home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0586>
- <title>
- Dec. 06, 1993: Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 06, 1993 Castro's Cuba:The End Of The Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 58
- Keeper Of The Straight And Narrow
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Pope's chief enforcer of doctrine and morals, Joseph Cardinal
- Ratzinger is the most powerful prince of the Church and one
- of the most despised
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling/Rome--Reported by John Moody/Rome and Nomi Morris/Regensburg
- </p>
- <p> The world's most powerful Cardinal lives a stone's throw from
- St. Peter's Square, above the terminus of the No. 64 bus, a
- line infamous for pickpockets. Each morning he sets off on foot
- at a brisk pace, crossing over cobblestones to arrive at 9 a.m.
- at the palazzo that once bore the title of the Roman and Universal
- Inquisition. Soft-spoken and courteous, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger,
- 66, looks too benign to be an inquisitor. But his Congregation
- for the Doctrine of the Faith is the Roman Inquisition's latest
- incarnation, and as the Catholic Church's chief enforcer of
- dogma, the Cardinal stands in direct succession to the persecutors
- of Galileo and the compilers of the index of banned books. The
- weight of history is borne in the attention Ratzinger receives.
- His staff, which includes some of the church's brightest men,
- is sensitive to every small sign of pleasure or displeasure--a subtle glance, a pause, a bland word that has accrued special
- meaning over years. When he gets to his office, important documents
- are spread out on the desk, ready for his review. Says an associate:
- "He hates to be unprepared."
- </p>
- <p> And he is prepared for everything, from opinions on candidates
- for bishoprics worldwide to subtle points of theology. Moreover,
- he seems prepared always to say no--at least to Catholic liberals:
- no to women becoming priests, no to radical feminism, no to
- each instance of abortion, no to every incidence of premarital
- or extramarital sex. He has exerted his influence on a document,
- published last week, laying out the church's stand on interpretations
- of the Bible. Ratzinger sees his work as showing Catholics the
- proper way--and the forbidden way. "I think there is an obligation
- to protect people, to help them to see this is not our faith."
- </p>
- <p> The Cardinal wields immense clout in the hierarchy--beginning
- at the top. The Pope and Ratzinger are, says one mid-ranking
- Vatican official, "two pieces of a puzzle. Without one, the
- other is not complete." Others point out an obvious primacy.
- Asked whether the Cardinal in practice was the undisputed No.
- 2 under the Pontiff, one insider in the Holy See responds, "Intellectually
- and theologically, he's No. 1."
- </p>
- <p> "I wouldn't be surprised if someday he's looked upon as one
- of the great saints of our time," says Joseph Fessio, an American
- Jesuit and a former student. However, as the Pope's conservative
- eminence grise, the Cardinal is also one of the most despised
- men in Catholicism. Critics decry his hard-line ways and his
- apostasy from the seeming liberalism of his youth. They call
- the German-born prelate "Panzer Kardinal" and conjure up images
- of Huns and German despots. "He is very sweet--and very dangerous,"
- the Swiss theologian Hans Kung says. Ratzinger helped force
- Kung out of a professorship at the University of Tubingen for,
- among other things, arguing that the church--speaking through
- the Pope and its bishops--is not infallible.
- </p>
- <p> The Cardinal likes to spend 15 minutes each afternoon at the
- piano. He is particularly fond of Mozart and Beethoven. "Brahms,"
- he says, "is too difficult for me." Other difficulties include
- modern technology--computers, stereos, gizmos and cars. He
- has never earned a driver's license. His talents lie in another
- realm. He can, say his associates, refine doctrine from a chaos
- of arguments. Says an aide: "He has the ability to synthesize
- a lot of collected, sometimes contradictory, information and
- put it into words that are compelling, straightforward and above
- all true to what he believes." And what he believes is often
- what the faithful are expected to accept.
- </p>
- <p> Ratzinger's behind-the-scenes interrogations and investigations
- exert a subtle chill on Catholic intellectual life. His actions
- imposed an 11-month "penitential silence" on Leonardo Boff,
- Brazil's exponent of liberation theology (who has since quit
- the priesthood); they also led to the removal of Charles Curran,
- a proponent of birth control, from teaching theology at the
- Catholic University of America. (He is now at Southern Methodist
- University.) In fact, Ratzinger sometimes seems to be turning
- his back--literally--on modern notions. The pre-Vatican
- II church, he said last April, was theologically correct in
- having priests "oriented toward the Lord," facing away from
- the congregation at Mass. He agreed, however, that a reversal
- would be impractical.
- </p>
- <p> In the early 1960s, no one would have thought Joseph Ratzinger
- would become the enforcer of conservatism. At the Second Vatican
- Council, from 1962 to 1965, Ratzinger and Kung were young theological
- stars advising the West German contingent. In those heady days,
- Ratzinger and Kung applauded from the sidelines as Joseph Cardinal
- Frings, the Archbishop of Cologne, electrified the council by
- calling the prosecutorial tactics of the very office Ratzinger
- now leads "a cause of scandal to the world." Ratzinger is said
- to have ghostwritten most of that speech.
- </p>
- <p> The progressive views he expressed during the council evolved
- out of wartime experience. Though drafted into a paramilitary
- corps, the teenage Joseph saw no combat because of a badly infected
- finger. He never learned to fire a gun, and his weapons were
- never loaded--even when he performed guard duty in a BMW plant.
