Pope Benedict Day: The Book

Last week I blogged about Pope Benedict’s forthcoming book about Jesus. The story I referenced had some brief excerpts from the introduction to the book.

Now Zenit has posted all of the preface (or as much of it has been made public).

HERE ‘TIS.

It’s also posted an excerpt from the book’s introduction (it apparently has both an preface and an introduction).

HEREZAT.

One of the interesting things to me about the book is that B16 appears to wish to read the gospels in light of both historical criticism and faith. Too often these approaches have been seen as mutually exclusive, so that one must either accept historical criticism and reject the perspective of faith in Christ or one must accept faith in Christ and therefore reject historical criticism. Pope Benedict proposes to reject this either/or solution in favor of a both/and solution, and I for one am interested in seeing the model that he proposes for how the two approaches can be harmonized.

Here’s a taste of his approach, from a passage in the Preface:

I believe, in fact, that this Jesus — the one of the Gospels — is
a historically honest and convincing figure. The Crucifixion and its
efficacy can only be explained if something extraordinary happened, if
Jesus’ figure and words radically exceeded all the hopes and
expectations of the age.

Approximately twenty years after Jesus’ death, we find fully
displayed in the great hymn to Christ that is the Letter to the
Philippians (2:6-8) a Christology which says that Jesus was equal to
God but that he stripped himself, became man, humbled himself unto
death on the cross and that to him is owed the homage of creation, the
adoration that in the prophet Isaiah (45:23) God proclaimed is owed
only to Him.

With good judgment, critical research asks the question: What
happened in the twenty years after Jesus’ Crucifixion? How was this
Christology arrived at?

The action of anonymous community formations, of which attempts are
made to find exponents, in fact does not explain anything. How would it
be possible for groups of unknowns to be so creative, so convincing to
the point of imposing themselves in this way? Is it not more logical,
also from the historical point of view, that greatness be found in the
origin and that the figure of Jesus break all available categories and
thus be understood only from the mystery of God?

Of course, to believe that though being man He "was" God and to
make this known shrouding it in parables and in an ever clearer way,
goes beyond the possibilities of the historical method. On the
contrary, if from this conviction of faith the texts are read with the
historical method and the opening is greater, the texts open to reveal
a path and a figure that are worthy of faith. Also clarified then is
the struggle at other levels present in the writings of the New
Testament around the figure of Jesus and despite all the differences,
one comes to profound agreement with these writings.

Of course with this vision of the figure of Jesus I go beyond what,
for example, Schnackenburg says in representation of the greater part
of contemporary exegesis. I hope, on the contrary, that the reader will
understand that this book has not been written against modern exegesis,
but with great recognition of all that it continues to give us.

Pope Benedict Day: The Trip

John Allen ("The Other JA") is in the papal entourage for the trip to Turkey and has been blogging extensively about it (allowing for the fact that NCR doesn’t actually seem to call his blog what it is . . . a blog).

HERE’S A GENERAL BACKGROUNDER ON THE CHALLENGES FACING THE POPE.

And there are many updates as well.

CHECK HERE FOR DAILY UPDATES DURING THE TRIP.

I REALLY hope that the pro-papal safety parts of the following quotation from this piece prove to be accurate:

Security experts said that while the pope’s physical safety can almost certainly be assured, it’s much more difficult to protect other Christian targets in the country – churches, Christian-owned businesses and private homes, which could be placed in harm’s way if there is significant negative reaction to the pope’s presence, or his message.

Ely Karmon, an anti-terrorism expert in Herzliya, Israel, said, “I don’t expect threats against the person of the pope. The real risk is actions on the part of Islamic extremists against churches, religious institutes or other significant sites. It would ruin the trip, striking the pope and replying to what these groups considered anti-Islamic declarations at Regensburg.”

Let’s also pray for the safety of other Christians and their churches in Turkey during the trip!

And here’s a non-endorsement endorsement that the Vatican has apparently settled on regarding Turkey’s admission to the EU:

Without the pope having left Rome, the Vatican on Sunday took an enormous step towards making the Turkey trip a success, effectively neutralizing the issue of Turkey’s candidacy to join the European Union.

