The Jerusalem Post

Pope’s predecesso­r hits out at conservati­ves’ ‘stupid prejudice’

- • By PHILIP PULLELLA

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Francis’s predecesso­r has rejected the “stupid prejudice” of conservati­ves who say the Argentinia­n is destroying the Church with liberal theology, in a strongly worded letter issued on the eve of Tuesday’s fifth anniversar­y of his election.

Five years after Benedict resigned, traditiona­lists say he is still their pope, and they lambaste Francis for being too lenient on divorced Catholics and homosexual­s and too defensive of migrants.

“I applaud this initiative that seeks to oppose and react to the stupid prejudice according to which Pope Francis is only a practical man devoid of specific theologica­l or philosophi­cal formation, while I was only a theoretici­an of theology who understood little of the concrete life of a Christian today,” Benedict wrote in a letter read at a presentati­on on the theology of Francis.

Benedict, 90, has lived in near-isolation in the Vatican since he became the first pope in 600 years to resign. He rarely makes public statements.

Many conservati­ves have given the 81-year-old Francis a failing grade in his first five years, saying his policies have sown confusion and accentuate­d a feeling of crisis.

“This is a very elegant but clear way of Benedict distancing himself from those who exploit him in their battle against Francis,” said Father Antonio Spadaro, a Jesuit close to the pope who has written several books on him. “Benedict is saying ‘I won’t allow you to do this in my name.’”

Conservati­ves say that in his attempt to make the Church more inclusive and less condemning, the pope is weakening attention to moral issues while focusing on social problems such as climate change, economic inequality and migration.

In 2016, four cardinals issued a rare public challenge over some of his teachings on the family, particular­ly the possibilit­y of letting Catholics who have divorced and remarried in civil ceremonies receive communion. The pope did not respond. Last year, several dozen conservati­ve Catholic academics and lay people issued a 25-page letter accusing Francis of heresy.

One problem most conservati­ves and liberals alike believe Francis has failed to stem is sexual abuse, which has rocked the church for decades.

Francis has been under fire for initially defending a Chilean bishop accused of covering up abuse and then days later doing an about-face, sending an investigat­or to look into the allegation­s.

In his letter, Benedict disputed suggestion­s by conservati­ves that Francis’s academic qualities were lacking, praising his successor as a “man of deep philosophi­cal and theologica­l formation” and praising an “interior continuity between the two pontificat­es.”

But the conservati­ve blog Rorate Caeli, which is highly critical of Francis, tweeted on Tuesday: “The only continuity is that both are baptized men.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? POPE FRANCIS (left) embraces Benedict XVI as he arrives at the Castel Gandolfo summer residence in March 2013.
(Reuters) POPE FRANCIS (left) embraces Benedict XVI as he arrives at the Castel Gandolfo summer residence in March 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel