Tag Archives: Resignation

On that Resignation of Pope Benedict XVI

Excerpts from Harvesting the Fruit

[Note: there is some awakening beginning]

… Does anyone other than the willfully deluded and painfully ignorant still honestly believe that Benedict XVI wasn’t forced from office by a substantial threat either real or imagined?

He told the world that he was stepping aside in order to make room for a man better suited to answer important “questions of deep relevance for the life of faith,”  and who would more vigorously “govern the bark of Saint Peter and proclaim the Gospel.”

All indications are that those who orchestrated what looks more and more like a hostile takeover of the papacy couldn’t even muster the patience to put on a good show at the conclave in order to hide the appearance of having preselected Jorge Bergoglio well before the doors were even locked.

No… Pope Benedict didn’t depart for reasons of physical and mental health, and there’s not a Catholic this side of brain dead who is still buying that lie.

Abdication Fascination

Excerpts from Harvesting the Fruit

… Pope Benedict XVI declared before the College of Cardinals his incapacity for carrying out the Petrine ministry and his intention to renounce the same, citing a lack of strength of mind and body as the reason.

Can anyone be blamed for wondering if the Holy Father, in announcing his abdication, once again deliberately skirted around a deeper, and potentially scandalizing, truth as a means to an end?

So, what exactly do we know?

Benedict declared himself incapable, both mentally and physically, to carry on.

Several days later, he delivered, without notes, a lengthy address to the parish priests and other clergy of Rome. Not only was his mental acuity unquestioned; it was hailed.

His last public appearance took place on April 27, 2014 at the canonizations. Though he walked with a cane, he was far from showing signs of a physical “incapacity” such that he would be, even now, unable to “adequately fulfill the ministry” of the pope.

Benedict further suggested in his declaration that he was making way for someone better able, both mentally and physically, to address “questions of deep relevance for the life of faith, in order to govern the barque of Saint Peter and proclaim the Gospel.”

Following his departure, the Conclave elected, and in very short order, Jorge Bergoglio, a 76 year old man with one lung whose public discourse strongly suggests even to his most devoted cheerleaders that he is far duller of intellect than his predecessor.

To be clear, I certainly don’t claim to know the whole story, but one thing I’m fairly certain about is this, the declaration of February 10, 2013 isn’t it.

[Note: those who do know the story know that Benedict XVI is still the real pope while Francis is an anti-pope, the False Prophet of the Bible. Once the communists return to Italy via revolution, Benedict XVI will flee and then be martyred.]

The Pope’s Third Embodiment – ‘unprecedented innovation in the history of the Church’

From Sandro Magister

The Pope’s Third Embodiment

It is Benedict XVI’s state of life after the resignation. He is no longer the vicar of Christ, but neither has he returned to private life. He is “pope emeritus,” and he acts as such: an unprecedented innovation in the history of the Church.

ROME, April 7, 2014 – The more the months go by, the more Benedict XVI’s resignation of the papacy manifests its exceptional novelty.

Other popes before him had resigned: the last was Gregory XII, in 1415. But Joseph Ratzinger was the first to want to be called “pope emeritus” and to continue to wear the white robe “within the precincts of Saint Peter,” bewildering the canonists and bringing fears of the installation of a diarchy of two popes at the summit of the Church:

> Notice of Danger: A Church with Two Popes

Of course, Ratzinger no longer has the powers of pontiff of the universal Church: he stripped himself of them by exercising for the last time and in the highest degree precisely his powers as “vicarius Christi.” But neither did he return to being what he was before he was pope. After these two “embodiments” he now has a third that has no precedent in the history of the Church. [Note: this utterly unique novelty is itself a sign that something is amiss. Such was prophesied about 200 years ago by Anne Catherine Emmerich.] It is the new “embodiment,” the new state of life that he sees as connected to the commitment “forever” taken on with the acceptance of his election as successor of Peter.

This is what he explained at his last general audience on February 27, 2013, the eve of his resignation of the papacy:

“Allow me to go back once again to 19 April 2005. The real gravity of the decision was also due to the fact that from that moment on I was engaged always and forever by the Lord. Always – anyone who accepts the Petrine ministry no longer has any privacy. He belongs always and completely to everyone, to the whole Church. In a manner of speaking, the private dimension of his life is completely eliminated. [. . .]

“The ‘always’ is also a ‘for ever’ – there can no longer be a return to the private sphere. 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. Saint Benedict, whose name I bear as Pope, will be a great example for me in this. He showed us the way for a life which, whether active or passive, is completely given over to the work of God.”

