In his own footsteps: Benedict XVI: from professor to pontiff.It has been a year since Pope Benedict XVI Places
The new pope has intrigued, and to some extent, baffled many. Much, for example, has been written about 1968 as marking a turning point in Ratzinger's life and thinking. Why did he leave a major university long celebrated for theological faculty (and wrangling!) for the fledgling University of Regensburg The University of Regensburg, situated in Regensburg, in Bavaria, Germany, was founded on July 18 1962 by the Bavarian parliament. Bavaria's fourth university saw its first lectures during the 1967-68 winter semester , initially housing a faculty of Law and Business Sciences as ? Was it the peaceful charm of his native Bavaria or the lure of a less disruptive student body? Student unrest at Tubingen in 1968 shouldn't be confused with the violent protests that took place in Paris and Chicago that year, and theology students who attended Ratzinger's lectures hardly resembled the young Maoists who disrupted classes in other disciplines at Tubingen. Contrary to some news reports, he was not heckled. Even in 1968, academic decorum DECORUM. Proper behaviour; good order. 2. Decorum is requisite in public places, in order to permit all persons to enjoy their rights; for example, decorum is indispensable in church, to enable those assembled, to worship. still prevailed in Germany. In a centuries-old gesture of respect, students still knocked on their desks each time their professor entered and left the lecture hall lecture hall n → sala de conferencias; (UNIV) → aula lecture hall lecture n → amphithéâtre m . Occasionally, such knocking might erupt mid-lecture if the professor said something the students found particularly gratifying grat·i·fy tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies 1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please. 2. . But the tradition also allowed for students to hiss if they strongly disagreed, and on at least two occasions that semester, lecturing before some two hundred would-be Catholic theologians, Professor Ratzinger was hissed. I can't remember exactly what he said that earned him that peculiar German expression of academic displeasure. In fact, when I was recently asked what I remember from his course, the thing that came to mind was his statement--as startling star·tle v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles v.tr. 1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start. 2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten. to most Catholics today as it was then--that the Orthodox churches resemble the church of the first millennium more closely than does the Roman Catholic Church Roman Catholic Church, Christian church headed by the pope, the bishop of Rome (see papacy and Peter, Saint). Its commonest title in official use is Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. . Did memory serve me correctly? Luckily, I did not have to depend solely on my own powers of recollection, or even on personal notes. At semester's end, with Ratzinger's permission, seminarians at the university produced a 152-page single-spaced typescript of his lectures for purchase. It is important to keep in mind what was happening in the church at that time. Only a few months before Ratzinger's lectures, in July 1968, Paul VI Paul VI, 1897–1978, pope (1963–78), an Italian (b. Concesio, near Brescia) named Giovanni Battista Montini; successor of John XXIII. Prepapal Career The son of a prominent newspaper editor, he was ordained in 1920. had issued Humanae vitae Humanae Vitae (Latin "Of Human Life") is an encyclical written by Pope Paul VI and promulgated on July 25, 1968. Subtitled "On the Regulation of Birth", it re-affirms the traditional teaching of the Roman Catholic Church regarding abortion, contraception, and other issues , reaffirming the ban on all forms of artificial birth control. The firestorm of criticism that erupted was especially brutal in Germany, where the secular press skewered the pope. Even national conferences of bishops that called for a respectful reading of the encyclical took pains to point out that it was not infallible, and that Catholics, following their consciences, could come to different conclusions. Those were divisive times, and in reaction to the upheavals of 1968, Ratzinger is widely thought to have repudiated much of what he had professed to believe when he was a peritus Peritus (Latin for "expert") is the title given to Roman Catholic theologians present to give advice at an Ecumenical council. At the most recent, the Second Vatican Council, some periti (theological adviser) of decidedly progressive views at the Second Vatican Council Noun 1. Second Vatican Council - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms Vatican II Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church . But the lecture notes from his class reveal more continuity in the new pope's theological thinking than divergence, and they afford insight into the complexity of his positions on any number of thorny ecclesial Ec`cle´si`al a. 1. Ecclesiastical. issues. While the students' critical reactions to his lectures may have prompted him to change employers, they did not cause him to abandon his basic ideas. The postconciliar situation Ratzinger introduced his 1968 lectures by surveying the state of the church and of ecclesiology ec·cle·si·ol·o·gy n. 1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the nature, constitution, and functions of a church. 