Ratzinger:
“My resignation is valid. Speculations are simply
absurd”
By Andrea Tornielli Vatican Insider (La Stampa)
February 26, 2014 http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/the-vatican/detail/articolo/benedetto-xvi-benedict-xvi-benedicto-xvi-32340/
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Benedict XVI and Francis: a
blending of papacies |
Benedict XVI responds to a letter
sent to him by the Vatican correspondent Andrea Tornielli. The
journalist sent him some questions regarding the alleged
pressures and conspiracies which some claim led to his
resignation
“There is absolutely no doubt
regarding the validity of my resignation from the Petrine
ministry” and the “speculations” surrounding
it are “simply absurd”. Joseph Ratzinger was not
forced to resign, he was not pressured into it and he did not
fall victim to a conspiracy: his resignation was genuine and
valid and there is no “diarchy” (dual government)
in the Church today. There is a reigning Pope, Francis, who
leads the Catholic Church and an Emeritus Pope whose
“only purpose” is to pray for his successor.
The Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has put
pen to paper to set the record straight on the historic
decision he took one year ago, in response to the various
interpretations that have been circulating in the press and on
the web regarding his gesture. Writing from the Mater Ecclesiae
monastery in the Vatican, he replied in person to a letter with
some questions which we sent him a few days ago, after certain
comments made in the Italian and international press about his
resignation. Ratzinger was brief and to the point; he denied
speculations about any secret reasons behind his resignation
and urged people not to give undue importance to certain
choices he has made, such as his decision to carry on wearing
the white cassock after stepping down as Bishop of Rome.
Readers will recall the shock
announcement Benedict XVI made on 11 February 2013, informing
cardinals at the Consistory of his free decision to resign ingravescente
aetate (because of old age): “
I have come to the certainty that my
strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an
adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry.” He also
announced that the Apostolic See was going to be vacant as of
the evening of 28 February when the cardinals would meet to
begin the process of electing his successor. In the days that
followed, Ratzinger informed he would be keeping his papal name
Benedict XVI (the name with which he signed the letter he sent
us), that he would from that moment on be referred to as Pope
Emeritus (this title also appears in print on the letter) and
that he planned to carry on wearing a white cassock, albeit a
simpler version than the papal one: Ratzinger does not wear the
short shoulder cape, known as the “pellegrina” and
without the fascia.
At his final General Audience on 27
February 2013, Benedict XVI told a packed and sunny St.
Peter’s Square that: “In these last few months, I
have felt my strength diminish and I have asked God with
insistency in my prayers to illuminate me with his light and
make me take the best decision. I took this step in full
awareness of its gravity and novelty but with profound serenity
of spirit. Loving the Church also means having the courage to
make difficult, painful choices, always keeping the good of the
Church in mind and not ourselves.”
He added that his decision to withdraw
from the public spot light “hidden from the world”,
did not mean a return to private life. “My decision to resign the active exercise
of the ministry does not revoke this. I do not return to
private life, to a life of travel, meetings, receptions,
conferences, and so on. I am not abandoning the cross, but
remaining in a new way at the side of the crucified Lord. I no
longer bear the power of office for the governance of the
Church, but in the service of prayer I remain, so to speak, in
the enclosure of Saint Peter,” he said.
It was these words regarding his wish
to stay within “the enclosure of Saint Peter” that
led some to think that Benedict XVI’s decision to resign
had not been taken freely and was therefore not valid. The idea
that the Pope Emeritus wanted to cut out a role for himself as
a “shadow Pope”, was light years away from the real
Ratzinger. After Francis’ election, the changes he
brought with him and the electric effect his words and personal
testimony have had on the Church, comparisons with his
predecessor were to be expected. This is after all what always
happens when a new Pope takes charge. Benedict XVI himself has
always rejected this comparison. Over the past weeks, as the
anniversary of his resignation approaches, some have gone a bit
too far, suggesting that Benedict XVI’s resignation may
not have lacked validity and that he is therefore still playing
an active and institutional role beside the reigning Pope.
On 16 February, the author of this
article sent the Pope Emeritus a letter with some specific
questions regarding these interpretations. A response came two
days later. “There is absolutely no doubt regarding the
validity of my resignation from the Petrine ministry,”
Ratzinger wrote in his letter of reply. The only condition for
the validity of my resignation is the complete freedom of my
decision. Speculations regarding its validity are simply
absurd.” Those closest to Ratzinger had been aware of the
possibility of his resignation for a long time and he himself
confirmed it in a book-length interview with the German
journalist Peter Seewald (“Light of the World”,
2010): “If a pope clearly
realizes that he is no longer physically, psychologically, and
spiritually capable of handling the duties of office, then he
has a right and, under some circumstances, also an obligation
to resign."
It was inevitable that this shock
decision was going to be linked to the Vatileaks scandal and
the conspiracies in the Roman Curia. After all, this was the
first time in two thousand years that a Pope had decided to
step down from the pontificate because of old age. Benedict
XVI’s entire pontificate was a Via Crucis, especially his
final years. : first the paedophilia scandal which he
courageously dealt with without attributing the blame to
lobbies or “external enemies” of the Church , but
to “persecution”, an evil that comes from within
the Church itself; then the leaked documents which the former
Pope’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, took from his desk. And so
Ratzinger’s resignation was linked to these events. But
in the interview with Peter Seewald, Benedict XVI explained
that a ship could not be abandoned in the midst of a storm.
This is why he decided to wait until the Vatileaks saga,
Gabriele’s trial and the investigation into the Vatileaks case being
carried out by the Commission of three cardinals
were all over before he announced his resignation. Only after
this did he step down.
In the letter he sent to us, the Pope
Emeritus answered some questions regarding his decision to keep
his papal name and continue dressing in white. “I
continue to wear the white cassock and kept the name Benedict
for purely practical reasons. At the moment of my resignation
there were no other clothes available. In any case, I wear the
white cassock in a visibly different way to how the Pope wears
it. This is another case of completely unfounded speculations
being made,” he wrote.
Benedict XVI proved this at last
Saturday’s Consistory - which Francis had invited him to
– when he took a seat along with the cardinal bishops
instead of accepting the special seat that was offered to him.
When Francis came up to him to greet and embrace him at the
start and end of the ceremony, Benedict removed his zucchetto
as a sign of respect and also to show that there is only one
reigning Pope.
A few weeks ago, the Swiss theologian
Hans Kung quoted a passage from a letter Benedict XVI received
regarding Francis. Words which leave no room for doubt: “I'm grateful to be bound by a great
identity of views and a heartfelt friendship with Pope Francis.
Today, I see my last and final job to support his pontificate
with prayer." Some on the web questioned the validity of
these words or tried to twist them. We asked the Pope Emeritus
to comment on this too. “Professor Küng quoted the content of my letter to him
word for word and correctly,” he wrote in his reply. He
ended by saying he hoped he had answered our questions in
“a clear and adequate way”.
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