November 20, 2006

WHO EXPECTS A PANZER TO BE PEACEFUL?:

The passion of the pope (TIME, November 19, 2006)

Few people saw this coming. Nobody truly expected Benedict to be a mere caretaker pope -- his sometimes ferocious 24-year tenure as the Vatican's theological enforcer and John Paul's right hand suggested anything but passivity -- but neither did church watchers expect surprises.

They generally believed that he would sustain John Paul II's conservative line on morality and church discipline and focus most of his energies on trimming the Vatican bureaucracy and battling Western culture's "moral relativism."

Although acknowledged as a brilliant conservative theologian, Benedict lacked the open-armed charisma of his predecessor. Besides, for all John Paul's magnetism, what had initially propelled him to the center of the world stage was his challenge to communism and its subsequent fall, a huge geopolitical event that the pope helped precipitate with two exhilarating visits to his beloved Polish homeland.

By contrast, what could Benedict do? Liberate Bavaria? Well, not quite. But this year he has emerged as a far more compelling and complex figure than anyone had imagined. And much of that has to do with his willingness to take on what some people feel is today's equivalent of the communist scourge -- the threat of Islamic violence.


How could they not have forseen that this Pope would be primarily dedicated to salvaging Europe from the twin threats of secularism and Islamicism from at least the moment he took the name Benedict?

Posted by Orrin Judd at November 20, 2006 12:06 AM
Comments

Being Time magazine on the topic of religion, they probably thought that he was expressing his taste in eggs.

Posted by: John Ziemba at November 20, 2006 6:17 PM
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