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Newest Papal Controversial declarations to Scalfari
A Rorate Translation
Did Pope defend the annihilation of
souls?
What Pope Francis may say to Europe's
Nonbelievers
Eugenio
Scalfari
La
Repubblica
March
15, 2015
“We must avoid that the good [souls] be
lost and we must do everything possible to save the lost ones”
The
mercy to which Pope Francis is dedicating the upcoming Jubilee Year has this
objective: the prodigal son of the parable whom the father welcomes [home] as a
celebration of life, forgiveness among men and the infinite forgiveness of God
towards His creatures. Repentance is the condition [necessary] for mercy to
fall upon that soul and illuminate it with its light.
Pope Bergoglio did not pick the name
Francis (unusual for the Church of Rome) by chance:
The
Saint from Assisi saw and loved all of God’s creatures because they all carry a
spark of the divinity in them; the good shepherd is that spark which must
discover and cancel with his love the dross accumulated in life itself and
which has banished it into the depths, suffocating its light.
However,
the theme of sin and repentance remain. And if repentance does not come? If the
spark has gone out or has never existed? Pope Francis never considered that
that spark could go out or that some natures could have even been deprived of
it from birth; so the care for souls must never stop nor be interrupted and
this is the task of the missionary work of the Church. At one of our meetings
he spoke to me of that mission which concerned also unbelievers. “The
missionary Church” – he said to me – does not proselytize, but strives to
awaken the search for good in their souls.”
“Your Holiness, – I replied – I don’t
believe in the existence of the soul.”
[Pope’s
reply]“You don’t believe in the soul, but you have one anyway.”
This is
the faith that sustains him and illuminates the way: the love of neighbor is
the passion that inspires him.
I
remember also saying to him that I never thought that there could have been a
pontiff like him and his reply was that it was the Lord’s [business] in His
endless mercy, to know the future..
Recalling
the history of the Catholic Church, there are two predecessors in particular
who made mercy the main theme of their pontificate: Lambertini in the 18th
century and Roncalli half a century ago. Almost all the others, from the
Council of Nicea onwards, held the preaching of the Gospel and the governing of
temporal power together, giving the precedence to one or the other according to
the times in which they lived, as well as to the disposition of their own
personalities.
In a Mexican newspaper interview made
public yesterday in fact, Francis also said that he had the sensation that his
pontificate would be short - four or five years - and the attention of the
newspapers focused on this: is he perhaps ill? Is he perhaps thinking of
resigning from such an arduous office?
He
denied both of these hypotheses. In any case, a year ago, on his return trip
from Korea, he had already said the same thing. It is possible that he wants
those who are listening (as well as himself) to remember that his anagraphical
age is called “old age” and old people are [always] on the threshold of death.
He does not fear death which is simply a passage to the true life in the other
world. He fears suffering, yes, and has said so more than once, but death no.
Death is a celebration and should be faced as such by those with faith in the
Father who awaits them in highest heaven.
Yet, what about those with no faith? The
answer is that if one has loved others at least as much as himself, (possibly a
little more than self) the Father will welcome him. Faith is of help but that
is not the element of the one who judges - it’s life itself. Sin and repentance
are part of life [and include]: remorse, a sense of guilt, a desire for
redemption and the abandonment of egoism.
Those
who have had the fortune of meeting Pope Francis, know that egoism is the most
dangerous enemy of our species. Animals are egoistic because they are prey to
their own instincts, the main one being their own survival. On the other hand,
man is moved also by conviviality and so feels love for others, and for the
survival of the species to which he belongs. If egoism overpowers and
suffocates his love for others, it darkens the divine spark within him and he
is self-condemned.
What happens to that lifeless soul? Will
it be punished? How?
Francis’ answer is very clear: there is no
punishment, but the annihilation of that soul. All the others will participate
in the bliss of living in the presence of the Father. The annihilated souls
will not be part of that banquet; with the death of the body their journey is
ended and this is the basis for the missionary work in the Church: to save the
lost souls. And this is also the reason why Francis is a Jesuit to the core.
The
Company founded by Loyola taught and still teaches its followers that the
premise of mission is being in tune with others i.e. being on the same
wavelength, without which dialogue would be impossible. For that reason the
missionary Church has to update itself according to the passage of the times
and the diversities of places.
