From The Tablet : http://www.thetablet.co.uk/issues/1000044/
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The real
Ratzinger revealed John L. Allen |
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Benedict XVI turns 80 on Monday, and
on Thursday celebrates the second anniversary of his election. To date,
expectations of a ‘Catholic fundamentalist' papacy have been confounded. As
cardinal, he was the man who said ‘no' for 20 years. Now he seems to want to
express a deeper ‘yes'
Reporters on the Vatican beat generally seek
out the bishops who come to
For a number of years, a few reporters had a
standing bet that if one of us ever found a bishop who did not say that his
best meeting was with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the legendary prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the rest of the group would buy
that person dinner. In the end, no one ever claimed the prize.
Normally, bishops would tell us that many ad
limina encounters with the heads of
Such impressions framed the great disjunction
between the public image of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and private perceptions
of the man. In public, Ratzinger was the Darth Vader of Roman Catholicism; he
was seen as draconian, inquisitorial and imperious. Those stereotypes shaped
the early line in the media on his election as Pope Benedict XVI. To take one
typical example, an Italian editorial cartoon the day after Cardinal
Ratzinger's election, in a play on the famous scene of John XXIII telling a
moonlit crowd in St Peter's Square in 1962 to give their children a kiss from
the Pope, showed the new Pope instructing a similar crowd to give their
children not a kiss but a firm spanking.
In private, however, Cardinal Ratzinger had a
different profile. Co-workers and brother bishops saw him as strikingly humble
and collegial. The conviction of the 115 cardinals who elected him Pope was
that they were elevating this "real" Ratzinger.
On 16 April, Pope Benedict XVI turns 80, and
on 19 April he marks two years in office. As he passes those milestones,
perhaps the most notable storyline about his pontificate is the way the private
Ratzinger has, to a considerable extent, become the public Pope. To date,
Benedict XVI has proved a more gradual, centrist and collegial figure than his
earlier public image would have suggested.
To be sure, Benedict is capable of drawing
lines in the sand, as he did by approving a November 2005
Furthermore, Benedict's listening skills did
not stop the Vatican from issuing a critical notification on Jesuit Fr Jon
Sobrino, a famed liberation theologian, just two months ahead of the Fifth
General Conference of CELAM, the council of bishops' conferences of Latin
America and the Caribbean. Senior Latin American clergy had asked the
Yet, on the whole, expectations that Benedict
XVI would be a bruiser-pope have proven off the mark. Two vignettes make the
point. First, in July 2006 the Pope visited
Christianity,
Catholicism, isn't a collection of prohibitions: it's a positive option. It's
very important that we look at it again because this idea has almost completely
disappeared today. We've heard so much about what is not allowed that now it's
time to say: we have a positive idea to offer ... The human person must always
be respected as a human person. But all this is clearer if you say it first in
a positive way.
For a Pope with a passion for classical
music, this effort to phrase the Christian fundamentals in a positive key has
become something of a leitmotif. Having been responsible for expressing the
"noes" of the Catholic Church for 20 years, Ratzinger as Pope appears
determined to articulate what he sees as its much deeper "yes".
The second such occasion came with Benedict's
trip to
In Benedict's approach to matters inside the
Church, a similar pattern has emerged. His most important appointments, both in
the Holy See and in major archdioceses, have revealed a preference for pastoral
moderates rather than ideologues. To date, there has been no systematic
clampdown on dissidents, no night of the long knives. This gradualism has even
generated alarm among some of the most ardent supporters of Benedict's
election. Last year, Fr Richard John Neuhaus publicly acknowledged
"palpable uneasiness" about the Pope's lack of decisive action.
Another American neo-conservative privately groused, "We thought we were
electing Ronald Reagan, but we got stuck with
Benedict's commitment to collegiality has
been visible in ways large and small. He has repeatedly spoken out about the
crisis of Africa, for example, including a strong condemnation of the way
Africa has been "plundered and sacked" in his new book, Jesus of
Nazareth, and a plea for humanitarian concern with
Perhaps the best expression of Benedict's
emerging persona came in his first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est, released at
Christmas 2005. The Pope treats human erotic love in deeply approving terms, deliberately
avoiding anathemas. In general, most observers regard the Pope's writings and
public addresses to date as impressive. Some have been tempted to style
Benedict as "a pope of words", in contrast to his predecessor, John
Paul II, as a "pope of images".
Although Benedict at 80 seems remarkably
healthy, his advanced age nevertheless beckons thoughts about his legacy.
In the long run of history, John XXIII and
Paul VI will be remembered as the popes of the Second Vatican Council, the men
who launched that moment of top-to-bottom reform in Catholicism and who brought
it to fruition. John Paul II and Benedict XVI, on the other hand, have sought
to foster a rebirth of Catholic identity, a transition from a period of
internal reform to one of engagement with the wider world. Under John Paul II,
evangelisation was the watchword rather than aggiornamento; he was an ad extra
pope, far more interested in how the Church can affect the social, cultural and
political questions of the day than in reform of its internal structures.
Cardinal Ratzinger was key for John Paul, but no one is to Benedict XVI the
same trusted lieutenant. The vision of the pontificate is flowing very much
from himself for good and for ill, and there have been instances of both.
Benedict XVI's top priority, as stated on 22
March by his Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, during a lecture in
If the danger of the John XXIII and Paul VI
era was throwing the baby out with the bathwater, the chief risk in today's
politics of identity cuts in the opposite direction, towards rigidity and
exaggerated defensiveness - a sort of "Taliban Catholicism" that
knows only how to excoriate and condemn. To be sure, one can see the stirrings
of such a spirit in today's Church. Potentially, Benedict XVI's legacy may lie
in pointing a way around these shoals. Given all that he represents, Benedict
is in a unique position to illustrate that one can embrace Catholic
fundamentals without becoming a fundamentalist, that reason and faith are not
opposed but inextricably linked. That, in fact, was the argument he was trying
to make in
Because Benedict is not the charismatic media
figure that John Paul II was, it is unclear how much of this will ever register
on the broader cultural radar screen. To date, pundits still seem to be waiting
for the "real" Ratzinger to emerge from beneath his thoughtful,
pastoral facade. Perhaps, however, the deepest truth is that this facade is the
real Ratzinger.
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