The novelty of Benedict XVI’s action is being brought into new light today by Valerio Gigliotti, a professor of history and of European law at the university of Turin and a specialist in relations between state and Church, in a book recently published in Italy:

> V. Gigliotti, “La tiara deposta. La rinuncia al papato nella storia del diritto e della Chiesa”, Leo S. Olschki Editore, Firenze, 2013, pp. XL-468, euro 48.00

It is the first time that a work of scholarship – but a compelling read as well – has analyzed the resignation of the papacy under the aspects of history, law, theology, and literature, over the span of two thousand years.

The book begins with what are presumed to be the first cases of papal resignation, some of which are hardly more than legendary but met with great fame during the Middle Ages.

It proceeds with an in-depth reconstruction of the most famous resignation, that of Celestine V, canonized in 1313, exactly seven hundred years before the “renuntiatio” of Benedict XVI.

It continues with the papal resignations – spontaneous, arranged, or imposed – over the period of the larger and smaller schism of the West between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, when the Church was divided between popes and antipopes.

It arrives at the idea of resignation examined and then rejected by four popes of the twentieth century: Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, and John Paul II.

Coming finally to the grand gesture of Benedict XVI, perfectly in the path of tradition but also profoundly innovative, which professor Gigliotti summarized as follows on the eve of the publication of his book, in an article in “L’Osservatore Romano” of February 28, the first anniversary of the resignation:

“The resignation of Benedict XVI fuses the traditional with the contemporary in a completely new perspective, which has its roots in medieval mysticism, from Meister Eckhart to Sandaeus to the Franciscan model of renunciation.

“Kantorowicz’s felicitous and now classic intuition of the twofold, double nature of the person of the supreme pontiff, man and vicar of Christ, is now being enriched, through the resignation of Benedict XVI, with a third component, that of continuation in the service of the Church after the act of resignation. No longer a political embodiment and mystical embodiment of the pope, but a ministerial embodiment that takes on its identity and responsibility precisely at the moment of resignation: these are the three embodiments of the pope.

“Joseph Ratzinger’s decision to remain ‘near the Lord, in the precincts of Saint Peter’ in the capacity of ‘Roman pontiff emeritus’ legitimates a new juridical and ecclesiological configuration for the ‘renuntiatio papae.’

“It is the opening of a real and proper ministeriality, which in the figure of the pope takes on the traits of an authentic mysticism of service. The perspective, if one looks carefully, is Christological even before it is historical and juridical. It is the institutional regeneration of ‘kènosis,’ newness in continuity, a new beginning.”

At his last Angelus as pope, on February 24, 2013, the second Sunday of Lent, in commenting on the Gospel of the Transfiguration Benedict XVI compared the new life awaiting him after resignation to “scaling the mountain”:

“Dear brothers and sisters, I hear this word of God as addressed to me in particular at this moment of my life. The Lord is calling me ‘to scale the mountain’, to devote myself even more to prayer and meditation. But this does not mean abandoning the Church; indeed, if God asks me this it is precisely so that I may continue to serve her with the same dedication and the same love with which I have tried to do so until now, but in a way more suited to my age and strength.”

On Mount Tabor Jesus spoke of his “exodus” with Moses and Elijah. He also spoke with Peter and the other two apostles he had brought with him.

And for pope emeritus Ratzinger as well now is not only a time of contemplation, but of conversation. His successor Francis has confirmed this: the “wisdom” and “advice” of the pope emeritus – he said in a recent interview – “bring strength to the family” of the Church.

In some cases, Benedict XVI has spoken openly and to all. For example, in the few dazzling pages with which he shed light on the pontificate of John Paul II, which he said remains to be studied and assimilated today:

> The Pope Emeritus Prays, But Also Advises. Here’s How

In other cases, he has advised his succussor in strictly confidential terms. For example, after the publication of the summertime interview with Francis in “La Civiltà Cattolica.”

Jorge Mario Bergoglio had sent Ratzinger a copy of the interview and had asked him to jot a few notes down in the space between the title and the text.

But the pope emeritus did more, he filled and sent to Francis four whole sheets, too many to have written nothing but compliments.

In an interview last March 15 with the German television channel ZDF, Archbishop Georg Gänswein, prefect of the pontifical household and secretary of the pope emeritus, said:

“Benedict XVI granted the request of his successor, offering a few reflections and observations on particular observations or questions that he believed could be developed further on another occasion. Naturally I will not tell you about what.”

