Friday, April 22, 2005

is this the new benedict, for whom the world waits, according to alistair macintyre?

As with the program, so with the man: He is a Benedict in the depths of his interior life and in his intellectual accomplishment. Benedict XVI has an encyclopedic knowledge of two millennia of theology, and indeed of the cultural history of the West. He is more the shy, monastic scholar than the ebullient public personality of his predecessor; yet he has shown an impressive capacity for a different type of public "presence" in his brilliantly simple homily at John Paul II's funeral and in his first appearance as pope. He has known hardship: He knows the modern temptations of totalitarianism (paganism wedded to technology) from inside the Third Reich; he has been betrayed by former students (like the splenetic Brazilian liberation theologian Leonardo Boff) and former colleagues (like Hans Kung, a man of far less scholarly accomplishment and infinitely less charity). His critics say he is dour and pessimistic. Yet I take it as an iron law of human personality that a man is known by his musical preferences; and Benedict XVI is a Mozart man, who knows that Mozart is what the angels play when they perform for the sheer joy of it. Indeed, and notwithstanding the cartoon Joseph Ratzinger, the new pope is a man of Christian happiness who has long asked why, in the aftermath of the Second Vatican Council, summoned to be a "new Pentecost" for the Catholic Church, so much of the joy has gone out of Catholicism. Over some 17 years of conversation with him, I have come to know him as a man who likes to laugh, and who can laugh because he is convinced that the human drama is, in the final analysis, a divine comedy.

He once called himself a "donkey," a "draft animal" who had been called to a work not of his choosing. Yet when Joseph Ratzinger stepped out onto the loggia of St. Peter's to begin a work he never sought, I couldn't help think of the conclusion of Alasdair MacIntyre's penetrating study of the moral confusions of the West, "After Virtue." In a time when willfulness and relativism had led to a frigid and joyless cultural climate, MacIntyre wrote, the world was not waiting for Godot, "but for another -- doubtless very different -- St. Benedict." The world now has a new Benedict. We can be sure that he will challenge us all to the noble human adventure that has no better name than sanctity.


From the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Here is the whole thing.

Is it of much significance that St. Benedict is the patron of Europe? Did Pope Benedict have this in mind when choosing his name?

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think there is a significance. Europe needs the Gospel.

Will, Mike and I are thinking about getting together an informal group to look at theology next year. I don't think it could even be a group without your presence (we could socially construct some other people).

PJA

Ecgbert said...

Of course as you can read I'm happy about Pope Benedict XVI too.

Many thanks again for the link but I liked 'Catholic, Conservative, Anti-war' or alternatively 'A Conservative Blog for Peace'.

gwb said...

How about "A Catholic, Convservative Blog for Peace"? The word "conservative" started annoying me the other day. I think I'm over that now.

Ecgbert said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Ecgbert said...

Why did the word 'conservative' annoy you?

If it was because it reminded you of commonly understood American 'conservatism' today that's understandable!

That's not this blog's conservatism.

I like it as it is now. Thanks!

gwb said...

Its just that words that become such an entrenched part of the public discourse begin, as a result, to be emptied of their conceptual content. I mean, that the word "conservative" is applicable to so many disparate and mutually exclusive things (Republicanism, Libertarianism, FDR Democrats, etc. etc.) is what I'm getting at. Its obviously an analogous situation in Church circles.

But as I said, my annoyance was passing. "Conservative" is not entirely vaccuous. I'm happy calling myself a conservative.