Овај чланк који преносим из канадског The Globe and Mail за Кичмоломца Буловића, Мираша Деадића, Ристивоја Радовића може бити да ће бити шокантна вест. Можда ће посве Мирослав из Видове почети да лева сузе, пародон ни један од њих нису толико довољно учени да би овај чланак могли да прочитају, а некамо ли да га разумеју, (ако их детаљи интересују нека плате преводиоца да им чланак преведе), али пошто чланак детаљно анализира и описује да се ватиканском подземљу измиче тло испод ногу, и да му за то нису криви ни адвокати, нити новинари, верујем да ће ипак Мирослв пустити коју сузу, када сазна бар из овога увода да му његов моћни "папа" то јест тата ипак није толико моћан колико је то Мирослав преувеличао.
Овај чланк је дело професора Џона Корнвела са колеџа који носи име Исус, и који је под јурисдикциом Университета Кембриџ. Професор се с правом пита шта ће неки смртник на земљи било коме који се представља да је отац? (папа, на српском је тата или отац).
Професорев закључак је једноставан. Једна криминална организација какав је Ватикан заиста не прердставља данс ништа и није потртебна никоме до самој себи. Или горе споменутим велеиздајницима, и њиховим следбеницима.
Па зато још, шта ли ће тек имати, да каже Лабаренције из Шапца на сву ову кризу? То је онај Лабаренције што лаже да је "папа" на челу организације распрострањене на подручју најразвијениег дела човечанства.
Ја се надам да црвенкапе неће бити у стању да изабру некога ко би их реформисао, јер то би значило да се на миран начин угаси једна давно проклета организација. Једна крволочна клика, због које су настали Мачвански покољи, Јасеновци, Јадовна, Аушвици, Бухенвалди, Дахау и тако редом. Пропорционално на овим стратиштима су се одиграла зверства не запамћена у историји човечанства, само су комунисти у споменутим зверствима могли да парирају Ватикану.
Међутим додтно, на горња спменута зверства, зверства којих се доњи осврт дотиче, попут силовања деце и нејачи, су она зверства која датирају још од пре Мачванских покоља, Јасеновца, Јадовна, Аушвица, Бухенвалда, и која се настављају, и ова организација више не може и није у стању да их скрива. Ова зверства по размери и према процени многих аналитичара, чак и превазилазе она која су се збила у Првом и Другом Светском Рату, и у послењем Балканском, коме је доста кумовао Ртазингервов предходник Војтила.
Неки и мени замерају да сам наводно преоштар као што је то и аутор доњег чланка, пa ако сам и ја у оној групи којa осуђујe црвенкапе и њиховe колаборатерe, што смо успели да раскринкамо ово подземље, па ме не само они, већ како ми пријатељ саопшти мрзе и синодавци из Београдске патријаршије, на челу са Мирославом из Видове. Онда само могу да кажем једно. Ја сам поносан што ме такви мрзе! Уз још једну напомену да је писац чланка аутор чувеног дела Хитлеров Папа.
A pope for the Church - or a pope for the world
What on earth is a pope for? And why should it matter to the world
who he is or what his talents are, so long as he is a good man and
preaches the gospel?
On Tuesday, the cardinals will enter the
papal conclave to discuss the problems of the Roman Catholic Church in
the world and the kind of man best suited to tackle them.
Their debates will be shaped by the times. On the brink of the Second
World War, they chose a diplomat pope, hoping in vain that he would
bring a negotiated peace before conflict began.
After Paul VI, an
anxious reformer who had struggled with the sexual and other social
upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s, they wanted a cheerful, uncomplicated,
pastoral pope who would stress the need for prayer.
(Unfortunately,
John Paul I, the “smiling Pope,” lasted barely five weeks – the
cardinals realized too late that they had chosen a man in fragile
health. They next chose the young, physically robust cardinal who would
become the papal superstar John Paul II.)
Sometimes, during a long
papacy, the problems alter drastically. In the 1980s and 1990s, John
Paul II had a hand in bringing down communism and ending the Cold War,
which benefited East and West, Catholics and non-Catholics. He said,
“The tree was already rotten. I just gave it a good shake.” After the
fall of communism, however, John Paul was fearful of the dark side of
unrestrained capitalism and the growth of secularism and materialism,
especially in his native Poland.
He was an example of the strong
moral voice a pope can bring to global affairs, speaking truth to power
even when governments choose to ignore his teachings. In 1991, I
followed John Paul on a trip to Sicily, where he fearlessly denounced
the corruption of the Mafia on their own territory. He was popular
throughout the world, even among many not bound by Catholic beliefs.
