The crucial test for the pontificate of Benedict XVI

http://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/articles.cfm?id=302


by Phil Lawler, February 17, 2009

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Years from now, I feel certain, Church historians 
will look back upon the early months of 2009 as 
the crucial test of this pontificate. Four years 
after he assumed the throne of St. Peter, Pope 
Benedict has run into a solid wall of resistance 
to his pastoral plans. That resistance is evident 
not only in the secular world but also within the 
Church (especially in Europe) and even inside the 
Vatican. The Holy Father's response to this 
challenge will define the remainder of his papacy.

The late Pope John Paul II defined his mission-- 
first as Archbishop Krakow, then as Bishop of 
Rome-- to lead the Church to the full 
implementation of the teachings of Vatican II. 
When he was elected to succeed the beloved Polish 
Pontiff, the former Cardinal Ratzinger embraced 
the same mission, while adding his own distinct 
perspective. The message of Vatican II, Pope 
Benedict insisted, must be interpreted using a 
"hermeneutic of continuity," recognizing that the 
Council was not a radical break from enduring Catholic tradition.

During his years as prefect of the Congregation 
for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Ratzinger 
had often been depicted as a stern authoritarian. 
That image did not fit the man, and when he 
became Pope the world saw the real Benedict XVI: 
a gentle, humble, scholarly man, with a strong 
preference for collegial governance and an 
extraordinary willingness to hear opposing 
arguments. This was not the cartoonish 
Panzerkardinal his critics had depicted. Although 
he could not match the personal charisma and 
"stage presence" that John Paul II enjoyed, 
Benedict XVI proved remarkably popular.

Nevertheless, the Pope's enemies always knew 
where he stood. Disaffected clerics and 
dissenting theologians-- those who espoused the 
"hermeneutic of rupture" that the new Pope 
condemned-- waited nervously for Benedict to make 
his move. If the man they had mocked as "God's 
Rottweiler" ever threatened their positions, they 
were ready to mount the resistance.

In 2007, when Pope Benedict issued Summorum 
Pontificum, reviving universal access to the 
traditional Latin liturgy, the resistance became 
palpable. Liturgists, theologians, and bishops-- 
even the entire French bishops' conference-- 
lobbied openly to dissuade the Pope from 
releasing his motu proprio. When the document was 
promulgated over their objections, many bishops 
issued their own diocesan guidelines, clearly at 
variance with the Pope's orders, restricting the 
use of the traditional liturgy. Still, this was a 
quiet form of resistance; the bishops who 
effectively forbade celebration of the 
traditional Latin Mass still claimed to be following the Pope's orders.

In January, when the Pope lifted the 
excommunications of four bishops from the 
traditionalist Society of St. Pius X (SSPX), the 
resistance burst out into the open. The 
traditionalist order broke with Rome because of 
disagreements over the work of the Second Vatican 
Council. Pope Benedict has made it clear that the 
teachings of Vatican II will not be rescinded, 
but there is room for discussion about the proper 
interpretation of those teachings, and he was 
ready to engage the SSPX in that discussion, 
confident that the entire Church could benefit 
from a lively debate. But any plans for such a 
discussion were quickly submerged beneath the 
avalanche of criticism set off by Bishop Richard 
Williamson's ugly anti-Semitic remarks, and now 
the debate Pope Benedict hoped to begin seems 
even less remote than it was a month ago. Indeed 
there are conspiracy theorists on both sides of 
the Catholic theological spectrum who suspect 
that the furor was deliberately instigated, in an 
effort to scuttle the Pontiff's plan.

Whether or not it was a conspiracy, there can be 
no doubt that the Vatican bureaucracy fumbled the 
announcement of Pope Benedict's bid for 
reconciliation with the SSPX. Nor could there be 
much doubt that conflicts within the Roman Curia 
were reaching a critical mass. Influential 
prelates were more or less openly blaming each 
other for the debacle; there were credible 
reports of angry shouting confrontations between curial cardinals.

Suddenly, the pontificate of Benedict XVI 
appeared vulnerable. And at this strategic moment 
the Vatican announced the appointment of a 
controversial conservative priest to become auxiliary bishop of Linz, Austria.

Ordinarily the appointment of an auxiliary bishop 
is a routine move, which secular media outlets 
ignore. An auxiliary bishop has very little 
control over Church policy, after all. But the 
Pope's selection of Father Gerhard Maria Wagner 
outraged Austria's liberal clerics-- and since 
liberals dominate the Austrian clergy, their 
voices could not be dismissed. Now the emboldened 
resistance began issuing demands. Father Wagner 
should not be ordained a bishop, said the most 
influential Catholic priests of Austria. Soon the 
entire Austrian hierarchy-- meeting under the 
aegis of no less an authority than Cardinal 
Christoph Schönborn, the Archbishop of Vienna, 
the former student of Professor Ratzinger, the 
general editor of the Catechism of the Catholic 
Church-- had joined in open criticism of the 
papal appointment. Father Wagner had asked the 
Pope to withdraw his nomination. And the Pope had agreed.

So now let's take stock of the situation. In 
Austria-- a country where dissident Catholics 
have nearly seized control of the Church-- a 
papal appointment has been rejected. At the 
Vatican, there is open feuding among the leaders 
of the Roman Curia. In the mass media there is a 
steady drumbeat of criticism of Pope Benedict and his policies.

This, I repeat, is the decisive hour of this 
pontificate. If there was ever a time to pray for the Pope, this is it!

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