INTERVIEW OF THE HOLY FATHER
BENEDICT XVI
IN PREPARATION FOR THE UPCOMING JOURNEY TO BAVARIA
(SEPTEMBER 9-14, 2006)
Apostolic Palace of Castel
Gandolfo
Saturday, 5 August 2006
BR:
Holy Father, your next
Trip will be to Bavaria. During preparations for the trip your
collaborators said you are nostalgic for your Homeland. What are the
issues you will be speaking about during the Visit and is the
concept of "homeland" one of the values you intend touching on, in
particular?
Benedict XVI: Of course. The
purpose of the Visit is precisely because I want to again see the
places where I grew up, the people who touched and shaped my life. I
want to thank these people. Naturally I also want to express a
message that goes beyond my Country, just as my ministry calls me to
do. I simply let the liturgical recurrences suggest the themes to
me. The basic theme is that we have to rediscover God,
not just any
God, but the God who has a human face, because when we see Jesus
Christ we see God. Starting from this point we must find the way to
meet each other in the family, among generations, and then among
cultures and peoples as well. We must find the way to reconciliation
and peaceful coexistence in this world, the ways that lead to the
future. We will not find these ways leading to the future if we do
not receive light from above. So, I did not choose very specific
themes, but rather, it is the liturgy that leads me to express the
basic message of faith which naturally finds its place in everyday
reality, where we want to search, above all, for cooperation among
peoples and possible ways that can lead us to reconciliation and
peace.
ZDF:
As Pope you are
responsible for the Church throughout the world. But, clearly, your
Visit focuses attention on the situation of Catholics in Germany as
well. All observers say there is a positive atmosphere, partly
thanks to your election as Pope. But obviously, the old problems are
still around. Just to quote a few examples: fewer churchgoers, fewer
baptisms and especially, less Church influence on the life of
society. How do you see the present situation of the Catholic Church
in Germany?
Benedict XVI:
I would say,
first of all, that Germany is part of the West, with its own
characteristic colouring obviously, and that in the Western world
today we are experiencing a wave of new and drastic enlightenment or
secularization, whatever you like to call it. It has become more
difficult to believe because the world in which we find ourselves is
completely made up of ourselves, and God, so to speak, does not
appear directly anymore. We do not drink from the source anymore,
but from the vessel which is offered to us already full, and so on.
Humanity has rebuilt the world by itself, and finding God inside
this world has become more difficult. This is not specific to
Germany: it is something that is valid throughout the world,
especially in the West. Then again, today the West is being strongly
influenced by other cultures in which the original religious element
is very powerful. These cultures are horrified when they experience
the West's coldness towards God. This "presence of the sacred" in
other cultures, even if often veiled, touches the Western world
again, it touches us at the crossroads of so many cultures. The
quest for "something bigger" wells up again from the depths of
Western people and in Germany. We see how in young people there is
the search for something "more", we see how the religious phenomenon
is returning, as they say, even if it is a search that is rather
indefinite. But with all this the Church is present once more and
faith is offered as the answer. I think that this Visit, like the
Visit to Cologne, is an opportunity for us to see that believing is
beautiful, that the joy of a huge universal community possesses a
transcendental strength, that behind this belief lies something
important and that together with the new searching movements there
are also new outlets for the faith that lead us from one to the
other and that are also positive for society as a whole.
VR:
Holy Father, you were in
Cologne with the young people exactly a year ago. You experienced
how amazingly willing youth are to welcome others and you personally
were very warmly welcomed. Will you be bringing a special message
for young people on this next Trip?
Benedict XVI:
First of all,
I would say that I am very happy there are young people who want to
be together, who want to be together in faith and who want to do
something good. The tendency to do good is very strong in young
people; just think of the many kinds of volunteer work they do. The
commitment of offering your own personal contribution to help the
needy of this world is a great thing. One idea might be to encourage
them in this sphere: Go ahead! Look for opportunities to do good! The world needs this desire to do good, it needs this commitment!
Then, another message might be this: the courage to make definitive
decisions! Young people are very generous, but when they face the
risk of a lifelong commitment, be it marriage or a priestly
vocation, they are afraid. The world is moving dramatically:
nowadays I can continually do whatever I want with my life with all
its unpredictable future events. By making a definitive decision, am
I not myself tying up my personal freedom and depriving myself of
freedom of movement? Reawaken the courage to make definitive
decisions: they are really the only ones that allow us to grow, to
move ahead and to reach something great in life. They are the only
decisions that do not destroy our freedom but offer to point us in
the right direction. Risk making this leap, so to speak, towards the
definitive and so embrace life fully: this is something I would be
happy to communicate to them.
