+Bishop Luigi Locati

Missionary-bishop Luigi Locati, nine years the ordinary of the Vicariate of Isiolo in Kenya, has been apparently martyred a few hours after he returned from a national bishops’ meeting.
At a time when Africa is shocked by a massacre between rural clans in Kenya’s Marsabit province, and the bishops have been criticizing public corruption and official dithering, is it possible that someone wants to shut the bishops up?
It took murder to stop this bishop, too: he had not been stopped by a previous attempt on his life by attackers who invaded his home in September.
Our Lord freely laid His life down for us, and this man, 50 years a priest, gave his for God’s people living in Kenya. May God be glorified in His saints!
Bishop Luigi Locati, pray for us.

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Pope Benedict XVI’s installation homily

I caught the last half of the papal installation Mass today, but missed the Holy Father’s homily. Here is the text if you missed it, too. It is truly magnificent and transcendent.
In particular, I am interested to know what non-Catholics think of Benedict’s words. Anyone care to comment?

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The papacy, not just an instrument

Discussions about the papacy revolve mainly around the duties of the office, and its function within the Catholic faith. That is not the only essential aspect of the pope’s role, however. The papacy is not solely an instrument that performs certain actions, it is good and beautiful in its own right.
It is a sign of God’s providence that he would entrust the Gospel to an unbroken line of successors, who are God’s primary liaisons to mankind until Christ comes again. The charism of infallibility, often misunderstood and derided, is a gift not only to the pope, but to all of us. Jesus went to the trouble of becoming incarnate, teaching his disciples, getting crucified for our sins, and rising from the dead. Having gone to all that effort, the Good Shepherd wants to ensure that his truth will remain intact, pure and entire.
Too often, that gets buried in media coverage that emphasizes the political aspect of the papacy to the exclusion of the central fact: God loved the world so much that he gave his only son, and the protection of his saving message are manifestations of God’s perpetual love.

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On joining abhorrent political movements so you can lead your life

A little more about Pope Benedict’s “Nazi past.” When membership in an immoral political party is compulsory, and you are not obliged to commit any heinous acts, then I do not think joining it is morally wrong. Since everyone living under the party’s regime understands the rules, and that membership is not a personal statement backing the party’s crimes, they cannot possibly be scandalized.
A personal anecdote: When I was in Iraq, one of our translators invited us to dinner with his family. His brother was a teenager who loved everything about America, which he had learned about on the Internet. He loved our laws, our music and movies, our guns, and our freedoms. He completely hated the Ba’athist Party, but to go to high school, he had to join it. The brother didn’t have to gas Kurds or feed women into industrial shredders, he just had to go through the motions. I don’t think he did anything wrong, either.

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Jerusalem Post says Benedict XVI was not a Nazi

The Jerusalem Post had an editorial on Monday defending the new pope’s reputation against slanderers: “Ratzinger a Nazi? Don’t believe it”:

London’s Sunday Times would have us believe that one of the leading contenders for the papacy is a closet Nazi. In if-only-they-knew tones, the newspaper informs readers that German-born Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was a member of the Hitler Youth during World War II and suggests that, because of this, the “panzer cardinal” would be quite a contrast to his predecessor, John Paul II.
The article also classifies Ratzinger as a “theological anti-Semite” for believing in Jesus so strongly that – gasp! – he thinks that everyone, even Jews, should accept him as the messiah.
To all this we should say, “This is news?!”…
As the Sunday Times article admits, Ratzinger’s membership in the Hitler Youth was not voluntary but compulsory; also admitted are the facts that the cardinal – only a teenager during the period in question – was the son of an anti-Nazi policeman, that he was given a dispensation from Hitler Youth activities because of his religious studies, and that he deserted the German army….
The only significant complaint that the Times makes against Ratzinger’s wartime conduct is that he resisted quietly and passively, rather than having done something drastic enough to earn him a trip to a concentration camp. Of course, whenever it is said that a German failed the exceptional-resistance-to-the-Nazis test, it would behoove us all to recognize that too many Jews failed it, as well.

Read the article here (registration required.)

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