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Pope Benedict - no Dr Strangelove (good read)
Times On line ^ | Gerrard Baker

Posted on 04/17/2008 6:21:24 PM PDT by pissant

Anybody who has ever had to stand at a podium after a gifted speaker knows how it might have been for Pope Benedict XVI this week as he has made the first papal visit to the United States since John Paul II.

His predecessor was the ultimate media-savvy leader. When he came to the ultimate media-fixated nation, it was a match made in Heaven. Millions of the faithful and the merely curious flocked to parks and stadiums. People at times had to be physically restrained from throwing themselves at him. Even on his last trip here in 1999, visibly deteriorating, his mere presence was enough to move the least sentimental of grizzled Midwesterners.

The man who became Benedict was never going to match that. It would be rather like asking an ageing professor of English to take over from Laurence Olivier as Hamlet. He knows all the lines but he’s not even going to try to pull off the delivery.

Of course, when he was elected three years ago, the new Pope’s personal history created its own, somewhat lowered set of expectations. His membership of the Hitler Youth (actually mandatory for all young Germans, but why spoil a good story?); his reputation as the fierce intendant of Catholic orthodoxy; the fact that he spoke English in a vaguely “Ve haf veys of making you pray!” kind of accent. It was all too delicious for the headline writers. He was instantly dubbed Panzer Cardinal and The Enforcer.

Before the incense had drifted away from his installation Mass, the world had determined that this 265th pontiff was a rather disappointing, even frightening, sort of substitute for the last one, a kind of cross between Torquemada and Dr Strangelove.

Three years have passed since the fuzzy grey smoke from the Sistine Chapel announced his elevation and it is clearer than ever on this, his most visible excursion into the limelight since then, that this is as far from the reality as it is possible to be.

The visuals of a papal trip are much the same. There are vast Masses in baseball stadiums, Popemobile-led motorcades along city streets. And though he may not be a natural, this Pope has a sure grasp of the power of the image. He speaks to the United Nations today. He extended Passover greetings to the Jewish people yesterday and met leaders of other religions. On Sunday, his last day in the US, he pays a symbolic visit to the sacred American territory of Ground Zero.

But what is most striking, as hundreds of thousands observe this Pope in person for the first time, is not the visual symbolism, the crowds or the made-for-TV events, but the imposing beauty and power of his words.

It’s already a cliché in Rome that the crowds came to see John Paul but they come to hear Benedict. Among those familiar with his career, his reputation was always that of a fierce intellectual — the theologian and author of dozens of dense tracts on Christianity. But what was missing was an understanding of Benedict’s remarkable capacity to use words to speak to the emotional part of the human brain.

Of course, the Pope will already have known that the US, unlike the Europe he hopes still to convert, is a religious place. True, as in Europe, there are a growing number of so-called cafeteria Christians, those who like to choose from a menu of moral and doctrinal options, who believe religion should be essentially a kind of divine validation of their own lifestyle rather than a call to sacrifice and commitment. But America is still fundamentally receptive to the religious principle, the idea of a single truth rather than a moral chaos of equally valid beliefs.

It would be a shame, however, if his words to Americans were not heard by people — Christians and non-Christians everywhere.

He has already startled many with the intensity of his denunciations of the actions of priests who sexually abused minors — the scandal that has turned many away from the Church in America and elsewhere — as well as those in the church hierarchy who enabled them. The Church has seemed reluctant in the past to make a complete penance for this sin but Benedict’s words this week will have done much to heal the wounds and restore trust.

Less newsworthy but perhaps more powerful for most listeners has been Benedict’s eloquence on the spiritual challenges of the modern world. At the White House, with President Bush at his side, he reminded Americans about the responsibilities as well as the great opportunities of political and economic freedom. “Freedom is ever new. It is a challenge held out to each generation, and it must constantly be won over for the cause of good.”

But the Pope’s most compelling words are a constant reminder of how absurd his stereotype has been. He speaks repeatedly of the simple beauty of human love.

Shortly before he became Pope, Benedict told a congregation: “Christianity is not an intellectual system, a collection of dogmas, or a moralism. Christianity is instead an encounter, a love story, an event.”