The ANSA news agency quoted Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone as saying, “I hope that Turkey can fulfill the conditions for entry into the EU and integration into Europe.”

Bertone added that the question of EU membership is a political matter, and that the Vatican will remain neutral.

Suggesting that the Vatican has crafted a corporate response on the EU question, spokesperson Jesuit Fr. Federico Lombardi said much the same thing in an interview with the Turkish news ageny Anatolia.

"Turkey’s membership in the EU depends on its ability to meet the EU criteria. If Turkey fulfils its obligations and meets the requirements of the EU criteria, why shouldn’t it become a full member of the EU?" Lombardi said.

That strikes a significantly different stance from then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger’s opposition to Turkey’s admission prior to his election as pope. Ratzinger told Le Figaro in 2004, “Making the two continents identical would be a mistake. It would mean a loss of richness, the disappearance of the cultural to the benefit of economics.”

I recognize the good diplomatic effects of this announcement, though I don’t think it really signals that the Holy Father is warm to the idea of Turkey joining the EU.

I have somewhat mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I’m heartened to see the Holy See not weighing in on a political issue for once; on the other hand, I think this is one where (due to the religious dimension of the situation) it could do so with significant legitimacy. I don’t know what the effects of including Turkey in the European Union would be, but I could see the presence of a populous Muslim country in the Union serving an advocacy role that would prevent other European countries from doing what they need to in order to deal with the problem of radical Islam in Europe.

That’s something that’ll have to be left in God’s hands. In the meantime,

GET THE STORIES.

MORE ON TURKEY JOINING THE EU.

Pope Benedict Day: Prayer

Yesterday was Torture Day, but today is Pope Benedict Today. As folks likely know, His Most Awesomeness B16 is embarking on a trip to Turkey–which has a lot of folks (me included) nervous. I hope that you will take time to pray for him during this trip, using whatever form of prayer you feel led to use.

In that regard, a reader has a suggestion and writes:

I am extremely concerned about Pope Benedict’s trip to Turkey, especially amid the vast number of fanatical Muslims protesting. And since the Pope said that he is releasing the first 10 chapters of his book since he isn’t sure how much energy or time he has left has only added to my uneasy feeling. Attached is a beautiful prayer (Novena from 11/28 – 12/1) by Bishop Lori.  Would yo please post this on your website or blog. Today I stood outside church and handed out about 100 and people were so pleased to be able to pray the novena for the Pope. And it is such a beautiful prayer.

Here’s the prayer:

SPIRITUAL PILGRIMAGE WITH HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI ON HIS PASTORAL VISIT TO TURKEY

NOV. 28 – DEC. 1, 2006

Heavenly Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name, we humbly ask that you sustain, inspire, and protect your servant, Pope Benedict XVI, as he goes on pilgrimage to Turkey – a land to which St. Paul brought the Gospel of your Son; a land where once the Mother of your Son, the Seat of Wisdom, dwelt; a land where faith in your Son’s true divinity was  definitively professed. Bless our Holy Father, who comes as a messenger of truth and love to all people of faith and good will dwelling in this land so rich in history. In the power of the Holy Spirit, may this visit of the Holy Father bring about deeper ties of understanding, cooperation, and peace among Roman Catholics, the Orthodox, and those who profess Islam. May the prayers and events of these historic days greatly contribute both to greater accord among those who worship you, the living and true God, and also to peace in our world so often torn apart by war and sectarian violence. We also ask, O Heavenly Father, that you watch over and protect Pope Benedict and entrust him to the loving care of Mary, under the title of Our Lady of Fatima, a title cherished both by Catholics and Muslims. Through her prayers and maternal love, may Pope Benedict be kept safe from all harm as he prays, bears witness to the Gospel, and invites all peoples to a dialogue of faith, reason, and love. We make our prayer through Christ, our Lord.  Amen.      

Prayer composed by Bishop William E. Lori,
Knights of Columbus Supreme Chaplain

New Book By Post-Pre-16 On Jesus Soon

For some time it has been known that the pope was working on a book, and now the book’s publication has been announced:

Pope Benedict XVI has completed the first volume of a major scholarly and spiritual book on Jesus of Nazareth, a work he began several years before being elected pope.

