Vatican crisis highlights Pope Benedict’s failure to reform the Curia
When Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger became Pope Benedict in 2005, epithets like “God’s Rottweiler” and “Panzerkardinal” suggested he would bring some German efficiency to the opaque Vatican bureaucracy, the Curia.
Instead, as the “Vatileaks” scandal has revealed, the head of the Roman Catholic Church can’t even keep his own private mail secret. His hand-picked deputy, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, faces a “monsignors’ mutiny” by prelates in the halls of power.
Benedict’s papacy has been marked until now by controversies over things he has said and done, such as his criticism of Islam at Regensburg in 2006 or his 2009 decision to readmit four excommunicated ultra-traditionalist bishops to the Church.
Now a goal he has failed to achieve — gain control over the Curia — has come back to haunt him. Leaks of confidential documents on everything from Vatican finances to private papal audiences make his papacy look weak and disorganized. [more]
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1 Comments
Ratzinger operates from a culture that insists that the Vatican is immune from error. No wonder there is such secrecy. The Vatican is composed of human beings, consequently their obedience to the Holy Spirit is imperfect as for all human beings. This fiasco may be providential if it opens the locked doors and leads to reform and transparency.