Catholicism
is nothing if not social, committed to the principles of the Sermon on
the Mount, antagonistic to the status quo. Catholicism is radical,
communitarian, open to all cultures and ethnicities – hence “catholic,”
universal.
Yet, the great difficulty of every pope is that he is
the final protector of traditional belief. The Catholic Church is
evidently a conservative institution. It does not pander to the latest
fads and fashions; it is vigilant over its traditions of belief and
practice. It does not fall into the trap of believing that, unaided by
grace, human nature is perfectible.
How can a pope – who, in
combination with his bishops, is regarded as infallible in faith and
morals – change course once he has proclaimed the dogma? And yet how can
he not engage with the real world, the changes in society and politics,
as well as scientific knowledge?
Hans Küng, the Swiss dissident
Catholic theologian and former friend of Benedict XVI, has written of
the papacy: “A change, indeed a radical revolution, has to come, given
the present accumulation of problems.”
Threats to the Church
A pope must try to protect the Church against threats of every kind, at the highest level.
There
are many external threats to the Church today. In China, the regime has
created a government-sponsored hierarchy of bishops in competition with
those appointed by the Vatican. In parts of Africa, Catholic churches
and their congregations are being targeted in Christian-Muslim
conflicts. In the United States and Britain, many parts of the Church
find themselves at odds with the papacy over equal-rights policies.
Yet,
more than in any era since the Protestant Reformation, the pope who
resigned last month has been deeply engrossed with internal rather than
external threats to the Church.
High on the agenda is the clerical
sexual-abuse scandal, still rocking the Church. The cardinals must
choose someone who has had no executive or pastoral responsibilities for
pedophile priests. But there is a danger that the clerical-abuse
problem is obscuring deep internal structural problems that need urgent
attention.
There are two major questions, on which a host of other
issues depend: first, the scope and limits of the power of the pope and
the Curia (the Vatican bureaucracy); and next, what does it mean to be
an authentic Catholic today?
At the Second Vatican Council 50 years ago, it was decided that the
pope should be less of a chief executive and more a judge of final
appeal. Local bishops should have greater authority and discretion. It
was called the principle of collegiality, or collective authority.
The
first test of collegiality after Vatican II involved the Church’s
teaching on contraception, not long after the pill became available. The
bishops wanted a relaxation of the rules. But Paul VI decided on his
own conscience and sense of infallibility to confirm the ban on condoms
and the pill.
For three decades, John Paul II and Joseph Ratzinger
– first as cardinal enforcer, then as pope – have stuck rigidly to the
papal doctrine on birth control. At the same time, they have
consistently clawed back powers from the bishops to the papal centre,
weakening the autonomy of the local churches.
John Paul and
Benedict, moreover, strenuously enforced a prerogative appropriated by
the popes as recently in the Church’s long history as 1917: It insists
that only the pope can nominate new bishops. Local hierarchies, clergy
and laypeople have no say in the matter. This has ensured the
appointment of generations of papal yes-men, who tend to be weak and
often disappoint the faithful. (Under John Paul and Benedict, no priest
could hope to be elected who had questioned papal teaching on sexual
issues.) It has also meant long delays in replacing bishops.
The
centralization of papal and Vatican power and downgrading of bishops was
a major reason for the failure to grapple with the pedophile-priest
scandal. Decisions on defrocking were referred back to Rome. Both John
Paul and Benedict believed that the scandal was cooked up by journalists
and lawyers. When they could disregard it no longer, both cited Satan
as the principal culprit. Abusing priests were allowed to reoffend and
escape justice for years.
Second, there is the problem of true
Catholic identity. According to the past two popes, it means strict
adherence to Catholic doctrine, which forbids sex before marriage, using
condoms or the pill, divorcing and remarrying without an annulment,
living in a gay sexual relationship etc. – all of which, unrepented,
condemn a person to hell.
Figures vary across the world, but, by
papal standards, there are a great many Catholics “living in sin.” And
people are not going to confession as they once did: In the U.S.,
statistics show that only 2 per cent of the faithful go to confession
nowadays. Yet, contrary to doctrine, most still receive the Eucharist at
Mass. This means that there has been a deep and growing split between
papal teaching and popular practice for decades.
John Paul
appeared to ignore the dysfunction. Benedict, by contrast, knew what
should be done: In interviews and writings, he declared that Catholics
who were not prepared to follow the rules should leave the Church. As
recently as last summer, he preached a sermon stating that those who
dissented from Church teaching yet stayed within the Church were acting
like Judas – the gravest sin that could be imagined.
He was not
referring just to sex, but to priests and nuns who called for a married
priesthood, or for a female priesthood. Likening the truly faithful
Church to the Christians in the catacombs, “a faithful remnant,” or the
hot centre of a dying star, with the flotsam and jetsam of dissent in
orbit around it, he expounded his preference for a smaller, totally
loyal Church.
