Posted on 03/04/2013 1:36:51 PM PST by dangus
Over the next four years, Ranjith became something of a bête noire for liturgical progressives. He criticized communion in the hand, saying it was not envisioned by the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) and became widespread only after its illegitimate introduction in some countries. When Benedict authorized wider celebration of the old Latin Mass in 2007, Ranjith openly blasted bishops who didnt move quickly to implement it, accusing them of disobedience and even rebellion against the pope.
First, he may be a little too traditionalist for some of the moderates in the College of Cardinals more Ratzingerian than Ratzinger himself, as some put it. In 2006, he said of the Lefebvrists that he wasnt a fan, but that what they sometimes say about the liturgy, they say for good reason.
True, but ultimately what matters is faithfulness to Christ and his message.
You can’t lead people who refuse to be led.
“Though no one join me, still I will follow” and all that.
I tend to gauge Ouellet’s qualifications by the people who don’t like him (ie: abortion advocates, gay rights advocates, proponents of female clergy, the separation of church and state crowd, dissident priests, dykish ‘nuns’ in turtle necks with Miss Hathaway haircuts)
The fact that he’s almost universally hated by these groups tells me that he’s touching all the right nerves.
He routinely participates and speaks at (along with Cardinal Collins) various Right-to-Life type events on Parliament Hill, taking the message directly to those who have the power to make changes.
I’m hoping he’s elected just so I can visit the CBC.ca boards that day and rub salt in the wounds of so many ‘disillusioned’ lefties.
Did you read about this Cardinal Ranjith?
I like Tagle.
I haven’t really been following the speculation.
Those memberships on various curial commissions don’t mean a whole lot.
Schoenborn’s been a disaster as an archbishop. Granted, Austria is a rebellious pseudo-Catholic country and so his diocese an province is hard to govern, but still, he’s not distinguished himself.
He won’t be pope. You can bet on it.
Doesn’t stand a chance. He was openly campaigning for it and even if it were true that it’s not wrong to campaign for the office, being foolish enough not to know that it’s a deal-breaker is, in his case, a deal-breaker.
Moreover, his line about “doctrinal orthodoxy but openness to updating the Church to conform to modern culture” is a DoA campaign platform. The idea that there’s some kind of narrowly pigeonholed “doctrinal orthodoxy” that’s different from cultural updating fails to grasp that the theological wars are also the culture wars and cannot be otherwise.
To elect someone as pope who doesn’t “get it” in those matters would be a disaster and there are enough JPII and B16 cardinals who know that “it’s all about the culture wars, stupid.”
If they want an affirmative action African to silence all the affirmative actioneers in the MSM (which they are not so stupid as to want), they can elect Arinze.
Or Malcom Cardinal Ranjith.
The plumping for Turkson in the MSM was nothing other than a head-feint by the MSM. They pushed his “candidacy” so that when he’s not elected, as he will not be, they can then browbeat the Church for being racist for not electing the MSM African favorite.
Even if Arinze were to be elected, the stories would then come out that he’s not “really black” and not “really African” because he spent so much time in Rome in the curia.
He’d be portrayed as JPII’s little lap-dog black “boy.”
They only want an African pope if he’s ideologically in their camp. Anyone else will be “not really African.”
That’s no Ouellet’s fault. It happened long before he became Archbishop. HE wasn’t even living there for much of his early/mid-career. For a while he was teaching out West, if I remember correctly.
I’ve been calling attention to him ever since the day that Benedict announced he was going to resign. The only problem I can see is that I don’t know if he has the “capital” to carry out the Augean purging of the Curia that needs to be done. They might dismiss him as a naive Third Worlder. He may have too many enemies from his time in the Curia.
On the other hand, if he has solid enough backing from the College of Cardinals, from influential members, perhaps he’d be the very one to step on toes and shake things up.
If he’s chosen it will be a long shot and, in my view, clearly the work of the HOly Spirit.
You saw it here first.
No, I was first LOL
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2987469/posts
Who Will Be the Next Pope? Bookmakers Place Their Bets
Monday, February 11, 2013 3:54:37 PM · 54 of 100
Houghton M. to SeekAndFind
A year ago my money would have been on Scola or Ouellet. But right now Id say it will be Cardinal Archbishop Malcom Ranjith of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
You saw it here first.
Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies
I actually found out about him only a few days ago. Immediately caught my attention, not only for the emphasis on classic liturgy and rubrics, but also because my wife has Catholic connections in Mumbai and Goa, not so far away culturally or geographically (or so it seems that way from North America).
From your posting record you should be reading Fr. Zuhlsdorf’s What Does The Prayer Really Say
regularly. That’s where I learned to know of Ranjith, a number of years ago. He was thought to be in line to head up the Congregation for Divine Worship but then Benedict named him Archbishop of Colombo. At that point Zuhlsdorf did a lot of “reporting” on Ranjith without ever fingering him as papabile. I remember being a tad frustrated at having to read between Zuhlsdorf’s lines and guess at what he “really meant.”
I assume Zuhlsdorf knows of him either from his own years in Rome or through mutual friends in Rome.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.