2. The study of ecclesiastical architecture and ornamentation. in general. After centuries of being a "stepchild step·child n. 1. A child of one's spouse by a previous union. 2. Something that does not receive appropriate care, respect, or attention: "Demography has a reputation for being the stepchild of . . . " of canon law canon law, in the Roman Catholic Church, the body of law based on the legislation of the councils (both ecumenical and local) and the popes, as well as the bishops (for diocesan matters). , in the first decades of the twentieth century the church itself had been rediscovered as an object of faith and theological reflection. In particular, Ratzinger celebrated the fact that the biblical image of the church as the body of Christ
The Body of Christ is a term used by Christians to describe believers in Christ. Jesus Christ is seen as the "head" of the body, which is the church. had received renewed scholarly and official attention. Vatican II Noun 1. Vatican II - the Vatican Council in 1962-1965 that abandoned the universal Latin liturgy and acknowledged ecumenism and made other reforms Second Vatican Council Vatican Council - each of two councils of the Roman Catholic Church was thought to be the harvest of that rediscovery. Yet only three years after the end of the council, much of the council's work on ecclesiology was being distorted, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Ratzinger. Steering clear of specifics and without naming names, the future pope declared that the church was in "crisis" and that faith in the church was too often being replaced by an all too worldly belief in progress. The widespread postconciliar ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates. fer·ment n. 1. in the church was not a sign of life and hope, Ratzinger argued, but of contempt for tradition. A middle ground between traditionalism and a naive faith in progress was desperately needed. Ratzinger was thinking of Kung when he complained that church reformers were concentrating on matters of secondary importance. By focusing on the need to change the church's institutional structure and organization, these theologians were taking a sociological view and losing sight of the church as a "mystery." The root of the problem, Ratzinger thought, lay in the tendency to define the church faddishly as the "people of God," while neglecting other, more authentic ecclesial "models." Specifically, he urged a return to thinking first of the church as the "body of Christ." Ratzinger conceded that at the council the bishops had exhibited a "certain aversion" for body-of-Christ theology. For example, the entire second chapter of the Dogmatic Constitution on the Church was devoted to understanding the church as the "people of God." Not surprisingly, many people thought people-of-God language was the council's "basic declaration" on the nature of the church. Ratzinger objected strongly to this interpretation, insisting that the New Testament church understood itself primarily as the body and bride of Christ The Bride of Christ is a metaphor for the Church, Ecclesia. The image originates from the Old Testament prophets, who described Israel as God's bride, for example in Isaiah 54:5. , and that the council had not in any way denied that. He went on to offer compelling interpretations of the origins and development of the church's ecclesial structures, including the papacy. Jesus & the church In his lectures, Ratzinger agreed with Kung that Jesus preached to the "lost sheep of the house of Israel The House of Israel is a Jewish community in Ghana. This ethnic group claim to be one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. History of Jews in Ghana It is believed that Judaism and Jewish communities had established a presence in Ghana since ancient times. " (Mt 10:5), and that he did not intend to found a church. The Pentecost narrative presents the church as a creation of the Holy Spirit, as well as the earthly work of Jesus. However, Ratzinger accentuated the new situation described in the book of Acts. Unlike Kung, or later liberation theologians, Ratzinger was not ready to make the historical Jesus--as drawn by scholars from the synoptic syn·op·tic also syn·op·ti·cal adj. 1. Of or constituting a synopsis; presenting a summary of the principal parts or a general view of the whole. 