New Pope's Name May Signal Focus on Evangelizing Europe
Austin Ruse, C-FAM
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
The German cardinal with the charge of defending Church orthodoxy for
the last 23 years was elected pope of the Roman Catholic Church today by
the College of Cardinals.
The former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, know for
his faithful adherence to Church teaching as well as his influential role
at the Second Vatican Council, emerged as the new pope on the famous
Vatican balcony of St. Peter's Basilica after it was announced he would
take the name of Benedict XVI.
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Culture of Life Foundation board member
Father Joseph Fessio told CNN that the key to the name was not his
predecessor Pope Benedict XIV, but St. Benedict, the co-patron of Europe and the founder of Western monasticism.
Interpreting the name as a nod to St. Benedict would indicate that
the new pope would make defending the embattled faith in Europe central to
his mission, just as St. Benedict and the monastic movement he led were
essential to the spread of Christianity on the Continent in the sixth
century. Some time around 500 A.D., St. Benedict left his studies in Rome
because of the widespread corruption there and eventually formed a
monastic community at Subiaco, 40 miles from the city.
Benedictine
monastic communities became centers of intense scholarship in Europe and
are responsible for preserving and developing much of the Western
tradition on the Continent, a point the pope will likely want to emphasize
to the new European Community, which refuses to acknowledge Europe's
Christian roots.
The name could also be taken as a tribute to Pope Benedict XV, who led
the Church from 1914 to 1922 and oversaw the promulgation of the first
Code of Canon Law. As Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the
Faith, Ratzinger helped produce the second edition of the Code of Canon
Law. Following World War I, Turkish Muslims erected a statue of Pope
Benedict XV in their homeland in honor of his work with refugees during the war, a
sign perhaps that Pope Benedict XVI will pursue peaceful relations with
Muslim countries.
Dissenting Catholics have sought a silver lining in the election by
noting that Benedict XV formally ended the Church's attack on modernism.
Others noted that the new pope is old, 78, and therefore might have
little time to make his mark. But most dissenters responded immediately
with anger. Andrew Sullivan on his blog, www.andrewsullivan.com,
practically called the news an indication that a Church split was
imminent.
"It would be hard to over-state the radicalism of this decision.
It's not simply a continuation of John Paul II. It's a full-scale attack
on the reformist wing of the church. The swiftness of the decision and the
polarizing nature of this selection foretell a coming civil war within
Catholicism. The space for dissidence, previously tiny, is now extinct.
And the attack on individual political freedom is just beginning,"
Sullivan wrote.
Following the announcement, Web sites with articles on St. Benedict,
Benedict XV and Ratzinger were bombarded with traffic, leading to sluggish surfing. An unofficial site devoted to Cardinal Ratzinger,
www.ratzingerfanclub.com, was so deluged with hits that it soon crashed.
The site's owner, Christopher Blosser, commented on the crash on the
popular Catholic blog Open Book. "As you can imagine, the entire world wants to know who this Cardinal is (if they don't already). I'm working on upgrading the bandwidth, but the changes may not go into effect for 24 hours, so you might have to wait to access the site. I apologize. I really should have anticipated this. But then, who knew?" he said.
Prior to entering the Catholic hierarchy, the German-born pope was a
well-regarded theologian with expertise on St. Augustine and was more
comfortable in academia than in the corridors of the Vatican bureaucracy.
Though often labeled a "hardline conservative," Pope Benedict XVI was one of
the leading voices for reform at Vatican II. Under his years of service to
Pope John Paul II he tried several times to resign, but his service was so
valued by the former pontiff that he would not allow Cardinal Ratzinger to leave his Vatican post.
Copyright 2005 Culture of Life Foundation.
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