Originally Posted by sarah j
I found it hard to believe that Ratzinger wrote that and found this
enlightening article.
It seems that the statement you quoted is actually ** Ratzinger quoting Newman**.
*In the cited text, Ratzinger was referring to Newman’s ideas on conscience. >
*
“
For Newman, conscience represents the inner complement and limit of the Church principle.Over the pope as the expression of the binding claim of ecclesiastical authority there still stands one’s own conscience, which must be obeyed before all else, if necessary even against the requirement of ecclesiastical authority.”
Ratzinger does say that we must follow our conscience but he also says **we must form them well: **
‘It is never wrong to follow the convictions one has arrived at—in fact, one must do so. But
it can very well be wrong to have come to such askew convictions in the first place, by having stifled the protest of the anamnesis of being. The guilt lies then in a different place, much deeper—not in the present act, not in the present judgment of conscience but in the neglect of my being which made me deaf to the internal promptings of truth. For this reason, criminals of conviction like Hitler and Stalin are guilty. These crass examples should not serve to put us at ease but should rouse us to take seriously the earnestness of the plea: “Free me from my unknown guilt” (Ps 19:13).’
— From a 1991 Keynote address titled ‘Conscience and Truth’ by Ratzinger at a workshop for bishops
( as Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith)
christianity.stackexchange.com/questions/8036/how-does-pope-benedict-xvi-reconcile-conscience-and-authority