Better be cautious about this. If Pope Francis is as  pro-Liberation 
Theology
as the Latin American priests think he is, things would not stop at  the
amelioration of the sufferings of the poor. Contemporary "Marxism"
can be Marxist-Gramscism, what we would call  Political  Correctness
gone amok, or Left wing multi-culturalism, and that would not be
good at all. However, this is a caution only.  Much too soon
to tell how Francis' pontificate will turn  out.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------
 
 
 
AP
 
 
Leftist  priests: Francis can fix church 'in ruins'
 
 
 
By _JESSICA  WEISS_ (http://bigstory.ap.org/author/jessica-weiss) 


— Apr. 28 , 2013

 
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — A new pope from Latin America  known for 
ministering to the poor in his country's slums is raising the hopes of  
advocates of liberation theology, whose leftist social activism had alarmed  
previous pontiffs. 
Prominent liberation theologian Leonardo Boff said Pope Francis  has what 
it takes to fix a church "in ruins" and shares his movement's  commitment to 
building a church for the world's poor. 
"With this pope, a Jesuit and a pope from the Third World, we  can breathe 
happiness," Boff said Saturday at a Buenos Aires book fair. "Pope  Francis 
has both the vigor and tenderness that we need to create a new spiritual  
world." 
The 74-year-old Brazilian theologian was pressured to remain  silent by 
previous popes who tried to draw a hard line between socially active  priests 
and leftist politics. As Argentina's leading cardinal before he became  pope, 
Francis reinforced this line, suggesting in 2010 that reading the Gospel  
with a Marxist interpretation only gets priests in trouble. 
But Boff says the label of a closed-minded conservative simply  doesn't fit 
Francis. 
"Pope Francis comes with the perspective that many of us in  Latin America 
share. In our churches we do not just discuss theological  theories, like in 
European churches. Our churches work together to support  universal causes, 
causes like human rights, from the perspective of the poor,  the destiny of 
humanity that is suffering, services for people living on the  margins." 
The liberation theology movement, which seeks to free lives as  well as 
souls, emerged in the 1960s and quickly spread, especially in Latin  America. 
Priests and church laypeople became deeply involved in human rights and  
social struggles. Some were caught up in clashes between repressive governments 
 
and rebels, sometimes at the cost of their lives. 
The movement's martyrs include El Salvador's Archbishop Oscar  Romero, 
whose increasing criticism of his country's military-run government  provoked 
his assassination as he was saying Mass in 1980. He was killed by thugs  
connected to the military hierarchy a day after he preached that "no soldier is 
 
obliged to obey an order that is contrary to the will of God." His killing  
presaged a civil war that killed nearly 90,000 over the next 12 years. 
The case for beatification of Romero languished under popes  John Paul II 
and Benedict XVI due to their opposition to liberation theology,  but he was 
put back on track to becoming a saint days after Francis became  pope. 
Scores of other liberation theologians were killed in the  1970s and 1980s. 
Six Jesuit teachers were slaughtered at their university in El  Salvador in 
1989. Other priests and lay workers were tortured and vanished in  the 
prisons of Chile and Argentina. Some were shot to death while demanding land  
rights for the poor in Brazil. A handful went further and picked up arms, or  
died accompanying rebel columns as chaplains, such as American Jesuit James  
Carney, who died in Honduras in 1983. 
While even John Paul embraced the "preferential option for the  poor" at 
the heart of the movement, most church leaders were unhappy to see  
intellectuals mixing doses of Marxism and class struggle into their analysis of 
 the 
Gospel. It was a powerfully attractive mixture for idealistic Latin  
Americans who were raised in Catholic doctrine, educated by the region's army 
of  
Marxist-influenced teachers, and outraged by the hunger, inequality and bloody 
 repression all around them. 
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, hundreds of Argentine  priests were 
affiliated with a movement that proclaimed Christian teaching  "inescapably 
obliges us to join in the revolutionary process for urgent radical  change of 
existing structures and to reject formally the capitalistic system we  see 
around us ... We shall go forward in search of a Latin American brand of  
socialism that will hasten the coming of the new man." 
John Paul and his chief theologian, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,  drove some 
of the most ardent and experimental liberation theologians out of the  
priesthood, castigated some of those who remained, and ensured that the bishops 
 
and cardinals they promoted took a wary view of leftist social activism. 
Yet much of the movement remained, practiced by thousands of  grassroots 
"base communities" working out of local parishes across the  hemisphere, 
nurtured by nuns, priests and a few bishops who put freedom from  hunger, 
poverty 
and social injustice at the heart of the Church's spiritual  mission. 
Hundreds of advocates at a conference in Brazil last year  declared 
themselves ready for a comeback. 
"At times embers are hidden beneath the ashes," said the  meeting's final 
declaration, which expressed hopes of stirring ablaze "a fire  that lights 
other fires in the church and in society." 
Boff and other advocates are thrilled that this new pope spent  so much 
time ministering in the slums, and are inspired by his writings, which  see no 
heresy in social action. 
"The option for the poor comes from the first centuries of  Christianity. 
It is the Gospel itself," said then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio  during a 
2010 deposition in a human rights trial. He said that if he were to  repeat 
"any of the sermons from the first fathers of the church, from the 2nd or  
3rd century, about how the poor must be treated, they would say that mine 
would  be Maoist or Trotskyite." 
Msgr. Gregorio Rosa Chavez, the auxiliary bishop of San  Salvador, said 
Romero and Francis have the same vision of the church. "When he  says 'a church 
that is poor and for the poor,' that is what Monsignor Romero  said so many 
times," he said. 
Rosa Chavez said neither was among the most radical of  churchmen. 
"There are many theologies of liberation," he said. "The pope  represents 
one of these currents, the most pastoral current, the current that  combines 
action with teaching." He described Francis' version as "theologians on  
foot, who walk with the people and combine reflection with action," and  
contrasted them with "theologians of the desk, who are from university  
classrooms." 
John Paul II himself embraced the term "liberation theology,"  but was also 
credited with inspiring resistance to the communist regime in his  native 
Poland, and was allergic to socialist pieties. 
For 30 years, the Vatican has been seeding Latin America,  Africa and Asia 
with cardinals "who have tended to be, adverse, to put it  kindly, to 
liberation theology," said Stacey Floyd-Thomas, a professor of ethics  and 
society 
at Vanderbilt University Divinity School. 
In Brazil, Sao Paulo Archbishop Odilo Scherer, widely  considered a 
possible pope, told the Estado de S. Paulo newspaper last year that  liberation 
theology "lost its reason of being because of its Marxist ideological  
underpinnings . which are incompatible with Christian theology." 
"It had its merits by helping bring back into focus matters  like social 
justice, international justice and the liberation of oppressed  peoples. But 
these were always constant themes in the teachings of the Church,"  Scherer 
said. 
In 1984, Ratzinger put Boff in Galileo's chair for a Vatican  inquisition 
over his writings, eventually stripping him of his church functions  and 
ordering him to spend a year in "obedient silence." Nearly a decade later,  in 
1993, the Vatican pressured him again, and he quit the Franciscan order. 
Now Boff says Francis has brought a "new spring" to the global  church. 
"Josef Ratzinger. He was against the cause of the poor,  liberation 
theology," Boff said. "But this is from last century. Now we are  under a new 
pope."

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