Dissident theologian criticizes pope's opening to Anglicans
ROME (CNS) -- Dissident theologian Father Hans Küng criticized Pope Benedict XVI for his recent opening to discontented Anglicans, charging the pope was "fishing" for the most conservative Christians to the detriment of the larger church.
Father Küng said the invitation to traditionalist Anglicans to join the Roman Catholic Church went against years of ecumenical work on the part of both churches, calling it instead "a nonecumenical piracy of priests."
The pope's basic message is: "Traditionalists of all churches, unite under the dome of St. Peter's!" Father Kung wrote in an editorial Oct. 28 in the Rome daily La Repubblica.
"Look: The fisherman is fishing above all on the 'right' side of the lake. But the water is muddy," he said.
The Vatican announced Oct. 20 that the pope was establishing a new structure to welcome Anglicans who want to be in full communion with the Roman Catholic Church while maintaining some of their spiritual and liturgical traditions. Many of the Anglicans who have asked the Vatican for such a provision are dismayed by the ordination of women and by the blessing of homosexual unions and the ordination of openly gay bishops in some provinces of the Anglican Communion.
While emphasizing the importance of celibacy for priests, the Vatican said a dispensation would be made for former Anglican priests who are married to be ordained Catholic priests. However, they will not be able to become bishops.
Father Küng, a Swiss theologian who has taught in Germany for decades, warned that married newcomers will cause resentment on the part of celibate Catholic clergy.
In 1979 the Vatican withdrew permission for him to teach as a Catholic theologian, although it did not restrict his ministry as a Catholic priest.
In the editorial, Father Küng also lambasted Pope Benedict's recent efforts to bring back into the fold members of the Society of St. Pius X, a group of breakaway Catholics opposed to the changes in the church following the Second Vatican Council.
"After reintegrating the anti-reformist Society of St. Pius X, now Benedict XVI wants to flesh out the thinning ranks of Roman Catholics with like-minded Anglicans," Father Küng wrote in the editorial.
He also criticized Anglican Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury, head of the Anglican Communion, who "in his desire to ingratiate himself with the Vatican apparently didn't understand the consequences of the papal fishing trip in Anglican waters."
Copyright © 2009 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
Yes, but in a strange way it
By John David (not verified) on Wednesday, October 28, 2009Yes, but in a strange way it sometimes can add credibility. Actually, for some it is seen as a feather in one's cap.
"Dissident"
By Bryan Cones on Wednesday, October 28, 2009Wonder what it's like to have "dissident" always in front your name? It's like a title now:
You write one book questioning papal infallibility and get stuck for the rest of your life...
Bryan Cones
Re: "Dissident"
By Jeffrey Pinyan (not verified) on Wednesday, October 28, 2009He didn't just "question" papal infallibility. He flat-out rejected it, if Wikipedia can be trusted on this matter:
In the late 1960s Küng became the first major Roman Catholic theologian after the late 19th century Old Catholic Church schism to reject the doctrine of papal infallibility, in particular in his book Infallible? An Inquiry (1971). ... To this day he remains a persistent critic of papal infallibility, which he claims is man-made (and thus reversible) rather than instituted by God.


