|
|
|
POPE ONCE RAILED AGAINST DISBELIEF IN THE DEVIL
AND SAW A RETURN OF 'DARK POWERS', by Michael Brown
At a time when the devil is barely mentioned from the pulpit and
the concept of evil considered to be abstract, Pope Benedict XVI's
beliefs, as expressed when he was a cardinal, are clear: the devil is
not only real but something that we ignore at our own peril. Moreover,
the man who would become Pope once expressed the pressing need for all
Christians to act as "exorcists" as he cited a return of
"dark powers."
That was not to say that laymen should cast out demons in the
formal Catholic rite but rather that all must recognize the operations
of evil and overcome it with the proper fear not of evil, said the
future Pope, but of God.
"Whatever the less discerning theologians may say, the devil,
as far as Christian belief is concerned, is a puzzling but real,
personal and not merely symbolical presence," Benedict XVI said in
The Ratzinger Report [co-authored with Vittorio Messori, above left].
"He is a powerful reality (the 'prince of this world,' as he is
called by the New Testament, which continually reminds us of his
existence), a baneful superhuman freedom directed against God's freedom.
This is evident if we look realistically at history, with its abyss of
ever-new atrocities which cannot be explained by reference to man alone.
On his own, man has not the power to oppose Satan, but the devil is not
second to God, and united with Jesus we can be certain of vanquishing
him. Christ is 'God Who is near to us,' willing and able to liberate us:
that is why the Gospel really is 'Good News.' And that is why we must go
on proclaiming Christ in those realms of fear and unfreedom."
Such may come as a jolt to those who view Joseph Ratzinger more as
a hard-nosed intellectual and to certain theologians, priests, and
bishops who have all but discounted existence of an actual nefarious
preternatural spirit -- either arguing that the very mention of the
devil is counterproductive ("negative") or dismissing the idea
to begin with.
But the devil does not simply stand for "sin"; he is not
a mere symbol or image; an approach of denial is one authored by Satan
himself, said Benedict XVI. He described sociologists and philosophers
who have dismissed notions of the devil as possessing a philosophy that
"consists merely in banal, uncritical assent to the convictions of
the present time."
One of then-Cardinal Ratzinger's most celebrated books, Dogma und
Verkundigund, treats the topic of the devil as one of the "major
themes of preaching."
Raised in Nazi Germany, the Pope, like John Paul II before him,
had only too close a look at how evil can manifest and fretted in the
1985 book that "there are already signs of the return of these dark
powers, and Satanic cults are spreading more and more in the secularized
world."
Yet in the current day homilies mentioning Satan are rare and
numerous dioceses do not so much as boast an exorcist.
Will that change under Benedict -- the very name associated with
spiritual warfare?
"Anyone who has a clear picture of the dark sides of the age
in which we live sees forces at work which aim to disintegrate the
relationships among men," said the Pope. "In this situation
the Christian can see that his task as exorcist must regain the
importance it had when the faith was at the beginning. Of course the
word 'exorcism' must not be understood here in its technical sense; it
simply refers to the attitude of faith as a whole, which 'overcomes the
world' and 'casts out' the prince of this world. Once the Christian has
begun to be aware of this dark abyss, he knows that he owes the world
this service."
Ratzinger and Messori pointed out that in addition to the
affirmations of the New Testament -- which treats the devil not as a
symbol, but as an actual presence -- Vatican II documents speak 17 times
of "satan," "the devil," the "evil one,"
"the ancient serpent," the "power of darkness," and
the "prince of this world." "At least five of these
references occur in Daudium et spes -- the most 'optimistic' document of
the entire Council," noted Messori in an interlocution between
answers he posed to the cardinal.
The Pope equated belief in the devil with spiritual maturity.
Genuine courage, he said, does not close its eyes to the dimensions of
danger but considers danger realistically.
In unity with Jesus, and with fear of God, the devil is easily
defeated. But, in a balanced way, he said, there has to be that
recognition.
"The more one understands the holiness of God, the more one
understands the opposite of what is holy, namely, the deceptive masks of
the devil," said the future Pope. "Jesus Christ Himself is the
greatest example of this: before Him, the Holy One, Satan could not keep
hidden and was constantly compelled to show himself. So one might say
that the disappearance of the awareness of the demonic indicates a
related decline in holiness. The devil can take refuge in his favorite
element, anonymity, if he is not exposed by the radiance of the person
united to Christ."
Source: Spirit
Daily - April 26, 2005 |