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Forgotten
Treasures
The Pope of Peace
by Peter A. Kwasniewski
Today a billion Catholics around the
world look to Pope Benedict XVI as their shepherd. Recently
in Australia, the largest gathering ever to occur in that
country’s history rallied around him. We take for granted,
as it were, the Roman numerals “XVI” after Benedict’s
name, yet would it not be interesting to stop and ask ourselves
how much—or little—we know about the Benedicts
who preceded Joseph Ratzinger?
A few tidbits of papal history are never amiss. The first
pope to bear the name Benedict reigned from 575 to 579, and,
well, there is nothing remarkable to report about his pontificate.
The second Benedict reigned less than a year (684–685).
Benedict V reigned only a month in 964, if you take the view
of Emperor Otto I who had him deposed in favor of Leo VIII.
A decade later (974), the unfortunate Benedict VI was strangled
by the command of his enemies. Benedict VIII (1012–1024)
was forced by antipope Gregory VI to flee Rome for part of
his pontificate; he enjoys the glory of having rallied troops
to repel the invidious Saracens.
With Benedict IX, who occupied the office three separate
times (1032–1044, 1045, and 1047–1048) and was
the only man who dared to sell his office to another
bidder, we undoubtedly reach one of the low water marks in
the history of the papacy. Numerous clerics, including bishops,
popes, and Doctor of the Church St. Peter Damian, accused
Benedict IX of “rapes, murders, and other unspeakable
acts.” Benedict X (1058–59) is generally regarded
as an antipope, but the numbering of subsequent Benedicts
includes this man, such that the official register skips from
IX to XI. Benedict XI (1303–1304), a member of the Dominicans
and formerly their Master General, was the last pope prior
to the so-called “Babylonian captivity” of 1309–1377
when the popes dwelt in the town of Avignon rather than in
Rome.
Benedict Through the Centuries
After this rather dreary catalog, we come to Benedict XII
(1334–1342), who, though an Avignon pope, was a Cistercian
monk of lofty theological interests and reforming zeal. His
quaintly-named papal bull Benedictus Deus of 1336
dogmatically defined that the souls of the just, after they
have been purified, are immediately advanced to the beatifying
vision of God—there is no “delay,” as if
they had to await the general resurrection or the general
judgment. We leap centuries ahead with Benedict XIII (1724–1730),
an ascetical Dominican of reforming intentions but evidently
little skill in ruling.
Benedict XIV (1740–1758), on the other hand, is a most
intriguing figure. A rare combination of learned scholar and
successful diplomat, Prospero Lambertini earned two doctorates
(theology and law) and, as pope, managed to conciliate nations
that demanded the right to nominate bishops. Before ascending
the papal throne, Lambertini authored a sizeable treatise
on beatification and canonization that quickly established
itself as the standard work in this area—a place it
still occupies today. As pope, he showed great sympathy toward
Eastern rites and legislated to preserve them from Latinization;
he spoke out eloquently in defense of the rights of native
Americans; he investigated the history of episcopal synods
and their function; he introduced many reforms in seminary
education; he encouraged scientific endeavors and counseled
an open-minded approach to contemporary thought; he patronized
the universities, restored or completed public monuments (such
as the Trevi Fountain), and initiated the cataloguing of the
immense Vatican Library. Though his openness to Enlightenment
thinkers met with criticism, Benedict XIV was hardly the puppet
of his age. He vehemently condemned usury in the encyclical
Vix Pervenit (1745) and placed Montesquieu’s
Spirit of the Laws on the Index of Prohibited
Books.
In All Things, Charity
All this brings us to Benedict XV, “the Pope of Peace,”
after whom, along with St. Benedict of Nursia, Cardinal Ratzinger
told us that he wished to be named. In spite of the fact that
this pope reigned less than a hundred years ago—from
1914 to 1922—he is surely one of the least known of
modern popes. Giacomo della Chiesa, as he was called until
1914, was born in Genoa in 1854, undertook advanced studies
in law and theology, entered the papal diplomatic service,
and rendered noteworthy service as under-secretary of state
for St. Pius X, who made him archbishop of Bologna in 1907
and cardinal in 1914. It was to prove a short cardinalate.
As its years alone announce, Benedict’s pontificate
was consumed from start to finish with grave matters of war
and peace. He expended himself tirelessly in every possible
effort to stay, stall, or mitigate the “Grear War,”
and when he saw with bitter anguish that the bloodshed could
not be stopped, he turned his attention to organizing humanitarian
relief on a hitherto unprecedented scale—maintaining,
as befits the common father of Christians, a strict political
neutrality that was turned against him by both the Germans
and the Allies. In this regard his reputation suffered, as
that of Pius XII continues to suffer, from the breadth and
impartiality of his own charity. As an experienced diplomat
and a thoughtful observer of world events, Benedict XV knew
and stated very clearly that the only hope for avoiding still
worse wars in Europe consisted in a peace process based not
on vindictiveness but on a self-sacrificing regard for the
good of the many nations, even the defeated ones.
Unfortunately his repeated attempts to influence the peace
process after the armistice proved largely ineffectual; the
“peace” that was concluded at the Paris Peace
Conference was more a cloak for the victors’ revenge
than a forward-looking plan for international cooperation.
