecting that their church would take an even harder, more conservative line if the College of Cardinals picked early favorite Joseph Ratzinger as the next pontiff.

They got Ratzinger ---- now Pope Benedict XVI.

Yet the Vatican's German-born chief orthodoxy watchdog has hardly acted like the man saddled with the nickname "God's Rottweiler."

Instead, the faithful got a pope who rode around in St. Peter's Square in traditional papal headgear that resembled a Santa Claus hat. The man described as a "dour Bavarian" wrote his first encyclical on love.

That's not to say that Benedict has changed his doctrinal tune. On the contrary, he has reaffirmed church teaching on everything from sexuality to the sanctity of life.

But in his first year as pope, Benedict has confounded left and right through a handful of small yet significant changes that defy easy interpretation. He is very much his own, unpredictable man.

Take for example that first encyclical, "God is Love," an exploration of love and charity that focused on the different types of love ---- erotic and unconditional ---- that Benedict said were joined in marriage between man and woman.

"What other pope in history made his major encyclical on erotic love?" asked the Rev. Joseph Fessio, a conservative Jesuit who has known Benedict since the 1970s, when he was the German theologian's doctoral student.

"Now we have the 'panzer cardinal,' the 'dour Bavarian,' 'God's Rottweiler' defending love!" Fessio said. "What a paradox!"

Indeed, ever since his April 19 election, Benedict has been anything but boring.

He has shown a pastoral and populist side unfamiliar to many, humbly joking that he felt like a guillotine was falling on him when he realized he would be pope, and then making the popular decision of placing John Paul on the fast track to possible sainthood.

He made some surprising choices in naming his first batch of cardinals, promoting an outspoken critic of China, Hong Kong bishop Joseph Zen, despite the Vatican's new push to re-establish diplomatic relations with Beijing.

And he shocked Catholics across the theological spectrum by meeting with his harshest liberal critic, Hans Kueng, as well as the excommunicated ultraconservative Bishop Bernard Fellay, who heads a Swiss-based schismatic movement founded by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.

"When he was elected, the left was very worried and the right was delighted, and both of them expected him to come in like a gangbuster and start an attack cleaning up the church, coming in like the Grand Inquisitor," said the Rev. Thomas Reese, a Jesuit who resigned last year under Vatican pressure as editor of America magazine.

"Of course he totally surprised people that way because his personality, which is quite charming, came through as a charming Bavarian rather than an authoritarian Prussian."

Aside from his public persona, Benedict's few yet decisive moves have also surprised observers of the church hierarchy.

In one of his few bureaucratic changes, Benedict removed the Vatican's top expert on Islam, Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, as head of the Vatican's office for relations with Muslims and other religions, and sent him to Egypt as papal envoy. He then merged Fitzgerald's old office with the Vatican's culture office.

Analysts like Fessio said Fitzgerald was probably removed because he was seen as being too soft on Islam, promoting dialogue with Muslims at all costs when the Vatican should be pressing Islamic countries hard to respect religious freedom.

Others, like Reese, warned of the dangers of "exiling" such a knowledgeable expert at a time when the Vatican's relations with Muslims are so important.

Benedict has reached out to Muslims, saying he wants to build "bridges of friendship." But he also issued a strong denunciation of terrorism during a meeting with Muslim leaders in Cologne. And he has questioned whether the largely Muslim Turkey belongs in the European Union.

Benedict's only other major move within the Vatican has also sparked questions, particularly on the right.

The appointment of Cardinal William Levada as prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith provoked "widespread puzzlement" among conservatives, the Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, editor of the conservative magazine First Things, wrote last month.

Levada, he wrote, hadn't effectively preached the church's doctrine on homosexuality during his tenure as San Francisco archbishop.

Neuhaus said Benedict now faced a "defining test" of his pontificate in how he chose to deal with the dissent that emerged from liberals to the first major document issued under his pontificate, an instruction effectively banning gays from joining the priesthood.