"Jesus of Nazareth: From the Baptism in the Jordan to the Transfiguration" is scheduled for a March release in Italian by the Rizzoli publishing house and in German by Herder Verlag.

Announcing the publication Nov. 21, Rizzoli and the Vatican gave reporters copies of the book’s preface and a portion of its introduction.

In the preface, signed "Joseph Ratzinger — Benedict XVI," the pope wrote that for decades he had noticed a growing scholarly distinction between the "historical Jesus" and the "Christ of faith," a distinction that many Christians now accept as accurate.

But, he wrote, if the human Jesus was totally different from the Jesus depicted in the Gospels and proclaimed by the church, what does it mean to have faith in him?

"I trust the Gospels," the pope wrote.

This book is intended to be the first part of a longer work, which apparently would have been published in one volume but is now envisioned for three. The pope wrote:

"Because I do not know how much time and how much strength I will still be given, I have decided to publish the first 10 chapters" as Volume One of "Jesus of Nazareth."

But the book is not an act of the papal magisterium, despite its author’s election to the papal see:

In a Nov. 21 statement, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, said, "The pope says clearly, with his usual simplicity and humility, that this is not a ‘magisterial act,’ but a fruit of his personal research and, as such, can be freely discussed and critiqued.

"It is not a long encyclical on Jesus, but a personal presentation of the figure of Jesus by the theologian Joseph Ratzinger," who was elected pope after beginning the work, Father Lombardi said.

This says volumes about the personal humility of the man who is now pope. To have the spiritual authority to mandate that every sentence in the book be believed by Catholics and to refuse to use it–to refuse to put forward one’s own ideas authoritatively–and to instead openly say that people are free to discuss those ideas and critique them–knowing even that they will meet hostility in many scholarly circles–is the mark of an extraordinarily humble man.

Which is one of the things that makes His Most Awesomeness B16 so most awesome.

Which is why B16 was the right man for the job. It shows that he takes the role of being the servant of the servants of God seriously and does not wish to use the position as a platform for merely advancing his personal preferences and ideas.

What I want to know is how soon Ignatius Press will have an English translation out.

In the meantime,

GET THE STORY.

The Mad Archbishop Speaks

You may encounter some news stories that mention a letter Archbishop Milingo sent to His Most Awesomeness B16.

The press accounts I’ve seen, as usual, tend only to give snippets and their own summaries of what it said and do not provide links to the original source. (The press is notiously bad about showing its work. They want us to trust them to get it right, y’see.)

So I tracked down the original.

Here ’tis (below the fold).

Continue reading “The Mad Archbishop Speaks”

Readmission To The Priesthood?

A reader writes:

I understand that Pope Benedict XVI presided today at a top-level consultation to discuss questions related to Catholic priests of the Latin rite who have married.  One of the points on the agenda reportedly  relates to requests for readmission of priests who left the ministry to marry:

"It seems that while many seek permission to return to active ministry, some requests come from priests who are now old and would like at least to be allowed to celebrate Mass once again, even if they cannot return to public ministry (SOURCE.)

I left the Priesthood during a debilitating struggle with Obsessive Compulsive disorder. It was only a few years later that I received effective treatment. I was civilly married also, was dispensed from priestly celebacy recently, and my wife and I have convalidated our marriage. 

Here’s my question: is there any basis for me to hope that one day I might be allowed to exercise my Priesthood again? Perhaps in old age if I were a widower (my wife is older than I am)? I would be willing to go to the missions, a quiet monastery, or anything to be able to celebrate Mass and minister again.

God bless you, you are a top-notch Canon Lawyer and Apologist!

Thanks very much, only I should point out that while I do my best to answer canon law questions on occasion, I am not a canon lawyer. Just a simple, country apologist.

I also extend my sympathies regarding your debilitating bout with OCD, and I’ll do my best to answer your question, as well as try to answer questions that I know others are wondering about concerning the meeting Pope Benedict had.

First, let’s review the situation: The pope called a meeting for Thursday (yesterday) of the heads of the Vatican dicasteries (departments). This was the third such meeting he had called. The first one was sooper sekrit, but it is commonly reported that the subject was the possibility of reconciling the SSPX. The second, apparently, was about religious life. And an Italian news agency reported that this week’s was to be about the liberalization of permission for celebrating the Tridentine rite of Mass.