DW:
Holy Father, a question
about the situation regarding foreign politics. Hopes for peace in
the Middle East have been dwindling over the past weeks. What do you
see as the Holy See's role in relation to the present situation?
What positive influences can you have on the situation, on
developments in the Middle East?
Benedict XVI:
Of course, we
have no political influence and we do not want any political power.
But we do want to appeal to all Christians and to all those who feel
touched by the words of the Holy See, to help mobilize all the
forces that recognize how war is the worst solution for all sides.
It brings no good to anyone, not even to the apparent victors. We
understand this very well in Europe, after the two world wars.
Everyone needs peace. There is a strong Christian community in
Lebanon, there are Christians among the Arabs, there are Christians
in Israel. Christians throughout the world are committed to helping
these countries that are dear to all of us. There are moral forces
at work that are ready to help people understand how the only
solution is for all of us to live together. These are the forces we
want to mobilize: it is up to politicians to find a way to let this
happen as soon as possible and, especially, to make it last.
BR:
As Bishop of Rome you
are the Successor of St Peter. How can the ministry of Peter
manifest itself fittingly in today's world? And how do you see the
tensions and equilibrium between the primacy of the Pope, on one
hand, and the collegiality of the Bishops, on the other?
Benedict XVI:
Of course,
there is a relationship of tension and equilibrium and, we say, that
is the way it has to be. Multiplicity and unity must always find
their reciprocal rapport and this relationship must insert itself in
ever new ways into the changing situations in the world. We have a
new polyphony of cultures nowadays in which Europe is no longer the
determining factor. Christians on the various continents are
starting to have their own importance, their own characteristics. We
must keep learning about this fusion of the different components. We
have developed various instruments to help us: the so-called ad limina visits of the Bishops, which have always taken place. They
are now used much more in order to speak sincerely with all the
offices of the Holy See and with me. I speak personally to each
Bishop. I have already spoken to nearly all the Bishops of Africa
and to many of the Bishops from Asia. Now, it is the turn of Central
Europe, Germany, Switzerland. In these encounters in which the
Centre and the Periphery come together in an open exchange of views,
I think that the correct reciprocal relationship in this balanced
tension grows. We also have other instruments like the Synod, the
Consistory, which I shall be holding regularly and which I would
like to develop. Without having a long agenda, we can discuss
current problems together and look for solutions. Everyone knows
that the Pope is not an absolute monarch but that he has to
personify, you might say, the totality that comes together to listen
to Christ. There is a strong awareness that we need a unifying
figure who can guarantee independence from political powers and so
that Christians do not identify too much with nationalism. There is
an awareness of the need for a higher and broader figure that can
create unity in the dynamic integration of all parties and that can
embrace and promote multiplicity. This awareness is very strong. So
I believe there is a close bond with the Petrine ministry, which is
expressed in the desire to develop it further so that it responds
both to the Lord's will and to the needs of the times.
ZDF:
As the land of the
Reformation, Germany is especially marked by the relationships
between the different religious confessions. Ecumenical relations is
a sensitive area that constantly encounters new problems. What
chances do you see of improving relations with the Evangelical
Church or what difficulties do you foresee in this relationship?
Benedict XVI:
Maybe it is
important to say, first of all, that there are marked differences
within the Evangelical Church. If I am not mistaken, in Germany we
have three important communities: Lutherans, Reformed, and Prussian
Union. There are also several free Churches (Freikirchen), and
within the traditional Churches there are movements like the
"Confessing Church", and so on. It is therefore a collection of many
voices with which we have to enter into dialogue, searching for
unity while respecting the multiplicity of the voices with which we
want to collaborate. I believe that the first thing we need to do is
to concern ourselves with clarifying, establishing and putting into
practice important ethical directives in society, thus guaranteeing
a social-ethical consistency without which society cannot fulfil its
political ends, namely, justice for all, living together in a
positive way and peace. In this sense, I think a lot is already
achieved, that we already agree on the common Christian basics
before the great moral challenges. Of course, then we have to
witness to God in a world that has problems finding him, as we said,
and to make God visible in the human face of Jesus Christ, to offer
people access to the Source without which our morale becomes sterile
and loses its reference point, to give joy as well because we are
not alone in this world. Only in this way is joy born before the
greatness of humanity: humanity is not an evolutionary product that
turned out badly. We are the image of God. We have to move on these
two levels, so to speak: the level of important ethical points of
reference and the level that manifests the presence of God, a
concrete God, starting from within and working towards them. If we
do this, and especially, if in all our single communities we try not
to live the faith in a specific fashion but always start from its
deepest basics, then maybe we still will not reach external
manifestations of unity quickly, but we will mature towards an
interior unity that, God willing, one day will bring with it an
exterior form of unity, too.