This is not to say that the left is entirely pleased with Benedict, either.

The Europe-based reform group "We Are Church" has criticized Benedict for the same gay priest document because it says that homosexuals shouldn't be ordained.

The group has also criticized what it calls Benedict's "Eurocentric" attitude, neglecting the needs of the developing world by focusing so much on reasserting the Christian roots of Europe and the challenges the continent is facing. "We had hoped for a change," said Vittorio Bellavite, a spokesman for We are Church in Italy. "It's not like we are happy to be confirmed; we want to be proved wrong."

Benedict, however, has won widespread praise for other initiatives.

Jewish groups have hailed his outreach, praising in particular his visit to a Cologne synagogue and his many meetings with Jewish groups at the Vatican. They also point to his upcoming visit to the Auschwitz concentration camp during his planned trip to Poland in May.

"He has made it very clear that his commitment to this endeavor is no less than (that of) his predecessor," said Rabbi David Rosen, who heads the interreligious relations office for the American Jewish Committee. "This is very good news for the Jews."

Orthodox Christians have similarly applauded his efforts to unite all Christians ---- a pledge made the day after his election and regularly repeated since then. Benedict will further demonstrate his commitment in November when he visits Turkey, home to the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians.

But the Turkish trip could also cause problems: Benedict has said that Turkey's bid to join the EU conflicted with Europe's Christian roots, even though many see Turkey as a prime candidate for forging relations with moderate Islam. And tensions have been worsened with the slaying of an Italian priest in Turkey.

"I guess there are a number of mixed signals coming," Reese said, "which shows that Benedict is going to be unpredictable."

benefan
Friday, March 31, 2006 9:23 PM
A BLESSING IN DISGUISE

Sydney Morning Herald
April 1, 2006

Joseph Ratzinger was expected to be a harsh keeper of the faith. But a funny thing happened on the way to St Peter's throne. James Button and Desmond O'Grady report.

IN THE palmy days that followed the death of Pope John Paul II a year ago, when 4 million pilgrims descended on Rome and it was again the centre of the world, Sydney's Cardinal George Pell sat in the square of Santa Maria in Trastevere and talked about the sickness of the West.

The flood of broken families, the hostility to childhood, the contraceptive mentality that led to abortion and plummeting birth rates - these, Pell believed, were the "ravages of a radically secular society" - and the church's duty was to condemn them. Its historical mission was to speak the truth, never to court facile fashion or popularity for its own sake. "As Cardinal Ratzinger says," Pell said, "Christians are called to be the salt of the earth, not the sugar of the earth."

In a phrase, the Archbishop of Sydney had caught the quality in Joseph Ratzinger so admired by conservatives such as Pell and so disliked by liberals. To the first group, he was the deeply principled, intellectual giant who for 24 years as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith had held the line against liberalism, permissiveness and other forms of what conservatives call "weak thought". To the second group, Ratzinger was the doctrinal enforcer who ruthlessly rooted out dissent; the author of a 2000 Vatican document that saw followers of other faiths as in a "gravely deficient situation"; the implacable opponent of artificial birth control, homosexual unions and liberation theology in Latin America. The Grand Inquisitor, God's Rottweiler, Cardinal No.

So when Ratzinger became Pope Benedict XVI, there was "extreme apprehension and even a bit of panic" among liberal Catholics, says John Wilkins, the former editor of The Tablet newspaper, the leading voice of the Catholic left.

AS POPE Benedict, he smiles in every picture. He consults: last week he convened a meeting of the world's cardinals in Rome just to hear their concerns. He even had a long lunch with dissident Swiss theologian Hans Kung, whose denial of the doctrine of papal infallibility led the Vatican to strip him of his right to teach Catholic theology in 1979.

Supporters say Ratzinger was always like this: a sensitive, gracious man whose perceived harshness came from his position as doctrinal prefect, not his nature. It seems too simple an explanation, yet his human side has emerged. He carries a card that permits use of his organs after death, making him the first pope to be a registered organ donor. Having once decried the "barrenness of technology", he now owns a papal iPod, on which he listens to Vatican Radio and his beloved Mozart.