This was not the case, and to clear up confusion on this point, the Vatican press office released the following communique:

The Holy Father has convened for Thursday, November 16, a meeting of the
heads of offices of the Roman Curia to examine [a] the situation created
following the disobedience of Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo, and to
undertake a reflection on [b] requests for dispensation from celibacy as
well as [c] requests for readmission to priestly ministry presented by
married priests in the course of the most recent years. Other topics
are not anticipated on the schedule [SOURCE].

I’ve added the blue (a), (b), and (c) so that folks can see more clearly what the agenda items were.

The reason that these three items are grouped together–as many will surmize–is that excommunicated Archbishop Emmanuel Milingo (a.k.a. "the Mad Archbishop"–at least to me) has not only formed an organization called Married Priests Now! but he has also attempted the ordination of several married men as bishops, meaning that they could ordain other bishops and priests. This creates the basis of a potential schism, like that of the SSPX.

Milingo has denied the intention of creating a schism, but he’s not called "the Mad Archbishop" (by me) for nothing. You can’t trust that he won’t change his mind, especially if things don’t go his way. Then there’s the issue of the men he attempted to consecrate as bishops, which we won’t even go into right now.

The potential for schism here is great, particularly in light of this bit of information from the story that the reader links (which is one of the more insightful stories I have read):

The archbishop plans to hold a convention in the New York City area Dec. 8-10 with 1,000 married priests and their wives.

Now, if there’s one thing that popes hate worse than almost anything, it’s schisms. The pope’s job description involves being the ecumenical center of the Church that holds it together, and from the perspective of the occupant of Peter’s see, schisms are a Very Bad Thing. Popes–or conscientious popes–will go to extreme lengths to avoid them. Pre-16 watched in horror as the Lefebvrists went into schism (he was personally involved in the negotiations with them) and as B16, he certainly doesn’t want a new schism on his watch.

So it’s not surprising that he would hold consultations of how to solve the problem of Milingo. It’s a little surprising that they would release the agenda of this consultation given that it includes the eye-opening elements [b] and [c], and I suspect that if they hadn’t been blindsided by the Italian press that they might have kept the topic of this meeting sooper sekrit as well.

But given the sensitivity of the liberalization of the Tridentine rite (which they’ve been having trouble with the French bishops over lately), I guess they felt that it was the lesser of two evils to announce what they were really talking about, rather than let this meeting be portrayed in the press as the final consultation regarding the Mass (which would inflame the situation in France).

Also–and this could have been an even bigger factor in the decision to announce the agenda–they may have been trying to send Milingo a signal that he shouldn’t do anything precipitous (like announcing the creation of a new church–i.e., a schism) at his New York conference next month. More on that in a moment.

They thus had a three-hour meeting on Thursday, following which they released the following (in hindsight) entirely predictable communique:

COMUNICATO
PRESS OFFICE OF THE HOLY SEE

This morning, Nov. 16, in the Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father presided over one of the periodic meetings of the Heads of Dicasteries of the Roman Curia, for a common reflection.

The participants in the meeting received detailed information about [b] the requests for dispensation from the obligation of celibacy received in recent years, as well as [c] the possibility of readmission to the exercise of ministry from priests who at present find themselves in the conditions prescribed by the Church [i.e., for readmission].

[d] The value of the choice of priestly celibacy according to Catholic tradition was reaffirmed, and the exigency of a solid human and Christian formation was underlined, both for seminarians and for priests already ordained [SOURCE].

You’ll note that we have no mention here of item (a)–the situation created by Milingo–but we do have mention of (b) and (c), which are very important to Milingo and his Married Priests Now! group.

This combination (the removal of [a] but the inclusion of [b] and [c]) is a diplomatic move meant to not inflame the Milingo situation (by not mentioning him) and to calm it down if possible (by indicating that the Holy See is at least willing to think about changes regarding dispensations from celibacy and the readmission of priests who have attempted marriage).

We also have the addition of a fourth element–(d)–which is meant to keep the press from going completely hog wild and announcing that the pope is considering chucking the requirement of celibacy altogether (which he’s not).

So what to make of all this?

