[Grem] Mit mond naga XVI.Benedek lemondásáról, pápaságáról, Ferenc pápáról?

Emoke Greschik greschem at gmail.com
2016. Aug. 25., Cs, 20:15:13 CEST


Benedict XVI says he felt he had a ‘duty’ to resign because of his health
by *Junno Arocho Esteves
<http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/author/junno-arocho-esteves/>*
posted Thursday, 25 Aug 2016
http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2016/08/25/benedict-xvi-says-he-felt-he-had-a-duty-to-resign-because-of-his-health/
[image: Benedict XVI assisted by Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of
the Pontifical Council for the Family, left, and Archbishop Georg Ganswein,
prefect of the papal household (CNS)]
Benedict XVI assisted by Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the
Pontifical Council for the Family, left, and Archbishop Georg Ganswein,
prefect of the papal household (CNS)

*In a new interview the Pope Emeritus reveals his decision was forced by
his inability to travel to Rio*

Retired Pope Benedict XVI has said in an interview that *he felt a “duty”
to resign from the papacy because of his declining health and the rigorous
demands of papal travel.*

While his heart was set on completing the Year of Faith, the retired pope
told Italian journalist Elio Guerriero that *after his visit to Mexico and
Cuba in March 2012, he felt he was “incapable of fulfilling” the demands of
another international trip, especially with World Youth Day 2013 scheduled
for Brazil.*

“With the program set out by John Paul II for these (World Youth) days, the
physical presence of the pope was indispensable,” he told Guerriero in an
interview, which is included in the journalist’s upcoming biography of Pope
Benedict. “This, too, was a circumstance which made my resignation a duty,”
the pope said.

An excerpt of Guerriero’s book, *“Servant of God and Humanity: The
Biography of Benedict XVI,” was published Aug. 24 in the Italian newspaper,
La Repubblica.*

Pope Benedict said that although he was moved by the “profound faith” of
the people of Mexico and Cuba, it was during his visit to the two countries
in 2012 that he “experienced very strongly the limits of my physical
endurance.”

*Among the problems with committing to the gruelling schedule of an
international trip was the change in time zones. Upon consulting with his
doctor, he said, it became clear “that I would never be able to take part
in the World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro.”*

*“From that day, I had to decide in a relatively short time the date of my
retirement,” he said.*

Guerriero noted that while many believed the pope’s retirement was a defeat
for the church, Pope Benedict continues to seem “calm and co*n*fident.” The
retired pope said he “completely agreed” with the journalist’s observation.

“I would have been truly worried if I was not convinced — as I had said in
the beginning of my pontificate — of being a simple and humble worker in
the Lord’s vineyard,” he said.

*The retired pope added that while he was aware of his limitations, he
accepted his election in 2005 “in a spirit of obedience” and that despite
the difficult moments, there were also “many graces.”*

“I realized that everything I had to do I could not do on my own and so* I
was almost obliged to put myself in God’s hands, to trust in Jesus who —
while I wrote my book on him — I felt bound to by an old and more profound
friendship,” he said.*

*The retired pontiff spends his days in prayer and contemplation while
residing at the Mater Ecclesiae monastery in Vatican City. For 19 years,
different contemplative orders took turns living in the monastery with a
mission focused on praying for the pope and the church.*

Benedict said that upon learning that the Visitandine nuns would be leaving
the residence, he realized “almost naturally that this would be the place
where I could retire in order to continue in my own way the service of
prayer of which John Paul II had intended for this house.”

*Among the visitors Pope Benedict receives is Pope Francis, who “never
fails to visit me before embarking on a long trip,” he said.*

*Asked about his personal relationship with his successor, Pope Benedict
said they shared a “wonderfully paternal-fraternal relationship” and he has
been profoundly touched by his “extraordinarily human availability*.”

“I often receive small gifts, personally written letters” from *Pope
Francis, *he said.*“The human kindness with which he treats me is a
particular grace of this last phase of my life for which I can only be
grateful. What h e says about being open toward other men and women is not
just words. He puts it into practice with me.”*

Pope Francis, who wrote the book’s preface, expressed his admiration for
the retired pope and said his spiritual bond with his predecessor “remains
particularly profound.”

“In all my meetings with him, I have been able to experience not only
reverence and obedience, but also friendly spiritual closeness, the joy of
praying together, sincere brotherhood, understanding and friendship, and
also his availability for advice,” Pope Francis wrote.

The church’s mission of proclaiming the merciful love of God for the world,
he added, has and continues to be exemplified in the life of Pope Benedict.

“The whole life of thought and the works of Joseph Ratzinger have focused
on this purpose and — in the same direction, with the help of God — I
strive to continue,” Pope Francis wrote.
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