Google+
 

BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 23/08/2021 11:16
Autore
Stampa | Notifica email    
08/04/2013 14:30
OFFLINE
Post: 26.539
Post: 9.025
Registrato il: 28/08/2005
Registrato il: 20/01/2009
Administratore
Utente Master


Here is a thoughtful and rather lengthy article I found on a blog I was seeing for the first time, and whose author is a member of the US-based Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate. He runs a Marian broadcast operation called airmaria.com...Here, he offers a historical and philosophical perspective on the figures of St. Francis, Benedict XVI and Pope Francis that has been totally absent from most media reporting and commentary these days.

The Franciscan papacy:
Rebuilding or demolition?

From the blog MARY VICTRIX
by Fr. Angelo Mary Geiger
April 5, 2013

The life of St. Francis is subject to much sentimental hype because of his love for creation and his identification with the poor. The saccharine images on holy cards and sculptures in gardens don’t help the matter. And Zeffirelli’s hippie-revolutionary film version of the saint is positively infuriating. Pope Francis seems to be subject to the same kind of misinterpretaion.

The media and the Catholic propagandists on the left and the right will continue to mythologize about St. Francis and Pope Francis’s selection of the name. The Pope himself has said the reason for the choice of name has to do with “peace” and “poverty.” Oh, those two words: two little threads out of which the propagandists will weave a rope to hang us all with.

Sandro Magister puts it well:

In the pseudo-Franciscan and pauperist mythology that in these days so many are applying to the new Pope, imagination runs to a Church that would renounce power, structures, and wealth and make itself purely spiritual.

But it is not for this that the saint of Assisi lived. In the dream of Pope Innocent III painted by Giotto, Francis is not demolishing the Church, but carrying it on his shoulders. And it is the Church of St. John Lateran, the cathedral of the bishop of Rome, at that time recently restored and decorated lavishly, but made ugly by the sins of its men, who had to be purified. It was a few followers of Francis who fell into spiritualism and heresy.

I confess that all I know about St. Francis and the early problems that afflicted his order have come from Benedict XVI’s various statements and catecheses over the years about the mendicant orders, St. Francis himself and his 13th-century successor St. Bonaventure, who was the subject of Joseph Ratzinger’s dissertation for his Habilitation, and precisely in the context of Bonaventure opposing the ‘spiritualist’ movement that some Franciscans had undertaken under Joachim of Fiore. I will try to compile a ‘bibliography’ of these most illuminating texts if only to place Francis of Assisi in the right perspective, as Benedict XVI sought to do during his Pontificate, i.e. to rescue him from the universal and false hagiography that completely ignores his imitation of Christ, in favor of the poster-boy from the 13th century for New Age peaceniks, enviromaniacs and pauperists.][DIM]

Rorate Caeli, as anyone familiar with the blog would expect, approves of this assessment and is critical of the Good Friday homily, given in the Holy Father’s presence, of Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa, a Capuchin Franciscan. The preacher talked about evangelization and the need to get rid of accretions to the life of faith that undermine the reception of the message. He said:

As happens with certain old buildings. Over the centuries, to adapt to the needs of the moment, they become filled with partitions, staircases, rooms and closets. The time comes when we realize that all these adjustments no longer meet the current needs, but rather are an obstacle, so we must have the courage to knock them down and return the building to the simplicity and linearity of its origins. This was the mission that was received one day by a man who prayed before the Crucifix of San Damiano: “Go, Francis, and repair my Church” .

It seems to me that both Sandro Magister and Fr. Cantalamessa are reacting to extremists: Magister, to those on the left who want to use Pope Francis as an excuse to reject Tradition and traditions; Cantalamessa, to those who regard Tradition as static.

[I took a much more uncharitable view of Cantalamessa’s Good Friday homily as an execrable model of opportunism and unctuous sycophancy to the new Pope, which would be understandable per se, except that he strongly implies that Pope Francis’s predecessor had in any way wanted to keep all the unnecessary ‘incrustations', as Benedict XVI called them a number of times, and had not always advocated a return to the essentials in everything. And cultivating beauty in liturgy – in its external forms as well as its interior content - for the greater glory of God is an essential that does not conflict in any way with ‘simplicity’. As far as that goes, specifically, I do not see that Pope Francis simplified the fairly ‘elaborate’ liturgy followed by Benedict XVI for the Good Friday liturgy in its compelling central portion dedicated to the Veneration of the Cross. In fact, he even went as far as following Benedict XVI’s act of full prostration before the altar at the start of the entire liturgy – an action that when first performed by Benedict XVI in 2006 was hailed as ‘a first in papal liturgy’.