2. a. Taking the same point of view. b. Gospels--the canonical criterion for all subsequent Christian development and practice. Catholic theology has traditionally read the gospel narrative where Jesus names Peter the rock on which he will build the church (Matt 16:18) as constituting the church's foundation. Conscious of questions raised regarding the historicity his·to·ric·i·ty n. Historical authenticity; fact. historicity Noun historical authenticity of that particular narrative, Ratzinger situated the church's foundation not in Jesus' singling out Peter--or even his calling the Twelve--but in the Last Supper Last Supper, in the New Testament, meal taken by Jesus and his disciples on the eve of the passion. Jesus broke bread and passed a cup of wine among the disciples, identifying himself with the bread and the wine and linking the meal to his impending death on the , where Jesus links the themes of the paschal lamb (Ex 12), new covenant This article is about the theological concept of the New Covenant. For other uses, see New Covenant (disambiguation). The term New Covenant (Hebrew: ברית חדשה, (Jer 31), and the suffering servant who gives himself up "for many" (Is 53). That "for many" (Mk 14:24) prevents the church from becoming simply a select community of the righteous, a community that condemns the wayward masses to perdition. The Ratzinger of 1968 acknowledged that some Catholic apologists misconstrued the body of Christ image by merely identifying the church with Christ, thus discounting the church's historical failings. Ratzinger, however, connected the body of Christ and bride of Christ imagery, seeing the church as a bride who had not always lived up to her calling. To put it another way, the church, by the grace of God a community of saints, is also a company of sinners. With language reminiscent of protestant theologian Paul Tillich, Ratzinger did not absolve ab·solve tr.v. ab·solved, ab·solv·ing, ab·solves 1. To pronounce clear of guilt or blame. 2. To relieve of a requirement or obligation. 3. a. To grant a remission of sin to. the church of the ambiguities that bedevil all religion, where one can find "the most awful fanaticism Fanaticism See also Extremism. Adamites various sects preaching a return to life before the fall. [Christian Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 8] assassins Moslem murder teams used hashish as stimulus (11th and 12th centuries). , self-alienation, and human degradation." And with a nod to Jesuit Henri de Lubac Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details. , he even conceded that heretics and atheists provide a service when they criticize dubious religious thinking and practice. As Ratzinger put it bluntly: "The institutional church does not coincide with the church's essence." Early structures in the church Ratzinger was familiar with the voluminous literature produced by biblical scholars on the evolution of church structures. He agreed with Kung that there is an absence of cultic terminology and titles for church leaders in the New Testament: nowhere, for example, are the community's leaders called priests. Rather, the terms used are apostolos (one who is sent), episkopos (supervisor), and presbyteros (elder). Ministry is viewed in prophetic rather than priestly categories. At the same time, though, he rejected the arguments made by those demanding democratic reforms. Reformers tended to base their demands on 1 Corinthians, arguing that the early church was a kind of "charismatic-pneumatic anarchy or democracy." Ratzinger disagreed. In the Gospels, he argued, Jesus exercises authority based on a profound sense of being sent, and then personally authorizes his disciples, deputizing them to preach in his name. Similarly, Ratzinger thought the separation of prophetic preaching and cult in the Judaism of Jesus' day was a false development. One of the distinctive characteristics of the New Testament was how it reunited apostleship and prophecy. Unlike the Jewish priesthood, leadership in the first-century church was not inherited. The New Testament describes apostles and prophets as chosen by the Holy Spirit and marked by a "charismatic calling," not elected by popular vote. Ratzinger acknowledged that in that first generation, the number of apostles was greater than "the Twelve," but argued that by the second generation, when Luke and Acts were written, the church had begun to identify apostleship with "the Twelve," to signify that the apostolic age was over. Similarly, in a move to maintain unity in the late first-century church, Acts (20:17-35) declares the elders (presbyteroi) who led