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Will the pope resign?

Shia Islam

Quran and Ahlul-Bayt a.s.
Premium Member
By Francis X. Rocca
VATICAN CITY (RNS) Will Pope Benedict XVI resign?

Less than two weeks ago, that question was just a publicity-grabbing ploy by an Irish online bookmaker.

Now, following charges that he personally mishandled cases of pedophile priests in Munich and Milwaukee, the idea of Benedict stepping down is actually being taken seriously, at least in some quarters of the media.

“With his authority eroded, why does he even remain in office?” wrote Peter Wensierski on Thursday (March 25) in the online edition of the German magazine Der Spiegel.

“If the church is to survive ... it will have to go through a wrenching transformation,” wrote the influential Washington-based blogger Andrew Sullivan the same day. “Beginning with the resignation of this Pope and an end to priestly celibacy.”

The Roman Catholic Church’s code of canon law does provide for the possibility of a pope stepping down, as long as the decision is “made freely.”

Yet according to the Rev. Richard P. McBrien, writing in “Lives of the Popes,” no more than six popes have resigned over the Catholic Church’s two millennia of history. All but two did so under pressure from secular potentates.

Gregory XII resigned in the year 1415 at the demand of a council of bishops, called to resolve the four-decade-long Western Schism that had divided the church between two rival claimants to the papal throne.

Only one pope, Celestine V, a Benedictine hermit who was later canonized as a saint, retired of his own volition, in 1294, pleading his unworthiness for the job and desire for a more tranquil life.

At least two recent popes have seriously considered resigning for reasons of physical or mental incapacity.

In 1989, Pope John Paul II left a written declaration that he would resign the papacy “in case of illness presumed to be incurable and of long duration, that impedes me from adequately exercising the functions of my apostolic ministry.”

John Paul noted that he was “following the example” of Pope Paul VI, who in 1965 apparently made similar provisions for his own resignation in case of incapacity.

According to another document, recently revealed by the Vatican-appointed advocate for the late pope’s canonization as a saint, John Paul also considered stepping down when he reached the standard bishop’s retirement age of 75.

The advocate, Monsignor Slawomir Oder, writes that John Paul sought advice from experts on the historical and theological aspects of resignation, “consulting in particular then-Cardinal (Joseph) Ratzinger,” now Pope Benedict.

Whatever Benedict may have advised, his predecessor finally decided that it was, as he put it, his “duty to continue to carry out the job for which Christ the Lord has called me, as long as he, in the mysterious designs of his providence, will want.”

John Paul, of course, died of natural causes at age 84 in 2005, having endured years of painful illness, still reigning as pope.

Assuming that Benedict’s health holds out, and no secular government or pretender to his throne pressures him to abandon it, the only precedent for resignation that this deeply traditional leader has to follow is that of the monastic Celestine.

For a man whose greatest joys are said to be liturgy, theology and music, there might be moments lately when that option seems hard to resist.

RNS Feature: "Will the pope resign?"
 
A

angellous_evangellous

Guest
I don't think so.

It's been a thousand years since a Pope stepped down in disgrace.
 
A

angellous_evangellous

Guest
It's also going to be difficult these days to find a cardinal or bishop who hasn't known about sexual felonies among priests.

It's been common practice for as long as Christian history, and it is directly linked to several Roman Catholic traditions.

A Roman Catholic preist has the power to give the Body of Christ no matter how immoral he is, and the Pope has the authority to retain the Body of Life from the Church if he desires.

For believers, this is the fear of God, and in earlier times the Pope could control entire countries with this threat.

Nowadays, the concept that forgiveness is synthetic - that priests can rape 200 children and simply receive forgiveness and keep providing the Body of Christ - provides the rationale for hiding the truth from everyone.
 

Autodidact

Intentionally Blank
Why should he? He's an absolute monarch of one of the world's most powerful kingdoms, and no one has the power to make him resign.

However, the Catholic Church will be dramatically smaller and poorer in another ten years than it has been for several hundred.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
My bet is the Pope will not resign. For one thing, he's too decrepit to fully comprehend the mess the Church is in. So he probably thinks things are better than they are.
 
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