Another point I wish to make about Fr. Cantalamessa: His Good Friday homilies during Benedict XVI’s Pontificate were marked by a topical opportunism that necessarily called media attention to his homilies - usually with neuralgic controversies like The Da Vinci Code, or the so-called 'Gospel of Judas’, or citing a Jewish friend who likened the secular persecution Francis of the Church today to the anti-Jewish persecution in pre-war Nazi Germany - in a way that is so un-Franciscan for a Capuchin, precisely because he ends up calling attention to himself and the nerve-touching points he chooses to highlight rather than on the Good Friday liturgy.]


St. Francis’s love for poverty was almost immediately misinterpreted, even by his own friars, and turned into an ideology. The Order was almost suppressed in the time of St. Bonaventure because of the internal strife that resulted from this misinterpretation. But the problem was that the Franciscan charism is both radically evangelical and radically ecclesial.

St. Francis was a reformer, who wished to have for himself and his friars; “nothing of this world.” But he distinguished himself from other evangelical movements that were anti-ecclesial by his radical obedience to the See of Peter. The rebuilding engaged in by St. Francis had this dual characteristic of restoration and reform.

[ [His work was primarily preaching to the faithful and the outside world in words and in example, never preaching to the Pope himself, whose role as Universal Pastor and spiritual leader of the Church he never contested.]

I believe the real difficulty with understanding what is going on here is that St. Francis, Pope Emeritus Benedict and Pope Francis represent a more sophisticated way of thinking that will never be appreciated by the pundits who communicate principally by soundbites, blogposts and tweets. The zealots will continue to paint two-dimensional caricatures of these men on the banners they wave in our faces.

[It’s also a slavish adherence to the so-called principle that news has to be anything which generates and exacerbates conflict. So for the slaves of media primacy, it is never just enough to celebrate Pope Francis, because there is no conflict in just doing that - he must be celebrated by portraying him as the virtuous antithesis of everything Benedict XVI was, which means scrubbing out instantaneously from their consciousness anything good they may ever have thought about Benedict XVI (and in this, the Francis sycophants have been led so egregiously by the cardinals who elected Francis) – and therefore, effectively, of any good that Benedict XVI may have done. Even if, before March 13, 2013, they may have been among the most vocal in praise of the now emeritus Pope.]

St. Francis’s choice of poverty was not a judgment on any one else, but it did have an evangelical character. People complain about the expression, wrongly attributed to St. Francis, but in my view, accurately reflective of his thought and actions: ”Preach the gospel always and sometimes use words.” They say that this is an excuse not to be evangelical. But that is not the point of the expression at all.

Franciscanism is a way of life before it is an apostolate, and it is principally by the evangelical life that St. Francis and his followers rebuild the Church. Franciscans are also committed to the apostolate of the preaching of penance. But they are not committed by their charism to teaching, catechizing and theologizing, like the Dominicans, though none of that is excluded from their work.

Their apostolic calling is principally to edify their listeners by speaking briefly about “vice and virtue, punishment and glory” (Rule, c. 9), and to deliver the power of that message by their way of life.

In the Rule, St. Francis commanded the friars not to judge those who lived in luxury, but to “judge and despise themselves” (c. 2). On the other hand, St. Francis did not hesitate to preach against the vanity of the world, even to the great and mighty.

One time, when the soon to be Emperor Otto passed by Rivo Torto on the way to his coronation, St. Francis refused to go and watch him pass. And while he also urged the other friars to ignore his passing, he did send one friar to meet the cortege and ordered him to announce to Otto how vain and transitory was the glory of this world.

In other words, St. Francis defies being put into anybody’s box. He was not an ideologue. He was not a revolutionary. But he was a reformer. He was not against the establishment—certainly, never against the magisterium. He did not despise the wealthy or the structures of power. But neither did he believe that power was the answer. Nor was he blind to the problems within the Church and in the world or afraid to confront them. He preached penance to whoever would listen, no matter what their station, and no matter what it cost him.

