T
triciafrancess
Guest
I respect your opinions and agree with your analysis that perhaps Pope Benedict is sending a message that it’s time to set a new precedent for aging and ailing popes, but I’m not sure I agree with it. To me, it feels as though he is buying into the culture’s precedent that people have to be active and productive to be valuable.If we want a new evangelization, we need someone who has the physical capacity to evangelize. While I love B16, I respect the fact that he realizes that he is simply physically not up to that task. It takes great humility to do what he’s doing.
I remember when Pope Benedict was elected that I felt kind of sorry for him. It was well known that he was ready to retire and wanted to live a quiet life of praying and writing. I thought it was so very courageous of him to accept the papacy knowing that he was then committed for the rest of his life. It never occurred to me that he wouldn’t (or didn’t have to) honor that commitment.
Maybe it’s time for a change in tradition, and maybe Pope Benedict’s decision will set a precedent that turns out to be for the good of the Church, so I’m praying to be able to keep an open mind about it. But, change is hard, and I think the surprise factor is what makes this so difficult to deal with. I would like to say I think it’s a courageous decision, but instead, I’m having abandonment issues.