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Benedict Relies on Words, Not John Paul’s Dramatic Images

posted by akornfeld | 3:36pm Tuesday April 8, 2008

By Carol Ann Campbell
Religion News Service

Pope John Paul II would kneel to kiss the ground of foreign countries. He unleashed doves to signal peace. He placed a prayer of atonement in cracks of Jerusalem’s Western Wall. And the cameras clicked. John Paul, a former actor, reveled in the power of image.
In contrast, his successor, Pope Benedict XVI, who arrives in the United States next week (April 15), lets words define him. Benedict, an academic and man of letters, prefers to deflect the spotlight. Observers say he expects his words, if not his image, to last.
Americans who remember the excitement of John Paul’s U.S. visits will see a very different pontiff when 80-year-old Benedict sets foot on American soil. The two are a study in contrasting styles, and, to a lesser degree, of substance.
“Pope John Paul II was an actor. He wrote plays. He brought a sense of the dramatic to the papacy,” said Monsignor Kevin Irwin, dean of the school of theology at Catholic University in Washington. “Pope Benedict spent his life in libraries and university classrooms.”
John Paul, a master of the iconic gesture, created the kind of buzz associated with a rock star during his whirlwind visits. When Benedict comes, expect a quieter, slower but nonetheless charming pontiff, say people who have followed both men.
“Benedict does not have the huge following in the press and on the street as John Paul,” said John Allen, the Vatican correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter. “But over time, if people reflect on what he says, he does have the potential to shape the future of the Catholic Church in this country.”
Benedict commonly is described as quiet, even shy. He worked for John Paul as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith — one of the church’s top positions — and was said to be wary of John Paul’s celebrity status, fearing people would confuse personality with faith.
“He’s not one to be out there shaking hands and kissing babies,” said the Rev. Thomas J. Reese, a Jesuit and senior fellow at Georgetown University’s Woodstock Theological Center. “He would rather go home and curl up with a theology book than stand out in front of thousands of screaming kids. But Pope John Paul thrived on that.”
The difference between the two pontiffs became clear almost immediately.
Five days after Benedict’s election as pope in April 2005, he first planned to hold his elaborate installation inside, not outside, St.
Peter’s Basilica in Rome. He reasoned that the basilica’s architecture directed attention toward Christ, not the pope, according to the Italian Web site chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it.
Yet an indoor ceremony would have left nearly a half million people outside, watching on video feeds like football fans stuck in an arena parking lot. John Paul, some observers said, would never have dreamed of limiting the audience at such a crucial event.
Benedict eventually was persuaded to move the proceedings outdoors, but the episode showed early on that he was not a pope to seek the spotlight. The focus, he reportedly said at the time, belonged on the Mass, not a particular pope.
The contrasts between the two popes, though, do not extend to the hot-button issues of gender, divorce and sexuality that divide American Catholics. John Paul had handpicked Benedict — when he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — to be the church’s chief enforcer of doctrine. Both popes have staunchly supported restrictions against priests marrying, ordaining women priests, birth control and abortion.
“Here in the U.S. we are used to a new administration coming in and shaking things up,” Reese said. “But in the papacy it is the opposite. The idea is `We are eternal and unchanging.”‘
Since the 1960s, Ratzinger has been one of the church’s most prolific theologians, holding German faculty posts at the University of Bonn, University of Munster, University of Tubingen and University of Regensburg.
Then he moved to his high-profile job in the Vatican.
“He had the thankless job of telling liberation theologians that they had to choose between Marx and Christ and others that if they denied the Trinity they were out of the club,” said Tracey Rowland, author of “Ratzinger’s Faith: The Theology of Pope Benedict XVI” (Oxford University Press).
Back then, Ratzinger was dubbed God’s Rottweiler. Yet since his election, he has shown a more compassionate side. He has not satisfied the hopes of hard-line conservatives, nor has he been the draconian pope that many liberals feared.
“His image has softened and he has been able to show a more affectionate side,” Rowland said. In an authorized children’s book written by his personal secretary, Benedict’s life story is told through the eyes of a cat.
His first papal encyclical was on love. The second was on hope.
Both, described by some church-watchers as clear and compassionate, were striking for what was missing.
“There was no finger-wagging in either,” said Catholic University’s Irwin. “Pope Benedict is not here to be the corrector. His role has changed.”
John Paul may have been a tough act to follow, in many ways, but church observers say his efforts to take the papacy global helped pave the road that Benedict now travels.
“The major aspect of the job is to proclaim the gospel of Jesus,” Wister said. “In that respect, the two popes are exactly the same. It’s foolish to think that a new pope will change doctrine. What is different is the way they proclaim the doctrine.”
(Carol Ann Campbell writes for The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J)
Copyright 2008 Religion News Service. All rights reserved. No part of this transmission may be distributed or reproduced without written permission.



