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<http://www.thetrumpet.com/index.php?page=article&id=2615> &id=2615

 


Benedict's War Cabinet 



By Ron Fraser 

November/December 2006





 


In contrast to the pope's obvious call to Europe to step up to the battle
against extremist Islam that he broadcast from Bavaria in September, Pope
Benedict XVI has been far less overt in publicizing the revolutionary
changes he is making within the Vatican bureaucracy.

Commentators have mentioned the frailty of old age that inflicts this pope.
They in turn note his thin and reedy voice and his comparative lack of
charisma compared to his predecessor, John Paul II. But all seem to agree on
one thing: the power of this pope's tremendous intellect.

So it is that, having bided his time, Benedict has recently begun, with
typical German thoroughness-one could even say administrative
brutality-trimming the fat in the governing body of the Catholic Church, the
Curia, and placing hand-picked troops in his front line. This is a pope
gearing up for battle. Benedict is preparing to wage war with any who would
challenge his word on dogma, on liturgy, and on any of his initiatives at
promoting a great religious revival within Rome's collective global
congregation of over 1 billion souls. With the benefit of John Paul's papacy
having laid the groundwork, Benedict XVI is even now preparing for his
clarion call to revive the church's mission to catholicize the world.

Consider the wide-ranging changes Benedict has already enacted over the past
few months, with no sign of these changes slowing down.

Starting with his own replacement in the office of prefect of the
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Benedict turned to an
interesting choice by appointing then-archbishop of San Francisco, William
J. Levada, in May last year. The two had worked closely together during John
Paul's pontificate. Benedict would know full well that Levada, known as shy
and retiring in demeanor, would not challenge the pope on any matter of
theological consequence. Thus Benedict guarantees that he remains sole and
final authority on Catholic doctrine.

Then this March, the pope started his downsizing program by first
eliminating two senior positions in the Curia. He accepted the resignation
of Japanese Cardinal Stephen Fumio Hamao, who had been president of the
Pontifical Council for Migrants, and reappointed Archbishop Michael
Fitzgerald from president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious
Dialogue to apostolic nuncio to Egypt. In the process, Benedict merged four
existing pontifical councils into two.

There followed a change in the post which is key to Vatican relations with
the developing world. The office of the Congregation for the Evangelization
of the Peoples, formerly held by Italian Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, was given
to the archbishop of Bombay, Indian Cardinal Ivan Dias.

In July, the Vatican's longstanding press officer, Opus Dei layman Joaquin
Navarro-Valls, was replaced by Jesuit priest Federico Lombardi, director
general of Vatican radio and television.

In September, with the retirement of Cardinal Edmund Szoka from the post of
president of the Vatican City governate, the Vatican's secretary of
relations with states, Archbishop Giovanni Lajolo, moved into that role,
thus leaving the Vatican's key foreign-policy office vacant. That position
was later filled by French Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, a Moroccan native
with an understanding of the Muslim world.

Also in September, following the papal visit to Bavaria, Cardinal Angelo
Sodano, having served for the past 15 years in the powerful position of
Vatican secretary of state, was replaced by Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone,
Ratzinger's prior trusted deputy in his former position as the head of the
Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. It is believed the pope
considers that Betone will more effectively serve Benedict's goals of
changing the Curia into an administrative body better tuned to facilitating
his global mission to catholicize the masses.

All these moves are, according to a recent report, designed to help achieve
the pope's vision of enabling the Vatican as a "church headquarters to be
both a more holy and a more efficient entity" (Time, September 11). This
certainly bespeaks a "holy" Roman imperial vision, underwritten by typical
German motivation for thoroughgoing efficiency.

Dual posts now under consideration by Pope Benedict for review and change
are that of vicar of Rome and head of the Italian Bishops Conference, both
currently held by the veteran Cardinal Camillo Ruini.

Benedict is also mulling over the need to place a man in charge of the
Vatican purse strings whom he can trust. Although it may come as a shock to
some, particularly in Italy, the fact that Benedict is currently considering
a fellow German for this position should surprise few who have watched his
power plays. The Italian magazine Panorama recently reported that Benedict
has in mind appointing the former head of the German Central Bank, Hans
Tietmeyer, to that key treasury position. As Time observed, should that
appointment become a reality, it "would shake things up almost as much as a
German pope" (ibid.).

As we have consistently advised, watch Rome, and watch Berlin. The state of
the world for the immediate future will vitally hinge on strategies being
currently worked out in these two key capital cities.

Pope Benedict certainly lit the fuse to the Middle East tinderbox during his
now infamous speech in Regensburg, Bavaria. Islam will soon reap the
whirlwind, Iran having pushed its foreign policy to the point of stimulating
a powerful papal response. The pope is busy assembling his war cabinet
within the Curia in Rome. The battle will be joined in one final great
crusade. That titanic battle is about to begin. 2007 will powerfully
demonstrate that reality. Watch Rome-watch Berlin! 

 



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