Pope Benedict Moves Cautiously In Approaching Other Faiths
By Francis X. Rocca
Religion News Service
Saturday, October 20, 2007; B09
washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/19/AR2007101902233_pf.html
VATICAN CITY – Twenty-one years ago this month, Pope John Paul II met in Assisi, Italy, with more than 150 leaders of different religions to pray for peace. Images of the white-robed pontiff worshiping in the Basilica of St. Francis alongside colorfully garbed Tibetan Buddhists, Japanese Shintoists and representatives of traditional African and American faiths captivated millions around the world.
Not everyone, however, was pleased – including the man who would one day succeed John Paul.
“
This cannot be the model,” said Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI), who was then head of the Roman Catholic Church’s highest doctrinal body, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Ratzinger later wrote that it was “indisputable that the Assisi meetings, especially in 1986, were misinterpreted by many people.”
Ratzinger feared that such displays, however well-intentioned, could promote the relativistic idea that all religions are equally true, or that all faiths could be combined in a single blend.
Yet, tomorrow, Benedict will attend the opening day of the International Meeting for Peace in Naples. Organized by a Catholic lay group, the Community of Sant’Egidio, it is the latest in an annual series of events intended to sustain the “spirit of Assisi.”
At least Pope Beneidct will not have voodoo religions at the meeting burning woodchips to the devil.
From Pope Benedict’s June 2007 words about that 1986 interfaith gathering:
*“In the current context I cannot forget the initiative of my predecessor of holy memory, John Paul II, who convened here in 1986 representatives of Christian confessions and different religions of the world for a meeting of prayer for peace. It was a moment of grace, as I confirmed some months ago in my letter to the bishop of this town on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of that event [in September 2006]. [John Paul’s] choice to celebrate that meeting in Assisi was inspired from the testimony of Francis himself, as a man of peace, to whom many from other cultural and religious positions look at with sympathy.”
*
**Also, referring, on the same occasion, to St. Francis: **
"His impassioned prayers reveal his way of living according to the form of the holy Gospel, his choice of poverty and to seek Christ in the face of the poor. His conversion to Christ reveals virtue that can apply to the grand themes of our time in the search for peace, the safeguard of nature, and the promotion of dialogue between all humanity. Francis is a true teacher in these things."
That’s good enough for me.
“At least Pope Beneidct (sic) will not have voodoo religions at the meeting burning woodchips to the devil”.
Is that what you REALLY believe about JPII? Oh my.