Hartford Faith & Values

Faith » Clergy & Congregations

Did gays in the Vatican drive Benedict out?

The latest speculation to fill the vacuum created by Pope Benedict’s shocking resignation is that his almost unprecedented action was prompted by the discovery of a gay “mafia” inside the Vatican.

Horrors! Right? Well, maybe not so much…

The original report came this week from the Italian daily La Repubblica, delivered in breathless prose, of how a select group of cardinals delivered a report on the “Vatileaks” scandal last October to His Holiness and revealed that there was a “network” of gays inside the Roman Curia bringing scandal to the church by opening themselves to blackmail.

That news so shocked the pontiff’s delicate sensibilities that he there and then decided to resign at the earliest possible moment. The story has since zipped around other outlets.

I’m one of those who would say this is pretty massively overplayed. For one thing, Benedict’s resignation was most certainly the result of numerous factors, mainly revolving around the internal problems of the Vatican, of which sexual shenanigans were likely one — but hardly the only one, or even the principal one. His advancing age was the element that pushed it all to the brink.

The other thing is that Benedict would receive the Captain Louis Renault Award (see below) if he were to declare himself “shocked” that gay men inhabit the priesthood and hierarchy, and of course the Vatican itself.

Marco Tosatti, the veteran Vaticanista at at La Stampa, puts it well today when he notes that Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger spent 25 years as a top official in the Curia, much of it attempting to chase gay priests out, or to discipline priests and bishops and even cardinals guilty of sex scandals. And he spent nearly eight years as pope doing the same.
 

“In short,” Tosatti writes, “if there is anyone who has seen it all when it comes to priests, it is precisely Joseph Ratzinger. It does not seem terribly plausible that the discovery in the Roman Curia, like in the Church, like in the world, that there are “fish of every type” (the words are those of Ratzinger himself, from the Gospels) might have been the decisive blow in forcing the pope to abandon the Throne of St. Peter.”

Makes sense to me. And yes, the Vatican can seem a lot like “Casablanca.” Clip below.

UPDATE: NCR’s John Allen weighs in, in a similar vein:

No, Benedict didn’t quit under the pressure of a “gay lobby.” But the perceived disarray in the Vatican, which may well be one part perception and one part reality, probably made resignation look even better.

Topics: Faith, Clergy & Congregations
Beliefs: Christian - Catholic
Tags: gays, pope benedict, vatican

You must acquire rights to repost our content. Log in now for permission to download and reprint or repost this article.

Comments

Add Your Comment

If a person is called Brian, what is their name?

Related Stories

Vatican: Pope Benedict to resign at the end of the month

VATICAN CITY (RNS) In a move that took the world by surprise, Pope Benedict XVI on Monday (Feb. 11) announced that he will resign on Feb. 28.
More | Comments (0)

The Pope on Twitter. Would you follow him?

Perhaps his hashtags will include #mortalsin, #sevensacraments and #eucharist – we can only hope.
More | Comments (0)

HartfordFAVS’ top religion news stories of 2012: The Pope on Twitter

Editor's Note:  Between now and Dec. 31, Hartford Faith & Values will re-publish the 10 most-read articles since the website  launched in September. Today's article about Pope Benedict's foray into social media is just one example of the many stories HartfordFAVS' talened contributors have written, making the website a resource for diverse viewpoints of faith and values. 
More | Comments (0)

Vatican defends pope’s Twitter account despite attacks

VATICAN CITY (RNS) The Vatican on Thursday (Jan. 24) defended the pope’s choice to open a Twitter account even if it exposes him to insults and online abuse.
More | Comments (0)

What Pope Benedict XVI shares with his notorious namesake

(RNS) You won’t find many Catholic churches named after Pope Benedict IX.
More | Comments (0)

Sign In



Forgot Password?

You also can sign in with Facebook or Twitter if you've connected your account to them.

Sign In Using Facebook

Sign In Using Twitter