This idea of faith as a love story — God’s love for his people, and our love for Christ, the human face of God — is what Benedict seems to want us to understand as the defining theme of his papacy. His first encyclical was not on birth control or gay marriage, but on what many considered the somewhat surprising subject of the simple divinity of human love, including the sanctity of erotic love. This emphasis on the centrality of love to the human condition is so at odds with the caricature of the doctrinal vigilante, endlessly lecturing on the perils of sexual intemperance, that it requires us to think hard about the very nature of religion’s role in modern life. It is a useful counterweight to the popular secular view that religion is the root of all human discord.

Three years ago, as John Paul II was laid to rest under St Peter’s, his extraordinary and epoch-changing ministry at an end, a reporter turned to one of his colleagues and said, with evident feeling: “There goes one heck of a story.” But the story, as it happens, lives on, Benedict has opened a new chapter and if people would only listen they might find it has a surprising ending.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: bxvi; popo


1 posted on 04/17/2008 6:21:24 PM PDT by pissant
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To: pissant

Most Excellent! I really like this man, he’s smart and compassionate. What he did today, meeting with the Victims from Boston was profoundly meaningful and important to the Natives.
Love the pic of the Nuns with the cell phone!

Bless you, Pope Benedict.


2 posted on 04/17/2008 6:33:51 PM PDT by acapesket (never had a vote count in all my years here)
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To: acapesket

Yeah, I’m glad he did it too. And his call to the Catholic Colleges in the US to follow Christ in all things was certainly needed too.


3 posted on 04/17/2008 6:45:18 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: pissant

He will never be as warm, popular or outgoing as Pope John Paul II. He was a very difficult act to follow and I think it’s an unfair comparison. But he is nonetheless more than qualified to lead the Catholic Church for the forseeable future.


4 posted on 04/17/2008 6:49:18 PM PDT by infantrywhooah
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To: pissant

Fantastic article..One of the best written i’ve seen in a long time..Watching the Pope today as he greeted the crowds, and trying to listen to his words- difficult as it was- left one with a feeling that he knows the problems and has the right answers to the Church’s problems. He is right too, for the true message of Catholicism is the message of love, pardon and peace, forgiveness, and hope for a better future for the world,as Jesus would have wanted. He wants the clergy to behave as good spiritual fathers would, and wants the Catholic colleges and universities to accurately teach the Faith. He is a loving Holy Father and a true guiding genius, just what our Catholic Church needs in this secular time...Thanks for posting this pissant..


5 posted on 04/17/2008 7:09:19 PM PDT by billmor
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To: pissant
He has already startled many with the intensity of his denunciations of the actions of priests who sexually abused minors — the scandal that has turned many away from the Church in America and elsewhere — as well as those in the church hierarchy who enabled them. The Church has seemed reluctant in the past to make a complete penance for this sin but Benedict’s words this week will have done much to heal the wounds and restore trust.

As one of those who left the Catholic Church in 1993 in disgust and protest over the Priest Abuse Scandal that was happening in the Chicago area (and ironically the church I attended) I've been following Pope Benedicts visit here closely, reading every article I could find. I really wanted to know if he'd truly address the sex abuse scandal.

Pope Benedict has been outspoken the last three days over the scandal, spoke about it today to a large mass, and after having met privately (without telling the media it was happening) with some of the victims I was truly heartened to see the Catholic Church - of which I have been HIGHLY CRITICAL since I left in 1993 to appear to begin addressing this issue head-on.

I believe Pope Benedict when he said today it was shameful how the scandal had been handled, and that he wanted to know the names of each of the abuse victims so that he could pray for them. What a wonderful, compassionate and graceful expression from him. With all due deference to Pope John Paul II who I believe was a good man, Pope Benedict appears to be just what the Catholic Church needed at this time. While I no longer count myself as a Catholic, it's truly good to see the Pope dealing with this issue head-on, which will ultimately be good for the Church.

Well done Pope Benedict, please keep it up.