He is a brilliant man, the author of 27 books. He is a loner who before his election rarely mixed with other cardinals who lived in his building. Now he governs a church of a billion souls. At 78, the oldest pope for nearly 300 years, he has to follow the adored John Paul II, who was 58 when he began his papacy. It's a tough job and Benedict is doing it his way.

He does not thrust forward his ring for the faithful to kiss, as his predecessor did. There will be no mass beatifications in St Peter's Square and for now the huge roadshows and papal Woodstocks are over. Benedict wants to be a teacher not "a pop culture superstar", says his biographer John Allen, Vatican correspondent for America's National Catholic Reporter.

In August he made his first trip abroad as Pope to attend World Youth Day in Cologne. Wilkins says he watched closely to see whether Benedict, like John Paul, would kiss the ground. "He very much didn't. Instead, his skull cap blew off." But when he spoke to the crowd of a million, "there was no finger-wagging to the young people about morals, the way John Paul used to do".

Wilkins believes that "everyone of whatever tendency, conservative and progressive, has been surprised by this papacy. We still don't know what its content will be. What we have is the setting of a style. That is basic, for the style defines the pope. His style is loving, it is humble, it is not in the limelight all the time."

In fact, virtually the only criticism so far has come from the right. Benedict hasn't appointed a new batch of conservative bishops or cracked down on renegade liberals, as the right had hoped. In November the Vatican released guidelines that predictably opposed the ordination of gay priests. But, unusually, it was done with no fanfare and some Western bishops believed the document was loose enough to spare them having to expel priests who are gay.

Conservative US commentator Father Richard John Neuhaus was alarmed. The Vatican's order "is meeting with vigorous resistance and there is reason to fear" it will not be implemented, he lamented in First Things magazine, which he edits. "Among those who greatly admired Cardinal Ratzinger and were elated by his election as pope, there is a palpable uneasiness." Was Ratzinger "a gentle man and averse to unpleasantness" going soft?

"Some of his staunchest traditionalist supporters are disappointed in his performance as Pope," says Mark Coleridge, the auxiliary Bishop of Melbourne. Coleridge admires Ratzinger's gift for "conveying deep and complex truths with simplicity", but says that "communicating a strategic vision is essential for the papacy and some complain there is a great silence at the top".

Is the new Pope a new man? Almost certainly not, says Allen. "He will draw lines in the sand - on gay marriage and embryonic research, for example." But Allen says Benedict wants above all to show the church's message is one of love, not fear. "I think this is what the first year has been about: to project a loving image of the Catholic Church."

Perhaps John Paul and the extraordinary reaction to his death inspired him. Ratzinger had often said "he expected the flock to shrink, that purification would make a better church", says Wilkins. But in the homily he delivered at John Paul's funeral he cried: "Look at all these young people. The church is alive!" At that moment, a cardinal told Allen, it seemed Ratzinger was taking on something of the mantle of John Paul II.

But after a fat pope comes a thin pope, the Romans say, and differences between the popes are emerging. "While John Paul was a bit of a dove on Islam, Benedict is more of a hawk," says Allen. John Paul was the first pope to enter a mosque (and a synagogue). Invited by German Muslims to attend a mosque before they met in Cologne, Benedict declined.

Allen says that whereas "John Paul would have spent most of the time talking [to Muslims] about how we were the common sons of Abraham", at the Cologne meeting Benedict delivered a tough message to Muslim leaders about the need to reject terrorism.

Like John Paul, Benedict will be a loud voice for greater justice for the Third World, where most Catholics live. Yet it is probably the West's crisis of faith - and what Benedict sees as a consequent crisis of identity - that most engages his mind and heart. Benedict was once a progressive theologian, who supported the reforms of the seminal Vatican Two Council in the early 1960s. But the student riots of 1968 appalled him; German Protestant students carried placards denouncing the crucifixion as sado-masochistic. Ratzinger came to see the West as sliding into monstrous self-indulgence, anarchy and even another Dark Age, as it lost sight of Christian truth.

