By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In a letter to an atheist Italian mathematician,
retired Pope Benedict XVI defended his own handling of allegations of the sexual abuse of minors by clergy and politely criticized the logician's total reliance on scientific facts for meaning.
"I never sought to conceal these things," the pope said of cases of
clerical abuse, and lamented the scholar depicting the church as the
only place where such "deviation" and "filth" occur.
The
publication of the retired pope's comments Sept. 24 to an atheist
scholar came the same month a written letter by Pope Francis to an
Italian journalist concerning dialogue with nonbelievers was published.
Both letters were published, with the two popes' permission, by the
Italian daily La Repubblica.
The paper released long excerpts
of Pope Benedict's original 11-page response to Piergiorgio Odifreddi, a
prolific science writer who authored the book, "Dear Pope, I Write to
You" in 2011. The book, presented as a letter to Pope Benedict, proposes
the superiority of a worldview in which belief should stem only from
things that can be understood and empirically known over worldviews that
include belief in things that cannot be fully understood or known.
The pope's response, dated Aug. 30, thanked Odifreddi for seeking to
juxtapose his ideas against the pope's own writings "and, thus, with my
faith."
The pope, who has long engaged in dialogue with
nonbelievers, most notably with his "Courtyard of the Gentiles"
initiative and his 2011 Assisi gathering, said he appreciated
Odifreddi's efforts to engage in a frank and open dialogue with the
Catholic faith.
However, the pope said he met "with deep dismay" Odifreddi's unspecified comments about the clerical abuse scandals.
The pope, who was the first pontiff to meet with abuse victims, had
spoken out forcefully against "the filth" in the church, clarified
church laws to expedite cases, and mandated bishops' conferences put in
place stringent norms against abuse, among a number of other
initiatives.
In his letter, the pope said he never tried to cover up allegations.
"That the power of evil seeps all the way into the inner world of the
faith is a source of suffering for us." Not only must the church bear
the burden of this evil, but it also must "do everything possible so
that such cases never repeat themselves," he wrote.
While there
"is no reason to find solace in the fact that, according to research by
sociologists, the percentage of priests guilty of these crimes is no
higher than those present in other similar professional fields," neither
should people "ostensibly present this deviation as if it were filth
pertaining only to Catholicism," Pope Benedict wrote.
Just as
it is wrong "to be silent about the evil in the church," it is wrong to
remain silent about the good, holy and loving service the church has
offered, he said.
Pope Benedict said he read Odifreddi's book "with pleasure and benefit."
However, he also offered some sharp criticisms against Odifreddi's
arguments as well as his neglect of and lack of explanation for very
real and observable phenomena such as love, liberty and evil.
The pope said it was curious that someone like Odifreddi, who considers
theology to be nothing but "science fiction," would even consider the
pope's works as "worthy of such a detailed discussion."
The
retired pope said one of the things the two men have in common is a
belief in a First Cause to the universe, only Odifreddi replaces God
with "Nature" as the origin.
"But the question remains, who or what is this nature," the pope asked.
Nowhere does the scholar offer a definition, making "it appear, therefore, as an irrational divinity that explains nothing."
Concerning Odifreddi's "religion of mathematics," the pope said nowhere
does this belief system consider three major human realities: "freedom,
love and evil."
"I'm amazed that with just one stroke you
eliminate freedom, which has existed and is the fundamental principle of
the modern era."
"Whatever neurobiology says or doesn't say
about freedom, this is present as a decisive reality in the actual
unfolding of our history, and it must be taken into consideration."
Odifreddi's religion of mathematics also lacks any thought or discussion about love and evil, too, the pope said.
"A religion that neglects these fundamental questions remains empty," he said.
The pope, who has also long-supported the compatibility of faith and
science as both being dedicated to the truth, underlined that the task
of theology is to keep religion and reason closely connected.
One without the other will lead to certain dangerous "pathologies" in either religion or reason, he said.
Pope Benedict said science fiction exists in many areas of science,
especially in some theories about the beginning and end of the world.
"I would define (Odifreddi's thoughts on this) as science fiction in
the good sense of the word -- they are views and forecasts in order to
reach real understanding, but they are, in fact, only (products of)
imagination with which we try to get closer to reality."
The
pope also gave Odifreddi some recommended readings to address the
mathematician's doubts about being able to know anything for certain
about the historical figure of Jesus.
Just because there is
shoddy research out there "doesn't compromise the importance of serious
historical research," which has brought real and certain knowledge about
the figure of Jesus, the pope said.
He said
"historical-critical exegesis is necessary for faith, which doesn't
propose myths" out of historical figures and events, but demands a
history that is based on truth and facts, and presents such findings
with scientific rigor.
"All of my efforts have been aimed at
showing how the Jesus described in the Gospels is also the real
historical Jesus; that it is history that has really taken place," Pope
Benedict said, referring to his writings on Jesus of Nazareth.
The pope ended his letter admitting he may have been harsh in some of his criticisms, but that "frankness is part of dialogue."
END
Copyright (c) 2013 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved.
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