Of course, with Ratzinger’s resignation the figure of the pope emeritus has entered into history for the first time, And day after day this figure also contributes to “making” history, in an unprecedented dialectic relationship with the pope in office.

_________

The translation of the announcement made by Benedict XVI in Latin on February 11, 2013, resigning from the papacy:

> Declaratio

And the explanation that Benedict XVI gave of his resignation at his last general audience as pope, on February 27:

> “I thank all of you…”

__________

Last February, at the first anniversary of Benedict XVI’s resignation from the papacy, the journalist and writer Antonio Socci – who had been predicting this action since 2011 with impressive foresight – brought up a few questions on the coexistence of the two popes, on the practical role of the pope emeritus, and on the sense of his decision.

Following this, the website “Vatican Insider-La Stampa” posed questions to Benedict XVI, receiving answers to them. And it published the results:

> Ratzinger: “My resignation is valid. Speculations are simply absurd”

But without dispelling all of the questions raised by Socci, in the four articles he dedicated to the question:

> I due papi e noi. Cosa sta veramente accadendo nella Chiesa (16.2.2014)

> Due papi in San Pietro. I perché di un evento mai visto in duemila anni (23.2.2014)

> Ora il mistero è ancora più fitto. Ratzinger e “La Stampa”. Le mie domande senza risposta (26.2.2014)

> Ecco la risposta seria di Ratzinger, tramite don Georg (2.3.2014)

Benedict XVI Resignation: End of “Confusion” Game or New Media Hoax

From Eponymous Flower

Benedict XVI: Resignation Was Valid — End of “Confusion Game” or New Media Hoax?

[Yes, a new hoax for damage control]

(Rome) The Vatican expert Andrea Tornielli published two sentences by Pope Benedict XVI., which were allegedly from a reply to a correspondence.  In it he declared that his resignation was “valid”, it had been for no other reason than his age. “Speculation”  about this is “absurd.”  He also confirmed the authenticity of statements attributed to him, that was written to the heretical theologian Hans Küng.  Does the Church have two popes? Benedict XVI. signed himself as pope and used paper with the letterhead “Pope Emeritus”.  Francis describes himself as “Bishop of Rome” and signs only with “Franciscus”. The traditional blog “Chiesa e post concilio”  looks beyond the alleged letter of Benedict XVI. and sees a transparent maneuver by  the ruling Church leadership, to cause widespread doubts and discomfort  and to silence the faithful. Tornielli has not printed the alleged the “letter”.  Above all, it does not come to him to deny or correct the place of the Holy See. Least of all with things of such magnitude. But above all Tornielli is not to be confused with the Acta Apostolica Sedis. In short, the message is reminiscent of another media  hoax  last summer, reported as a “great  mystery”  of an alleged visit to Benedict XVI. and the fact that he was supposed to have said, the Holy Spirit advised him to resign (see separate report Benedict’s resignation: “God told me” – Media Hoax of the “Great Mystery”? ). Tornielli was merely instrumental in this action, probably even  the misused tool of others, said “Chiesa e post concilio”. We document the comment as a contribution to the current debate in the Church.

Tornielli quotes Some Sentences of Benedict XVI., Which Belong to “a Letter”

The news has already made the rounds around the world. Tornielli published a “letter” of Benedict XVI., in which the “Pope Emeritus” explains and confirms his resignation’s validity  that there is no other reason than “advanced age.” He is also to have  confirmed Hans Küng (!) with the oft-quoted words about the “identity of perception” and his wish to want to be until the end of his days nothing more than a “worshiper”.

I’m Sorry for Orwellian Despotism

I’m really sorry. Sorry to be treated by the so-called “Catholic journalists”, but above all by the hierarchy as an imbecile (in the literal sense of the word). I’m tired of being mistreated, judged to be (with “Mercy”) and sentenced and to be impeded in the utterance of doubt by arrogant and constant aggression. I am  sorry for this kind of “Orwellian despotism,” in which only “war galleys” are included, that  “dominate”. For the “nice words” about “service and humility,” they just sound like hot air.
Some believers, it may be that they are a minority, are simply ignored or attacked mercilessly. To them it seems to be permitted, what the “Pope Emeritus” said of himself to the reactions when he offered the bishops of the SSPX an act of justice: total and unjustified hatred. The hatred manifests itself in very different forms: one of these is the indifference (the highest form of detestation) compared to the spiritual life and the soul of the faithful. Whether it is a believer or a lot, does not matter. Shameful is the sound, the disgust and aggression are treated with the those who “doubt”. The allegations go far beyond a normal judgment and generalizations  about the exalted letters from “the despot” . Each argument is minimized, delegitimized, no matter who it submits. Arbitrary labels are missed, sometimes vile, just as it suits.