Such thinking became his hallmark. As late as the eve of the conclave that elected him Pope, he denounced the "dictatorship of relativism" that "recognises nothing definite and leaves only one's own ego and one's own desires as the final measure". He even took his papal name in part to honour the sixth-century saint, Benedict, who founded the monasteries that kept the church alive as barbarians surged into Italy and the Dark Ages began.

But none of this bleak vision emerges in his first papal encyclical, published in January: Deus Caritas Est, or God is Love. Borrowing from The Song of Songs, the Bible's erotic verses, Benedict celebrated in lush prose the "ecstasy" of physical love between man and woman and how it could be a path to the divine. But without a spiritual dimension, he added, physical love risked being not only empty but destructive. His letter seemed above all directed at people in the West, where eros "has become a commodity, a mere thing to be bought and sold".

But will it be heard? The dissident theologan Kung said he was glad the encyclical wasn't a manifesto of cultural pessimism or of a severe sexual morality. Yet it had limitations, Kung said. He wished Benedict had written not only about the love of God but about "a loving way of dealing with all the different groups: with the women and men who use contraceptives, with the divorced and remarried, with priests who have left the priesthood because of the issue of celibacy, with the critical voices in the church".

"There is a lot of healing to do in the church," says Wilkins. "There are a lot of wounds, people whose dreams have been broken, a lot of people who have left. A lot of people have been denunciatory of those who didn't agree with them. This year has been a year of healing. Will that continue? We must wait and see."

Wilkins believes Benedict is able to be so conciliatory because the Pope feels that all the big decisions have been settled: that on social and moral issues, and on how the church is governed, the conservatives have won. Many Catholics do not agree. And so Benedict's great tests may be yet to come. They will require all the intellect, energy and love of a man whom Allen describes as possessing "epic ambition" but who described himself, upon his election, as a "a simple and humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord".

benefan
Friday, March 31, 2006 9:28 PM
Huge challenges for a ship of faith

The Age
April 1, 2006

Despite his quiet skill, the problems the Pope must deal with seem insurmountable, suggests Barney Zwartz.

For a man whose election last April was greeted with tears variously of joy and frustration, Pope Benedict XVI has achieved miracles in mollifying and encouraging nearly all quarters of the Catholic Church. The discontented are mainly the fervent observers who wanted the former theological puritan to continue and intensify the conservative and authoritarian aspects of John Paul II's papacy.

They feel betrayed because they numbered Benedict with their own, but he has proved himself a far broader figure. For the rest, especially those who feared an inflexible dogmatist, he has emerged as an astute and delicately nuanced politician, a superb teacher and a notable moral leader, "prime minister of the human conscience", as one commentator put it.

But for all his quiet skill and calm assurance, the huge challenges confronting him seem intractable. The cardinals who elected him evidently concluded that the most serious crisis facing Catholicism was the aggressive secularism in Europe, accompanied by emptying churches, fewer priests, a birth rate far below replacement level in many countries, and an increasingly strident Muslim population. They also wanted an able administrator who might reform the Vatican bureaucracy, the Curia, and allow local bishops more flexibility.

Benedict has made careful and muted advances on all these fronts. On secularism, he has taken a temperate tone. His first encyclical - on love, rather than truth - set his agenda, a gentler one than many had feared. On the Curia, Benedict has just started to act, but Vatican watchers expect big changes after Easter, primarily aimed at ensuring that the people who run Vatican departments have the proper expertise. Australian Cardinal Edward Cassidy, former head of a Vatican department, says there is scope for big changes because of the ages and circumstances of key Vatican staff.

"The appointment of his own successor (American William Levada as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) was a very good start," Cassidy says. It will encourage English-speaking bishops who feel the Curia doesn't understand their situation - for example, the Vatican felt the problem of clerical sexual abuse was exaggerated.