6 posted on 04/17/2008 7:39:50 PM PDT by usconservative (www.ropma.net -->ISLAM is NOT a religion of peace, it is a CULT of DEATH.)
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To: acapesket
What he did today, meeting with the Victims from Boston was profoundly meaningful and important to the Natives.

I think it was profoundly meaningingful and important to those who were sexually abused by rogue Priests.

He didn't pay "lip service" to the scandal as many of the Cardinal's in the U.S. have done over the years. The Pope *acted* out of compassion for the victims and expressed his love for them. That action alone told them he took them seriously, and was going to do something about the problem. I can only imagine this is what the victims needed. Maybe this will give them some peace.

I'm really, truly impressed with this Pope (especially as a former Catholic.)

7 posted on 04/17/2008 7:45:17 PM PDT by usconservative (www.ropma.net -->ISLAM is NOT a religion of peace, it is a CULT of DEATH.)
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To: infantrywhooah

I pray BXVI is aorund long enough to leave his lasting footprint on the church.


8 posted on 04/17/2008 8:10:17 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: billmor

I echo those sentiments.


9 posted on 04/17/2008 8:12:05 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: usconservative

Why would anyone leave the true church because of misbahavior of another member of that church????sounds like you didn’t really have your heart in the right place at all...While I certainly don’t condone the scandals of the past in the Catholic Church, I also would never leave the church because of the misbehavior of some of its leaders.I might point out that the level of this behavior in protestant denominations far outpasses those within Catholocism....the difference is that you can’t sue the church of what’s happening now, nor the national Methodist church, Nor the National Lutheran church......these churches are pretty much individual entities whereas the Catholic church is world wide, and acts as a single organization......when the first reporst of this nonsense came out, the Catholic Church should have denied , as a worldwide organization, responsibility for the acts of individuals who happened to be clergy....like every other denomination did!!.....and what ever happened to the statute of limitations?????the 1960’s?????please


10 posted on 04/17/2008 8:18:01 PM PDT by terycarl (lurking, but interested and informed)
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To: usconservative

I agree the US Bishops, with a few exceptions, were criminal in their response to the sex abuse problems.

A couple of things to keep in mind though. The % of incidents of priest doing this is/was certainly no higher than in the population at large or any other denomination. And a huge % was not pedophilia, it was homosexualism - post pubescent young men and boys. A problem made possible by lax rules that let homosexuals in the priesthood in the first place.

That being said, it happened, the US church and to a lesser extent the Vatican, responded egregiously slow.


11 posted on 04/17/2008 8:18:30 PM PDT by pissant (THE Conservative party: www.falconparty.com)
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To: pissant

RATZ: HOW ARE YOU SATAN!!
RATZ: ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US.
RATZ: HA HA HA HA....

12 posted on 04/17/2008 8:18:33 PM PDT by RichInOC (SATAN: WHAT YOU SAY!!)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: usconservative

“While those who give scandal are guilty of the spiritual equivalent of murder, those who take scandal-who allow scandals to destroy their faith-are guilty of spiritual suicide.” St. Francis de Sales


14 posted on 04/17/2008 8:37:13 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: pissant

St. John’s Seminary in Brighton should be burned to the ground with all of it’s contents intact.. just for a start.


16 posted on 04/17/2008 8:51:31 PM PDT by acapesket (never had a vote count in all my years here)
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To: infantrywhooah; sandyeggo
But what is most striking, as hundreds of thousands observe this Pope in person for the first time, is not the visual symbolism, the crowds or the made-for-TV events, but the imposing beauty and power of his words.

But the Pope’s most compelling words ... the simple beauty of human love. This idea of faith as a love story — God’s love for his people, and our love for Christ, the human face of God — is what Benedict seems to want us to understand as the defining theme of his papacy. His first encyclical was ... on what many considered the somewhat surprising subject of the simple divinity of human love, including the sanctity of erotic love.

IMHO, Benedict XVI has his own kind of warmth. It is true that he is not as outgoing as JPII was, but those who have met him all say that he is very kind and gentle. How can one who dwells on the subject of love not be warm?

17 posted on 04/18/2008 6:22:46 AM PDT by ELS (Vivat Benedictus XVI!)
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