the Jewish-Christian churches, and the bishops (episkopoi) of the Gentile-Christian churches were identical in authority. Presbyters and bishops alike are successors to the apostles. From the very beginning, spiritual leadership existed in the church and took a variety of forms. Church structures in the first century were fluid and open, and well into the second century leadership was charismatic and not restricted to bishops and presbyters. As late as the third century, Ratzinger pointed out, the laying on of hands Noun 1. laying on of hands - the application of a faith healer's hands to the patient's body faith cure, faith healing - care provided through prayer and faith in God 2. was only one way of entering into the circle of leaders; suffering for the faith (martyria) also demonstrated one's possession of the Spirit. Looking at the overall historical evolution of church leadership, Ratzinger granted that things could have turned out otherwise. But he disagreed with Kung and Edward Schillebeeckx that further evolution was inevitable or necessary. The church is not a "laboratory for experiments," he argued, and there are limits to innovation: "The fact that a historical development could have turned out differently does not justify the conclusion that one is free to begin all over again." In short, development was not decline. The collegial col·le·gi·al adj. 1. a. Characterized by or having power and authority vested equally among colleagues: "He . . . episcopate At the same time, Ratzinger acknowledged that sometimes ecclesial development needs correction, or at least a change in emphasis. For example, New Testament references to presbyters and bishops leading local churches are always in the plural. It is only at the beginning of the second century that Ignatius of Antioch 1. ^ See "Ignatius" in The Westminster Dictionary of Church History, ed. Jerald Brauer (Philadelphia:Westminster, 1971) and also David Hugh Farmer, "Ignatius of Antioch" in The Oxford Dictionary of the Saints (New York:Oxford University Press, 1987). 2. refers to a single bishop serving as pastor of a local church, assisted by presbyters and deacons. Over time, this new structure, the so-called "monarchial episcopate," spread to all the churches throughout the Roman Empire. At the local level, the bishop embodied the unity of the church. At the level of the universal church, bishops constituted a collectivity, or, to use a term drawn from the argot ar·got n. A specialized vocabulary or set of idioms used by a particular group: thieves' argot. See Synonyms at dialect. [French. of imperial Rome, an ordo. In the third century, in both East and West, a bishop would be elected by the local community; then the bishops of the province would lay hands on him. Ordination was not a matter of receiving, but of being received into, the ordo, what today we call the college of bishops. Symbolic of this collegiality col·le·gi·al·i·ty n. 1. Shared power and authority vested among colleagues. 2. Roman Catholic Church The doctrine that bishops collectively share collegiate power. , a new bishop's ordination still consists of three bishops laying hands on him. This, to Ratzinger's mind, was no mere juridical Pertaining to the administration of justice or to the office of a judge. A juridical act is one that conforms to the laws and the rules of court. A juridical day is one on which the courts are in session. JURIDICAL. formality. It represents the fact that for an individual bishop to exercise his office rightly, he must remain in communion with his brother bishops. While each bishop embodies the apostolicity of the church, it is the whole college of bishops that symbolizes its catholicity. Clearly, Ratzinger has long held a high theology of the episcopate: "While the leadership of an individual church is in a certain sense monarchic, the unity and catholicity of the universal church rests upon the lateral bond of the college of bishops." In its first thousand years, in the "old church," as Ratzinger phrased it, episcopal office had a horizontal structure. The relationship of the various churches to one another was described with the Trinitarian language of unity amid equality. Collegiality was regulated regionally by metropolitan bishops, and across the empire by the five patriarchs of Rome, Constantinople, Antioch, Alexandria, and Jerusalem. Unfortunately, Roman Catholics no longer have a strong sense of that horizontal bond. Ratzinger blamed the subsequent schism between East and West for the impetus toward "papalism" and a consequent devaluation devaluation, decreasing the value of one nation's currency relative to gold or the currencies of other nations. It is usually undertaken as a means of correcting a deficit in the balance of payments. of the episcopate in the West. "Papalism" is not a word one