Well, B16 has always been more open to dialogue than JPTG (John Paul the Great) was. I suspect that this is partly due to their personal dispositions and partly due to the fact that JP2 came into office when the Church was in freefall. In 1978, everything was going to hell in a handbasket, and JP2’s pontificate played an enormous stabilizing role. One of the ways that happened was by him forcefully removing certain topics from discussion. Now that things have stabilized more, B16 feels more liberty to allow them to be cautiously discussed.

Thus during the pontificate of JP2 the question of clerical celibacy was most definitely off the table (because there were so many clamoring for it to be done away with en toto), but during last year’s Synod on the Eucharist, B16 allowed the bishops to take up the question and discuss it.

As the article the reader linked notes:

Even though the synod fathers heard a lot about the great shortage of priests in many countries, they still voted overwhelmingly (202 in favor, 28 against and 10 abstentions) to "affirm the importance of the inestimable gift of ecclesiastical celibacy" for priests in the Latin-rite church.

They also agreed that the proposal to have recourse to the ordination of mature married men "was considered a path not to be followed," a position Pope Benedict is expected to reaffirm in the post-synodal apostolic exhortation on the Eucharist, which he will promulgate in the coming months [maybe the next two weeks–ja].

Now, here’s the bottom line regarding Thursday’s discussions: If you’re pope, you don’t call a meeting to discuss things of this nature if you aren’t open at least in principle to making some kind of change. If you have absolutely no willingness to modify present discipline on these points, it makes no sense at all to call a meeting to discuss them–particularly in the present circumstances. Doing so would only raise hopes for a change that you have no willingness to make, and that’s always a Bad Thing (look at what happened with the commission Paul VI called on contraception).

I can only conclude, therefore, that B16 has at least some willingness–enough for him to think it worthwhile to consult with the dicastery heads and ask their opinion–to modify the Church’s current practices regarding requests for dispensations from celibacy and readmission to the priesthood of priests who have attempted marriage.

This is not surprising. He always showed more willingness as Pre-16 to consider questions of this sort. As John Allen (a.k.a. "The Other JA") notes,

In the 1997 interview that became Salt of the Earth, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger discussed the issue of celibacy at length. At that time, he said he did not anticipate married priests in the Catholic Church, “at least not in the foreseeable future,” as anything other than exceptional cases (such as converts from Anglicanism or Lutheranism).

“One ought not to declare that any custom of the Church’s life, no matter how deeply anchored and well founded, is wholly absolute,” Ratzinger said then.

“To be sure, the church will have to ask herself the question again and again … But I think that given the whole history of Western Christianity and the inner vision that lies at the basis of this whole, the church should not believe that she will easily gain much by resorting to this uncoupling [of priesthood and celibacy]; rather in any case she will lose if she does so.”

He said all this, mind you, during the reign of his predecessor, when the topic was most definitely off the table, which says something about his own willingness to reconsider the matter, as does the fact he allowed it to be discussed at the Synod on the Eucharist before the Milingo crisis even happened.

So, if B16 is willing to consider making changes in these matters, what might those changes be?

There’s zero chance that he’d chuck the whole system of celibacy. But what about nibbling around its edges?

Regarding dispensations from celibacy, what is most likely being referred to is the laicization of priests who wish to marry–not giving priests who are still functioning as priests permission to marry.

According to the article the reader linked:

Vatican sources calculate that an average of 300 such requests have
arrived annually in recent years, almost one a day. But the same
sources reckon that the number of priests who actually leave the
ministry each year is much higher than 300, as many do not bother to
seek dispensation.

Pope Benedict is well aware of the history and the actual procedure
for the granting of such dispensations, because the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, which he headed as prefect for 24 years
until his election as pope in April 2005, had responsibility for this
up to February 1989.

After that, the task was
handed over to the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline
of the Sacraments, until the responsibility was transferred again on
Aug. 1 last year to the Congregation for the Clergy.

The
consultation provides an opportunity for top Vatican officials to
reflect together on the current situation regarding requests for
dispensations from celibacy, and could lead to proposals for changing
the procedure or even decentralizing it, as some bishops have suggested
in recent years.

