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Benedict’s Own Five Issues
BY The Editors May 4-10, 2008 Issue |
Posted 4/29/08 at 2:40 PM
Before Pope Benedict XVI visited the United States, we
identified five key issues in his pontificate that we should watch for. The
list was a good guess — but the man we once called the “Pope of Surprises”
didn’t stick to our script.
With the benefit of a little hindsight, here is a more
accurate list of the key issues that were on Benedict’s mind when he came to
America.
Doctrine
When Pope Benedict himself declared (at Nationals Park) the
purpose for his coming, he used this formal language: “In the exercise of my
ministry as the Successor of Peter, I have come to America to confirm you, my
brothers and sisters, in the faith of the apostles.”
He hammered home the same point in his address to Catholic
universities, reminding them that the Church is mater et magistra (mother and
teacher) and reiterating Church teaching on their relationship to the
magisterium.
He told the bishops on April 16: “It cannot be assumed that
all Catholic citizens think in harmony with the Church’s teaching on today’s
key ethical questions. Once again, it falls to you to ensure that the moral
formation provided at every level of ecclesial life reflects the authentic
teaching of the Gospel of life.”
In most analysis after the visit, the Pope’s comments on abuse
have been called the true story of his trip. But Benedict put even the abuse
question in the context of a larger doctrinal crisis.
When he talked about the abuse crisis, he called its “among
the countersigns to the Gospel of life.”
Abuse crisis
When, as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he spoke of the scandal
— decrying the “filth” in the Church — his words were well-chosen and direct.
So were Pope Benedict’s in America. On the airplane coming to the United
States, he spoke of his “deep shame,” and said, “we will absolutely exclude
pedophiles from the sacred ministry.” To the bishops he spoke of the Church’s
“enormous pain,” and said the scandal was “sometimes very badly handled.” To
the congregation at Nationals Park, he said “No words of mine could describe
the pain and harm inflicted by such abuse.”
When he spoke to the bishops, he put the abuse in the larger
catechetical crisis.
“The policies and programs you have adopted need to be
placed in a wider context,” he said. “Children deserve to grow up with a healthy
understanding of sexuality and its proper place in human relationships. They
should be spared the degrading manifestations and the crude manipulation of
sexuality so prevalent today. They have a right to be educated in authentic
moral values rooted in the dignity of the human person.”
But perhaps his most stinging remark was the one he directed
at the culture at large in the 21st century, and at all who participate in it:
“What does it mean to speak of child protection when pornography and violence can
be viewed in so many homes through media widely available today?”
World unity
Pope Benedict didn’t speak about peace to the extent we
expected. But he did speak about a concept that’s very much connected with it:
world unity.
Americans have always had a certain suspicion of the United
Nations — and of world unity. With good reason. It’s right to fear for the loss
of sovereignty and to be watchful that worldwide anti-life policies aren’t
foisted on entire nations. The Holy Father’s remarks to the United Nations
raised those issues pointedly. But they also almost eagerly anticipated a
globalized world that would function on new models of international
relationships and national sovereignty. He repeatedly drew out the analogy of
the United Nations as at the center of a “family of nations.”
He was spelling out a vision he told the Nationals Park
congregation about the world Catholics must influence. “It is a time of great
promise, as we see the human family in many ways drawing closer together and
becoming ever more interdependent.”
Dialogue
It’s only natural that he would focus so much on
interreligious and ecumenical dialog, given this larger theme of global unity.
It’s as if Pope Benedict were calling people to understand each other despite
their differences, and providing an example in himself by demonstrating how a
pope interacts with leaders in other major religions.
And how does a pope interact with other major religions? In
a way that shows deep respect, by allotting time to them in a busy schedule — but
also by seeing the truth in them and spelling out exactly what the Church’s
beliefs are.
Renewal
The overarching theme of the Holy Father’s visit, though,
was renewal. He called the Church in America to return to the faith, reconcile
with the past and build the Kingdom of Christ in the future. And to do so, Pope
Benedict used language we haven’t heard for years. He declared “a great jubilee
of the Church in America.” He told the bishops to prepare for “the new
springtime of the faith.” He spoke of “the New Evangelization” and prayed for
“a new Pentecost” for America’s Church. And he summed it all up with his “Thy
Kingdom Come” message at Yankee Stadium, about the apostolate.
Was the visit a success? That will depend on how well it
fulfills the hopes — and directives — of the Holy Father. In particular, its
success will depend on whether or not: Bishops (and colleges) follow his
instructions to guard the faith; families make headway against a culture of
sexual excess; Catholics engage in the battle for hearts and minds in an
interconnected world; and we all take up his call to the new evangelization.
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