Benedict’s legacy
This teacher pope sought to bring the church back to its conservative roots, writes NICOLE WINFIELD.
On Monday, April 4, 2005 a humble priest walked up to the Renaissance palazzo housing the Vatican’s doctrine department and asked the doorman to call to the official in charge: It was the first day of business after Pope John Paul II had died, and the cleric wanted to get back to work.
The office’s No. 2, Archbishop Angelo Amato, answered the phone and was stunned: this was no ordinary priest asking permission to go upstairs. It was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, his boss, who under the Vatican’s arcane rules had technically lost his job when John Paul died.
“It tells me of the great humility of the man, the great sense of duty, but also the great awareness that we are here to do a job,” said Bishop Charles Scicluna, who worked with Ratzinger, before he became Pope Benedict XVI, inside the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
In resigning, Scicluna said, Benedict is showing the same sense of humility and duty and service that he showed on that day after the Catholic Church lost its last pope.
“He has done his job.”
When Benedict flies off into his retirement by helicopter on Thursday, he will leave behind a church in crisis — one beset by sex scandal, internal divisions and dwindling numbers. But the Pope can count on a solid legacy: While his most significant act was to resign, Benedict — in his quiet and humble way — also set the church back on a conservative, tradition-minded path. Benedict was guided by the firm conviction that many of the ills afflicting it today could be traced to a misreading of the reforms of the Second Vatican Council.
Benedict was the teacher pope, a theology professor who turned his Wednesday general audiences into weekly master classes about the Catholic faith and the history, saints and sinners that contributed to it.
In his teachings he sought to boil Christianity down to its essential core. He didn’t produce volumes of encyclicals like his predecessor, just three: on charity, hope and love. (He penned a fourth, on faith, but retired before finishing it.)
Considered by many to be the greatest living theologian today, he authored more than 65 books.
“If you hear him give a sermon, he’s speaking not from notes, but you can write it down and print it,” Fessio said. “Every comma is there. Every pause.”
Benedict never wanted to be pope and he didn’t take easily to the rigours of the job. Elected April 19, 2005 after one of the shortest conclaves in history, Benedict was at 78 the oldest pope elected in 275 years and the first German one in nearly a millennium. At first he was stiff. “No one is born a pope,” Giovanni Maria Vian, the editor of the Pope’s newspaper L’Osservatore Romano said. “You have to learn to be a pope.” And slowly Benedict learned. Crowds accustomed to a quartercentury of superstar John Paul II, grew to embrace the soft-spoken, scholarly Benedict who had an uncanny knack of being able to absorb different points of view and pull them together in a perfect, coherent whole.
Benedict seemed genuinely surprised sometimes by the popular reception he would receive — and similarly surprised when things went wrong, as they did when he removed the excommunication of a bishop who turned out to be a Holocaust-denier.
For a theologian who for decades had worked toward theological reconciliation between Catholics and Jews, the outrage directed at Benedict was fierce and painful; he was let down by his aides who hadn’t done the simple research to discover the true nature of the bishop.
Benedict was also burdened by what he called the “filth” of the church: the sins and crimes of its priests.
As prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Benedict saw first-hand the scope of sex abuse as early as the 1980s, when he tried unsuccessfully to convince the Vatican legal department to let him remove abusive priests quickly.
But it took him until 2001 to finally step in, ordering all abuse cases sent to his office for review.
But to this day, Benedict hasn’t sanctioned a single bishop for covering up abuse.
“Unfortunately, Pope Benedict’s legacy in the abuse crisis is one of mistaken emphases, missed opportunities, and gestures at the margin, rather than changes at the centre,” said Terrence McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org, an online resource of abuse documentation.
Benedict also gets poor grades from liberal Catholics who felt abandoned by a pope who seemed to roll back the clock on the modernizing reforms of Vatican II and launched a crackdown on Vatican nuns, deemed to have strayed too far from his doctrinal orthodoxy.
Some priests are now living in open rebellion with church teaching, calling for a rethink on everything from homosexuality to women’s ordination to priestly celibacy.
“As Roman Catholics worldwide prepare for the conclave, we are reminded that the current system remains an ‘old boys club’ and does not allow for women’s voices to participate in the decision of the next leader of our church,” said Erin Saiz Hanna, head of the Women’s Ordination Conference, a group that ordains women in defiance of church teaching.
The group plans to raise pink smoke during the conclave “as a prayerful reminder of the voices of the church that go unheard.”
But Benedict won’t be around at the Vatican to see it. His work is done. “Mission Accomplished,” Vian said.