Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger
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Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger
The theology of littleness is a basic category of Christianity. After all, the tenor of our faith is that God's distinctive greatness is revealed precisely in powerlessness. That in the long run, the strength of history is precisely in those who love, which is to say, in a strength that, properly speaking, cannot be measured according to categories of power. So in order to show who he is, God consciously revealed himself in the powerlessness of Nazareth and Golgotha. Thus, it is not the one who can destroy the most who is the most powerful...but, on the contrary, the least power of love is already greater than the greatest power of destruction.
- Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI
RIP Joseph Aloysius Ratzinger (1927-2023)
What St. Faustina says about Divine Mercy should be taken with a grain of salt
Many people are excited by something St. Faustina said Jesus told her (Diary 699), that if we went to Confession and received the Eucharist on Divine Mercy Sunday, we would have the remission of sins and punishment.
Of course, this is also true if we go to Confession and receive the Eucharist and imitate Christ in our daily lives. By itself, Confession is a great gift of Divine Mercy!
Theologians ought not use St. Faustina’s prayer experiences as recorded in her diary as matter for theology, because her prayer experiences, though real, happened after the death of the last apostle and so are not part of the deposit of faith.
In my book Mercy, I call attention to one of the best treatments of how to understand private revelation is in Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Theological commentary on the Third Secret of Fatima. The future Pope Benedict XVI urges us to retire the term “private revelation” and replace it with the New Testament term “prophecy”. And, like with the prophets of the Old Testament, to recognize that their own limitations of intelligence and theological education color the understanding of what they see and hear.
“...Public Revelation and private revelations - their theological status
“Before attempting an interpretation [of the 3rd secret] there is a need for some basic clarification of the way in which, according to Church teaching, phenomena such as Fatima are to be understood within the life of faith. The teaching of the Church distinguishes between «public Revelation» and «private revelations». The two realities differ not only in degree but also in essence. The term «public Revelation» refers to the revealing action of God directed to humanity as a whole and which finds its literary expression in the two parts of the Bible: the Old and New Testaments. It is called «Revelation» because in it God gradually made himself known to men, to the point of becoming man himself, in order to draw to himself the whole world and unite it with himself through his Incarnate Son, Jesus Christ. It is not a matter therefore of intellectual communication, but of a life-giving process in which God comes to meet man. At the same time this process naturally produces data pertaining to the mind and to the understanding of the mystery of God. It is a process which involves man in his entirety and therefore reason as well, but not reason alone.
“Because God is one, history, which he shares with humanity, is also one. It is valid for all time, and it has reached its fulfilment in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. In Christ, God has said everything, that is, he has revealed himself completely, and therefore Revelation came to an end with the fulfilment of the mystery of Christ as enunciated in the New Testament. To explain the finality and completeness of Revelation, the Catechism of the Catholic Church quotes a text of Saint John of the Cross: «In giving us his Son, his only Word (for he possesses no other), he spoke everything to us at once in this sole Word - and he has no more to say... because what he spoke before to the prophets in parts, he has now spoken all at once by giving us the All Who is His Son. Any person questioning God or desiring some vision or revelation would be guilty not only of foolish behaviour but also of offending him, by not fixing his eyes entirely upon Christ and by living with the desire for some other novelty» (No. 65; Saint John of the Cross,The Ascent of Mount Carmel, II, 22).
“Because the single Revelation of God addressed to all peoples comes to completion with Christ and the witness borne to him in the books of the New Testament, the Church is tied to this unique event of sacred history and to the word of the Bible, which guarantees and interprets it.
This kind of interpretation of the Second Vatican Council will only be defended by those who refuse to read its texts or who divide them into two parts: an acceptable progressive part and an unacceptable old-fashioned part. In the conciliar documents concerning the Church itself, for example, Vatican I and Vatican II are inextricably bound together. It is simply out of the question to separate an earlier, unsuitable ecclesiology from a new and different one. Ideas like these not only confuse conciliar texts with party platforms and councils with political conventions, but they also reduce the Church to the level of a political party. After a while political parties can throw away an old platform and replace it with one which they regard as better, at least until yet another one appears on the scene:
Joseph Ratzinger, “Communio: A Program” Communio 19 (Fall, 1992): 442
Why is it that so many Catholics of deep faith have grown weary of the “business as usual” Catholicism of our parishes and have felt the need to flee to an older iteration of the faith, in both liturgy and in theology, and who do so, not out of nostalgia for a past they never knew, but because they have found something there that rips open their souls with the passion of a lover? We can prattle-on with spittle flecked outrage about the audacity of those who dare reject Vatican II or who dare criticize the Novus Ordo, but it will come to nothing unless we own up to the fact that the Church has failed to recognize that the anomic and nihilistic cosmos of post-modernity has laid waste to all of our standard structures of meaning, all of the traditions that embodied and made “real” that meaning, and all of the moral and spiritual weight of everything that came before five minutes ago. The Church has failed to even notice and, therefore, to acknowledge, that modern Catholics in the West are drowning with a slow gurgling death in the chaotic waters of modernity’s hegemonic enchantments. That we live in a collective of concupiscence that enslaves us to the morbid regime of death and the allure of immortality through pleasure. The Church has failed to recognize that all “ultimates” have been killed as effective realities by the Mammon and Moloch of modernity and have been replaced with an endless panoply of penultimate counterfeits. The Church has failed to recognize the “abyss” that Ratzinger outlines which has now opened up below us and into which we all feel inexorably drawn as we flail our arms about desperately trying to grasp hold of something (anything!) solid.
Source: https://gaudiumetspes22.com/2021/07/19/the-hermeneutics-of-the-abyss-some-thoughts-on-traditionis-custodes/?fbclid=IwAR0Ng2y_8o_EwFQLbOD_bHqxUSyvb0f0epla9F_dogFNp5Wm_lOCt_ksx3k
“From the moment of [Jesus’] birth, he belongs outside the realm of what is important and powerful in worldly terms. Yet it is this unimportant and powerless child that proves to be the truly powerful one, the one on whom ultimately everything depends. So one aspect of becoming a Christian is having to leave behind what everyone else thinks and wants, the prevailing standards, in order to enter the light of the truth of our being, and aided by that light to find the right path.”
~ Pope Benedict XVI, Jesus of Nazareth: The Infancy Narratives, 67
[Nativity, by William Congdon].
• Joseph Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI) was born on 16 April 1927 in Marktl am Inn, Germany. His father, a police officer, came from a traditional family of farmers from Lower Bavaria. He spent his adolescent years in Traunstein, a small town on the Austrian border. It was in this context, which Pope Benedict XVI himself has described as "Mozartian", that he received his Christian, human and cultural formation. More: http://www.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/biography/documents/hf_ben-xvi_bio_20050419_short-biography-old.html
• William Grosvenor Congdon was born in Providence, Rhode Island, on 15 April 1912, on the night the Titanic sunk. His parents belonged to two illustrious families of protestant industrialists. William grew up in an environment that was well to do and full of possibilities... More: http://www.congdonfoundation.com/ENG/Biografia.html
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