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Monday, January 29, 2007

The KGB's Assault On The Holy See

Piusxiib_1The Myth of Hitler's Pope is just one of many ways in which the KGB sought to discredit the Holy See, according to a new and excellent article from the National Review Online. The article has far-reaching implications, and actually connects a lot of dots.

Here is the article: Moscow’s Assault on the Vatican

Here is the opening section of the article:

The Soviet Union was never comfortable living in the same world with the Vatican. The most recent disclosures document that the Kremlin was prepared to go to any lengths to counter the Catholic Church’s strong anti-Communism.

In March 2006 an Italian parliamentary commission concluded “beyond any reasonable doubt that the leaders of the Soviet Union took the initiative to eliminate the pope Karol Wojtyla,” in retaliation for his support to the dissident Solidarity movement in Poland. In January 2007, when documents disclosed that the newly appointed archbishop of Warsaw, Stanislaw Wielgus, had collaborated with Poland’s Communist-era political police, he admitted the accusation and resigned. The following day the rector of Krakow’s Wawel Cathedral, the burial site of Polish kings and queens, resigned for the same reason. Then it was learned that Michal Jagosz, a member of the Vatican’s tribunal considering sainthood for the late Pope John Paul II, has been accused of being a former Communist secret police agent; according to the Polish media, he had been recruited in 1984 before leaving Poland for an assignment to the Vatican. Currently, a book is about to be published that will identify 39 other priests whose names have been found in Krakow secret police files, some of whom are now bishops. Moreover, this seems to be just scratching the surface. A special commission will soon start investigating the past of all religious servants during the Communist era, as thousands more Catholic priests throughout that country are believed to have collaborated with the secret police. And this is just Poland — the archives of the KGB and those of the political police in the rest of the former Soviet bloc have yet to be opened on the subject of operations against the Vatican.

Catholic News Agency has this article on the same topic: KGB intent on linking Pius XII with Nazis, says former spy

Please take the time to read this article and share your thoughts and insights.

You may also be interested in this article: How Pius XII Protected Jews

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Cardinal Walter Kasper Disses Cardinal Ratzinger

Beliefnet's Paul Wilkes, blogging the conclave from Rome, and NC Reporter's Stacy Meichtry report on German Cardinal Walter Kaspar's sermon today basically firing a shot at those supporting the election of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger as the 265th Pope.

“Just as it is forbidden to clone others, it is not possible to clone Pope John Paul II,” Kasper said. “Every pope ministers in his own way, according to the demands of his era. No one was ever simply a copy of his predecessor.”

Wilkes reports the following about Kaspar:

Kasper told an Austrian Catholic paper that Dominus Iesus--the pope’s statement, but which bore Ratzinger’s mark, affirming Catholicism’s supremacy--“offended people. And if my friends are offended (referring to his years of Catholic-Lutheran dialogue) then so am I. It’s an unfortunate affirmation--clumsy and ambiguous.” Clumsy and ambiguous are certainly not casual terms between a cardinal and the Vatican.

In various magazines, such as America in the United States and The Tablet in London, Kasper has repeatedly called for a scaled-down and more temperate church bureaucracy. He has openly supported divorced and civilly remarried Catholics in receiving the Eucharist, something they are currently forbidden under Church law. When Kasper registered his view, Ratzinger rejected this approach and maintained that only those who have received a marriage annulment and therefore are fully in communion with the Church could approach the altar to receive.

Wouldn't want to hurt anyone's feelings, Cardinal. Kaspar is mentioned as a dark horse candidate -- a fact we can gratefully attribute to Pope John Paul's 26-year reign that enabled him to put his stamp on the College of Cardinals.

Papabili Run-Down

NC Reporter's John Allen provides a Papabili run-down today. While you'll need (if you're of orthodox bent) to filter out the National Catholic Reporter's heterodox bias, it's still a very useful guide to the top papabile and a handy reference during the upcoming conclave.

For those who'd just as soon avoid the Reporter, check out the Catholic World News' Toward the Conclave #10 from yesterday (HT: The Anchoress). It also offers links to the other nine parts of the Toward The Conclave series, which we give any conclave wathcer a solid grounding in the papal succession.

The Gray Lady Weighs In

Laurie Goodstein and Ian Fisher report in today's New York Times that Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger -- Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith -- is the front-runner to be the 265th Pope, reflecting the conventional wisdom in the Italian press that Ratzinger is supported by as many as 50 of the 115 elector cardinals. Fr. Richard John Neuhaus reports hearing the same thing in the Rome rumor mills -- see his Rome Diary blog (HT to Hugh Hewitt).

Goodstein and Fisher write:

Based on Cardinal Ratzinger's record and pronouncements, his agenda seems clear. Inside the church, he would like to impose more doctrinal discipline, reining in priests who experiment with liturgy or seminaries that permit a broad interpretation of doctrine.

Sounds good to me!

The NYT contrast this with dark horse candidate Carlo Maria Martini, the retired archbishop of Milan:

But Cardinal Martini appears to control far fewer votes. He has said he has not ruled out changes to priestly celibacy or the bans on contraception and on women serving as deacons. He has a form of Parkinson's disease and, unlike Cardinal Ratzinger, is not considered an active candidate. Experts say that while he respects Cardinal Ratzinger, Cardinal Martini does not support his vision of the church.

"Martini," said Alberto Melloni, a papal historian, "thinks that if the church does not move on in terms of doctrine, it is condemned to lose the content of Christian truth."

Sounds bad to me!

While it's basically a good, informative article, it suffers from the same defect as other secular MSM stories -- namely, the reporting spirit is so secular. I genuinely believe this handicaps the coverage provided by MSM monoliths like the NYT. MSM reporters, being overwhelmingly secular or non-religious in their world view, tend to view the conclave as a fancy smoke-filled room where party bosses pick the next Pontiff. Roman Catholics believe the Holy Spirit is at work in the conclave, but MSM reporters (my gut suspects) view that belief as a lot of superstitious hocus-pocus. Which is why you'll see little mention of it during conclave coverage, except in a detached, patronizing tone more suited to an anthropologist discussing the superstitions of primitive tribes.

 

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