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February
11, 2013
The Reason Benedict Resigned
by
William Fahey
Reprinted
on February 18, 2013, with kind
permission of
Crisis Magazine
(A Voice for the Faithful Catholic
Laity)
http://www.crisismagazine.com/2013/the-reason-benedict-resigned
The Catholic world is largely shocked by
the publication of Pope Benedict XVI’s
letter of resignation this morning. The
secular world assumes the worst—no, it
desires the worst, and by insinuation
worms doubts into the minds of even the
faithful.
The
secular world will tear through the
brief letter and fixate upon the line
about a “world, subject to so many rapid
changes and shaken by questions of deep
relevance for the life of faith.” It
will weave from these deconstructed
words an existential tale of despair,
scandal, and an authority which realizes
it is no longer in touch with reality.
Nothing
could be further from the truth.
Benedict’s resignation is utterly
consistent with his character. It is
traditional—he brings from our history
and our law a fact and feature of the
Papal Office: one can and—under certain
circumstance—should put aside that
office.
His
resignation demonstrates once again the
firm mark of a father and a teacher. A
father knows that his role is to provide
example, instruction, and discipline,
and ultimately put himself aside for the
good of his own. The Petrine ministry is
not exercised for a man, or for bishops
and priests, or even for Catholics
alone. It is a ministry exercised for
all those seeking God and for all those
towards whom God’s mercy is extended.
It is a demanding office.
As with
every text published by Benedict, this
letter of resignation has no imbalance,
flab, impression, or vagueness. Not a
word goes astray. It is shot through
with paternal love and professorial
clarity.
An
honest reading of this document can only
lead to profound gratitude and sympathy
for a suffering father who must
understand each act and decision he
makes as having “great importance for
the life the Church.”
No one
could doubt that this Holy Father has
meditated profoundly, and I expect
repeatedly, on The Pastoral Rule of St.
Gregory the Great—that sixth-century
handbook for those who hold the highest
spiritual authority, what Benedict and
others have called the ars artium (“the
art of arts”). Much of the book is a
warning against the wrong reasons for
grasping or holding on to power,
followed by an outline of the virtues
needed to exercise leadership well. In
the first book of The Pastoral Rule we
find this line, which I believe has
quietly echoed for some weeks in the
Holy Father’s thoughts: “He must be a
man whose aims are not thwarted by the
frailty of his body.” The office of
Peter is not a spiritual thing which
discounts human nature. That sacred
ministry resides with a person, but that
person must have the nature to exercise
its rigors.
Benedict XVI has marked his pontificate
by humility. If anything, he has tried
to depersonalize the use of authority,
even that uniquely personal authority,
the Petrine Office. Yet we must always
remember that the “person” of the Papal
ministry is St. Peter, who with his
successors acts in the person of
Christ. The papacy is a lived authority
and a living authority and one that must
respond to the needs of the Age. It is
natural that we love the concrete that
we know, and love the particular
character of our popes. And we must do
our best to accept that like a humble
and adored teacher, Benedict now forces
on his students a hard lesson: that the
teacher should never be the focus of our
final attention and love.
Our age
has become overly focused on a model of
“leadership” which is nothing short of
superficial, for whom the shallow gilt
of charisma and “personality” have
blinded everyone to questions of duty
and responsibility. Benedict’s
resignation teaches us once again that
leadership—while exercised by a
person—is not about that person.
Benedict has set before our eyes the old
Roman sense of officium—duty, office,
responsibility. Benedict’s embrace of
the Petrine office has always been a
reluctant one, and that reluctance is
born of clear self-knowledge and deep
understanding of the history and purpose
of papal authority.
The
following words are taken from one of
the Holy Father’s General Audience in
2008. He spoke on St. Gregory the Great
and his reluctance to sit on the throne
of St. Peter, reluctance that gave way
to grace, prayer, and action:
Recognizing the will of God in what had
happened, the new Pontiff immediately
and enthusiastically set to work. From
the beginning he showed a singular
enlightened vision of the reality with
which he had to deal, an extra-ordinary
capacity for work confronting both
ecclesial and civil affairs, a constant
and even balance in making decisions, at
times with courage, imposed on him by
his office. These are not words set down in a
theoretical fashion. They rise from the
Holy Father’s lips with experience
behind them.
More
moving are Benedict’s closing words from
the following day’s audience. Again,
speaking on St. Gregory and his lonely
pontificate, he ends:
Gregory
remained a simple monk in his heart and
therefore was decidedly opposed to great
titles. He wanted to be—and this is his
expression—servus servorum Dei. Coined
by him, this phrase was not just a pious
formula on his lips but a true
manifestation of his way of living and
acting. He was intimately struck by the
humility of God, who in Christ made
himself our servant. He washed and
washes our dirty feet. Therefore, he was
convinced that a Bishop, above all,
should imitate this humility of God and
follow Christ in this way. His desire
was to live truly as a monk, in
permanent contact with the Word of God,
but for love of God he knew how to make
himself the servant of all in a time
full of tribulation and suffering. He
knew how to make himself the “servant of
the servants.” Precisely because he was
this, he is great and also shows us the
measure of true greatness.
The
Holy Father’s reasons for resignation
spring from a grave sense of office and
a faithful belief in what that office
truly is. He has remained through his
pontificate faithful and true to his
vocation of father and teacher. Both
father and teacher must daily put aside
themselves to be true to their calling.
The
papacy is not a mere person, it is not a
great man, it is certainly not a
bloodline or earthly principality. It is
the ministry of the Bishop of Rome,
Successor of St. Peter. It is a sacred
office entrusted to the entire Church.
It is an enduring stewardship through
time. Behind the Vicar stand the
Kingship of Christ and the enduring
nature of His Church, yesterday, today,
and forever.
By the
grace of the Holy Spirit, Pope Benedict
XVI has resigned. His Holiness has
resigned because he understands his
office and he wishes with firm resolve
to help us to understand this and deepen
our faith by remembering him for what he
is and by lifting up our hearts and
minds to the eternal Father and His Son,
Our Supreme Pastor and Lord, Jesus
Christ. |