Note that B16 has already made one change in the handling of laicizations–charging the Congregation for Clergy with handling them rather than the CDW (HERE, scroll down). That of itself may speak of a mindset that views the granting of these dispensations as a more pastoral matter concerning individual members of the clergy rather than a matter that needs to be handled by the CDF or the CDW. He might be willing to go further, either streamlining the process or allowing them to be handled outside the Vatican, such as by the local bishops.

What about the question that most interests Milingo–the readmission of priests who have attempted marriage to some form of priestly service? The article states:

Vatican sources say the number of such requests for readmission has
increased in recent times, and some suggest it has even reached an
average of approximately 1,200 over the past few years.

It
seems that while many seek permission to return to active ministry,
some requests come from priests who are now old and would like at least
to be allowed to celebrate Mass once again, even if they cannot return
to public ministry.

Permission to celebrate Mass privately might be among the things the pope is considering allowing–a return to private ministry could be the kind of "readmission to the exercise of ministry" that B16 is considering–but this isn’t what Milingo and his associates are after: They want the ability to return to public ministry after having left the priesthood and attempted marriage.

If the pope were to start granting their requests, there would no doubt be significant conditions attached–such as the priests either separating from their spouses or regularizing their marriages via convalidation (most such priests are only civilly married)–and the granting of the request would not be automatic. Some of the individuals who left to attempt marriage are so problematic theologically and pastorally that they should never be allowed in public ministry again.

To prevent scandal or the wonderment of the faithful, they also likely would be required to be placed in positions other than the pastor of a parish–the way that married ministers from Anglicanism and Lutheranism who are ordained are generally assigned to administrative, educational, or similar roles as priests.

At a minimum, there would need to be a bishop willing to vouch for such candidates to the extent of incardinating them. If a priest couldn’t find a bishop willing to accept him in the diocese then the priest would not be returned to public ministry. The situation would thus be like that of ministers converted from Anglicanism or Lutheranism, who need to find such a bishop.

But it wouldn’t be quite the same.

A very real problem that bishops willing to sponsor a priest in making his peition–and a problem that is certainly on the pope’s mind right now–is the fact that returning a priest to public ministry could be seen as a reward for bad behavior. The message that could be sent to his brother priests in the diocese could be "Break the rules and we’ll reward you by letting you be both married and a priest"–a message that would not be good for morale or discipline.

Consequently, only a comparatively small number of priests would likely be admitted to public ministry–certainly not enough to help in any appreciable way with the priest shortage.

But maybe enough to head off a schism.

That’s what B16 is wondering right now.

To deal directly with the question that the reader asks, whether there is hope that he might one day be allowed to exercise his priesthood again (apart from emergency circumstances, such as when someone is dying), I can only say that the answer is yes.

The reader asks specifically about exercising his priesthood should his wife pass on before he does. Actually, canon law already provides for that possibility. Canon 293 states:

A cleric
who loses the clerical state cannot be enrolled among clerics again except
through a rescript of the Apostolic See.

The Holy See does allow for the potential readmission to the clerical state of priests who have been laicized, which explains the 1,200 applications that the article mentioned. In fact, a lot more than 1,200 priests have been readmitted under canon 293 over the years. According to Zenit:

According to data from the Vatican Congregation for Clergy, every year about 1,000 priests leave the priestly ministry.

The congregation also published data on priests who have returned to priestly ministry between 1970 and 1995. They undergo a rigorous procedure, carried out case by case. Their number varies greatly from one year to another. In those years, a total of 9,551 returned 9that’s an average of 367 a year–ja].

Under present praxis, a return would be possible (conceivable) in the case of a laicized priest whose spouse had died.

At present the Holy See seems to be handling these cases on an ad hoc basis. It had not, as of the year 2000 (the most recent info I have) established a formal procedure for handling such cases, but they have talked about doing so, and an informal procedure has already developed, whereby one finds a bishop or religious superior willing to accept the priest, following which there are a whole bunch of documents and interviews and, if the Holy See is favorable to the readmission, the priest spends a period of formation in an institution such as a monastery or religious house in preparation for his return to ministry, following which a rescript may be granted.

