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contemplative
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Some not as jubilant about Pope Benedict
Fr. McBrien
http://www.catholiccourier.com/images/spacer.gif
(Publication Date: 03-01-2006)
When the name Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger rang out from the balcony overlooking St. Peter’s Square last April, nowhere was the jubilation stronger than among conservative to ultra-conservative Catholics.
In recent weeks this column has given voice to a growing suspicion that many of the same Catholics who were once so jubilant about Cardinal Ratzinger’s election are beginning to experience feelings of doubt and even some measure of anxiety. He has not taken in hand the papal hammer they had expected him to wield against everyone on their long “enemies” list.
New evidence in support of this suspicion has surfaced recently in the February issue of First Things, a conservative monthly edited by Father Richard John Neuhaus, one of the late pope’s strongest supporters and one who, to his credit, correctly predicted the election of Joseph Ratzinger when most other commentators, including the present writer, thought him too old and too polarizing a figure to be elected. Rest of the article here.
The Neuhuas article is here
When I first read Mcbrien’s article I could not help but think that Mcbrien might just be so happy to still have his head on his shoulders. What he doesn’t realize is the other shoe is yet to fall.**
Some not as jubilant about Pope Benedict
Fr. McBrien
http://www.catholiccourier.com/images/spacer.gif
(Publication Date: 03-01-2006)
When the name Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger rang out from the balcony overlooking St. Peter’s Square last April, nowhere was the jubilation stronger than among conservative to ultra-conservative Catholics.
In recent weeks this column has given voice to a growing suspicion that many of the same Catholics who were once so jubilant about Cardinal Ratzinger’s election are beginning to experience feelings of doubt and even some measure of anxiety. He has not taken in hand the papal hammer they had expected him to wield against everyone on their long “enemies” list.
New evidence in support of this suspicion has surfaced recently in the February issue of First Things, a conservative monthly edited by Father Richard John Neuhaus, one of the late pope’s strongest supporters and one who, to his credit, correctly predicted the election of Joseph Ratzinger when most other commentators, including the present writer, thought him too old and too polarizing a figure to be elected. Rest of the article here.
The Neuhuas article is here
When I first read Mcbrien’s article I could not help but think that Mcbrien might just be so happy to still have his head on his shoulders. What he doesn’t realize is the other shoe is yet to fall.**