Pope Innocent’s dream of St. Francis holding up the Lateran was neither an affirmation nor a condemnation of the magnificence of the Basilica. It was a defense of the radical message of the Gospel, handed on through the only Church Christ founded, which he built upon the Rock of Peter. The Lateran Basilica is the Pope’s cathedral.

However, as I have already pointed out, St. Francis was never against magnificence in the sacred liturgy, though he certainly was not Benedictine in what he prescribed for the friars, who, though obliged to the common recitation of the Divine Office, were not obliged to its choral recitation like the Benedictines. The provisions of St. Francis for the Liturgy had to do with the reforms of the Fourth Lateran Council, not with monastic disciplines.

There have always been marked differences in the Benedictine and Franciscan approach to liturgy. Both make the liturgy a labor of love, and a work of beauty, but the Franciscan approach has been characterized by simplicity. The fact of the matter is that through the same provisions by which St. Francis forbade the friars from having property or any permanent residence, he also limited their ability to conduct magnificent liturgies.

St. Francis, then, as a “rebuilder” took Catholic tradition and developed it, according to Pope Benedict, as “an innovation of God” in order to respond to the needs of the times and to champion conciliar reform.

Pope Emeritus Benedict

I do not think it can be stressed enough that Benedict XVI’s views, however far to the left or right they may seem to lean, are those of a thinker, teacher and pastor, not that of a change agent or zealot.

Kierkegaard considered the gaining of disciples to be “the worst of calamities,” because of the ideas and projects that will end up being promoted by well-meaning disciples in the name of the master. Those on the left will quote Benedict out of context on matters of ecumenism, religious liberty and the interpretation of scripture, while those on the right cherry-pick his writings for criticisms of Vatican II and to support their crusade to end the liturgical reform.

On the question of rebuilding the Church, Benedict XVI presents us with the same kind of problem. Ecclesiastical reform is in a sense a “project,” but Pope Benedict deplores the idea the Church being treated as a “project” rather than the locus and means of encountering the Person of Jesus Christ.

But if Father Cantalamessa is criticized for saying that there are parts of the building of the Church that need to be “knocked down,” Joseph Ratzinger has nearly the same thing in 1982 in Principles of Catholic Theology, where he frankly discusses the problems with the Council, yet continues to affirm that it should not be abandoned:

The task is not, therefore, to suppress the Council but to discover the real Council and to deepen its true intention in the light of the present experience. That means that there can be no return to the Syllabus, which may have marked the first stage in the confrontation with liberalism and a newly conceived Marxism but cannot be the last stage. In the long run, neither embrace nor ghetto can solve for Christians the problem of the modern world. The fact is, as Hans Urs von Balthasar pointed out as early as 1952, that the “demolition of the bastions” is a long-overdue task.

Several things here are worthy of note in order to place his call for the “demolition of bastions” in context.

First, Benedict XVI talks about the “real Council,” an idea he reiterates in very clear terms during his last address concerning Conciliar reform, just three days after the announcement of his resignation.

Second, the distinction between the “real Council” and the “virtual Council,” corresponds to the opposition of the “hermeneutic of continuity” to the “hermeneutic of rupture,” a notion that was already in use by Ratzinger around the time that the above passage was written, but which became one of the most characteristic ideas of his whole pontificate.

Third, the “syllabus” to which he refers is the Syllabus of Errors of Pius IX, which condemns the religious errors of the modern era and to which Ratzinger opposed Gaudium et Spes, the “Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World,” and the teachings of the Second Vatican Council on religious liberty and inter-religious dialogue as a “counter-syllabus” (not “anti-syllabus,” as some incorrectly translate the term).

That Pope Benedict continued to hold to this basic position into his pontificate is clear from the famous “hermeneutic of continuity address,” in which he reaffirmed that the discontinuity between pre- and post-conciliar thought had nothing to do with principle, but with application. (Read the address to see exactly why that is the case.)

So for Ratzinger/Benedict, the reform, or rebuilding of the Church, mandated by Vatican II, clearly does involve a bit of renovation, which must begin with, to put it frankly, “demolition.”