If you’d like to read more about this, see pp. 292-293 of the green CLSA commentary (i.e., New Commentary on the Code of Canon Law, edited by Beal, Coridan, and Green [Paulist Press, 2000]) or the article "Return to Ministry of Dispensed Priests" by M. Souckar in The Jurist 54[1994], 605-616.

I would urge the reader to be careful about how he regards this possibility, however. As a married man, his duty is to wish for and strive for the good of his wife. Also, women live longer than men. They may not be as physically strong (on average), but in compensation they have longer lifespans (on average, which to my mind means that they’re getting the better side of the deal on this one).

I would therefore counsel the reader to view the possibility that he might one day be able to again exercise his priestly ministry as a potential gift–something to be grateful for if it happens but not something to be anguished about if it doesn’t.

That gift also might come if B16 decides to broaden the cases in which canon 293 is applied, in which case it should–again–be regarded as a potential gift.

Like the priesthood itself.

B16 On The 12

Pope Benedict recently completed a series of audiences on the Twelve apostles. I thought these were particularly interesting and well done. He covers what we know about them, what is speculated about them, what their writings contain, and what their example says to us today.

Now that the whole series is finished, I thought I’d provide links to the audiences so that you can read through them as a group if you wish.

Enjoy!

Apostles as Envoys of Christ
Profile of St. Peter
On Peter, the Apostle
Peter, the Rock
St. Andrew, the First Called
James the Greater
James the Less
John, Son of Zebedee  
Apostle John, the Seer of Patmos
John, the Theologian
On St. Matthew
The Apostle Philip
The Apostle Thomas
The Apostle Bartholomew
On the Apostles Simon and Jude Thaddaeus
On Judas Iscariot and Matthias

More Universal Indult Rumors

Tridentine_mass_1Okay, first let’s get the pedigree of the story out in the open:

She’s baaaaa-aaaaaaaak.

Ruth "I’m Too Dangerously Unqualified To Keep My Job" Gledhill–the religion correspondent for The Times of London, that is.

She’s back . . . and she’s quoting anonymous sources in the Vatican.

yah. . . . hoo.

What here anonymous sources are telling her is that His Most Awesomeness B16 has signed a universal indult allowing celebration of the Mass according to the 1962 Missal (i.e., the Tridentine rite) by any priest in the Church.

Specifically, according to Miss Too Dangerously Unqualified,

The new indult would permit any priest to introduce the Tridentine Mass
to his church, anywhere in the world, unless his bishop has explicitly
forbidden it in writing.

This is the most interesting thing in the story. If this is the way the indult is set up then it would still allow bishops to prohibit the celebration of the Tridentine rite in their dioceses, but they would have to take the step of doing so in a formal way. Unless a bishop were willing to set down his opposition in writing, priests would have liberty. This would effectively shift the burden from the way it is now. At the moment, the bishop has to specifically allow the celebration of this rite for it to be allowed. This would reverse that so that he would have to specifically deny it–and do so in writing.

That would be an interesting attempt at a compromise between the universal permission-bishop-not-withstanding that some would like and . . . well . . . whatever those who are afraid of such an idea are afraid of.

Gledhill also mentions:

Catholic bloggers have been anticipating the indult for months. The Cornell Society blog says that Father Martin Edwards, a London priest, was told by Cardinal Joseph Zen, of Hong Kong, that the indult had been signed. Cardinal Zen is alleged to have had this information from the Pope himself in a private meeting.

And, of course, she tosses off a few of her patented, Too Dangerously Unqualifiedisms, such as:

The priests of England and Wales are among those sometimes given permission to celebrate the Old Mass according to the 1962 Missal. [What . . . all of the priests in England and Wales? They’ve all been given permission to do this on occasion by their bishops, as current discipline requires?–ja]Tridentine Masses are said regularly at the Oratory and St James’s Spanish Place in London, but are harder to find outside the capital.

And

By bringing back Mass in Latin, Pope Benedict is signalling that his sympathies lie with conservatives in the Catholic Church.

Even setting aside the problematic use of the word "conservative" in this context, and the tendentious desire to frame the issue in terms of partisan conflict, is this really a news flash? Pope Benedict has been quite vocal about his sympathies for the Tridentine rite of Mass since long before he was pope. Or doesn’t Mrs. Gledhill know that?