- But there he saw laborers conscripted from a branch of the Dachau
- concentration camp. He also remembers seeing Hungarian Jews
- being shipped to their death. "The abyss of Hitlerism could
- not be overlooked," he said. The depredations of the officially
- atheistic regime led to his conviction that religion was crucial
- to civilization. "Only the Christian faith had the possibility
- to heal these people and give a new beginning," he says. He
- was ordained a priest in 1951, and moved on to a brilliant career
- as a theologian that reached its first peak at the Second Vatican
- Council.
- </p>
- <p> And then came 1968--annus mirabilis for the world and for
- Joseph Ratzinger. "Something happened," says Kung. "He was deeply
- shocked by the student revolts." At the time, Ratzinger was
- theology dean of the University of Tubingen, where Kung was
- a professor. "He had big clashes with his most intimate students
- and assistants," says Kung. The rebellion, says a Ratzinger
- student, Wolfgang Beinert, "had an extraordinarily strong impact"
- on the future Cardinal, who saw something sinister at work.
- He resigned from Tubingen and sought intellectual refuge in
- the peaceful quarters of the University of Regensburg. Ratzinger,
- says Beinert, who remains close to his former mentor, had been
- "very open, fundamentally ready to let in new things. But suddenly
- he saw these new ideas were connected to violence and a destruction
- of the order of what came before. He was simply no longer able
- to bear it." Says the Cardinal of that time: "I had the feeling
- that to be faithful to my faith, I must also be in opposition
- to interpretations of the faith that are not ((true)) interpretations
- but oppositions."
- </p>
- <p> After Pope Paul VI named him Archbishop of Munich in 1977, Ratzinger
- found an ally in a fellow Cardinal who shared his view of the
- church as the bulwark against barbaric atheism and dehumanizing
- secularism: Karol Wojtyla, the Archbishop of Cracow and the
- future John Paul II. Both were members of the worldwide Synod
- of Bishops--an advisory council to the Pope. In 1980, two
- years after his accession, John Paul asked Ratzinger to join
- him in Rome. The Pontiff was turned down--twice. Finally Ratzinger
- laid out his conditions. He would come only if he could continue
- to speak his mind on matters he felt strongly about. If John
- Paul was ever worried that he and Ratzinger would clash over
- ideas, that concern has dissipated. "In fact," says Ratzinger,
- "we do agree completely on all essentials of church doctrine
- and order. We arrive at the same conclusions, and our differences
- of approach, where they do exist, stimulate discussion."
- </p>
- <p> Since 1981, Ratzinger has infuriated liberals as the church's
- Doctor No. He and his staff have issued a strong public denunciation
- of homosexuality; privately they have warned bishops to guard
- against gay-rights laws. The congregation has also released
- a statement against genetic engineering. And Ratzinger was behind
- a critique that seems to have doomed prospects for a reunification
- of the Catholic and Anglican churches in the near future.
- </p>
- <p> Ratzinger's views resonate through the Pope's recent encyclical
- The Splendor of Truth, which sharply defined right and wrong.
- It also sought to instill a militant obedience in Catholics.
- Treating religion as a matter of mere emotion, says Ratzinger,
- has created a crisis in moral values for all societies. "It
- is essential to have common ground that can be attested to in
- moral and religious matters." The church's teachings, therefore,
- have to be unbending, Ratzinger believes. "Everyone, thank God,
- is free to decide whether or not he is able and willing to subscribe
- to the Catholic faith with responsibility before God and his
- conscience. If I come to the conclusion that I can no longer
- support this set of beliefs, then it is a matter of honesty
- to declare this and draw the consequences." If a theologian
- needs prodding to come to that realization, Ratzinger is happy
- to prod. And if this means many church members must drop out,
- so be it. Does this not betray his past? "I see no break in
- my views as a theologian," he says. "It is absolute nonsense
- to say Vatican II left it up to the individual to decide which
- religious ideas he would adopt and which he would not." As a
- participant in the council, "I would be making a liar of myself"
- to say such a thing.
- </p>
- <p> Today the Cardinal, who is into his third five-year term at
- the Congregation, is the longest-serving major official in John
- Paul's Vatican. Might he be elected Pope one day? Vatican watchers
- say no: he is too controversial, and his brief record in pastoral
- work--as Archbishop of Munich--is at best spotty. Meanwhile,
- his health, while good today, has been precarious in the past.
- In September 1991 he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage that affected
- his left field of vision. Then in August 1992 he fell against
- a radiator and was knocked unconscious, bleeding profusely.
- "Thank God, there are hardly any traces of it now," he says.
- </p>
- <p> The Cardinal likes to explain his faith through the story of
- one of his theology professors, a man who questioned the thinking
- behind the church's 1950 declaration that the Assumption of
- the Virgin Mary into Heaven was an infallible tenet. "He said,
- `No, this is not possible--we don't have a foundation in Scripture.
- It is impossible to give this as a dogma.' " This led the professor's
- Protestant friends to hope they had a potential convert. But
- the professor immediately reaffirmed his abiding Catholicism.
- "No, at this moment I will be convinced that the church is wiser
- than I." Ratzinger asserts: "It was always my idea to be a Catholic,
- to follow the Catholic faith and not my own opinions." Theologians
- may wrangle all they want, he says, but faith in the end is
- something ineffable, springing from the heart. And once it is
- felt there, he says, "then the mind will accept it too."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-