segunda-feira, 9 de novembro de 2015

A Guerra do Papa Francisco contra a Igreja



Este é o melhor texto que li até hoje sobre o Papa Francisco e a Igreja. Resume e esclarece a Igreja sob domínio do Papa Francisco, ou como o título do texto diz, o artigo mostra a Igreja (ensinamento de Cristo e bispos) sendo atacada pelo Papa Francisco.

O texto é do católico inglês Damian Thompson, publicado na revista The Spectator. Conheci os textos de Damian, quando morei na Inglaterra, e ele escrevia para o jornal The Telegraph. Acho que ele está cada vez melhor.

Boa parte do que Damian escreve á era de conhecimento daqueles que acompanham a Igreja, mas o texto é um ótimo resumo bem convincente para os que tinham dúvida de como está a Igreja sob o Papa argentino.

Resumindo o texto:

- Damian demonstra que o Papa Francisco quer realmente alterar aquilo definido por Cristo, que o casamento é indissolúvel e quer oferecer comunhão para recasados, mesmo que a maioria dos bispos a Igreja) seja contra.

- Damian demonstra que o Papa Francisco age de forma ditatorial no Vaticano, beneficiando aliados, mesmo quando esses aliados agem contra a maioria dos bispos e mesmo quando esses aliados acobertaram crimes de pedofilia;

- Damian demonstra que o Papa Francisco abusou do poder para tentar passar o que ele deseja no sínodo da família, convocando bispos desprestigiados para o sínodo, enquanto deixando fora clérigos de alto prestígio internacional.

- Damian mostra que o Papa Francisco persegue e condena os conservadores e ficou raivoso (na expressão em inglês "threw the strop) com o resultado do sínodo.

- Damian definie o Papa Francisco como "um motorista em alta velocidade sem mapa e sem retrovisor". Isto é, alguém que não sabe para onde vai, mas vai em alta velocidade, e também não respeita a Doutrina da Igreja determinada por séculos (sem retrovisor). Ótima definição.

- Damian também define o Papa Francisco como um político, muito mais do que o clérigo. Algo já observado por diversos analistas.

- Damian também argumenta que o Papa não é tem capacidade intelectual para defender seus argumentos, algo também já observado por muitos.

Não vou colocar todo o texto aqui, para que todos acessem no site original, também não tenho tempo para traduzi-lo todo, mas aqui vão alguns parágrafos importantes:


Pope vs church - the anatomy of a Catholic civil war
by Damian Thompson


We’re two and a half years into this pontificate. But it’s only in the past month that ordinary conservative Catholics, as opposed to hardline traditionalists, have started saying that Pope Francis is out of control.

Out of control, note. Not ‘losing control’, which isn’t such a big deal. No pontiff in living memory has awakened the specific fear now spreading around the church: that the magisterium, the teaching authority vested in Peter by Jesus, is not safe in his hands.

The non-Catholic media have yet to grasp the deadly nature of the crisis facing the Argentinian Pope. They can see that his public style is relaxed and adventurous; they conclude from his off-the-cuff remarks that he is liberal (by papal standards) on sensitive issues of sexual morality, and regards hard-hearted conservative bishops as hypocrites.

All of which is true. But journalists — and the Pope’s millions of secular fans — get one thing badly wrong. They assume, from his approachable manner and preference for the modest title ‘Bishop of Rome’, that Jorge Bergoglio wears the office of Supreme Pontiff lightly.

As anyone who works in the Vatican will tell you, this is not the case. Francis exercises power with a self-confidence worthy of St John Paul II, the Polish pope whose holy war against communism ended in the collapse of the Soviet bloc.

But that’s where the similarities end. John Paul never hid the nature of his mission. He was determined to clarify and consolidate the teachings of the church. Francis, by contrast, wants to move towards a more compassionate, less rule-bound church. But he refuses to say how far he is prepared to go. At times he resembles a motorist driving at full speed without a map or a rear-view mirror. And when the car stalls, as it did at the October synod on the family, he does a Basil Fawlty and thrashes the bonnet with a stick.

Non-Catholics were far more interested in Francis’s ‘historic’ pronouncements on climate change than they were in the synod, which was dominated by wrangling over the eligibility of divorced and remarried Catholics to receive communion.

That gets things the wrong way round. The Pope’s encyclical Laudato Si’ gave a temporary boost to climate activists. It was the conference on the family that was historic, but not in a good way. During the synod, ordinary devout Catholics began to wonder if Francis’s judgment had deserted him — or whether he’d always been a far stranger man than his carefree public image suggested.

In church circles the worries began in October last year, when the Pope staged an ‘extraordinary’ preparatory synod that fell apart in front of his eyes. Halfway through the gathering, the organisers — hand-picked by Francis — announced that it favoured lifting the communion ban and wanted to recognise the positive aspects of gay relationships.

Cue media rejoicing, until it emerged that the organisers were talking rubbish. The synod bishops, who included senior cardinals, didn’t favour either course. Cardinal George Pell, the Australian conservative who serves as the Pope’s chancellor of the exchequer, hit the roof — and when Pell is angry you really know about it. The final vote ditched both proposals. Francis, however, demanded that this year’s synod should revisit the question of communion for the divorced.

This first synod wasn’t just humiliating for the Pope; it was also weird. Why did Francis let his lieutenants, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri and Archbishop Bruno Forte, arrange a briefing that basically told lies?

