Catholic News Service
 
 
VATICAN LETTER Feb-15-2013  

Pope Benedict's resignation and the mystery of the  missing encyclical
 
 
 
By Francis X. Rocca
_Catholic News Service_ (http://www.catholicnews.com/index.html) 

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Benedict XVI's historic  decision to resign at 
the end of February has astonished and perplexed the world  in many ways, not 
least because of what might be called the mystery of the  missing 
encyclical.

In December, the Vatican spokesman, Jesuit Father  Federico Lombardi, said 
that Pope Benedict's fourth encyclical would be released  in the first half 
of 2013. Treating the subject of faith, the encyclical would  complete a 
trilogy on the three "theological virtues," following "Deus Caritas  Est" 
(2005) on charity, and "Spe Salvi" (2007) on hope. 

Then, on the day  after the pope's announcement, Father Lombardi announced 
that Pope Benedict  would not issue another encyclical after all. 

The news was surprising  because it suggested that Pope Benedict, a former 
professor who has placed a  priority on his teaching role as pope, had 
abandoned the most prominent teaching  project of his pontificate just before 
its 
completion. This, even though Father  Lombardi said that the pope had 
pondered resignation for several months, and the  Vatican newspaper reported 
that 
he first considered the move in March  2012.

It was hardly plausible that so prolific an author might be  suffering from 
writer's block, even given the deteriorating "strength of mind  and body" 
he cited in announcing his resignation. Three days after that  announcement, 
Pope Benedict delivered a highly structured, 46-minute long public  talk, 
without a prepared text and only occasionally consulting his  notes.

But unlike an off-the-cuff speech, papal encyclicals are not  one-man 
productions. Though the pope ultimately determines their content, they  are 
typically the fruit of much behind-the-scenes collaboration with Vatican  
officials and often with outside consultants as well. Pope Benedict's last  
encyclical, "Caritas in Veritate" (2009), appeared more than a year after its  
expected date, reportedly because of complications in this process. It is 
likely 
 that such was the case again this time. 

Father Lombardi has suggested  that the former Pope Benedict might 
eventually publish the document under his  own name, in which case it would not 
rank 
as part of the papal magisterium. But  it is at least as likely that his 
successor will take up and finish the task.  

Popes tend to honor their predecessors' commitments, which is why  everyone 
assumes that the next pope will travel to Rio de Janeiro for World  Youth 
Day in July. Indeed, Pope Benedict's own first encyclical, "Deus Caritas  
Est," was started by his predecessor, Blessed John Paul II. 

If the next  pope does finish the encyclical on faith, there is reason to 
think that his  predecessor will be happy to have left it incomplete.

A major papal  document whose production bridged the transition between the 
two pontificates  could serve as a reassuring sign of continuity after Pope 
Benedict's practically  unprecedented move. At the same time, since the 
next pope would undoubtedly  stamp the encyclical with his distinctive 
priorities and style, it would  exemplify Pope Benedict's ideal of reform as 
"innovation in continuity" with  church tradition. 

Pope Benedict has been careful throughout his  pontificate to distinguish 
his personal writings from his papal documents, by  publishing his 
bestselling series of "Jesus of Nazareth" books under the name  Joseph 
Ratzinger. The 
knowledge that the next encyclical was the work of more  than one pope would 
further underscore its impersonal character and reinforce  the idea, which 
Pope Benedict has conveyed so dramatically through his  resignation, that 
the papacy is an office distinct from any individual who might  hold it.

Only three days before he announced he would step down, the  outgoing pope 
said something that has acquired a more personal meaning in light  of that 
historic event. Commenting on the First Letter of Peter to an audience  of 
seminarians, Pope Benedict noted internal evidence that the apostle and first  
pope was not the epistle's sole author. 

"He does not write alone, an  isolated individual, he writes with the help 
of the church," Pope Benedict said.  "Peter does not speak as an individual, 
he speaks 'ex persona Ecclesiae,' he  speaks as a man of the church ... He 
does not want to say only his word, but  truly carries in himself the waters 
of the faith, the waters of all the church,  and precisely this way gives 
fertility, gives fecundity and is a personal  witness who opens himself to 
the Lord."

-- 
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