Apr 15, 2008
In 1966, less than a year after the close of the Second Vatican Council, a young European scholar wrote the following words:
“The debate on religious liberty will in later years be considered one of [Vatican II’s] most important events…there was in St. Peter’s the sense that here was the end of the Middle Ages, the end even of the Constantinian age. Few things had hurt the Church so much in the last 150 years as [her] tenacious clinging to outmoded politico-religious positions. The attempt to use the state as a protector of faith from the threat of modern science served more than anything else to undermine the faith and prevent the needed spiritual regeneration. It supported the idea of the Church as an enemy of freedom, as a Church which feared science and progress—products of human intellectual freedom—and thereby became one of the most powerful causes of anti-clericalism. We need not add that, here too, the evil dates far back. The use of the state by the Church for its own purposes, climaxing in the Middle Ages and in absolutist Spain in the early modern era, has, since Constantine, been one of the most serious liabilities of the Church, and any historically minded person is inescapably aware of this.”
The young German priest who wrote those words so long ago was, of course, Joseph Ratzinger— the same Joseph Ratzinger who arrives in the United States next week as Pope Benedict XVI, vicar of Christ.
For anyone familiar with the long development of Joseph Ratzinger’s thought, the news media’s coverage of the man over the last few decades has been uniquely interesting. A few reporters have done him justice. E.J. Dionne did an insightful story on then-Cardinal Ratzinger and his work at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith while he was posted in Rome for The New York Times in the 1980s. Sandro Magister and John Allen do consistently strong coverage today. But over the decades, far too many members of the news media have taken the lazy road of casting him as the “panzerkardinal”—the rightwing doctrine police behind John Paul II’s throne who surprises everyone by his moderation once he’s leading the Church himself.