expects to hear from someone who later came to exemplify Catholic orthodoxy. Similarly unexpected was Ratzinger's opinion that "the form of the old church described above has been essentially preserved in the Orthodox churches of the East." Rome has traditionally maintained that its structure and its theology of Roman primacy correspond to the structure and theology of the old church. But, as the Eastern churches see it, Rome has replaced a Trinitarian theology of church with the "profane" concept of "absolute monarchy." Ratzinger has long been forthright in his sympathy for the Orthodox point of view. The Eastern churches have never denied Rome's primacy, but they have interpreted it using Trinitarian categories like unity, plurality, and diversity. From a Trinitarian perspective, unity does not require rigid uniformity, and it excludes a priori a priori In epistemology, knowledge that is independent of all particular experiences, as opposed to a posteriori (or empirical) knowledge, which derives from experience. anything like top-down subordination. Roman Catholic theology, in Ratzinger's view, needs to take this Trinitarian view seriously. As he wrote in a 1977 article on the future of ecumenism ecumenism Movement toward unity or cooperation among the Christian churches. The first major step in the direction of ecumenism was the International Missionary Conference of 1910, a gathering of Protestants. , what was possible for a thousand years cannot be regarded as impossible today. In short, Catholics could learn something about the papacy from the Orthodox. Roman primacy Citing Protestant ecumenist Hans Dombois, Ratzinger compared the modern papacy to a mountain climber who, after managing to reach the summit, now finds he can't get down without breaking his neck or losing face. In the Catholic Church the gradual suppression of the communio of bishops reached its culmination at Vatican I. Conversely, to the detriment of unity, the Orthodox churches have grown increasingly apart, while the disintegration of Protestantism has continued apace. Divided churches have divided the power of Peter's keys among themselves. Here is the heart of the problem facing us today: the Roman church binds but can no longer loosen, other churches loosen but cannot bind. The demise of Christianity as a Jewish movement saw Rome replace Jerusalem, but not as a holy city. The New Testament equates Rome with Babylon (1 Peter 5:13), a city emblematic of exile, indicating that God's people were without a home. In the third century, this tradition was replaced by the idea that the bishops of Rome were successors to Peter, who along with Paul had been martyred and buried in Rome. But even this view of Petrine succession, said Ratzinger, "by no means meant total supervision of the churches by Rome." What Rome claimed was a purely theological and spiritual mandate to care for the unity of all the churches. Yet later in the third century, Rome, as the sole apostolic see in the West, began claiming administrative primacy over the other churches in the West. Soon the idea of an administrative primacy coalesced co·a·lesce intr.v. co·a·lesced, co·a·lesc·ing, co·a·lesc·es 1. To grow together; fuse. 2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite: with the idea that Rome had succeeded Jerusalem. By the fourth century, Ratzinger said, Rome "unlawfully" tried to extend its administrative claims on the East. The East felt compelled to reject such claims, setting into motion tensions that eventually led to the Great Schism in 1054. Ratzinger did not shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task" avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her" the implications of his analysis: "Our task is to separate the many layers that have developed within the idea of primacy. Concretely this means Rome's spiritual claims must once more be separated from its administrative claims. The spiritual unity of the Word and communio does not require administrative unity." Ratzinger's thinking about papal primacy and the need to distinguish between spiritual and administrative unity was influenced by Protestant theologian and Catholic convert Friedrich Heiler. For Heiler, the problem that papal primacy poses for Christian unity was epitomized in the papal tiara--hinting perhaps at why Benedict XVI chose to remove it from his papal coat of arms coat of arms: see blazonry and heraldry. coat of arms or shield of arms Heraldic device dating to the 12th century in Europe. It was originally a cloth tunic worn over or in place of armour to establish identity in battle. and to replace it with a bishop's miter miter bishop’s headdress signifying his authority. [Christian Symbolism: EB VI] See : Authority , and giving context to his decision to delete "Patriarch of the West" from the titles of his office