One move that prompted speculation was the departure of Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald as president of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue (he became papal ambassador to Egypt). It seemed to indicate a shift in attitude, as Islam became a more urgent priority. Benedict wants to keep talking to Muslims, but he also wants to work for much better treatment of Christian minorities in Muslim countries.

The term he uses is "reciprocity": Christians should be allowed the same religious liberty and rights that Muslims get in the West.

One challenge Benedict has not been interested in talking about is the crisis in priest numbers. Even with the resurgence in vocations among conservative young Westerners, there are not nearly enough seminarians to replace current priests. As one Australian put it, "either you have an internationalisation of clergy, which means Asian or Africans coming here, or a completely overstretched and under-performing clerical workforce which is ageing and getting tired".

Another internal challenge is the form of the liturgy. Benedict believes it brings Catholics into contact with the divine, and does not like more casual forms involving guitars and folk-style worship songs. Australian commentator Paul Collins says Benedict is "trying to reintroduce the sacred and the beautiful, to return to the traditional music of the church. The papal liturgies reflect that."

It's a long-term goal, but Benedict - soon to be 79 - is patient. He knows he can't reverse 350 years of increasing secularism overnight, but he is a Pope of gigantic ambition. The ship of faith, he believes, is on course.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Friday, March 31, 2006 10:43 PM
LOOKING FORWARD TO BRAZIL
An article in this week's issue of the Italian Panorama magazine gives strategic significance to the Pope's trip to Brazil next year. Here is a translation -

The Pope’s first trip outside Europe in 2007
belies the image of a Eurocentric Pope.
Meanwhile, he is preparing a Synod for Africa
.

By IGNAZIO INGRAO

Brazil will be Benedict XVI’s first trip as Pope outside Europe. The dates have not been officially confirmed, but the machinery for the Papal trip is already in motion.

The Pope is expected to be at the Sanctuary of our Lady of Aparecida On May 7-9, 2007, to open the Fifth General Conference of the Latin American episcopate (CELAM, from its Spanish acronym). It will be attended by more than 300 bishops from Latin America and the Caribbean.

Alberto Gasbarri, papal trip coordinator, will be visiting Brazil in June to finalize details for the visit. It will not be known until September if the Pope will be making other stops in Brazil besides Aparecida. Both the Brazilian Church and the government have made known that they would want him to visit other cities.

With 150 million nominal Catholics out of a population of 176 million, Brazil has the largest Catholic population of any single nation today.

A singular coincidence is that even Pope John Paul II’s first trip to Latin America was to open a CELAM conference (the third) in Puebla, Mexico, in January 1979.

“That pilgrimage in some way inspired and oriented all the successive years of my Pontificate,” he wrote 20 years later in the autobiographical book, “Alzatevi, andiamo” (Arise, let us go forward).

For Papa Ratzinger, Brazil will be a strategic step confirming the geopolitical openness of his Pontificate towards all 5 continents, although he has been called Eurocentric. Along with preparations for his trip to Brazil, Benedict has instructed the Secretary Generay of the Bishops Synod to prepare for a second special Synod for Africa, after that called by John Paul II in 1994.

The Pope has an appointment in Oceania in summer 2008 for the World Youth Day in Sydney. And as for Asia, the Vatican foreign secretary Giovanni Lajolo said earlier this week that the Pope is ready to travel to China whenever he is invited.

It will not be an easy trip to Brazil for the Pope who will be 80 years old by that time. He wll be visiting the country that gave birth to liberation theology. But it will be very different from the Brazil of the 1980s, where the Franciscan priest Leonardo Boff (who has since left the priesthood) and others spread the doctrine of the “Church militant” and ended up under the disciplinary strictures of Joseph Ratzinger in his capacity as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The country has undergone political and social changes, and the Catholic Church finds itself challenged by the popularity of evangelical sects and so-called electronic churches which use radio and TV extensively to proselytize. But the Church has also seen recent martyrs there, such as Sister Dorothy Stang, who was assassinated on Ferbuary 12, 2005, for speaking up for the rights of landless peasants.