The blockade of Germany by the Allies was one example of an
action he considered reprehensible, regardless of German guilt.
Benedict XV lauded the noble intentions behind the League
of Nations but recognized, as did his successor Pius XI, that
it could never be more than a poor expedient for the sacred
confederation of peoples that constituted Christendom. Something
similar may be said today of the United Nations, which, however
praiseworthy its original goals may have been, is degenerating
further and further into a subtle mechanism for promoting
private liberal agendas. In the end, Benedict XV offered up
his life for the intention of world peace as he died a holy
death on January 22, 1922. Can we now see more clearly why,
in an age marked by a resurgence of jihadism, nationalistic
conflicts, civil wars, and poorly justified invasions, not
to mention battles within the Church over her very identity,
mission, and liturgy, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger’s thoughts
turned, at the moment of his election, toward his humble predecessor
Giacomo della Chiesa?
War and Peace
The foregoing may seem a rather lengthy preface, but in this
case especially, knowing something about the personality and
the history behind Benedict XV’s encyclicals helps one
to appreciate them better, to understand why they are worth
rediscovering and rereading. His inaugural encyclical, Ad
Beatissimi Apostolorum (1914), like all first papal encyclicals,
is programmatic, searching, and bold, explaining why the world’s
endemic principles lead to rivalry, violence, and extermination,
whereas Catholic principles must lead to forgiveness, works
of mercy, and fullness of life. This encyclical can be considered
to be Benedict XV’s main contribution to Catholic social
doctrine. He says, for instance, about “the behavior
of men of today”:
Never perhaps was there more talking about the brotherhood
of men than there is today; in fact, men do not hesitate
to proclaim that striving after brotherhood is one of the
greatest gifts of modern civilization, ignoring the teaching
of the Gospel, and setting aside the work of Christ and
of His Church. But in reality never was there less brotherly
activity amongst men than at the present moment. Race hatred
has reached its climax; peoples are more divided by jealousies
than by frontiers; within one and the same nation, within
the same city there rages the burning envy of class against
class; and amongst individuals it is self-love which is
the supreme law overruling everything. (no. 7)
Here is a pope who sees clearly what is happening and is
not afraid to give it a name. We see much the same clarity
and fearlessness at work in his post-war encyclical whose
title is one of the longest on record: Pacem, Dei Munus
Pulcherrimum, “Peace, the Most Beautiful Gift of
God” (1920). Interestingly, he is also the only pope
I know of who has dedicated an encyclical to the subject of
preaching—what kind of study, manner of life, and diligence
is required of a good preacher, what he should be saying and
how he should say it. Clearly this theme of the worthy preaching
of the Word of God is bound up with calling the good, good,
and the evil, evil. The document, Humani Generis Redemptionem
(1917), makes for absolutely terrifying reading today,
when solid, orthodox, scripturally-based preaching is hard
to find. Benedict XV says that vigilance over preaching is
one of the chief responsibilities of the bishops.
Of Poets and Saints
A lively contender for most unusual encyclical ever to be
written is Benedict XV’s In Praeclara Summorum (1921),
commemorating not a saint, nor a council, nor a particular
dogma, but the poet Dante Alighieri. Benedict XV expatiates
on how genius is not antithetical to Christianity but is rather
nourished by it:
If then Dante owes so great part of his fame and greatness
to the Catholic Faith, let that one example, to say nothing
of others, suffice to show the falseness of the assertion
that obedience of mind and heart to God is a hindrance to
genius, whereas indeed it incites and elevates it. Let it
show also the harm done to the cause of learning and civilization
by such as desire to banish all idea of religion from public
instruction. (no. 10)
Pope Benedict XV authored a number of encyclicals on particular
saints that are well worth reading by those who have an interest
in or a spiritual connection to those individuals: In
Hac Tanta on St. Boniface (1919), Principi Apostolorum
Petro on St. Ephrem the Syrian (1920), Spiritus Paraclitus
on St. Jerome (1920), and Fausto Appetente Die on
St. Dominic (1921). Of these four, I recommend for all readers
the encyclical on St. Jerome, which, going well beyond its
modest commemorative function, turns out to be an encyclical
on biblical inspiration, inerrancy, interpretation—in
short, many of the fascinating topics that Bible studies raise.
This encyclical is an important link between two other momentous
encyclicals on the Bible: Leo XIII’s Providentissimus
Deus (1893) and Pius XII’s Divino Afflante
Spiritu (1943).
After you read one or more of Benedict XV’s encyclicals,
you will be in a better position for appreciating our Holy
Father Pope Benedict XVI, who expressly pointed to this papal
predecessor as a model for his ministry. May the Lord continue
to give our present pope the grace to be as strong and resolute
in his proclamation of the saving Gospel as was Giacomo della
Chiesa in his own day.
Peter Kwasniewski
is an associate professor of theology at Wyoming Catholic
College and a visiting professor at the International Theological
Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family in Gaming, Austria.
He received his BA in liberal arts from Thomas Aquinas College
in California and his MA and Ph.D. in philosophy from The
Catholic University of America.
Kwasniewski has published extensively
in scholarly and popular journals and directs Gregorian chant
and other sacred music. He and his wife, Clarissa, have two
children and are lay members of the Order of Preachers.
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