Pope’s sudden resignation sends shockwaves through Church Content from GistUs.com Read more at: http://www.gistus.com/21586/popes-sudden-resignation-sends-shockwaves-church
Pope Benedict stunned the Roman
Catholic Church including his closest advisers earlier today when he
announced he would stand down in the first papal abdication in 700
years, saying he no longer had the mental and physical strength to run
the Church through a period of major crisis. Church officials tried to
relay a climate of calm confidence in the running of a 2,000-year-old
institution but the decision could lead to one of the most uncertain and
unstable periods in centuries for a Church besieged by scandal and
defections.
Several popes in the past, including
Benedict’s predecessor John Paul, refrained from stepping down even when
severely ill, precisely because of the confusion and division that
could be caused by having an “ex-pope” and a reigning pope living at the
same time. This could create a particularly difficult problem if the
next pope is a progressive who influences such teachings as the ban on
women priests and artificial birth control and its insistence on a
celibate priesthood.
The Church has been rocked during
Benedict’s nearly eight-year papacy by child sexual abuse crises and
Muslim anger after the pope compared Islam to violence. Jews were upset
over rehabilitation of a Holocaust denier and there was scandal over the
leaking of the pope’s private papers by his personal butler.
In an announcement read to cardinals in Latin, the universal language of the Church, the 85-year-old said:
Well aware of the seriousness of this act, with full freedom I declare that I renounce the ministry of Bishop of Rome, Successor of St Peter. As from 28 February 2013, at 20:00 hours (1900 GMT) the See of Rome, the See of St. Peter will be vacant and a conclave to elect the new Supreme Pontiff will have to be convoked by those whose competence it is.
At a news conference, chief Vatican
spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said the pope did not fear a possible
“schism” in the Church, with Catholics owing allegiances to a past and
present pope in case of differences on Church teachings. The pope, known
for his conservative doctrine, stepped up the Church’s opposition to
gay marriage, underscored the Church’s resistance to a female priesthood
and to embryonic stem cell research.
But Lombardi said Benedict, who is
expected to go into isolation for at least a while after his
resignation, did not intend to influence the decision of the cardinals
who will enter a secret conclave to elect a successor. A new leader of
the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics could be elected as soon as Palm
Sunday, on March 24, and be ready to take over by Easter a week later,
Lombardi said.
He indicated the complex machinery of
the process to elect a new pope would move quickly because the Vatican
would not have to wait until after the elaborate funeral services for a
pope. The decision shocked many throughout the world, from ordinary
believers, to politicians to world religious leaders. Alessandra
Mussolini, a parliamentarian who is granddaughter of Italy’s wartime
dictator said:
This is disconcerting, he is leaving his flock. The pope is not any man. He is the vicar of Christ. He should stay on to the end, go ahead and bear his cross to the end. This is a huge sign of world destabilization that will weaken the Church.
The announcement even caught the pope’s
elder brother Georg Ratzinger, off guard, indicating just how well-kept a
secret it was. Ratzinger told reporters in Germany that he had been
“very surprised” and added: “He alone can evaluate his physical and
emotional strength.” Lombardi said Benedict would first go to the papal
summer residence south of Rome and then move into a cloistered convent
inside the Vatican walls. It was not clear if Benedict would have a
public life after he resigns.
The last pope to resign willingly was
Celestine V in 1294 after reigning for only five months, his resignation
was known as “the great refusal” and was condemned by the poet Dante in
the “Divine Comedy”. Gregory XII reluctantly abdicated in 1415 to end a
dispute with a rival claimant to the papacy.
Lombardi said Benedict’s stepping aside
showed “great courage”. He ruled out any specific illness or depression
and said the decision was made in the last few months “without outside
pressure”. Joseph Curran, professor of religious studies at Misericordia
University in Dallas, Pennsylvania, said the modern medicine prolonging
the life of people had posed difficulties for institutions whose
leaders usually rule for life.
“His resignation is a tremendous act of
humility and generosity,” he said. “A man who lives up a position of
authority because he can no longer adequately exercise that authority,
and does so for the good of the Church, is setting a wonderful example,”
he said. But Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, secretary to the late Pope
John Paul, who suffered through bad health for the last decade of his
life, had a thinly veiled criticism of Benedict. John Paul stayed to the
end of his life as he believed “you cannot come down from the cross,”
Dziwisz told reporters in Poland.
While the pope had slowed down recently –
he started using a cane and a wheeled platform to take him up the long
aisle in St Peter’s Square – he had given no hint recently that he was
mulling such a dramatic decision. Elected in 2005 to succeed the
enormously popular John Paul, Benedict never appeared to feel
comfortable in a job he said he never wanted. He had wished to retire to
his native Germany to pursue his theological writings, something which
he will now do from a convent inside the Vatican.
The resignation means that cardinals
from around the world will begin arriving in Rome in March and after
preliminary meetings, lock themselves in a secret conclave and elect the
new pope from among themselves in votes in the Sistine Chapel. There
has been growing pressure on the Church for the cardinals to shun
European contenders and choose a pope from the developing world in order
to better reflect parts of the globe where most Catholics live and
where the Church is growing.
John Paul was only 58 when he was
elected in 1978 – 20 years younger than Benedict when he was elected –
and some commentators said the resignation would likely convince the
cardinals to elect a younger man.
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