Tags: papacy

Skeletor

A pope by any other name would still have a big hat

Promoted from facebook: I think the new pope should look to the early church when choosing his papal name. Just look at some of these underused gems: Linus, Cletus, Telesphorus, Soter, Fabian, Zephyrinus, Hormisdas, Formosus, Cornelius, Eutychian, Miltiades, Zosimus, Hilarius, Agapetus, Adeodatus, Agatho, Conon, Sisinnius, and of course, Lando.

And if someone does choose Lando, Lando II should insist his secretary of state change his name either to Han or Ackbar.
  • Current Music
    Ben Folds Five - Steven's Last Night In Town
  • Tags
Stonehenge

Habemus confusion

So it looks like we're going to have a new Pope soon. In many ways, I think Benny the Hex got a bad rap. He's not the asshole many people made him out to be, and I think moreso than John Paul II, he tried to live the humility that Christ expects of His followers (his Prada wardrobe notwithstanding).

Benedict XVI steps down on Feb. 28, which means we'll be bombarded with lists of papabile for the next month or so, until the new guy gets the top Hat. As I said on Facebook, I'd like to a have a rooting interest that the new Pope is more liberal and willing to reconsider the Church's position on things like birth control and homosexuality, but that's not going to happen. So I'm just hoping the next pope chooses Sixtus the Sixth as his regnal name. But I'm out of the running this time. I'm not giving up my sweetie, not even for the best hat in Christendom.
  • Current Mood
    surprised surprised
  • Tags
Skeletor

Morning confusion

Those of you without strong stomachs might not want to follow this link. People do things like this to have something to talk about on the Web. The results are often amusing, as this is, but worrisome, too. And this from someone who is campaigning for everything but Holy Roman Emperor just to have something to talk about on the Web.

In other news, according to Newsweek, Pope Benedict XVI is a really snappy dresser. I'm incredibly amused by the fact that a major news publication feels the need to discuss the Papal wardrobe, but also a little sad. As a history student (and as a Catholic), this makes me incredibly naive, I know, but Christianity is a religion of the poor, right? Someone's missing the point here. I'm not sure who, but I'm fairly sure it isn't me.

I've been accused, from time to time, of overthinking things. I have no idea why.
Skeletor

Pope-patine

In my continuing efforts to transform The Breakfast Nook into All Pope All the Time (which sounds better than Mostly Pope Whenever I Bother to Update, Which Isn't Often), I have the following observation:

I would be more reassured about the success of Benedict XVI's papacy if the news media could locate more pictures of Benedict that don't look like he's about to shoot Force lightning from his fingers.

OTOH, Benedict's papacy began April 19, and Revenge of the Sith comes out May 19. Coincidence? So what.
  • Current Mood
    amused amused
  • Tags
Skeletor

Urk

It's been a busy few days in the world, what with the new Pope and all (the name Benedict XVI is pretty cool, but it's no Sixtus VI; personally from a symbolic point of view, I think I would have preferred Leo XIV, but that's neither here nor there), but I didn't write about any of it. That's because I've had the Martian Death Flu for the past four days. I'm over it to the point where I can string together a couple of sentences with my usual level of coherence (not much), where on Thursday, say, it was all I could do to put two words together, never mind have 'em make sense.

Anyway, I'm feeling a little better and as I continue (I hope) to improve, I'll probably have more to say.
South Park

Karol Josef Wojtyla, 1920–2005

I've been wrestling for three days with how to write about the Pope's death, and although I wanted to write a long obituary/commentary, I decided that just about everything that needed to said has been said, so I will show some restraint. (I know; I'm showing restraint; alert the media.)  My feelings are complex.  Considering I've spend the past few months waiting for him to die, I was surprised at the depth of loss I felt when he finally did.  I think that like a lot of people, I managed to shift all of my ambivance about his policies to the institution: "Love the Pope, not so sure about the Church" seems to be a pretty common feeling among American Catholics, especially liberal Catholics.  For most people, I think, he was hard not to love, the earnest traveller, the Dreamer of Poland, as zthulu called him in a wonderfully eloquent post, who outlasted the Nazis and the Communists and came home triumphant.  He spoke not only of the right to life, but the right to dignity, and preached peace to everyone, even the man who shot him.  But of course, he also quashed hopes for further acceptance for homosexual Catholics, stood foursquare against expanding the role of women in the Church, and refused to budge on birth control, even in the face of the Third World AIDS epidemic.  It's a mixed legacy, but not a bad one. 

Many people, I think, asked more of him than he or the instution could give.  The Church doesn't do upheavals; she likes her changes gradual, when she likes them at all.  Two thousand years of history will do that.  But Vatican II was still only 40 years ago—the blink of an eye for the Church.  She needed time to digest the changes, and John Paul II gave her that time.  His papacy is being referred to as a "transformational" papacy, but to me it was more a consolidational papacy.  He made institutional changes, but doctrine remains mostly as John Paul found it—the real changes to the Church were demographic, and the Pope merely accelerated those trends, he didn't create them.  And now, at the end of his quarter century, you have a Church that understands the changes that Vatican II brought and has a better idea of the challenges that she faces than she did in 1978.  I rather doubt the next Pope will leap in with both feet like the Blessed John XXIII and call for Vatican III, but I do think that, intentionally or not, John Paul made the Church ready for her next great changes.

I'll close with a couple of thoughts. The first is from the Pope, a sentiment that is to me beautiful in its simplicity and emblematic of what a Christian should be: "Do not abandon yourselves to despair.  We are the Easter people, and Hallelujah is our song."  We tend to forget, in the face of the Pat Robertons and Jerry Falwells, that Christianity is a religion of hope.  The Dreamer of Poland never did.

The second is my own, a slight tweak of a remark made in a comment to silverselene.  Some are already pushing to call him John Paul the Great.  Well, I'm a history student, and leery of handing out Greats when there have only been three in the Church's history.  And as I said, his record is mixed, and tainted by the pedophilia scandal of his last years.  So I can't say for certain that he was a great pope, but I never doubt that he was a great man.   Requiescat en pace, Iohannes Paulus.
  • Current Music
    Uneasy Street - Pete Townshend
  • Tags
    ,