A Vatican
Spring?
By HANS KÜNG
Published: February 27, 2013
TÜBINGEN,
Germany
THE Arab
Spring has shaken a whole series of autocratic regimes. With the resignation
of Pope Benedict XVI, might not something like
that be possible in the Roman Catholic Church as well — a Vatican Spring?
Of course,
the system of the Catholic Church doesn’t resemble Tunisia or Egypt so much as
an absolute monarchy like Saudi Arabia. In both places there are no genuine
reforms, just minor concessions. In both, tradition is invoked to oppose reform.
In Saudi Arabia tradition goes back only two centuries; in the case of the
papacy, 20 centuries.
Yet is that
tradition true? In fact, the church got along for a millennium without a
monarchist-absolutist papacy of the kind we’re familiar with today.
It was not
until the 11th century that a “revolution from above,” the “Gregorian Reform”
started by Pope Gregory VII, left us with the three enduring features of the
Roman system: a centralist-absolutist papacy, compulsory clericalism and the
obligation of celibacy for priests and other secular clergy.
The efforts
of the reform councils in the 15th century, the reformers in the 16th century,
the Enlightenment and the French Revolution in the 17th and 18th centuries and
the liberalism of the 19th century met with only partial success. Even the
Second Vatican Council, from 1962 to 1965, while addressing many concerns of the
reformers and modern critics, was thwarted by the power of the Curia, the
church’s governing body, and managed to implement only some of the demanded
changes.
To this day
the Curia, which in its current form is likewise a product of the 11th century,
is the chief obstacle to any thorough reform of the Catholic Church, to any
honest ecumenical understanding with the other Christian churches and world
religions, and to any critical, constructive attitude toward the modern
world.
Under the
two most recent popes, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, there has been a fatal
return to the church’s old monarchical habits.
In 2005, in
one of Benedict’s few bold actions, he held an amicable four-hour conversation
with me at his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo in Rome. I had been his
colleague at the University of Tübingen and also his harshest critic. For 22
years, thanks to the revocation of my ecclesiastical teaching license for having
criticized papal infallibility, we hadn’t had the slightest private
contact.
Before the
meeting, we decided to set aside our differences and discuss topics on which we
might find agreement: the positive relationship between Christian faith and
science, the dialogue among religions and civilizations, and the ethical
consensus across faiths and ideologies.
For me, and
indeed for the whole Catholic world, the meeting was a sign of hope. But sadly
Benedict’s pontificate was marked by breakdowns and bad decisions. He irritated
the Protestant churches, Jews, Muslims, the Indians of Latin America, women,
reform-minded theologians and all pro-reform Catholics.
The major
scandals during his papacy are known: there was Benedict’s recognition of
Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre’s arch-conservative Society of St. Pius X, which is
bitterly opposed to the Second Vatican Council, as well as of a Holocaust
denier, Bishop Richard Williamson.
There was
the widespread sexual abuse of children and youths by clergymen, which the pope
was largely responsible for covering up when he was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.
And there was the “Vatileaks” affair, which revealed a horrendous amount of
intrigue, power struggles, corruption and sexual lapses in the Curia, and which
seems to be a main reason Benedict has decided to resign.
This first
papal resignation in nearly 600 years makes clear the fundamental crisis that
has long been looming over a coldly ossified church. And now the whole world is
asking: might the next pope, despite everything, inaugurate a new spring for the
Catholic Church?
There’s no
way to ignore the church’s desperate needs. There is a catastrophic shortage of
priests, in Europe and in Latin America and Africa. Huge numbers of people have
left the church or gone into “internal emigration,” especially in the
industrialized countries. There has been an unmistakable loss of respect for
bishops and priests, alienation, particularly on the part of younger women, and
a failure to integrate young people into the church.
One
shouldn’t be misled by the media hype of grandly staged papal mass events or by
the wild applause of conservative Catholic youth groups. Behind the facade, the
whole house is crumbling.
In this
dramatic situation the church needs a pope who’s not living intellectually in
the Middle Ages, who doesn’t champion any kind of medieval theology, liturgy or
church constitution. It needs a pope who is open to the concerns of the
Reformation, to modernity. A pope who stands up for the freedom of the church in
the world not just by giving sermons but by fighting with words and deeds for
freedom and human rights within the church, for theologians, for women, for all
Catholics who want to speak the truth openly. A pope who no longer forces the
bishops to toe a reactionary party line, who puts into practice an appropriate
democracy in the church, one shaped on the model of primitive Christianity. A
pope who doesn’t let himself be influenced by a Vatican-based “shadow pope” like
Benedict and his loyal followers.
Where the
new pope comes from should not play a crucial role. The College of Cardinals
must simply elect the best man. Unfortunately, since the time of Pope John Paul
II, a questionnaire has been used to make all bishops follow official Roman
Catholic doctrine on controversial issues, a process sealed by a vow of
unconditional obedience to the pope. That’s why there have so far been no public
dissenters among the bishops.
Yet the
Catholic hierarchy has been warned of the gap between itself and lay people on
important reform questions. A recent poll in Germany shows 85 percent of
Catholics in favor of letting priests marry, 79 percent in favor of letting
divorced persons remarry in church and 75 percent in favor of ordaining women.
Similar figures would most likely turn up in many other countries.
Might we
get a cardinal or bishop who doesn’t simply want to continue in the same old
rut? Someone who, first, knows how deep the church’s crisis goes and, second,
knows paths that lead out of it?
These
questions must be openly discussed before and during the conclave, without the
cardinals being muzzled, as they were at the last conclave, in 2005, to keep
them in line.
As the last
active theologian to have participated in the Second Vatican Council (along with
Benedict), I wonder whether there might not be, at the beginning of the
conclave, as there was at the beginning of the council, a group of brave
cardinals who could tackle the Roman Catholic hard-liners head-on and demand a
candidate who is ready to venture in new directions. Might this be brought about
by a new reforming council or, better yet, a representative assembly of bishops,
priests and lay people?
If the next
conclave were to elect a pope who goes down the same old road, the church will
never experience a new spring, but fall into a new ice age and run the danger of
shrinking into an increasingly irrelevant sect.
Hans Küng is a professor emeritus of ecumenical
theology at the University of Tübingen and the author of the forthcoming book
“Can the Church Still Be Saved?” This essay was translated by Peter Heinegg from
the German.
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