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Comments read comments(7)
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JohnQ

posted April 8, 2008 at 4:29 pm


When Benedict comes, expect a quieter, slower but nonetheless charming pontiff, say people who have followed both men.
Charming? What people have described this man as “charming”. Perhaps this is a misprint.
I can understand what Bene16 avoids the having his image captured. His true nature is exposed in pictures. I wonder if he years for the earlier days of the Church? Say 1184 through the mid-eighteenth century. Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition has so much more clout than: Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Peace!



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JohnQ

posted April 8, 2008 at 4:38 pm


Well, the enemy must be after me….the above lines should have been:
I can understand why Bene16….
and
I wonder if he yearns for…..
Actually, I do not think the enemy has anything to do with it….more likely my lack of focus during interruptions.
Sorry!



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pagansister

posted April 8, 2008 at 9:09 pm


Somehow I don’t think Benny 16 is a charming person!
As to policies? He’ll keep the church back, and seems to me (a non- Catholic)to be taking it farther back than PJ2.
If he doesn’t like the lime light, why did he allow cameras when he baptized the Muslim man into the church?
He’s 80….and I think there was a reason the RCC chose an old dude to be after PJ2. How long will he actually be pope? Probably not as long as PJ2. Then? Who knows? Maybe the church will elect a more modern type who lives in the 21st century.
The article said he has the potential to shape the Catholic in this (U.S) country…so much for potential progress.
Benny 16 expects his words, if not his image to last. So far he has already had a couple of his “words” lasting…in “revising” the prayer use in the Latin Mass to make it less insulting to the Jews, and the lovely comment about the Muslim faith. Yes, Benny, folks will remember your “words.”



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jestrfyl

posted April 8, 2008 at 11:57 pm


The alpha of the pack of orthodogs uses only words? Is his bark worse than his bite? I doubt it. Some howling hounds have a mean bite, too. Perhaps B16 ought to learn something from jp2. He certainly does not have the “shepherd-ing” pastral sense of the job down. He just knows how to bark and nip and corral his flock like a German shepherd – a coincidince? I think not.



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Michael Taylor

posted April 9, 2008 at 12:04 am


In answer to the person who said, What people call the Pope charming? Prior to becoming pope, he was the most liked of the shop owners and baristas around the Vatican. The common person in Rome who came in contact with him loved him. He is a humble yet brilliant man. READ his work and then rethink your comment.
This was a great article. Very fair and true. Thanks for not quoting the malcontents. Pray for Pope Benedict!



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Nate W

posted April 9, 2008 at 1:35 pm


Michael Taylor,
How DARE you recommend that the regulars here on Beliefnet News actually read anything written by the Pope!!! It’s their right to criticize and falsely accuse the man in total ignorance, and they’re proud to exercise that right every time the opportunity arises.



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JohnQ

posted April 9, 2008 at 2:56 pm


Nate and Michael-
I know you may find this shocking….however, I have read several things by: Fr. Joseph Ratzinger and Cardinal Ratzinger as well as Pope Benedict XVI. I have little doubt I am not the only bnet regular who has done so.
So, when I expressed my shock at some unknown/unnamed group of people referring to him as charming…..I was making an educated assessment. I do realize that I have not met him in person….and, will allow for the possibility (no matter how remote) that the man has charisma. Though, from the photos I have seen of him and the expressions on the faces of people when they meet him…..I sincerely doubt it.
His: “Instruction concerning the criteria for the discernment of vocations with regard to persons with homosexual tendencies in view of their admission to the seminary and to Holy Orders,” sticks clearly in my mind.
Is to profoundly sad when a man who claims to be directly representing our Lord here on Earth not only perpetuates and reinforces bigotry, prejudice, and discrimination….but, actually revs it up. The rampant misogyny and homophobia that is systemic within much of the Catholic Church is detestable! Bene16 has done nothing to discourage it…let alone end it.
Peace!



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