Any other pontiff would have sent Baldisseri and Forte to parishes in Antarctica after screwing up so badly. Instead, to general amazement, the Pope invited them to take charge of the main synod last month. Also invited back was Cardinal Walter Kasper, an 82-year-old ultra-liberal German theologian who wants to sweep away all obstacles to remarried divorcees receiving communion.
To cut a long story short, Francis made it clear that he agreed with Kasper. Yet he also knew that most bishops at this year’s synod wanted to uphold the communion ban. So why did he insist that they debate the subject, given that they were never going to vote his way?

Senior cardinals were baffled — and angry that a synod on the worldwide crisis in family life would be dominated by squabbling on this one issue. A week before it started, 13 cardinals led by Pell wrote a letter to the Pope asking him not to let this happen — and also voicing their suspicion that the synod proceedings had been rigged in order to give maximum prominence to the minority Kasperite view.

As expected, the synod quickly threw Kasper’s scheme into the wastepaper basket — but that still left open the possibility of some change, because in the months before the synod started Francis had altered its balance by inviting extra bishops who shared his liberal views.

This brings us to a disturbing detail that has seriously undermined confidence in Francis. Among these personal invitees was the very liberal Belgian cardinal Godfried Danneels, who five years ago retired in disgrace when he was tape-recorded telling a man to keep quiet about being abused by a bishop until the latter had retired.

The bishop was the victim’s uncle. In other words, Danneels tried to cover up sex abuse within a family. Pope Francis knew this — but still decided to give him a place of honour at a synod on family life.

Why, for God’s sake? ‘To thank him for votes in the conclave,’ said conservatives — a smear, perhaps, but it didn’t help that Danneels had just been boasting that he’d helped get Bergoglio elected.

The synod ended messily, with a document that may or may not allow the lifting of the communion ban in special circumstances. Both sides thought they’d won — and then the Pope, in the words of one observer, ‘basically threw a strop’.

In his final address, Francis raged against ‘closed hearts that hide behind the church’s teachings’ and ‘blinkered viewpoints’, adding that ‘the true defenders of doctrine are not those who uphold its letter but its spirit’.

The implication was clear. Clergy who wholeheartedly supported the communion ban were Pharisees to Francis’s Jesus. The Pope was sending coded insults to at least half the world’s bishops — and also, it seemed, giving priests permission to question teaching on communion and divorce.

One priest close to the Vatican was appalled but not surprised. ‘You’re seeing the real Francis,’ he said. ‘He’s a scold. He can’t hide his contempt for his own Curia. Also, unlike Benedict, this guy rewards his mates and punishes his enemies.’

Clergy don’t normally refer to the Holy Father as ‘this guy’, even if they dislike his theology. But right now that’s one of the milder conservative descriptions of Francis; others aren’t printable in a family magazine.

Now, suddenly, the successor of Peter is acting like a politician, picking fights with opponents, tantalising the public with soundbites and ringing up journalists with startling quotes that his press officer can safely retract. He is even hinting that he disagrees with the teachings of his own church.

A pope cannot behave like this without changing the very nature of that church. Perhaps that is what Francis intended; we can only guess, because he has yet to articulate a coherent programme of change and it’s not clear that he is intellectually equipped to do so.

Loyal Catholics believe that the office of Peter will survive irrespective of who holds it; Jesus promised as much. But after the chaos of the last month, their faith is being tested to breaking point. It’s beginning to look as if Jorge Bergoglio is the man who inherited the papacy and then broke it.


Damian Thompson is an associate editor of The Spectator, and author of The Fix and Counterknowledge.

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Rezemos.


(Agradeço a indicação do texto ao site Big Pulpit)

6 comentários:

  1. Caro Pedro,

    Salvo engano, já li um relato do Beato Paulau, onde ele conta que a revolução é como um trem desgovernado, onde o maquinista cada vez mais acelera o trem rumo ao abismo e as pessoas não se dão conta disso. Mesmo os que estão fora gritam, mas ninguém se da conta do que está acontecendo.

    Uso esse relato do beato para dizer que as coisas estão se acelerando, que Deus nos ajude e tenha piedade de nós.
    Viva Cristo Rei !!!

    Emanoel

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  2. Muito boa noite, nobre e incansável Pedro.
    Faz um bom tempo que não venho aqui; perdoe-me, meu caro, por essa minha dificuldade.
    Como sempre, o Thyself surpreende-nos. Infelizmente, porém, só tenho a dizer o seguinte: o que se notícia sobre o nosso papa apenas serve de alerta e prevenção, pois o que ele é e o que ele quer já está posto; ele é um homem de progresso e sua mentalidade já foi construída para tal fim. E graças a Deus temos bons sábios comos vocês para nos manter informado.
    Rezemos, rezemo e rezemos.

    Sou grato a Deus pelo Thyself..

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    Respostas
    1. Muito obrigado, meu amigo.
      Fiquei muito honrado com suas palavras.
      Rezemos, os tempos são difíceis

      Grande abraço,
      Pedro Erik

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  3. Não acho que ele dirija sem mapa, acho que ele sabe muito bem para onde vai e qual estrada pegar, aquela mesma estrada descrita por uma certa banda de rock australiana...

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  4. Uma pelo menos seria a dica: após a saída do saudoso, inteligente e santo Bento XVI - apesar de ser extremamente criticado, até dentro da Igreja - notei que os ataques à Igreja esfriaram em geral na midia, as esquerdas sossegadas e os inimigos da Igreja pareceriam estarem muito eufóricos!

    ResponderExcluir

Certa vez, li uma frase em inglês muito boa para ser colocada quando se abre para comentários. A frase diz: "Say What You Mean, Mean What Say, But Don’t Say it Mean." (Diga o que você realmente quer dizer, com sinceridade, mas não com maldade).