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– Twenty-First Century Crusades?
Story 14
Prediction
8: The Vatican demonstrating intolerance for the Muslims in
Europe. Possibility of the Pope speaking negatively toward the
Muslim faith, its beliefs and the Qur’an. He could conceivably
call for a new "crusade" against Islam.
World: Pope Concerned About Islam,
Orthodoxy In First 100 Days
By Jeffrey Donovan
Today marks 100 days since the election of Pope Benedict XVI as leader
of the world’s 1 billion Roman Catholics. Prior to his elevation to
Saint Peter’s throne, the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger had a
reputation as a strict doctrinarian with a cool approach concerned more
with religious dogma than engaging with the world and its problems. But
Benedict has so far surprised on this count. He has proven to be a
capable communicator on pressing issues, such as terrorism and tensions
with the Islamic world, and improving Catholic ties with the Eastern
Orthodox churches.
| “You know the old
political adage, ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend.’ And in
that sense, I think Ratzinger perceives a friend in Islam in the
struggle against secularism," Allen says. "On the other hand, he
also does not want Europe to become an outpost of Islamic
culture. |
Prague, 27 July 2005 (RFE/RL) -- As head of the Vatican’s office on
doctrine, the former Cardinal Ratzinger was once a feared figure,
winning the nicknames “Enforcer of the Faith” and “God’s pitbull.”
But since he became Pope Benedict on 20 April, the personal warmth of
the German theologian has taken many people by surprise -- as has his
focus on Islam and his attempt to bridge the 1,000-year gap between
Roman Catholicism and the Orthodox faith of the East.
Robert Moynihan is editor-in-chief of “Inside the Vatican,” a
monthly magazine focused on the Holy See. He says Cardinal Ratzinger’s
image was once “distant, icy, and Germanic.” Now, he says, Pope Benedict
comes across as a sort of compassionate grandfather figure, such as when
he addressed worshippers at the Vatican shortly after attacks killed 56
people on 7 July in London.
“We pray for the people killed, for those injured and for their loved
ones," Moynihan says. "But we even pray for the attackers: Lord, touch
their hearts. To those who foment feelings of hate and carry out such
revolting terrorist acts, I say: God loves life, which he created, not
death. And I say, stop, in the name of God.”
Publicly praying for terrorists is not exactly in vogue these days. But
Moynihan says it is certainly in keeping with Benedict’s chief concern,
Christianity, in which forgiveness and compassion figure prominently.
“We are dealing with tormented individuals [the terrorists] and with a
tormented social and political world right now. He wants healing. And he
wants healing personally and socially and geopolitically."
“We are dealing with tormented individuals [the terrorists] and with a
tormented social and political world right now. He wants healing. And he
wants healing personally and socially and geopolitically," Moynihan
says. "He was quite opposed to the Iraq war. I spoke with him personally
in February of 2003, and the war, as you recall, began in March 2003.
And I said, ‘How about the Iraq war?’ And he said, ‘It would not be
just. It’s not a just war.’”
Benedict, meanwhile, has quietly begun waging what he sees as his own
“just war.” In a Vatican address two days before his election as pope,
Ratzinger declared war on “moral relativism” -- that is, the widespread
view in the West that there is no absolute truth, that morality is
subjective.
Moynihan says the pope seeks to restore what he sees as Europe’s lost
Christian tradition. He says Benedict is expected to address that issue
in his first major writing -- called an encyclical -- likely to be
published by yearend.
“He’ll talk [in the encyclical] about the church and its sacramental
life, in the sense of bringing the transcendent down and incarnating
through the sacraments in daily human life, in things like baptism and
the Eucharist," Moynihan says. "And he’ll use that as a springboard to
talk about the necessity of human beings having that transcendent
dimension in their cultural and political life, and if they don’t have
it, he will argue that they’re missing something so profound that they
lose their way -- they lose their identity.”
But Benedict’s war won’t simply be a philosophical battle. John Allen is
the author of an acclaimed biography of Ratzinger as well as a new book,
“The Rise of Benedict XVI.”
“We have already seen some political translations of that idea [the war
on moral relativism]," Allen tells RFE/RL from Rome. "The pope, for
example, very enthusiastically backed the Italian bishops in their
campaign to defeat an Italian referendum on in vitro fertilization. The
church actually won that battle. He also very wholeheartedly backed the
Spanish bishops in their attempt to block a gay marriage law in Spain,
which of course the church lost. And I think what this indicates is that
this is not just a philosophical exercise for Pope Benedict XVI, but
it’s also a very practical political issue. I think it means this is
going to be a very engaged pontificate, above all in what we in the West
call the ‘cultural issues.’”
In waging his war on relativism, Benedict appears to be looking to the
Orthodox churches as an ally. His predecessor, John Paul II, made great
efforts to reunite the main branches of Christianity, which split in
1054. But few expected Benedict to follow him so strongly, as Allen
points out.
“This is a man who in his 24 years as head of the doctrinal office in
the Vatican was always very concerned about reinforcing Catholic
identity and Catholic distinctiveness, and therefore was never seen as a
particularly ecumenical figure," Allen says. "And yet, he has made it
abundantly clear that he sees this as a top priority of his pontificate
and, above all, he wants to improve relations with the Orthodox Church,
trying to heal this millennium-old split.”
Ironically, the pope also has another ally in his battle against
secularism: Islam. But Allen says that for Benedict, as a cardinal who
has expressed opposition to Muslim Turkey joining the European Union,
relations with Islam are a balancing act.
“You know the old political adage, ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend.’
And in that sense, I think Ratzinger perceives a friend in Islam in the
struggle against secularism," Allen says. "On the other hand, he also
does not want Europe to become an outpost of Islamic culture. So he’s
going to try to walk this fine line between the sort of philosophical
and theological common cause with Islam, while at the same time try to
some extent to hold Islam at arm’s length in his own backyard, which is
Europe.”
Benedict will take his message to Europe at large in August, when he
makes his first papal trip outside Italy. Hundreds of thousands of
faithful are expected to greet him in Cologne, Germany for World Youth
Day commemorations on 16-21 August.
That yearly event was always a major fixture on the schedule of the
media-savvy John Paul. This year, it looks set to be the first major
test of Benedict’s appeal to Europeans to return to their Christian
roots.
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