Clearly, the position of the Church in respect to democracy and religious liberty has changed. Very clearly, Pope Benedict’s support for the removal of the walls that had prevented religious dialogue and a more participatory liturgy are principles to which he held onto until the end of his pontificate. But he never pretended that any of this is easy or simple. [Just as the Church and her Popes, echoing Christ himself, have never said being Christian would ever be easy or simple! There are many ‘ways’ of being Christian, depending on one’s circumstances – whether one is a pauper or a prince or a Pope. But each Christian must begin with himself, becoming a friend of Jesus and following his commandment of love, from which all else flows, in continuing and constant acts of conscience, knowing that man is forever in need of continuing purification which one gains by actual grace and by sacramental grace. To be Christian is nothing less than to try to be like Christ. Surely, that is not easy, but as Benedict XVI often said, the saints have shown us it is possible, In other words, ‘be saints’, as he has often exhorted young people.]

He has bewailed the “spiritual desertification” that occurred as a result of the misinterpretation of the Council, and the “disasters,” “problems” and “suffering,” that resulted from the closing of seminaries and convents and from the banalization of the liturgy. And so there is a question of removing the right walls and partitions, themselves additions, without damaging the structure and design of the Church itself.

Pope Benedict uses another metaphor that reflects the complexity of the “demolition/rebuilding problem in his book The Spirit of the Liturgy in which he compares the pre-conciliar liturgy to an ancient beautiful fresco that, though undamaged, had become covered over with additions and whitewash. For the faithful, it was “largely concealed beneath instructions for an forms of private prayer.” The Council removed and cleaned from the fresco all the build-up and revealed its true form and colors. “But since then the fresco has been endangered by climatic conditions as well as by various restorations and reconstructions.”

Like Christ speaking to St. Francis, “rebuild my Church,” Pope Benedict tells us to get to work and stop the destruction of the liturgy, not by returning it to the state of “whitewash,” but by treating the liturgy with “a new reverence” and “a new understanding of its message and reality.”

So demolition/rebuilding or cleaning/restoration is not a simple broad-brush endeavor, but a selective process that can only be accomplished by renewed reverence and the proper understanding of what the conciliar reforms set out to accomplish.

[However, to limit the sense of Benedict XVI’s ‘rebuilding’ to just the liturgy is reductive. The emphasis on liturgy is because ‘lex orandi, lex credendi’ –the way we pray and worship God reflects how we believe in him and his law. Because we live his law as he wants us to do, we are able to pray and worship him as we ought to do.]

Pope Francis

Partisans make more of the differences between Pope Benedict and Pope Francis than is warranted, just as partisans can make more of the differences between monks and mendicants, Dominicans and Franciscans, St. Thomas, the Angelic Doctor, and St. Bonaventure, the Seraphic Doctor, than is really justified.

All of these varieties are characterized more by what unites them than by what separates them. That is not to say that their distinguishing characteristics are unimportant. Quite the contrary, what distinguishes them has to do with charism, with the specific movements of the Holy Spirit that are not accounted for by any “antecedent rule.” Now there are diversities of graces, but the same Spirit (1 Cor 12:4).

The institutional and the charismatic will always be in tension, yet great charismatic influences are dangerous movements, because radical change easily precipitates crisis. It is easy to conceive law and grace to be in opposition. It is a very old heresy, because the interaction between God and the human free agent inherently mysterious.

The law does not save us, nor can it supplant the legitimate domain of prudence, but neither can grace and charism ever be lawless. These are not problems that black and white reactions are going to resolve or that the conventions of left vs. right, modernist vs. traditionalist are going to adequately describe.

The “calamity of discipleship” is the tendency to be reactionary. Reactionaries create black hat vs. white hat mythologies to correspond to their black and white ideologies. Then they put the appropriate hats on the hero they worship and the villain they despise, ascribing the opposing ideologies to the protagonist and antagonist. They create simple narratives that everyone repeats until all are clear on who can be trusted and who cannot.

In all of this symbolism is essential. Did he wear the cape or did he not wear the cape? What about the shoes? Whose liturgy is more magnificent? Whose is more accessible? To be sure the symbols are important. They say something significant, as I am sure both Pope Benedict and Pope Francis have been deliberate in their choices of style. But we should not let the extremists define the terms of the conversation and dazzle us with sophistries about contradictions where only contraries exist.