To Refresh The Memory: The Works of Mercy

Obviously, this “humble servant” have forgotten that in the church not important WHO says something, but WHAT he says. In addition, they seem to have forgotten just what the spiritual works of fashionably acclaimed mercy are:
  • Teach the ignorant
  • Encourage the doubtful
  • Comfort the afflicted
  • Rebuke the sinner
  • Bear wrongs patiently
  • To those who insult us, sincerely forgive
  • To pray for the living and the dead
So if justified criticism and legitimate doubts are expressed, then this must be clearly and unambiguously be clarified and resolved. When the believers are in the confusion, it is really to serve the duty of the holy shepherds their salvation, and to restore the right path. Chatter is not enough.
What do the articles of Tornielli  change in current situation? Nothing. The “Pope Emeritus” wrote him two lines that we do not want to call into question, from which he creates a message. The problem does not dissolve with a simple denial. The “Pope Emeritus” should clarify the doubts with the facts. In this sense, I make a pressing appeal to him.

Why did not Benedict XVI Pass the Papal Dignity?

If his resignation is valid, then he would do it again without any form of error which are sufficient to make him canonically invalid, then he renounces the papacy and the papal symbols and insignia, then it was abandoning but especially on being Pope , then he has resigned really and completely. If he really is in “full compliance” with Francis, then he officially denies his teaching position in relation to  Tradition, including the Motu Proprio Summorum Pontificum , which has already proven to have done so much good in the Church and which is now being  so openly rejected.
It’s time to stop with the dictation. This seems to be a realm of chaos, instead of the Church. The despotism of the “galleys”,  the “you do not know who I am” and “you must blindly obey” is over. The shepherds shall feed the sheep entrusted to them. They must do them  justice.

THE TWO POPES AND US. SOMETHING IS REALLY HAPPENING IN THE CHURCH

Translated from Antonio Socci’s Blog

THE TWO POPES AND US. SOMETHING IS REALLY HAPPENING IN THE CHURCH

On February 11th the anniversary of the “renunciation” of the papacy by Benedict XVI was remembered.  On February 28 it will be a year since the end of his pontificate. But in recent days what happened in the Vatican a year ago is ever more mysterious. And what is the true nature of the “retirement” of Benedict XVI.

In previous cases, in fact, popes who resign have always returned to their status as cardinal or religious: five months after he abdicated, the famous Celestine V, elected in 1294, returned to being the hermit Peter of Morrone.

And the legitimate Pope Gregory XII, who, in order to repair the great Western Schism retired from the papal office on July 4, 1415, was reinstated to the Sacred College with the title of Cardinal Angelo Correr, serving as papal legate in Marche.

Given the precedents, the same spokesman for Benedict, Father Federico Lombardi, during a briefing with reporters on 20 February last year, in answer to the question “and if he decides to call himself Pope Emeritus?” said: “I would rule it out. ‘Emeritus’ is a bishop who, even after resignation, maintains a link … in the case of the Petrine ministry it is better to keep things separate.”

Famous last words. Just one week later, on February 26, the same Father Lombardi had to communicate that Benedict XVI would remain precisely “Pope Emeritus” or “Roman Pontiff Emeritus,” retaining the title of “His Holiness.” He would no longer wear the ring of the fisherman and would dress in a simple white cassock.

In these days Benedict XVI also refused to change his papal coat of arms, rejecting both a return to the heraldry of a cardinal and the coat of arms of a Pope Emeritus. He will keep the coat of arms of a Pope, with the keys of Peter.

What does all of this mean? Obviously excluded is any personal vanity for a man who has given proof of total detachment from worldly positions (here it involves matters theological, not worldly goods).

So, there can be only a weighty historico-ecclesial reason, probably related to the motives for his retirement (for which so many pressed unduly). But what is this reason?

POPE FOREVER

The only official explanation lies in his speech of February 27, 2013, the one in which he clarified the limits of his decision: “Here, allow me to go back once again to 19 April 2005. The real gravity of the decision was also due to the fact that from that moment on I was engaged always and forever by the Lord.”

Note: I emphasize that expression “always and forever” because the Pope then explained it thus: “Always—anyone who accepts the Petrine ministry no longer has any privacy. He belongs always and completely to everyone, to the whole Church (…) he no longer belongs to himself….”

Then he added, and I quote: “The ‘always’ is also a ‘forever’—there is no longer a return to the private sphere. My decision to resign the active exercise of the ministry does not revoke this.”

