Well, he does. Or at least, he’s supposed to.
The Pope is supposed to be a Teacher; it’s part of his office. But a good teacher cannot teach the same way to everyone. A good teacher tailors his/her lesson to the student(s) he/she is teaching. Telling this woman “no” without giving her something to ponder and pray over would accomplish nothing. She wouldn’t learn anything new. She knew the answer was “no,” the Pope gave her something to ponder and pray over.
If he can’t do that and would be intimidated by men like Cardinal Kasper, then maybe he might not be the right man for the office. *** I would imagine that this was just a tongue-in-cheek, self-depreciating joke.***
This Pope confuses people, and that’s not a good thing. Look at threads like these, people trying to analyze, journalists and media placing a spin, and apologists trying to tell people to “calm down; the Pope is really saying…” Well why do we need all that? Who is the Pope really confusing? If we, orthodox Catholics listen to the Pope though the eyes and ears of the Church, we will hear what He is really saying. If we assume he’s talking as a Heretic, well then yes, you will be confused. If his “confusion” causes a non-Catholic or a non-practicing Catholic to read the Catechism and come/return to the Church, then where is the harm? If he’s confusing faithful Catholics (whom he isn’t talking to), then they either do not know their faith well enough, they don’t trust The Holy Spirit to protect the Church, or they are listening to the wrong people. We should all know by now not to put stock into the mainstream media regarding anything dealing with the Church or general morality.
He needs to be clear, but from the back-and-forth on these forums and Catholic publications alone, he obviously is not. ***He’s not clear because some people feel that he is a heretic and don’t hear him from within Church teaching. But if you read his words with the ears & eyes of the Church and of the Catechism, he often makes sense. ***
Well no. If he needs to say something, then for the sake of the Chair of St. Pete, say something. Even if it’s no. ***This isn’t a question that hasn’t been answered before. It’s written down in almost every single pew missal in all Churches. It’s in the Catechism. The woman knew the answer was “no.” We all know the answer is “no.” If the Pope simply said “no” to this women, it would be like answering “blue” if someone asked “what colors can the sky be?” We know the sky is blue, but many of us don’t all know why the sky is blue. Also, we don’t all know why the sky appears different colors at sunrise and sunset. So a good answers isn’t simply blue, but it’s explaining why the ski is blue. Also good teachers give homework to allow people to learn for themselves.
This is what the Pope did here. He was, in a gentle manner, explaining why the answer is “no” and giving her homework so she could learn more herself. ***