One example of this the opposition posited between a beautiful liturgy and one that is simple. Since when is magnificence the only measure of beauty? The Cistercians simplified the Benedictine Liturgy, considering too much ornamentation in their Churches to be both contrary to poverty and to recollection. Did that make their liturgy not beautiful? Did it invalidate the older Benedictine approach? Of course not.

Franciscans took it another step. Was St. Francis condemning the monastic tradition? Certainly not. But the aesthetic that measures beauty in terms of magnificence is a school of thought and a preference of taste, not the teaching of the Church.

We have an almost unprecedented grace of having two Successors of St. Peter alive at the same time. Not only have they taken the complimentary names of Benedict and Francis, but they also symbolically represent these two schools of thought in a way that I believe is just as providential and inspired by the Holy Spirit as both Pope Emeritus Benedict and Pope Francis have claimed that this papal transition has been.

In the end there is no contradiction. The rebuilding of the Church does require a bit of demolition, as both Popes Benedict and Francis affirm. We all have to be careful not to go to the extremes and to fall into facile left/right dichotomies. We cannot retreat into old comfort zones and protect ourselves behind a forest of secondary and tertiary precepts. But neither can we imagine ourselves to be in an antinomian paradise and then blame our delusion on the Holy Spirit.

In the end the Benedict and Franciscan pontificates are in fundamental agreement. The perennial principles will never change. But as Pope Francis has said* we cannot allow “pre-established patterns” to end up “closing our horizon to the creative action of God,” or as Pope Benedict has put it, quoting the great Franciscan St. Bonaventure: “Christ’s works do not go backwards, they do not fail but progress”.

*[The entire quotation from Pope Francis, taken from the first GA he held on Wednesday of Holy Week, was this: “Following, accompanying Christ, remaining with Him requires a 'stepping outside;, a stepping beyond. Stepping outside of ourselves, of a tired and routine way of living the faith, of the temptation to withdraw into pre-established patterns that end up closing our horizon to the creative action of God”.

Obviously, he was not talking about Popes. But if we take his words in a general sense, might they not also be applied, for example, to the simple matter of wearing the mozzetta and stole - ceremonial signs of episcopal and papal ministry - as one of those pre-estyablished patterns that would ‘close off our (anyone’s) horizon to the creative action of God’? Because in this case, the horizon is Jorge Bergoglio's personal horizon, which certainly remains open to the creative action of God now that he is Pope as it was before he became Pope - whether he wears traditional accessories or not! Were previous Popes somehow less open to God’s creative action because they chose to follow ‘pre-established patterns’ which have no intrinsic demerit at all and which, in serving a symbolic purpose for the dignity of the office of Pope, not for the person who happens to be Pope, are therefore far from self-glorifying or self-indulgent?

Someone recently cited an anecdote about Pope St. Pius X who privately complained about having to ‘dress up’ as Pope but complied with tradition nonetheless out of duty and obedience. And of course, he went on to be a saint. John Paul II did not seem to care at all what he was given to wear = he wore even the lurid ‘technicolor dreamcoat’ devised for him to open the Great Jubilee with his usual good grace (as Benedict XVI would wear the atrocious spatter-dyed chasuble that the Austrian bishops gave him to wear in Mariazell back in 2007. In both cases, both Popes put up with having to wear the 'ridiculous' liturgical vestments inflicted on them - and they dhowed genuine humility in acquiescing to the dpubtless well-intended if tasteless and absurd 'stage costume' concept of liturgical wear.

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 03/04/2014 07:36]
Nuova Discussione
 | 
Rispondi
Cerca nel forum

Feed | Forum | Bacheca | Album | Utenti | Cerca | Login | Registrati | Amministra
Crea forum gratis, gestisci la tua comunità! Iscriviti a FreeForumZone
FreeForumZone [v.6.1] - Leggendo la pagina si accettano regolamento e privacy
Tutti gli orari sono GMT+01:00. Adesso sono le 19:32. Versione: Stampabile | Mobile
Copyright © 2000-2024 FFZ srl - www.freeforumzone.com