It is amazing that a statement of this sort passed unnoticed. If words have meaning, in fact, here Benedict XVI says he renounces “active exercise of the ministry,” but the Petrine ministry, as such, is “forever” and is not revoked. In the sense that his resignation applies only to “active exercise” and not to the Petrine ministry.

What other meaning can these words have? I do not see it. Hence we must ask what kind of “resignation” was that of Benedict XVI.

That speech of February 27 seemed consistently to confirm the distinction between “active exercise” and “passive exercise” of the Petrine ministry.

He said, in fact: “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. Saint Benedict, whose name I bear as Pope, will be a great example for me in this. He showed us the way for a life that, whether active or passive, is completely given over to the work of God.”

To the fact of these words, and the words “forever” and “ministry not revoked,” were then added the acts of which we have spoken, that is, the permanence of the name Benedict XVI, the dress, the title “His Holiness,” and the pontifical coat of arms.

IN COMMUNION WITH FRANCIS

Moreover, perfectly recognized by Pope Francis, who on February 11 broadcast this tweet: “Today I invite you to pray for His Holiness Benedict XVI, a man of great courage and humility.”

This is a totally new situation in the history of the Church. In past centuries, in fact there have been, again and again, conflicts between popes and anti-popes, even three at a time.

There had never been, instead, two popes in communion, who recognized each other in the process. I said “two popes,” considering that one of the two is the previous pope, become “Pope emeritus,” and that involves a completely unheard-of figure.

What in fact is his theological status? And what does “retirement” from only the “active exercise” of the Petrine ministry mean?

Benedict XVI, speaking to the cardinals before the conclave, anticipated his reverence for and obedience to his successor. This in fact is the attitude of Benedict toward Francis. The communion between the two was made visible when they co-wrote the encyclical “Lumen fidei.”

But it is striking that in their filmed encounter at Castel Gandolfo, as well as in the ceremony held in the Vatican gardens to bless the statue of St. Michael, you see the two men of God who embrace each another as brothers, and from neither of the two the gesture of kissing the Ring of the Fisherman. It makes one wonder: who is the Pope?

A SECRET BETWEEN THEM

Is there perhaps a secret, between them, which the world ignores? Or are they to be considered on the same level? We know that cannot be because the Church’s divine constitution can have only one Pope. But then?

There are new and surprising problems in light of which some may also assign unexpected meanings to certain gestures of Francis, such as presenting himself on the balcony of St. Peter only as “Bishop of Rome,” without pontifical vestments, or the lack of the pallium in his Papal coat of arms (the pallium is now the symbol of the pontifical coronation, having replaced the papal tiara).

Of course people who are now trying to pit one against the other are acting arbitrarily. Moreover, some Lefebvrians and the sedevacantists who question the authority of Francis are equally hostile to Benedict.

The constant prayer of Benedict for Francis and the Church is perhaps the great prophetic sign of this historic moment.

However, one cannot pretend that everything is normal, because the situation is almost apocalyptic. And one cannot avoid the questions: about the reasons for the resignation of Benedict, about how many desired it, about the undue pressure they caused. And about his current status.

AN ERA NEVER SEEN

In the days following the announcement of the resignation, before he had specified his new situation, even Civiltà Cattolica, like Father Lombardi, had committed a gaffe.

In fact, it published an essay by the canonist Gianfranco Ghirlanda where it was affirmed: “It is clear that a pope who has resigned is no longer pope, and thus no longer has any power in the Church and cannot meddle in any affair of government. It can be asked what title Benedict XVI will retain. We think there should be attributed to him the title of Bishop Emeritus of Rome, like every other diocesan bishop who resigns.”

In any case, not “Pope Emeritus.” But Benedict has chosen to be precisely “Pope Emeritus.” There must be a very serious reason for deciding to “continue” thus. And the consequences are obvious. His are very important signals sent to those who have to understand them, and to the whole Church.

He signals that he continues to defend the treasure of the Church, albeit in a new way. And he seems to repeat what he said during his inaugural Mass: “Pray for me, that I may not flee for fear of the wolves.”

Antonio Socci

From Il Libero, February 16, 2014

A Tale of Two Pontiffs

From Harvesting the Fruit

A year has now passed since Pope Benedict XVI shocked the world by announcing his intention to abdicate the Throne of St. Peter, and what have we learned?

In concrete terms, perhaps very little as it relates to the real reasons behind his renouncement of the papacy, but circumstantially, we can infer quite a lot. With this in mind, please allow me to indulge in a bit of informed speculation.

