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Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2005 13:53:08 -0400
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Subject: Benedict XVI - A True Liberal
Organization: The Acton Institute
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From: Rev.Robert Sirico <robert_sirico@acton.org>
To: "Jeffery Cornwall" <cornwallj@mail.belmont.edu>
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                <td class="V10"> <p><b><br>
                    <a href="http://www.acton.org/ppolicy/comment/article.php?id=263">True 
                    Liberalism</a></b></p>

                  <p><i>By Robert A. Sirico</i></p>
                  <p><a href="http://www.acton.org/press/special/benedictXVI.html"><img src="http://www.acton.org/images/buttons/benedict.jpg" width="100" height="100" border="0" align="right" style="margin-left: 10px;"></a>ROME 
                    -- We have already heard a thousand times or more that the 
                    new Pope is a conservative. As counterintuitive as this may 
                    sound, I believe that insofar as the new papacy has implications 
                    for economics and politics, it is in the direction of a humane 
                    and unifying liberalism. I speak not of liberalism as we know 
                    it now, which is bound up with state management and democratic 
                    relativism, but liberalism of an older variety that placed 
                    it hopes in society, faith, and freedom.</p>
                  <p>Bear with me.</p>
                  <p>When it was announced that Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger would 
                    take the name of Benedict XVI, the question immediately presented 
                    itself: Who was Benedict XV and what did he stand for? What 
                    does it imply for the future of this papacy that it would 
                    consider itself to be, in some sense, a successor papacy to 
                    that one?</p>
                  <p> Benedict XV was pope from 1914 to 1922 -- the pope who witnessed 
                    the age of peace, prosperity and hope turn to one of bloodshed, 
                    violence, and the total state. He is remembered mostly for 
                    his anguished encyclical <i>Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum</i>, 
                    which sought to end the conflicts and battles that became 
                    what we now call World War I, the war which so violently dashed 
                    the hopes of many generations of 19th century classical liberals.</p>

                  <p>I think in particular of Lord Acton, who exemplified the 
                    spirit of his age. The temporal power of the papal power had 
                    mercifully come to an end, and at the urging of the liberal 
                    wing of the faith. They had placed their hope in the capacity 
                    of Christian faith to flourish in the absence of coercion, 
                    and in the capacity of the world to continue its progress 
                    toward peace and prosperity. It was to be a world of free 
                    trade, free thought, and religious orthodoxy. But it was not 
                    to be. The vision of liberalism in which they had placed their 
                    hopes were dashed, utterly and completely with the carnage 
                    of war.</p>
                  <p>Pope Benedict XV wrote the following terrifying passage in 
                    1914:</p>
                  <blockquote>
                    <p>On every side the dread phantom of war holds sway: There 
                      is scarce room for another thought in the minds of men. 
                      The combatants are the greatest and wealthiest nations of 
                      the earth; what wonder, then, if, well provided with the 
                      most awful weapons modern military science has devised, 
                      they strive to destroy one another with refinements of horror. 
                      There is no limit to the measure of ruin and of slaughter; 
                      day by day the earth is drenched with newly-shed blood, 
                      and is covered with the bodies of the wounded and of the 
                      slain. Who would imagine as we see them thus filled with 
                      hatred of one another, that they are all of one common stock, 
                      all of the same nature, all members of the same human society? 
                      Who would recognize brothers, whose Father is in Heaven? 
                      Yet, while with numberless troops the furious battle is 
                      engaged, the sad cohorts of war, sorrow and distress swoop 
                      down upon every city and every home; day by day the mighty 
                      number of widows and orphans increases, and with the interruption 
                      of communications, trade is at a standstill; agriculture 
                      is abandoned; the arts are reduced to inactivity; the wealthy 
                      are in difficulties; the poor are reduced to abject misery; 
                      all are in distress.</p>
                  </blockquote>
                  <p>Obviously these sad words served as foreshadowing of what 
                    would follow: crimes and terrors of Communism and Nazism, 
                    the end of European unity, the advent of weapons of mass destruction, 
                    the takeover of the West by ideologies of social management, 
                    secularism, consumerism, and every kind of horror. These were 
                    the worldly concerns of popes that followed Benedict XV, all 
                    the way to John Paul II, who was singularly instrumental in 
                    overthrowing the great tyrannies of the last century. It was 
                    a debilitating time for anyone who believed in the spirit 
                    of Lord Acton and his contemporaries.</p>
                  <p>And what became of Christian hope? We find it in documents 
                    of the Second Vatican Council, the most important event to 
                    shape the lives of both John Paul and the German theologian 
                    Joseph Ratzinger. This was the council that did not turn its 
                    back on religious freedom but rather embraced it more fully 
                    with a confidence that the setbacks that followed the end 
                    of the temporal power would be temporary. This council looked 
                    forward to a world of renewed spiritual and material progress 
                    in which a global order of freedom -- along with technological 
                    advance -- would serve all peoples in all places. It was the 
                    council that made it the Church's mission to not only care 
                    for souls but also for the well being of all societies in 
                    which people live and breath.</p>

                  <p>At the time the council closed, many conservative Catholics 
                    had great doubts about the optimism at the heart of Vatican 
                    II, particularly that which motivated the church to embrace 
                    the modern world and more clearly define the need for religious 
                    freedom and human rights. But today, the wisdom is clearer. 
                    Communism and Nazism came and went. The other "isms" that 
                    dominated the 20th century seem also to be abating. We again 
                    live in times of new hope, similar to the ones that gave birth 
                    to the liberal vision of the 19th century.</p>
                  <p>This is a vision that was warmly embraced by John Paul II, 
                    and we can expect a full continuity with that vision under 
                    Benedict XVI. The very name of the latter gives us hope that 
                    the bloodshed between World War I and the fall of the Berlin 
                    Wall need not be our common destiny. Certainly Cardinal Ratzinger 
                    has not contradicted John Paul II's liberal teachings on economics, 
                    which found great merit in the market economy and even condemned 
                    European-style welfare states.</p>
                  <p>Cardinal Ratzinger has been more focused on the theological 
                    implications of political heresies such as liberation theology 
                    than he has in questions of economic systems. But he has written 
                    with great optimism about the prospects for a new and unified 
                    Europe -- not unified by the state but by faith and cooperation. 
                    He has written very powerful condemnations of the total state 
                    as we know it and decried the way in which the secularist 
                    social-managerial project of the overweening state has displaced 
                    the Christian vision of unity in faith.</p>
                  <p>Mostly, Ratzinger has written in defense of authentic freedom. 
                    He has written of the "real gift of freedom that Christian 
                    faith has brought into the world. It was the first to break 
                    the identification of state and religion and thus to remove 
                    from the state its claim to totality; by differentiating faith 
                    from the sphere of the state it gave man the right to keep 
                    secluded and reserved his or her own being with God... Freedom 
                    of conscience is the core of all freedom." (Freedom and Constraint 
                    in the Church, 1981)</p>
                  <p>Here is the voice of a true liberal. Long live Benedict XVI.</p>
                  <hr size="1" noshade/> 
                  <p><i>Fr. Robert A. Sirico is president of the Acton Institute 
                    for the Study of Religion and Liberty in Grand Rapids, Mich. 
                    (www.acton.org)</i></p>

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