Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Pope Benedict XVI gives a blessing during a visit at the cathedral in Freiburg, Germany, Sept. 24, 2011. (CNS photo/Arnd Wiegmann, Reuters)

FREIBURG, Germany (CNS) -- Retired Pope Benedict XVI has criticized representatives of the Catholic Church in his home country, Germany.

“As long as only the ministry, but not the heart and the spirit, speak in official church texts, the exodus from the world of faith will continue,” he wrote in response to questions submitted by the magazine Herder Korrespondenz. The German church news agency KNA reported his remarks.

The monthly magazine Herder Korrespondenz sent questions to retired Pope Benedict to mark the 70th anniversary of his becoming chaplain in a Munich parish 70 years ago. Most of the statements referred to his memories from that time.

The 94-year-old has lived largely in seclusion in a former monastery in the Vatican since his resignation in 2013.

The retired pope wrote that “people should be brought out from the cover of their ministry” in the Catholic Church in Germany.

The retired pope said that in the church’s hospitals, schools and in the Catholic charity, Caritas, “many people are involved in key positions who do not support the inner calling of the church and thus often obscure the mission of this institution.” This was particularly evident in announcements and public statements, he wrote. KNA reported he said a distinction must be made in the church between “believers and unbelievers.”

The retired pope wrote that “people should be brought out from the cover of their ministry” in the Catholic Church in Germany. He expected a “real personal testimony of faith” from the church’s spokespeople, he added, without naming names.

In the text, he also referred to his “Freiburg speech,” held during his visit to Germany in 2011, which triggered a broad response and some criticism. In the speech, he emphasized that the church must set itself apart from its surroundings and in a certain sense become “unworldly.”

The retired pope said that perhaps he had not chosen the term “unworldly” wisely.

“The term of becoming ‘unworldly’ indicates the negative part of the movement I am referring to, namely, stepping out of the speech and constraints of a time into the freedom of faith.” The positive aspect of this approach had not been sufficiently expressed, he said.

In the text, the former pope also described a “flight into pure doctrine” as unrealistic. Rather, doctrine must “develop in and from faith, not stand beside it.” That was because a “doctrine that would exist like a nature reserve separated from the daily world of faith” would be “a renunciation of faith itself.”

The latest from america

The church helped me heal after my miscarriage. That’s what every grieving mother deserves.
Colleen JurkiewiczMay 06, 2024
Ron Hansen has written award-winning novels that have been turned into Hollywood hits. As an ordained deacon, he crafts equally compelling homilies.
PreachMay 05, 2024
The two high-profile Catholics are among a diverse group of 19 individuals to be honored by President Biden for making “exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States.”
Speaking May 3 on the need for holistic higher education, the pope said that some universities are “too liberal” and do not place enough emphasis on forming their students into whole people.