Benedict’s announcement was met with two primary reactions from the cardinals to whom he was speaking, as well as from among various members of the sacred hierarchy and others across the globe.

On the one hand, pretty much everyone expressed shock, and I am certain that in most cases that reaction was entirely sincere.

That said, I do not doubt for even a moment that there were any number of clerics, particularly members of the Curia, who looked straight into the television cameras to express their surprise, when in truth they had played an active role in coercing Pope Benedict to take his leave.

The other most common reaction coming from Rome and elsewhere, especially in less-than-traditional quarters, was a near endless stream of blather (more properly, “spin”) touting the sheer humility of this pope who courageously decided to step aside for the good of the Church.

Sound familiar?

It should.

In hindsight, this was but the opening act for the Cirque du Humilité that burst onto the Roman stage with the elevation of Jorge Bergoglio.

Is it merely coincidental that the suddenly “humble” abdicator’s successor immediately undertook to implement an unprecedented program of papal humility-on-display [humility on display is nothing but pride – as the pharisees did], with everything from worn out shoes to shoddy vestments, to pedestrian living quarters and compact cars serving as props?

I doubt it.

Oddly enough, in the weeks following Benedict’s announcement, only a relative few were wondering aloud if perhaps he was in fact fleeing for fear of the very “wolves” he had mentioned in his inaugural homily. And yet, they had been howling at Benedict’s doorstep for quite some time.

One of the first signs of trouble among the “domesticated” variety (those who operate from within the Church) made itself known less than a year-and-a-half into Benedict’s pontificate following his now infamous Regensburg Lecture.

In addition to sparking a violent Muslim backlash, the address was met with heavy criticism from certain churchmen, including one Cardinal-Archbishop [Bergoglio!] who said, “These statements will serve to destroy in twenty seconds the careful construction of a relationship with Islam that Pope John Paul II built over the last twenty years.

Sound familiar?

It should.

Is it merely coincidental that the above mentioned Prince is now known as Pope Francis, a pope so determined to court favor with the Muslims that he even goes so far as to actively encourage them to hold fast to their false religion?

I doubt it.

Pope Benedict XVI, in spite of whatever shortcomings he may have had from a traditional perspective (e.g., Assisi III, the “continuity” illusion, his failure to celebrate the traditional Mass in public even once), committed what the neo-modernist cabal in post-conciliar Rome considers an unforgiveable sin; he showed a willingness to render papal authority in the manner of a Sovereign, when clearly everyone who is anyone in the Eternal City knows darn well that the church-of-man playbook now firmly in place requires the pontiff to govern according to unwritten rule number one: collegiality.

Sound familiar?

It should.

Pope Francis has made no bones about his desire to promote collegiality, even to the point of calling for “genuine doctrinal authority” and “juridical status” for episcopal conferences. (cf Evangelii Gaudium 32)

Is it merely coincidental that Pope Benedict’s successor is so driven?

I doubt it.

So, what specifically did Pope Benedict XVI do in the way of overstepping his bounds as primus inter pares (first among equals); landing himself in water so hot that he felt he had no choice but to end his days in seclusion?

Primarily, three things, as I see it.

First, he issued Summorum Pontificum.

Had he simply treated the “old Mass” as a sentimental attachment to be tolerated, rather than as a gift to be propagated, his own traditional leanings in matters liturgical could have perhaps been overlooked by the wolves, but as it was, he incited their fury.

As memory serves, one of the more vocal critics of Summorum Pontificum was the Jesuit Cardinal Carlo Martini, the then retired Archbishop of Milan who said in an interview shortly before his death on August 31, 2012:

“Our culture has aged, our churches are big and empty and the church bureaucracy rises up, our rituals and our cassocks are pompous.”

Sound familiar? [See the Martini connections here, here, here and here.]

It should.

Pope Francis, who suggested in his first address to the Roman Curia that the Church is in danger of becoming a “heavy bureaucratic customs house,” has eschewed nearly every sign of “pomp” associated with the papacy from the very moment he first appeared on the balcony at St. Peter’s.

Is it merely coincidental that Pope Benedict’s successor, another Jesuit, not only is so impassioned but also just happens to claim Carlo Martini as his role model?

I doubt it.

Secondly, Pope Benedict turned up the heat under his Throne considerably by lifting the excommunications from the four bishops of the Society of St. Pius X, and this in the very same year that he decreed the “Heroic Virtues” of Venerable Pope Pius XII.

