In moments of crisis, there’s a natural desire among many Catholics to rally around the flag, meaning to show support for the church and the pope. It’s not about denial, because Catholics are nothing if not sober realists about the church’s failures. It’s instead about saying to the world that despite it all, there’s still something positive about the church that commands grassroots loyalty.
That instinct seemed to be the principal subtext to Benedict XVI’s June 1-3 outing to Milan.
Formally, Benedict made the short trip north to attend the seventh “World Meeting of Families,” a Vatican-organized event held every three years to celebrate marriage, youth and the family. In context, however, the trip also offered an opportunity for the Catholic rank and file to embrace Benedict amid one of the greatest trials of his papacy, the mushrooming Vatileaks scandal.
That, at any rate, is how Vatican officials have touted what happened. In an interview with Italian TV, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Secretary of State (and, according to many analysts, the principal target of the leaks), referred to the “extraordinary display of love for the pope and … support for him and his magisterium” witnessed in the streets of Milan, as well as among the more than 1 million people who turned out for Sunday Mass at Bresso Park.
Bertone said it was significant that such affection, including “frenetic” applause for the pope wherever he went, poured out “in this particular moment” — and by that, of course, he meant the current atmosphere of scandal. Continue reading
Sources
- John L Allen Jr in National Catholic Reporter
- Image: thestar.com
News category: Features.