TERESA BENEDETTA
Saturday, April 01, 2006 1:36 AM
RATZINGER: JOHN PAUL'S TRUMP CARD

A most interesting perspective on the Vatican's actions to root out liberation theology is provided in this edited extract published in the British newspaper The Tablet,
www.thetablet.co.uk/cgi-bin/register.cgi/tablet-01165
from a new John Paul II biography coming out Sunday by Edward Stourton.

This is how the Tablet introduces the extract:


In this second edited extract from the broadcaster’s biography of John Paul II, the relationship between the Pope and the man who was to be his successor is revealed.

JOHN PAUL'S TRUMP CARD
By Edward Stourton

John Paul made the most significant appointment of his pontificate in late November 1981, as political storm clouds were gathering in Poland. The rapport established between Karol Wojtyla and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger during the conclaves of 1978 had flourished following John Paul’s election, and in early 1980 we find the then Archbishop of Munich expressing admiration for the new pope’s championship of traditional Catholic teaching.

It was not , he explained during a radio interview, within the pope’s power to change what had been handed down to him: “It is the pope’s duty”, he said, “to preserve the faith intact for our time, and to criticise the ills of Western society.”

John Paul turned to Joseph Ratzinger as a man with the intellectual bottom for the job of Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the cardinal was to prove an absolutely critical player in the way John Paul redesigned the model of the papacy.

Once installed in the Vatican, Cardinal Ratzinger set about deploying the full force of his powers – “cracking the whip immediately on taking office” as one of his critics put it – and, reflecting the priorities of his master John Paul, he soon turned his attention to the Liberation Theologians of Latin America.

I have spoken to many people in the Catholic Church – from cardinals downwards – who liked and admired the late Pope but disliked much of what was done in his name*, and I have found that Cardinal Ratzinger – before he became Benedict XVI, at least – was often the lightning rod they used to focus their anger away from John Paul.
[*Comment by T-B: This statement implies that John Paul II allowed important things to be said and done in his name even if he did not agree with such things, which is an insult to him, to say the least!]

He and Cardinal Ratzinger came to know one another’s minds very well indeed; for more than 20 years the two men would meet each Friday in private to discuss the CDF’s work, and there were regular Thursday lunches at which the conversation ranged more widely over a variety of topics in a freewheeling manner.

Moreover, the 1984 Instruction on Certain Aspects of Liberation Theology, which marked perhaps the rawest moment in the conflict between the Vatican and the Liberation Theologians of Latin America, was apparently produced on John Paul’s explicit instructions.

John Paul had given a very public indication of the strength of his feelings during perhaps the most ill-tempered pilgrimage of his entire pontificate – his visit to the Nicaraguan capital of Managua in March 1983. All sorts of Cold War and Catholic currents converged in Nicaragua. The Sandinista revolution to oust the old-school Latin American dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza in 1979 had widespread support; Daniel Ortega and the Sandinista leadership would in the fullness of time disappoint their supporters mightily, but in the early 1980s they still had the status of revolutionary heroes.

The Sandinistas had strong support among the so-called “base Christian communities” – the grassroots Catholic groups which Liberation Theology taught were the building blocks of the new Church. But the radical Marxist character of the Sandinista movement became more and more apparent as its leaders settled into power, and a division opened up between the “official” Church, which found itself increasingly in opposition to the country’s Government, and the “popular” Church, which continued to support the revolution.

A focus for the battle was provided by four Catholic priests who served in official positions in the Sandinista Government [including Fr Ernesto Cardenal, minister of culture]. For the Vatican this was a flagrant example of the excesses to which Liberation Theology could lead, and all four were told that they must either resign their jobs or leave the priesthood – making a choice, as it were, between their ministries and their ministry.

