Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.December 15, 2009

From Robert Mickens at The London Tablet:

Pope Benedict XVI has said that a Marxist-driven liberation theology is continuing to cause great harm to the Church in Brazil 25 years after he first tried to crack down on its proliferation.

“Its consequences, more or less visible, in the form of rebellion, division, dissent, offence [and] anarchy, are still being felt,” the Pope said last Saturday to the heads of some 28 dioceses in southern Brazil, including the metropolitan sees of Porto Alegre and Florianopolis. He told the bishops, who were in Rome for their five-yearly ad limina visit, that liberation theology was “creating great suffering and a serious loss of vital force in  [their] diocesan communities”. In 1984, as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he was prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and issued an instruction, Libertatis Nuntius, which strongly condemned a number of elements in liberation theology.

In his meeting with the Brazilian bishops the Pope said it was “worth recalling” the twenty-fifth anniversary of that document. “It underlined the danger inherent in an a-critical acceptance by some theologians of theses and methodologies coming from Marxism,” he said. “I implore all those who in some way feel attracted, involved or intimately touched by certain deceptive principles of liberation theology to look again at the instruction and accept the benign light it offers with outstretched hands,” the Pope said.

Read the rest here.

James Martin, SJ

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Peter Lakeonovich
15 years 6 months ago
Thanks for the blog Fr. Jim. Any website or articles or books you can recommend to learn more about Archbishop Romero and his involvement (for better or worse) with liberation theology?
15 years 6 months ago
Pete,

If you don't mind me giving my own place a plug - here is a description of how Archbishop Romero's theological view evolved over time, taken largely from the biography written by James Brockman, SJ.

http://estamos-vivo.blogspot.com/2007/03/legacy-being-buried-jon-sobrino-and.html

''I implore all those who in some way feel attracted, involved or intimately touched by certain deceptive principles of liberation theology to look again at the instruction and accept the benign light it offers with outstretched hands,” the Pope said.

Benign light?? What you wrote yourself at the CDF? My gosh, what humility.
Vince Killoran
15 years 6 months ago
This just in: Jesus-"Still a danger!"
Beth Cioffoletti
15 years 6 months ago
I read Jeff's post about Jon Sobrino and Archbishop Romero, and find myself ruminating on the very "danger" of being Christian. 
Jim McCrea
15 years 6 months ago
Liberation Theology:  Pope "Still a Danger"

The latest from america

This week on “The Spiritual Life,” Father James Martin speaks with former Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg about faith, fatherhood and his “Jesuit background.”
James Martin, S.J.June 24, 2025
In ‘Where is the Friend’s House?,’ we see the faces of the Iranian people captured with sensitivity and detail.
John DoughertyJune 24, 2025
Among those recognized at two theology conferences in June was Stephen Bevans, S.V.D., to whom the Catholic Theological Society of America gave its highest honor, the John Courtney Murray Award.
James T. KeaneJune 24, 2025
“Keeping our gaze on Jesus, we must learn to give a name and voice even to sadness, fear, anguish, indignation, bringing everything into relationship with God,” Pope Leo said.