Pope Benedict plans to be 'hidden from world' after retirement
First leader of the Catholic church to resign in nearly 600 years.
Published Saturday, February 16, 2013, 9:26 AM
Updated Saturday, February 16, 2013, 9:26 AM
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rose528 | Feb 18, 2013, 08:41 PM EST
HE IS A PEDOPHILE AND SHOULD BE IN PRISON
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misneac | Feb 18, 2013, 08:24 PM EST
Many of the comments being
posted are incredibly bigoted !
The impression that a 85 year
man is retiring seems to create in some peoples mind that there is a an ulterior motive is mind boggling . Tell me a major worldwide organisation who at its head an 85 year old person . Pope Benedict has served the Catholic Church well and deserves some serenity at this stage of his existence Name me a bloody civil servant who "works " after the age of 65 ,never mind 85 !!!
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CitizenWhy | Feb 17, 2013, 05:53 PM EST
At the Congress of Vienna in 1815, after the defeat of Napoleon a decision was made for Britain, Russia, Prussia and Austria to enforce a policy called Legitimacy, that is, the restoration of monarchs whose legitimacy as monarchs preceded the upstart Napoleon. As a result the Pope, as absolute monarch, was restored to the throne of the Papal States. A further decision was made to strengthen the Legitimacy policy by encouraging the pope to declare himself infallible and thus order all upstarts against legitimate authority, such as the Irish, to obey their masters. The English, Irish, German and other bishops voted against papal infallibility and it was defeated. But the pope simply waited for them to go home and then had the remaining bishops vote for it.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 17, 2013, 05:39 PM EST
To mreinhar2001 ... You missed a bit on papal infallibility, the pope is supposedly infallible when speaking "ex cathedra" on matters of faith and MORALITY. This includes papal interpretations of the peculiar roman catholic theory of Natural Law, a philosophic theory some of which is supposedly based on science but is in fact based on pseudo-science. The natural law theory is completely rationalized, worked out in the pope's head without any empirical observation. In addition the theory states that the sole and supreme interpreter of the natural law is the pope and that the pope's dcrees on natural law are binding on all humans of any faith or no faith and on all governments. Thus we have the bizarrre "infallibility" against contraceptives.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 17, 2013, 05:34 PM EST
To mreihar2001 ... I am well aware of the Roman Catholic theory of papal infallibility, a theory partly advanced by the British government at that time so that the infallible pope could order the Irish bishops to obey their legitimate masters, the British government.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 17, 2013, 05:30 PM EST
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mreinhar2001 | Feb 17, 2013, 03:36 PM EST
@WoundedKnee has some very good points and I concur with all of them.
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mreinhar2001 | Feb 17, 2013, 03:34 PM EST
@CitizenWhy: A correction, if you will. The person is not ifallible, the person in the office is infallible and then, only on certain matters. When a pope speaks "ex cathedra," he speaks infallibly on matters of the church, not other times. (If the pope eats a burger and syas, "That burger was way over cooked," that is not an infallible statement.) The last time a pope spoke infallibly was in 1950 when Pius XII declared that the Blessed Virgin Mary (the mother of Jesus, the Christ) was assumed body and soul into heaven at the end of her life. So there would not be two "two infallible people in the church at the same time." Just FYI.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 17, 2013, 01:07 PM EST
Of course he will be hidden. Hidden because it would be confusing to have two infallible people in the church at the same time. And hidden because he faces prosecution based on his cover up of child rapes (Germany) and law suits from victims (International Court in Der Haag).
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Will Hamilton | Feb 17, 2013, 10:37 AM EST
Hidden? He should be buried alive for his crimes. He won't be travelling now because he can't hide behind diplomatic immunity any more so he has to avoid being charged with covering up child rape and torture by his troops around the globe. He can sit around with his fellow fugitive Bernard Law.
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CelticQueenUSA | Feb 17, 2013, 09:03 AM EST
I think this guy has a lot to hide and to hide from. Something seems off about all this.
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WoundedKnee | Feb 17, 2013, 02:32 AM EST
I think he is a good man, and wish him well. Hopefully this will put a stop to the crazy rush to canonize his predecessor. I was never impressed by the Polish Pope while he was alive, even though he got a free run from the fawning media. I think it is time to investigate how much the man from Poland knew of the sex abusers who have nearly destroyed our Catholic institutions.
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