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STORYTIME
TAPESTRY
Special Treat
April 21
2005
Here's a submission from a non-Catholic who has known Joseph Ratzinger
personally and says there is another side to the "hard-nosed, arch-conservative
theologian" in most media characterizations of the new Pope Benedict XVI.
(Includes previously unpublished quotes from Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger.)
Johann Christoph Arnold is a pastor, family counselor, and
author of books on parenting, marriage, death and dying, and the spiritual life.
You have his permission to reprint this piece as long as you include the credit
line at the bottom with working hyperlinks. Please let me know if you use
it.
POPE
BENEDICT XVI CAN BE A UNITER
Johann Christoph Arnold April 19, 2005
I pricked up my
ears when the first broadcasts announced the election of a new pope and I heard
who it was: Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now known as Benedict XVI. I have known
this man for nearly a decade. The press has been quick to characterize Ratzinger
as an inflexible and mean-spirited theologian, but I know him to be different.
As a non-Catholic (I'm a member of the Bruderhof Communities) I want to
extend to him my best wishes and congratulations, and to let him know that he
will be in my prayers in the busy days to come.
My friendship with
Brother Joseph, as I called him right from the start, began when I presented him
with my book "Sex, God, and Marriage" in 1995. Already then, we formed a common
bond when he wrote to me:
"I was glad to deliver your manuscript to the
Holy Father. He was very happy for this ecumenical gesture and, more than that,
for the contents and for the harmony of moral conviction that springs from our
common faith in Christ. Such conviction will inevitably arouse hatred, and even
persecution. The Lord has predicted it. But with him we must continue in trying
to overcome evil through good."
Since that first meeting ten years ago, I
have met him three more times-one of those times just by chance, on a street
outside the
Vatican, where
we immediately recognized one another and ended up speaking for several
minutes.
On another encounter I was told that he was not well and would
have only a few minutes for me. We had come to
Rome with a delegation from the
United States
and Germany to
talk about the role of the Catholic Church in the persecution of Anabaptists
four hundred years earlier. Much of this persecution had occurred right in the
area of Munich, where Ratzinger
comes from, and our delegation included people whose forefathers had been burned
at the stake.
At first he did seem tired, but as our conversation
progressed, he became more and more attentive. I will never forget how by the
end of the meeting, he had tears in his eyes, and how he encouraged us with
words of love and reconciliation: "When hatred can be overcome and forgiveness
be given, that is the work of the Holy Spirit. Then we know that we are in
Christ."
It is just this message that the world needs today. With the
many challenges that face him now-from poverty and AIDS in the developing world
to sex scandals in the United States and the decline of faith in Europe and
America, the church needs a man like Ratzinger. Clearly he is not popular in
some circles: many prayed and hoped for someone more lenient, someone who would
give in to their wishes and complaints. But in selecting Ratzinger the cardinals
made a brave and bold choice, because the answers to the challenges and crises
of our present age will not be found in compromise, but in returning to the
simple and age-old truths of Jesus.
On one visit to him I was accompanied
by one of my first grandsons, a boy who is healthy now but who had been born
prematurely and had a very rough beginning. I asked Brother Joseph to bless him,
and he is now a strapping fourth grader who throws a ball, plays chess, and
proudly strums on a guitar. Who knows how much the heartfelt prayer of this old
man helped?
I cannot agree with the new Pope on every point-for example,
on his views of liberation theology-but I still respect and admire him. I have
always tried to see the best in others, and I believe that the only way to
effect change is by uniting with each other in what is positive.
People
think that the church can give them peace and freedom by releasing them from
obligations of marriage, family, and education; by throwing away as
old-fashioned any reverence for the holiest moments of living and dying. But
Jesus offers us a far better way, as Ratzinger so eloquently said when I met
with him in Rome in
1995:
"The church must renounce worldly principles and standards in order
to accept the truth, and the way it must go will always lead to some form of
martyrdom. It is important for us to realize that we cannot bring about unity by
diplomatic maneuvers. The result would be a diplomatic structure based on human
principles. Instead, we must open ourselves more and more to God. The unity that
he brings about is the only true unity. Anything else is a political
construction, and it will be as transitory as all such constructions are. This
is the more difficult way, for in political maneuvering, people themselves are
active and believe they can achieve something. But we must wait on God, and we
must go to meet him by cleansing our hearts."
These are difficult
words-as Ratzinger rightly says, following Jesus is a difficult way-but if we
want lasting peace and unity, they point us to the only answer.
<a
href="http://www.ChristophArnold.com">Johann Christoph
Arnold</a> is an author and
pastor with the <a href="http://www.bruderhof.com">Bruderhof Communities</a>.
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