Papal teaching on “life” and sexual matters has had a
profound effect not only on Catholics but on non-Catholic perceptions
of the Church. The failure of the Roman centre to deal with the
sexual-abuse scandals has eroded the Church’s moral authority throughout
the world. At the same time, the Church often appears out of touch on
medical and scientific questions such as in vitro fertilization,
HIV/AIDS prevention and embryonic stem-cell research.
I once
interviewed an extraordinary cardinal archbishop in Milan, the late
Maria Martini, who was one of the favourites at the last conclave. Rev.
Martini said that, on the question of contraception, for example, the
right use of language and theology should make it possible to maintain
the Church’s teaching against the “contraceptive mentality,” while being
more lenient on a couple’s specific situation.
He reminded me that, for 400 years, usury (lending at interest) had
been considered a mortal sin, but the Church had been able to change its
doctrine gradually without losing the spirit of the original principle –
condemning wrongful exploitation.
Papal isolation
There
is no doubt that popes in the past have believed and acted as if the
unity of the entire Church depends on them alone in a very real sense.
Loyalty to the Holy Father is the one issue that unites Catholics,
whatever they may think of him. To criticize him is to offend the most
crucial taboo; love him or loathe him, every Catholic knows that he
remains their best and only option for future unity.
Overwhelmed
by the solitude of this papal role, Paul VI confided a private note to
himself that might have been written by any of the popes in recent
history: “My solitariness becomes complete and awesome. Hence the
dizziness, the vertigo. Like a statue on a plinth – that is how I live
now.” He went on to comment that he has to “decide, assume every
responsibility for guiding others, even when it seems illogical and
perhaps absurd.”
There are great dangers in this isolation, which
the great 19th-century theologian Cardinal John Henry Newman recognized.
He wrote of elderly popes who have been too long in office: “It is
anomaly and bears no good fruit; he becomes a god, has no one to
contradict him, does not know facts, and does cruel things without
meaning it.”
Pius IX became so hated among the people of Rome
that, in 1881, a gang tried to throw his body into the River Tiber as it
was being drawn to its resting place.
Many popes become addicted
to their power. Pius XII, the wartime pope, was so keen to protract his
reign that he took rejuvenation injections provided by a doctor in
Switzerland, Paul Niehans, who was similarly treating Marshal Tito of
Yugoslavia.
This is what makes the resignation of Benedict so
unusual. It is an enormous departure from the past. It means that the
next pope will have an emeritus pope in the background who is aware of
the isolated and isolating problems of the papacy. There may come a day
when popes will have a limited period in office, and there could be
several retired popes, just as there are several retired presidents of
the United States. They may no longer wield power, but they can offer
advice and sympathy.
Much depends on the next pope, not just for
the Church but for the wider world. If the Catholic Church falters and
fragments, a crucial alternative moral voice in the world is lost.
Herculean task
Uppermost
in the cardinals’ minds this week will be the crisis in the Church over
centralization of power versus distribution of power. A conservative
pope is unlikely to embark on a reform of papal and Vatican power, which
has weakened the Church at its periphery. Yet, a liberal pope could
find himself residing over fragmentation and disunity.
Worse, an
ultra-conservative pope would probably move to exclude those many
millions of Catholics who refuse to abide by the Church’s teachings. And
a recklessly progressive pope could prompt the voluntary self-exclusion
of many groups of traditionalists, which happened with the so-called
Society of Pius X, the splinter Catholic group that found fault with the
reforms of Vatican II.
So the Church is on the horns of a dilemma.
One
North American bishop, John Quinn, a former president of the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops, has usefully drawn a parallel between
the need for decentralization in the Church and the precedent of
internal organizations such as the International Red Cross: Central
control becomes counterproductive and propels the institution toward
entropy and disintegration, as opposed to empowering every level to take
responsibility for what they can contribute to a common direction.
The
new pope has a herculean task before him. He must try to redeem the
Church from the huge damage to its reputation because of clerical sexual
abuse, while addressing, as far as possible, the harm done to their
victims. He must try to heal the divisions between liberal and
conservative Catholics, which have reached a peak of vitriol in recent
years. And he must try to devolve a measure of authority to the bishops
of the world, while ensuring reasonable central control over limited
essentials.
As the cardinals pray for the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, I guess they will be praying with more than special fervour this
time.
John Cornwell, a fellow of Jesus College at the University of Cambridge, is best known for his books on the papacy, most notably Hitler’s Pope. His most recent book is Newman’s Unquiet Grave.
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