Pope Francis is shaking things up in the Catholic Church to such an extent that many talk about a “Francis revolution.”
Yet the single most revolutionary act committed by any pope in at least the last 600 years fell one year ago, and it wasn’t Francis who did it.
On Feb. 11, 2013, Pope Benedict XVI used a meeting of cardinals discussing new saints to deliver the stunning announcement that he planned to resign, effective 8 p.m. Rome time on Feb. 28.
The news was a total surprise to everyone except a handful of papal intimates, and it set the stage for all the drama that’s followed.
One cardinal said afterward that he sat in the room well after the meeting broke up, still unable to comprehend what had just happened.
He played Benedict’s Latin phrasing over and over again in his mind to be sure he’d understood. Continue reading.
John L. Allen Jr is an Associate Editor at the Boston Globe.
Source: Boston Globe
Image: patheos.com
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