Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Professor Ratzinger Returns to Ratisbon

Pope Benedict’s recent speech – by now widely known, if not notorious – contained some important observations. But they aren’t the ones that made it into the press and gave him continuous media coverage for several days.

After a heavily academic treatment of “dehellenization” over the centuries, mostly since the Protestant Reformation (meaning efforts to disconnect the Christian message from Greek philosophical and theological roots), the Pope reached an important conclusion: the discipline of theology has been sidelined by a perilous narrowing in the contemporary understanding of reason. He remarked:

“The intention here is… of broadening our concept of reason and its application.… We will succeed in doing so only if reason and faith come together in a new way, if we overcome the self-imposed limitation of reason to the empirically verifiable, and if we once more disclose its vast horizons…. A reason which is deaf to the divine and which relegates religion into the realm of subcultures is incapable of entering into the dialogue of cultures.”

Instructive and insightful observations.

But the Pope’s remarks which have been reported by the media far overshadowed the main point of his speech. Strangely, the Pope seems to feel blindsided by it all. He seems unclear what to do about the sometimes furious reactions to his by-the-way citation of a medieval Byzantine Emperor on the tangential subject (tangential to his speech) of Christian – Muslim relations and the use of violence in religion.

I don’t know whether to be surprised at the Pope’s surprise, or to be blasé about the whole flap. Why he quoted the entire sentence under attack is beyond me, since it wasn’t at all germane to his point. He could have said,

[The Emperor Manuel II Paleologus] addresses his interlocutor with a startling brusqueness on the central question about the relationship between religion and violence in general, referring to Mohammed’s “command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.” (The sections in regular print are original, the italics my editing.)

That would have omitted the part claiming that “what Mohammed brought that was new, …you will find things only evil and inhuman,” which even the Pope characterizes as “startling brusqueness.” Why retain those hostile, inaccurate, offensive words?

I think the most likely explanation (and the one I prefer to believe) is that Benedict XVI, ever the teacher, was offering a scrupulously complete citation in a university lecture. He practiced teacherly forms for decades, and they continue to shape his style.

Alternatively, he was testing the reaction to a difficult and unpopular opinion, which he claims he does not hold himself, by hiding behind somebody else’s words.

In any case, there is no room for ex-Professor Ratzinger to be naïve on this point. He must weigh his words more carefully. He is no longer a university professor. He has a new job.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

(1) I agree with you and with the Pope that questions concerning faith and reason demand critical debate, particularly in our highly bifurcated 21st century society; and (2) I would like to agree with you that in providing an example from medieval Byzantium that the Pope was simply engaging in the academic discourse to which he was accustomed. However, regarding this latter point, I'm afraid some cynicism intervenes. As an astute academic, the Pope knows how to be 'clever'; indeed he is likely quite skilled in this regard. How could he not have anticipated the volatile reaction to his remarks, and the subsequent further eroding of Christian - Muslim dialogue? As such, it is difficult to believe that the inclusion of comments by the Byzantine Emperor was not an intentional means of trying with subtlety to reveal the Pope's assesment of Mohammed, if not the whole of Islam. There are countless examples within Christian history which the Pope could have cited with far more effective impact.
There is a difference between being 'clever' and being 'wise'. In this instance the Pope was not 'wise'. He surely is capable of such.

4:27 AM  
Blogger Bo said...

I would have to agree with the anonymous poster too. The Pope is skilled in oratory speech, having been the Defender of the Faith for John Paul for those many years. And, being a college professor and a philosopher extraordinaire, I think he knew what he was saying.

The Pope has been on some sort of new crusade, I believe, to return the Catholic Church to its more fundamental roots whereby Catholics will be known for what they are against, far more than what they stand for. Look how the Pope was responded to the priest abuse scandal. Instead of being for sexual purity, he is against homosexuality. Instead of being for accountability, he is against seminary students who support gay culture.

He has even stated quite clearly his belief that the Catholic Church has lost its own integrity and he would rather have fewer priests in the priesthood and provide a guiding light of Catholic reformation that to have more priests. This is esp. significant given the low turnout of new priests in today's Catholic seminary.

I think we'll be hearing a lot more from him in the near future. And he'll be less like John Paul, and for many of us who thought "he" was bad we are now discovering that Ratzinger is worse.

Look for him next to blame the Jews for killing Christ.

10:29 AM  
Blogger Bo said...

By the way, it's great to read your new posts. You've been gone from posting for awhile, welcome back!

I have another blog you might want to explore. The church where I am serving has let me start one as long as I promise not to mention my "other" blog.

You can find it at http://cresskillucc.blogspot.com

10:31 AM  

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