As is our custom, we are reprinting Fr. Kenneth J. Baker SJ's editorial from the April issue of H&PR, as the links to these tend to go dead over time. (Any emphases are mine)
AMDG,
-J.
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Pope Benedict XVI
April 2009

Last
October I spent three weeks in Rome covering the synod on the Bible.
During that time I was able to see Pope Benedict XVI at several
events—Sunday Masses and Wednesday audiences in St. Peter’s Square. In
April he will be 83 and will complete four years as our Supreme
Shepherd and Vicar of Christ on earth. In such a short time he has
already had a tremendous impact on the Church. In Rome he is very
popular and attracts huge crowds to his weekly audiences. Germans, of
course, are very much in evidence and seem to outnumber Italians at the
audiences by two or three to one. When he was elected pope and in his
first audiences, he seemed a bit diffident and surprised that thousands
of people would come to see him and cheer him. He soon got over that
and now obviously enjoys blessing the huge crowds as he drives around
St. Peter’s Square in the famous white “popemobile.”
Coming
from Bavaria and being a professor, scholar and first-rate theologian,
at first sight he would seem to be out of place as the head of the
Roman Catholic Church. Shortly after he was elected he went to visit
his staff at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and told
them he did not want to be the center of attention. But one of his
friends told him, “Your Holiness, that cannot be since you are now the
Vicar of Christ.”
Joseph Ratzinger is by
nature rather shy. He is soft-spoken and kind to all. The best word I
know of to characterize him is to say that he is a gentleman. In
the 1970s I attended two or three meetings in Germany at which he was
present as Professor Ratzinger. At the time I was impressed by his kind
and gentle manner in dealing with others and in speaking about them.
Benedict
is an outstanding theologian. At the recent synod he spoke one day
for about eight minutes on a topic concerning the Bible—the
relationship between exegetes (that is, Scripture scholars
who interpret and comment on the Bible) and theologians. He cut right
to the heart of the matter by saying that there are two dimensions to
the written word of God: 1) the historical, which has to do with past
events, and 2) the divine, which has to do with the inspiration and
inerrancy of the Bible. For too long, he said, exegetes have
concentrated almost exclusively on the historical and human in the
Bible and have neglected the divine, which has to do with theology. He
said that the two areas of study must learn to work together and learn
from each other.
One of the Pope’s main
concerns is the liturgy of the Church. He has made significant changes
in papal Masses, linking the liturgy to the tradition of the Church.
While I was in Rome the first volume of his Complete Works in sixteen
volumes was made public. It contains his most important writings on the
liturgy; it was his explicit wish that the first volume to be printed
should be the one on the liturgy. The whole series will take eight
years to produce—two volumes in German per year. Arrangements are being
made to make the work available in other languages, including English.
Also, his motu proprio, Summorum Pontificum, which brought back the
traditional Latin Mass as a regular part of Catholic worship, proves
his concern about the tradition of the Church. He has been saying for
many years that there is no discontinuity between Vatican II and the
previous history of the Church, that is, that Vatican II was not meant
to be a whole new beginning for the Church and a rejection of the past.
Benedict
XVI has reduced the papal schedule to a slower pace than that of his
predecessor, John Paul II. He does not have guests at all his meals; he
does not invite many concelebrants to his morning Mass; he does not
travel as much as John Paul did. He has changed the papal schedule in
order to find time each day to study and write; since he loves
classical music, he reserves a few minutes each day to play the piano.
He is now working on the second volume of Jesus of Nazareth—his
outstanding life of Jesus Christ. They say in Rome that he is also
working on a new encyclical. All of this takes time.
It
is a difficult task for any man to be the Vicar of Christ. For his age,
he seems very vigorous and does not walk like an old man. He is
obviously a holy man—a priest who not only knows the Catholic faith
thoroughly but also lives it. He needs the prayers of the faithful,
since he is our father in Christ. Please say a prayer for him after you
have read this short essay.
—Kenneth Baker, S.J., Editor
Thank you for this little essay on our Holy Father. I have been received into the Church three days ago and can honestly say that it was the present Pope who brought me to the Catholic Church from the Reformed tradition.IMHO he is superieur in his thoughts, his theology and as a human being.
Posted by: Anna | April 14, 2009 at 05:43 AM
Dear Anna,
Welcome home!
AMDG,
-J.
Posted by: joe | April 14, 2009 at 12:19 PM