The cabinet – including Fr Ernesto Cardenal – was lined up at the airport to see John Paul arrive, but the plan seems to have been that he would not greet them individually. As John Paul reached Fr Ernesto Cardenal he swept off his beret and knelt to kiss the papal ring. The pope took a step back, pulled away his hands and wagged his fingers in admonition at the kneeling figure, telling him, “Regularise your position with the Church.”

John Paul lost his temper altogether at his open-air Mass in Managua later that day. Instead of the usual field of gold and white papal flags waving above the crowd, he was confronted by posters of Marx and the heroes of the Sandinista revolution. During his sermon John Paul confronted the idea of a “popular” Church head on, and he was more or less shouted down by sections of the crowd.

The visit helped to create the highly charged and emotional climate in which the publication of the Vatican’s Instruction on Liberation Theology was received the following year. The document was designed “to draw the attention of pastors, theologians, and all the faithful to the deviations, and risks of deviations, damaging to the faith and to Christian living, that are brought about by certain forms of Liberation theology which use, in an insufficiently critical manner, concepts from various currents of Marxist thought”.

It amounted to a fairly ferocious condemnation of an approach which Rome said “subordinates theology to the class struggle”. And the Instruction was followed within a month by the interrogation and silencing of the Liberation Theologian, Leonardo Boff.

Boff, a Brazilian Franciscan, had written a book called Church Charism and Power, which took the new ideas that the Liberation Theologians had used to analyse Latin American societies, and turned them on the Church itself. Cardinal Ratzinger summoned him to Rome to explain his ideas, and, after a lengthy conversation, imposed a period of “silence” during which Boff was forbidden to write, teach or speak publicly.

Boff had a great deal of fun with the notoriety the incident afforded him. He was fond of describing it to journalists, and the story tended to get more dramatic as time went on. It was a day of “medieval scenes”, he told me when I interviewed him 15 years later. “We walked into a lift guarded by two Swiss Guards … we crossed an enormous room, I guess it must have been 80 metres wide, with glamorous carpets and huge Renaissance paintings.”

This picture of a callow provincial being terrorised by a naked display of Vatican power needs to be taken with some salt; apart from anything else, Boff knew Ratzinger personally, as the cardinal had supervised his doctorate when he was studying in Germany in the 1960s.

Many arriving in Rome for the Extraordinary Synod at the end of November 1985 had already concluded that John Paul conceived of the synod system as a mechanism for making sure that the bishops of the world listened to the Vatican rather than the reverse. The Church’s centre of gravity had shifted significantly. It was no longer a question of how fast progressive bishops could push along the revolutionary path that began with Vatican II: they were instead fighting a rearguard action to prevent a counter-revolution.

The tone for the meeting was set by the publication of a book entitled The Ratzinger Report, a long interview which John Paul’s man at the CDF had given to the Italian journalist Vittorio Messori. The cardinal tactfully spoke of “restoration” rather than counter-revolution, but there seemed little doubt about what he had in mind.

If by ‘restoration’ we understand the search for a new balance after all the exaggerations of an indiscriminate opening to the world, after the overly positive interpretations of an agnostic and atheistic world,” he told Vittorio Messori, “then a restoration understood in this sense (a newly found balance of orientation and values within the Catholic totality) is altogether desirable and, for that matter, is already in operation in the Church.”

The Synod’s Final Report recognised that the Second Vatican Council was “a legitimate and valid expression and interpretation of the deposit of faith as it is found in the Sacred Scripture and in the living tradition of the Church”, but said that there had been “selective” readings of some of its documents and a “superficial interpretation” of some of its conclusions.

The Synod’s most significant decision was that the Church needed a new Catechism to clear up post-Conciliar confusion about what the faithful were supposed to believe and what they could and could not do
. “Restoration”, every bit as much John Paul’s project as it was Cardinal Ratzinger’s, was under way.
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John Paul II – Man of History by Edward Stourton is published by Hodder and Stoughton, price £20, on 2 April.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 01/04/2006 6.53]

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