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The Boston Globe, April 20, 2005
The
Catholic Church steps backwards
By Derrick Z. Jackson, Globe Columnist

WITH THE election of Joseph Ratzinger to be Pope
Benedict XVI, the Catholic Church is not joining
the 21st century anytime soon. After all the
speculation that it was time for a pope from
a developing country and after the debate of
whether the conclave of cardinals would pick
someone who would build bridges toward the
church's outcasts and second-class citizens,
the church fled to yesteryear, hoping to avoid
facing today.
The cardinals made a choice so cautious as to
verge on the callous. If Ratzinger's past words
guide his rule, his papacy has the potential
to irritate and inflame religious and cultural
tensions around the world.
Ratzinger was the late Pope John Paul II's enforcer
of stark views on many issues that, for all
the church's proclamations of love, fuel disdain.
In 2003, Ratzinger issued a proclamation condemning
government recognition of same-sex unions saying
that instead it was the government's responsibility
to ''avoid exposing young people to erroneous
ideas about sexuality and marriage." Calling
civil unions the ''legalization of evil,"
Ratzinger said politicians who vote for them
are ''gravely immoral."
Ratzinger went on to condemn adoption by gay
parents, saying, ''Allowing children to be
adopted by persons living in such unions would
actually mean doing violence to the children."
This is the same Vatican that had barely a
thing to say about the American clergy child
sex-abuse scandal. And when it did, Ratzinger
downplayed it.
During the emerging news on the scandals in December
2002, Ratzinger said, ''I am personally convinced
that the constant presence in the press of
the sins of Catholic priests, especially in
the United States, is a planned campaign, as
the percentage of these offenses among priests
is not higher than in other categories and
perhaps it is even lower. Less than 1 percent
of (American) priests are guilty of acts of
this type . . . Therefore, one comes to the
conclusion that it is intentional, manipulated,
that there is a desire to discredit the church."
In 2004, a study commissioned by US bishops would
conclude that 4 percent of US priests were
sexual abusers.
While the Vatican turned an even more blind eye
to clergy sex-abuse than even the US bishops
did, Ratzinger had his eyes out for priests
and theologians who strayed over the party
line. In the mid 1980s, he cracked down on
''liberation theology" among the poor
in Latin America, saying it was too much allied
with Marxists. He led the Vatican in revoking
the authorization of the Rev. Charles Curran
of Catholic University for his challenge to
the ban on contraception. Ratzinger disciplined
several other priests and nuns for their liberal
views.
In 1997, Ratzinger and the Vatican reaffirmed
its ban on women priests. In 1998, John Paul
wrote a papal letter rejecting liberalism in
the church, including the ordination of women.
Last year Ratzinger led the Vatican's attack
on ''radical feminism," blaming assertive
women for calling into question the ''natural
two-parent structure of mother and father and
to make homosexuality and heterosexuality virtually
equivalent."
More recent words by Ratzinger are equally gloomy.
Just as the world economy and science and communications
technologies are connecting the planet and
as religions try to make meaning out of everything
from the Middle East to 9/11 to genocides,
Ratzinger suggests with a whiff of superiority
that Europe look inward. He opposed Turkey
joining the European Union. Turkey happens
to be predominantly Muslim and Ratzinger said
that nation ''represented a different continent,
always in contrast with Europe."
In his new book, ''Values in a Time of Upheaval,"
Ratzinger wrote, according to German newspapers,
''The ever more passionately demanded multiculturalism
is often above all a renunciation of what is
one's own, a fleeing from what is one's own."
He also wrote, ''Marriage and family are essential
for European identity."
Why Ratzinger found it necessary to narrowly
describe marriage and family as part of a European
identity only he knows. The world will soon
know how broad or how narrow is the world view
of Pope Benedict XVI, just when the world needs
religious leaders who can look across, reach
across, and embrace humanity across all its
borders.
Derrick Z. Jackson's e-mail address is jackson@globe.com.
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