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The Silencer

By Mary Jo McConahay, Pacific News Service. Posted April 20, 2005.


In the 1980s, Pope Benedict XVI led Catholic Church efforts to quell liberation theology, which many Latin American priests embraced after watching their parishioners' struggles for survival. Now, many in the region hope the pope will hear with new ears "the cry of the people."

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Joy, consternation, and for some, outright shock is reverberating among Catholics worldwide at the first sight of their new pope in his red robes, Benedict XVI. The most conservative regard the German Joseph Ratzinger as their champion, with his influential rock-hard stands against gay unions, cloning and the ordination of women, and against any dismantling of the firewall between Catholicism and every other religion in the world. Liberals regard him as medieval, a threat to theological exploration of sexual ethics, pluralism and a Church for the third millennium.

Now he is pontiff of all, and both sides are holding their breath.

One key to Benedict's papacy may be found far from the elegant St. Peter's Square and far from after-mass coffees in U.S. church halls, in the villages and rough urban misery belts of Latin America, the globe's most Catholic region, where Ratzinger made one of his hallmark stands as a Vatican force. There in the l980s, he powerfully confronted the fast-moving tide of liberation theology, an intellectual and popular movement that linked Catholic theology and political activism in everyday issues of social justice and human rights. Officially, Ratzinger reversed the tide, forbidding certain Catholic theologians to publish in what was called a "silencing."

Ratzinger issued a 1984 document with something like the force of law called an "Instruction," defining Rome's opposition to liberation theology's "fundamental threat" and weighing in on naming conservative Latin bishops.

Unofficially, liberation theology lives. On a continent of some 500 million where most are poor, where the promise of neo-liberal economic plans of the l990s didn't pan out and three-quarters of the population now lives under democratically elected leftist governments, the attraction of a Catholicism that links God's will with the desire for a better and more dignified life in the here and now -- not just after death -- remains strong. How Benedict XVI faces this reality, for face it he must in a Church that claims to be not just "one" but "universal," will be a marker of his papacy.

In the 1980s the Berlin Wall remained intact, and Ratzinger believed liberation theology was incipient Marxism with a religious veneer. He zeroed in on some intellectual proponents who linked Marx and Jesus. He did not focus on the outcomes of Vatican II -- where Ratzinger himself was considered a liberal reformer -- and the Latin American conferences in Medellin and Puebla, where bishops decided that the Latin Church must stake its future on "an option for the poor." He did not publicly regard the thousands of small communities who were reading the Bible together in a new way, sitting under trees or on dirt floors with no clergy or intellectuals in sight, finding what they called the strength to be actors in their lives.

What would have happened, Guatemalans and El Salvadorans ask to this day, if Ratzinger and Pope John Paul II had regarded the Latin American call for liberation from autocratic rulers with the same force with which the European churchmen supported the Polish Solidarity revolution?


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Mary Jo McConahay is Latin American editor for Pacific News Service.

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WILL THE CRY OF THE PEOPLE CHANGE GOD'S WORD???
Posted by: WONDERWALEYE on Apr 20, 2005 6:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
POLITICS, POLITICS, POLITICS. There is a reason that I left the catholic church but took my BIBLE with me!!!! Do folks really think GOD'S WORD will be changed by what the pope does? and are they making the pope their GOD? Church doctrine, politics, and tradition are folks folly and many make catholic their GOD!!!! Now you can see why I don't belong in the catholic church's activites!!!! I surley don't want to cause strife in the church as all it does is make for a war between CHRISTIANS. In the BIBLE JESUS STATED THAT IT WAS NOT HIS INTENT TO BRING STRIFE BUT TO BRING THE MESSAGE OF GOD'S LOVE, NOT THE COLD LAW OF THE CHURCH. RULES TO BE FOLLOWED THAT MAKE YOU HOLY WITHOUT LOVE FOR EACH OTHER. So my suggestion to the folks of the world is: MAY THE LOVE OF JESUS BE WITH YOU!!![this has two meanings]

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author and agitator of church and state
Posted by: eileen_flmng on Apr 20, 2005 6:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Speaking as a committed Christian and ex-Roman, the bishops choice of such a devisive figure to lead, may well be the catalyst for a Second Reformation. Due to current biblical scholarship and the unearthing in 1945 of the ancient texts known as the Nag Hammadi Library, we now know that in the first 3 centuries after Christ, Christians were a lively and diverse community. Many assert that when Emporer Constantine established Chrtistianity as the state religion, Christianity lost her soul. What we have today, is a religion about Jesus and the idolizing of the tradition. The religion Jesus taught was; male and female were equal, do not judge others, forgive and love your enemies, be a servant to all and that it is the peacemakers who shall be called the children of God.
To read more, the humorous and thought provoking novel, Keep Hope Alive is currently available as a FREE download at; www.olivetreesfoundation.org

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dedwardloftin
Posted by: dedwardloftin on Apr 21, 2005 12:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has anyone else noticed that the new Pope is the head of the Roman Catholic Inquisition, and was elected on Hitler's birthday?
The Head Inquisitioner's election is inevitably going to increase tension between the Catholic fundamentalists and the progressives in the fold. If the Roman church cannot overcome the throwback retrogrades in their midst, perhaps it is time for the monolithic organization to fragment.

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