Sigh.

Well, despite the fact that I’ve heard this one before, I hope it’s true.

One document that should be coming out soon is the pope’s Post-Synodal Exhortation, following last year’s Synod on the Eucharist. This document is expected out as soon as next month, and the pope himself has shown itchiness about wanting to get it out (having previously asked the bishops preparing material for him when it would be arriving). There are likely to be changes to the celebration of ordinary, vernacular Masses announced (i.e., changes to what the Missal of 2001 says to do), and the matter of the Tridentine order of Mass could be dealt with in the same document or in a parallel one.

Given what he did at the end of the Synod–taking the unusual step of making the bishops’ resolutions public–he might well simply release the final material submitted to him, plus a document of his own (probably a motu proprio) announcing his decisions.

We’ll just have to wait and see.

In the meantime,

GET THE (DANGEROUSLY UNQUALIFIED!) STORY.

(CHT to the reader who e-mailed!)

PRE-PUBLICATION UPDATE: Catholic World News–a source which isn’t dangerously unqualified–is hearing the same thing. Unfortunately, most of

THEIR STORY
(CHT to the reader!)

is presently hidden behind a subscription requirement, but here are the highlights (EXCERPTS):

The motu
proprio
that he has prepared– which, according to informed
sources, is now in final form– addresses other liturgical questions as
well as the issue of the traditional Mass.

Vatican sources say
that the papal document affirms the principle that there is only one
liturgical rite for the Latin Church. But this rite has two forms: the
"ordinary" liturgy (the Novus Ordo, celebrated in the vernacular
language) and the "extraordinary" (the Tridentine rite, in Latin).
These two forms have equal rights, the text indicates, and bishops are
strongly encouraged to allow free use of both forms.

Pope
Benedict is reportedly waiting for the best moment to release the new
document, which is currently circulating among Vatican dicasteries.
Speculation in Rome is that the indult will be announced at the same
time that the Pope releases his apostolic exhortation concluding the
Synod on the Eucharist. That document is expected soon, perhaps in
November.

Pope Benedict has made it clear– notably in
his meeting with the College of Cardinals in March– that he will move
forward with efforts to accommodate traditionalists. [N.B.–this was the sooper sekrit meeting he held back then, which everyone figgered was about this exact subject–ja.]

The document has been reviewed by the Congregation
for Divine Worship and by Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, the
president of the Ecclesia Dei commission, as well as the Pope; it is
now in at least its third draft.’

SECOND PRE-PUBLICATION UPDATE: Catholic News Service–another not dangerously unqualified source–has picked up the story as well. According to them (EXCERPTS),

Pope Benedict XVI is preparing to expand permission to use the Tridentine Mass, the pre-Vatican II rite favored by traditionalist groups, said an informed Vatican source.

The pope is expected to issue a document "motu proprio," or on his own initiative, which will address the concerns of "various traditionalists," said the source, who asked not to be named.

Canadian Archbishop James Weisgerber of Winnipeg, Manitoba, told Catholic News Service Oct. 10 that Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, head of the Congregation for Clergy, had spoken briefly to Canadian bishops about the expected step.

GET THE STORY.

Given the number of news sources picking this up from unnamed sources, we are either dealing with one very talkative source of unofficial spreading of the word before the document’s release to prepare the field.

Given the sources such as Cardinal Zen and Archbishop Weisgerber (apparently) going on public record about it, I’m guessing that a release may lie in the quite near future.

The BBC Hullabaloo

I’ve had several requests for a response to the recent BBC documentary segment Sex Crimes and the Vatican (click the link to watch it), and I plan on dealing with it soon. In fact, I’m working on the issue now.

Unfortunately, there is so much material I need to evaluate that, given the methodical way I work on such matters, it’s going to take me a few days. (I like to engage such situations loaded for bear.)

In the meantime, though, I’d like to provide some links to responses that others have prepared.

FIRST, CHECK OUT ED PETERS’ RESPONSE.

ALSO, CHECK OUT A STATEMENT FROM THE DIOCESE OF BIRMINGHAM (THE ONE IN ENGLAND, NOT ALABAMA)

AND HERE’S AMY ON THE SUBJECT.

More from JA.O soon.