The Wonder of
Wondering!
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
May 20, 2015
A READER WRITES:
Jim,
I
find your view of Paul fascinating. He
certainly was a lot of things but saint was not one of them.
He
was like anyone else who thought he had the answer. First he persecuted the Christians, and then
he invented Christianity and pursued it with the same fervor.
In
this he shares this sense of being with less exalted figures like Hitler,
Napoleon, and Stalin.
These
men all thought they knew the answer. It
appears one of the characteristics of humans who think they have found the
answer is to try to convert others and many times when they don’t acquiesce
force is the next option.
The
Buddha is another example of a person who thought he had found the answer, and
soon after his so called enlightenment sought to convince others to accept his
answer. The power structure of the time supported
his efforts because it aided in the control of the population.
Klaus
DR.
FISHER ANSWERS:
Klaus,
Your
comments always stir my interest. No,
Paul was not a saint, but who is? Reared
strict Irish Roman Catholic, sainthood always meant a lot to me in my impressionistic
years.
Pope
Pius XII’s picture was on the wall of our modest home along with President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. I would have
a military audience with Pope Pius XII, along with other members of the US
Sixth Fleet in 1957 in Rome only months before his death. He passed by me in the regal chair held by
four Swiss guards only inches from me. I
thought I would faint.
Like
books about Paul, I have read several books on or by the Pope Pius XII over the
years, but have been most disturbed by those that have been written post-WWII. For example, Hitler’s Pope: The Secret History of Pius XII (1999) by John
Cornwell.
Cardinal
Pacelli, later Pope Pius XII, was Nuncio of Munich (Germany) for the Vatican
and the pope (Pius XI) during Hitler’s rise to power after 1933, and
subsequently, he himself rose to the position of the Supreme Pontiff in 1939 –
when WWII commenced with the Nazi invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939 – and
would remain pope until his death in 1958.
Currently,
Pope Francis I is considering Pope Pius XII for sainthood.
As
devastating as Cornwell’s book is of Pius XII with reference to the Holocaust,
more devastating to me is David Kertzer’s The
Pope and Mussolini: The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in
Europe (2015).
Pope
Pius XI was totally enamored of Mussolini and thought him the answer to a
stable state, defending his every act, and actually in secret collusion with
him at the expense of the citizens of Italy.
But
the pontiff became disenchanted with Mussolini as his actions against Jews
became increasingly draconian.
What
Kertzer shows in this book is how human and brutal is the institutional governance
of the Vatican, how secret and flawed, but most importantly of all, how Pope
Pius XI’s Secretary of State, now Eugenio Pacelli, came to rule the roost.
The
brilliant lawyer that would be the next pontiff (Pope Pius XII) maintains the
autocratic organization control with its deep institution biases and
tendentious authoritarian, and antidemocratic political views with little
interference, that is, until Pope Pius XI comes to increasingly distance himself
from Mussolini and the Duce’s increasingly anti-Semitic Nazism.
Pope
Pius XI drafts encyclicals, which are meant to express the infallible authority
of the pontiff, had come to understand that fascism was not just another
conservative movement, but a dangerous pagan ideology deeply at odds with
Christianity.
The
pontiff was mortified when Mussolini invited Hitler to Rome, calling Hitler “the greatest enemy that Christ and the
Church have had in modern times.” It
was inconceivable to him “why Italy had
to go and imitate Germany.”
Pacelli,
who had appeased Hitler on many occasions as Nuncio of Munich, and apparently
felt that Germany, and not the Allies, would win the war, found his influence
on Pius XI waning.
There
was panic in the Vatican. Pacelli and
other power brokers, including the Roman Curia, were embarrassed when the pope
told a group of Belgium Catholics: “Anti-Semitism
is inadmissible. Spiritually, we are all
Semites.”
Paeelli
saw that these remarks were expunged from the public record. Later, near the pope’s death, learning of
Mussolini’s anger with the pope, and knowing that the pontiff had written a
final draft condemning anti-Semitism stating that fascism was inhuman and
unchristian, Pacelli told the Vatican printing office to destroy all copies of
the speech that had been printed.
Still
fearing that the text of the speech may have gotten out, the so-called secret
encyclical against racism, Pacelli went to the limits of his authority to see
that no one would ever know of Pope Pius XI’s change of heart, and desire to
make matters right.
Now,
Pope Francis I wants to declare Eugenio Pacelli, Pope Pius XII, a saint. Such is the business of sainthood of which I
no longer believe.
As
you know, I read and am still reading a number of books on Saul who became Paul
who became St. Paul. Should you read “Saint Saul: A Skeleton Key to the
Historical Jesus” (2000) by Donald Harman Akenson, I think you would find
support for your argument.
I
have a different view – am currently writing a piece where I discuss this in A Letter
from One Octogenarian to another Octogenarian -- finding the apotheosis to a cause rises
out of the masses and settles on a symbol called a “leader” who epitomizes the
masses discontent and longing, and not the other way around. Therefore,
I don’t see such “leaders” as converting, but representing the distillate of angst
and unrest, and self-ignorance of the masses.
Be
well thoughtful man.
Jim
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