Both of these acts, together with Summorum Pontificum two years earlier, amounted to an anti-Semitic trifecta in the minds of many a Jew and their progressive con frères within the Church; brothers in arms in the cause of creating an institution only a Mason could love.

While much of the dust-up concerned the comments of a now former SSPX Bishop relative to the Holocaust, the entire affair was treated as an occasion to proclaim the Jewish people off-limits in terms of evangelization.

Sound familiar?

It should.

Pope Francis raised eyebrows in saying, “We hold the Jewish people in special regard because their covenant with God has never been revoked,” (cf Evangelii Gaudium 247) as if their rejection of Christ amounts to anything less than a rejection of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. [Fr. Kramer shows how this is heretical]

Is it merely coincidental that Pope Benedict’s successor not only boasts a history of synagogue visits and inter-worship with Jews, but has also co-authored a book with his rabbi-best-friend; the same with whom he prayed during Sukkot and Shabbat at the Vatican, a papal first?

I doubt it.

Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, Pope Benedict all but signed his own walking papers the moment he set in motion the so-called “Doctrinal Discussions” with the Society of St. Pius X.

Imagine, the Roman Pontiff suggesting that these “traditionalists,” with their attachment to the doctrine of the Faith as it was taught without confusion prior to the Council and their insistence upon the Social Kingship of Christ, have something of value to offer the Church!

Sound familiar?

It should.

Pope Francis has repeatedly targeted those Catholics who dare to imagine that Christ is Sovereign and Ruler, at one point even alleging that such “triumphalistic” Catholics “do not believe in the Risen Lord and want to make theirs a more majestic resurrection than that of the real one.”

Is it merely coincidental that Pope Benedict’s successor has a kindly word and a warm embrace for every member of the human family, regardless of whether or not they reject Our Lord Jesus Christ and oppose His Holy Church, with one glaring exception; those tradition-minded Catholics toward whom he has repeatedly hurled insult after ignominious insult?

I doubt it.

With all of this in mind, I cannot but draw the following conclusions, speculative though they may be:

– Pope Benedict XVI was driven from office in some fashion or form, and whatever threat loomed had he remained on the Throne must have been truly terrible; such that it would have shaken the faith of many.

While we may never know what that threat actually was (and perhaps still looms), its power to exert history-changing force upon persons and events can be discerned in the swiftness with which what appeared to be the SSPX’s imminent reconciliation in June of 2012 (thanks to Pope Benedict’s own initiative) inexplicably fell apart at the eleventh hour.

All indications are that something was, shall we say, suggested to the pope that caused him to do a stunning about face, and whatever that something was may very well have played a part in his decision to abdicate.

If Cardinal Bertone is to be believed, this coincides precisely with the timeline of events.

According to CWN:

In an interview with the Italian daily Il Giornale on the anniversary of the resignation, Cardinal Bertone said that Pope Benedict had made up his mind to step down by the middle of 2012.

Is it merely coincidental…

You get the point. Only with great effort can one avoid the sense that a considerable degree of behind-the-scenes maneuvering on the part of Benedict’s enemies played a critical role in his departure, and necessarily, therefore, the arrival of his successor.

– In spite of Pope Benedict’s claim that he lacked the “strength of mind and body … to adequately fulfill the [Petrine] ministry,” with every passing day this reveals itself ever more clearly to have been nothing more than an excuse.

According to a recent article in the Telegraph, the former pope is used to “rising daily at 5.30am and filling his time with piano practise to improve his Mozart, meeting old friends, praying, tending a kitchen garden, reading the Vatican’s daily newspaper and watching the evening news on TV.”

This is hardly the image of a man too weakly to reign.

Oh, sure, it has been noted that he looks refreshed after a year in seclusion, but arguably this has as much to do with creating distance between himself and his extraordinarily tenacious enemies than leaving behind the ordinary, albeit substantial, demands of the Petrine Office.

– While many, including me, were initially hopeful that Benedict was stepping aside confident that the stage was set for a likeminded, more vigorous, successor to carry on in similar fashion, the exact opposite appears to have been true.

The only mystery in this tale of two Pontiffs that can rival the real reason behind Pope Benedict’s decision to abandon his family is how he ever got elected in the first place. I would suggest that those who are looking for signs of Divine influence on the proceedings of a papal conclave need look no further than the elevation of Josef Ratzinger in 2005.

As for conclave 2013, I have a sneaking suspicion that the Holy Ghost had more influence on the outcome of Super Bowl XLVIII.

In any event, those who drove Pope Benedict into early retirement appear to have done so in the knowledge that they had little or nothing to fear.