When
dialogue finally becomes possible among different peoples, of diverse cultures,
civics and religions, it is then that the missionary Church may stimulate the
call for the good and limit the love of self.
Francis’
teaching makes a lot of sense even for those who don’t believe because it
touches a deeply human factor, which is independent of belief in God and Christ
His Son. It is a teaching which highlights the difference between man and the
animal from which he descends, with a mind capable of reflection and
self-judgment, by holding the bridle of his own narcissism and his head held
high, gazing at the stars.
Now Francis still has to face some very
hard problems, barely mentioned so far.
The
first that no-one has yet posed but is nevertheless clearly evident, regards
the priests who administer the Sacraments and who have the power to absolve or
punish those whom they judge sinners.
The priests and the hierarchy which
encompasses them all, exist only in the Catholic Church and are forbidden to
marry.
Priests
and celibacy do not exist in any other religion and doctrine transformed into
code does not exist in any other religion either. Jews have their Scripture and
precepts, but the rabbis are simply teachers, they have no sacrament nor
obligations to celibacy. They explain and interpret the Scriptures, that is
their task and nothing else.
Muslims
also have their Scriptures and doctrine but there is no trace of the
priesthood. Attention, though: the various Muslim sects have teachers who
interpret the Koran, but also tribunals which indicate the overthrowing of the
enemy i.e. the infidel. They are potential theocracies, at times in a direct
way such as in Iran and at times indirectly, so the temptation to fundamentalism
is strong and often malign.
And so
it is the same also in all the other various Protestant confessions; even if
Christian, they have pastors, not priests. The pastors are similar in some way
to rabbis; they are teachers, have families, administer the sacraments which
some confessions have conserved, but the contact between man and God is not
obligatorily mediated by bishops and priests in the care of souls. It is direct
contact. This was Luther’s great revolution: the believer reads the Scriptures,
the Bible and the Gospels and faith permits him direct contact with God.
Well
then, this is the question: will the Church of Rome be able to conserve
ecclesiastical order with its duties and hierarchical rights? The problem is
even more present inasmuch as some non-Catholic confessions are drawing nearer
to the Church of Rome and may even decide to join Her. It has already happened
with some Anglicans and may happen with the Orthodox too. However, if the
pastors decide to become Catholics they bring their families (which they have
legitimately formed) with them, just like the Oriental Church which has always
been Catholic but with no obligation of celibacy.
Then
there is the other important theme of the family which Pope Francis dedicated
most of the Synod to and which will be concluded in the following months.
Lastly,
there is the theme of the Second Vatican Council: the contact with modern
culture which has its roots in the Enlightenment.
That
intellectual movement which experienced its maximum development in 18th century
England and France and had Diderot, Voltaire, Hume and Kant as its greatest
representatives, did not believe in absolute truth but in relative truth, which
excludes the existence of God or admits this existence as a motor in the
creation of life, which is then developed through autonomous evolution and
dictated by autonomous laws.
The God
of the “theists” had no attribute whatsoever that resembled the Christian God:
he was neither merciful nor vindictive, nor generous; he never intervened in
history and destiny; he never posed the problem of good and evil. He was a
motor, a cosmogonical force that had switched on the light of life in some
places of the universe and had then withdrawn, either dormant or busy with
other vital creations.
Europe
had the Enlightenment as a basis for modernity. The Vatican II theme which Pope
Francis holds dearly, is to understand and be on the same wavelength as modern
Europe (and Northern America), now greatly de-Christianized and thus mission
territory. It is very likely that the Jubilee desired by Francis is precisely
the start of this missionary activity, with all its ensuing results, not only
ultramontane, but also tremendously concrete in the tide of terrorism, wars and
local tensions, increasing violence, families shattered and desperate children;
in short, the gravest of sins: inequality, ignored poverty, the supremacy of
power and the war on love and peace.
To
conclude, mercy must be the most appropriate theme, not only religiously but
also socially and economically, in order to recuperate love, peace and hope in
contrast to power, war and desperation.
Long
live Pope Francis.
[A
Rorate Translation by Contributor Francesca Romana]
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