in the 2006 Vatican year-book. Quoting Heiler, Ratzinger essentially concluded his course: Different kinds of elements are symbolized in the three crowns of the papal tiara: the office of the Bishop of Rome, who at the same time is Metropolitan of the Roman church province; that of the Patriarch of the Western Latin church; and that of Primate of all the bishops. A good part of the obstacle standing in the way of Christian unity is the result of mixing these three offices, of expanding the powers of the first level of office to the second and of the first two to the third. If the primacy of the pope would be conceived purely in itself, in its providential function of serving ecumenical unity and would be separated from the changeable functions of Roman Metropolitan and Latin Patriarch, then the historical meaning and divine right of the papacy would also be understandable to its critics. Anyone who desires the unity of the church cannot evade a "center of unity" in the church nor shy away from recognizing this center to reside where--despite all human inconstancy and debasement--de facto it came to be situated in the history of the Christian church: in that community which the two greatest apostles sanctified with their preaching and martyrdom. Presiding in love Pundits have had some difficulty squaring "God's Rottweiler Rottweiler (rŏt`wīlər), breed of sturdy working dog developed from a Roman cattle dog introduced into S Germany more than 1,900 years ago. It stands from 21 3-4 to 27 in. (55.3–68. ," AKA the "Panzerkardinal," with the kinder, gentler "German Shepherd" of Deus caritas est, Benedict's favorably received first encyclical. Do Benedict's 1968 lectures shed any light on the disconnect? Certainly it's a different church from that of 1968. Long gone is anything like widespread faith in progress. But the "traditionalism" and "papalism" Ratzinger criticized in the Catholic Church of those days appear to be alive and well. Not surprisingly, Benedict's encyclical on love does not refer to the church as the "people of God." But it does distinguish between the church's leadership and the church itself, which the new pope describes as a "community of love" and "God's family in the world." More telling is Benedict's subtle reference to the church of Rome as "presiding in love," a phrase taken from St. Ignatius of Antioch that articulates precisely the kind of Roman primacy Orthodox churches can accept. In light of his 1968 lectures, would he dare make use of the loosening power of Peter's keys? He certainly appears to have made a highly significant move in that direction by relinquishing the title "Patriarch of the West." But was it symbolism without consequence or does it portend por·tend tr.v. por·tend·ed, por·tend·ing, por·tends 1. To serve as an omen or a warning of; presage: black clouds that portend a storm. 2. more juridical steps as well? It is unthinkable that the Vatican would forgo its prerogative to appoint bishops in the West, but might it relinquish administrative claims over the East? Up to now, Vatican II's teaching on collegiality has remained little more than a new (some would say empty) word in the Catholic lexicon. Would Benedict consider allowing bishops to exercise real decision making at future synods, and not serve merely as his consulters? Ratzinger's model and measure for what Christianity should look like hews closer to the "old church" of the first millennium than to the church of the first century. This bodes well for Roman Catholic dialogue with the Orthodox, less well for dialogue with most Protestant churches. But any serious move toward the Orthodox, any espousal of a Trinitarian theology of the church that endorses pluralism and equality along with unity, will necessarily have unpredictable repercussions repercussions npl → répercussions fpl repercussions npl → Auswirkungen pl within Roman Catholicism. The church may not be a "laboratory for experiments," but when an institution returns to a tradition after an interval of a thousand years, the ramifications ramifications npl → Auswirkungen pl are bound to be disruptive. The former Professor Ratzinger thus finds himself in the situation of the mountain climber he alluded to in his lectures. Having reached the dizzying heights of the summit, will he risk taking the steps to restore papal primacy to its original function? Or will he be afraid to move, for fear of breaking his neck or losing face? Whatever the direction Benedict strikes out in, it would be hard to find a pope with a better command of history and theology--or one surer of his footing. Ronald Modras is a professor of theological studies at St. Louis University. His most recent book is Ignatian Humanism: A Dynamic Spirituality for the 21st Century (Loyola Press). |
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