The surprisingly speedy fashion with which the cardinal-electors chose Jorge Bergoglio suggests to me that the wolverines entered the conclave confident that they had already secured the voting block necessary to push forward their prelate of choice; a man who could be counted upon to dutifully go about untying the various “knots” of the Benedictine papacy.

Let’s recap:

– While Benedict projected an air of regal confidence, his chosen successor would actively seek opportunities to take on the appearance of a “regular Joe.”

– While Benedict was unafraid to confront Muslim violence, his chosen successor would honor Islam, using the occasion of his first Apostolic Exhortation to insist that it is “opposed to every form of violence.”

– While Benedict was willing, on occasion, to rule in the manner of a Sovereign, his chosen successor would be the “Bishop of Rome” committed to making collegiality a priority.

– While Benedict promoted the traditional liturgy, his chosen successor would not only strip Papal Masses of their splendor, he would even take steps to  criminalize “cryptoLefebvrian” tendencies.

– While Benedict was willing to risk insulting the Jews as an acceptable “side-effect” of good governance, his chosen successor would bend over backward to affirm them.

– While Benedict was sympathetic to traditionalists (otherwise known as Catholics), his chosen successor would excoriate them at every given opportunity

That chosen successor, of course, is [apparent] Pope Francis, and the masterminds of Benedict’s demise, the wolves, are now licking their chops in anticipation of the goods he’s expected to deliver. [Make no mistake – the Biblical False prophet will deliver – in spades]

Fr Z: SOCCI: Did Pope Benedict really resign? Was it valid? Reeeeeally?

Fr. Z rejects Antonio Socci’s recent article about Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation being invalid. Let’s look at some things he has to say.

Kindly put, this is a stretch and a half.

The first part of his piece is mostly about how he, Socci, was right and others were wrong when he predicted that Benedict might resign.  Blah blah.  But, being right before means that he is right now.  Get it?

Vatican intrigue!

Forced resignation!

Ghost writer Pope and secret Magisterium!

This is sooooo Italian.

Fr. Z well represents the sleepy clergy who have no clue who is sitting in the chair of Peter now. It just can’t be! Too much of a stretch. Get it?

Just like the vast majority of clergy (Priests and Levites) of Jesus’ day did not recognize the First Coming, neither does the sleepy majority recognize the Second Coming, and Biblical prophecy being fulfilled in front of their sleepy eyes. Yes, this is soooooooo sleepy!

Pray much for the blind leading the blind.

 

 

 

CANONICALLY VALID “WAIVER” OF POPE BENEDICT? MAYBE NOT

Computer translated from Antonio Socci’s Blog

canonically VALID “WAIVER” OF POPE BENEDICTMAYBE NOT 

FEBRUARY 12, 2014

The “withdrawal” of Benedict XVI – a year later – is tinged with yellow. Why emerging “details” that require serious questioning about its real canonical validity. Continue reading

Another Analysis of the Invalid Resignation

See the article at Catholic Concepts.

Their summary:

“Now that Freemasonry has “their man” at the top of the Vatican, we can expect to eventually hear a dissenting reaction from Pope Benedict and his followers, as Francis pursues the Masonic policy of the utter demolition of Catholicism and a radical reform of the Church that would transform it into a Masonic “dogma free Christianity”, and merge it into intercommunion with the other denominations and non-Christian religions. Meanwhile, there is growing awareness among Catholics that “Francis” is increasingly manifesting himself to be exactly what St. Francis of Assisi foretold in his deathbed prophecy — “uncanonically elected”, and, “not a true pastor but a destroyer.” “

Was Francis Canonically Elected?

From the Catholic Truth blog is a reference to the Alberto Villasana letter regarding the invalid – forced – resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. There is a reprint of an email from Fr. Paul Kramer on that topic as well, with one key excerpt below:

“Some people might question the report of Alberto Villasana — in fact some Opus Dei types are already doing that. In fact, long before Benedict’s announcement of impending resignation, a close personal friend of mine, the late Mons. Mario Marini, Secretary of the Pontifical Commission «Ecclesia Dei», informed me of the well organized plot in Rome, in the Northern Italian bishoprics, and in the French hierarchy, to pressure and coerce Pope Benedict to resign. From the beginning the Modernist progressives wanted him out. Cardinal Daneels publicly expressed his displeasure with the election of Cardinal Ratzinger immediately after the cardinals elected him. Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor likewise made the very telltale remark that same day, saying, “We didn’t get our man.” The one he referred to as “our man” was Mario Jorge Bergoglio SJ.”

Read the whole article there.