VR:
The issue of the family.
A month ago you were in Valencia for the World Meeting of Families.
Anyone who was listening carefully, as we tried to do at Vatican
Radio, noticed how you never mentioned the words "homosexual
marriage", you never spoke about abortion or about contraception.
Careful observers thought that was very interesting. Clearly your
idea is to go around the world preaching the faith rather than as an
"apostle of morality". What are your comments?
Benedict XVI:
Obviously,
yes. Actually, I should say I had only two opportunities to speak
for 20 minutes. And when you have so little time you cannot
immediately begin with "no". Firstly, you have to know what we
really want, right? Christianity, Catholicism, is not a collection
of prohibitions: it is a positive option. It is very important that
we look at it again because this idea has almost completely
disappeared today. We have heard so much about what is not allowed
that now it is time to say: we have a positive idea to offer, that
man and woman are made for each other, that the scale of sexuality, eros, agape, indicates the level of love and it is in this way that
marriage develops, first of all as a joyful and blessing-filled
encounter between a man and a woman, and then, the family, which
guarantees continuity among generations and through which
generations are reconciled to each other and even cultures can meet.
So, firstly, it is important to stress what we want. Secondly, we
can also see why we do not want some things. I believe we need to
see and reflect on the fact that it is not a Catholic invention that
man and woman are made for each other so that humanity can go on
living: all cultures know this. As far as abortion is concerned, it
is part of the fifth, not the sixth, commandment: "You shall not
kill!". We have to presume this is obvious and always stress that
the human person begins in the mother's womb and remains a human
person until his or her last breath. The human person must always be
respected as a human person. But all this is clearer if you say it
first in a positive way.
DW:
Holy Father, my question
is linked to that of Fr von Gemmingen. Believers throughout the
world are waiting for the Catholic Church to answer the most urgent
global problems such as AIDS and overpopulation. Why does the
Catholic Church pay so much attention to moral issues rather than
suggesting concrete solutions to these problems that are so crucial
to humanity, in Africa, for example?
Benedict XVI:
So that is the
problem: do we really pay so much attention to moral issues? I think
- I am more and more convinced after my conversations with the
African Bishops - that the basic question, if we want to move ahead
in this field, is about education, formation. Progress becomes true
progress only if it serves the human person and if the human person
grows: not only in terms of his or her technical power, but also in
his or her moral awareness. I believe that the real problem of our
historical moment lies in the imbalance between the incredibly fast
growth of our technical power and that of our moral capacity, which
has not grown in proportion. That is why the formation of the human
person is the true recipe, the key to it all, I would say, and this
is what the Church proposes. Briefly speaking, this formation has a
dual dimension: of course, we have to learn, to acquire knowledge,
ability, know-how, as they say. In this sense Europe and in the last
decades America have done a lot, and that is important. But if we
only teach know-how, if we only teach how to build and to use
machines and how to use contraceptives, then we should not be
surprised when we find ourselves facing wars and AIDS epidemics;
because we need two dimensions: simultaneously, we need the
formation of the heart, if I can express myself in this way, with
which the human person acquires points of reference and learns how
to use the techniques correctly. And that is what we try to do.
Throughout Africa and in many countries in Asia, we have a vast
network of every level of school where people can first of all
learn, form a true conscience and acquire professional ability which
gives them autonomy and freedom. But in these schools we try to
communicate more than know-how; rather, we try to form human beings
capable of reconciliation, who know that we must build and not
destroy, and who have the necessary references to be able to live
together. In much of Africa, relations between Christians and
Muslims are exemplary. The Bishops have formed common commissions
together with the Muslims to try and create peace in situations of
conflict. This schools network, dedicated to human learning and
formation, is very important. It is completed by a network of
hospitals and assistance centres that reach even the most remote
villages. In many areas, following the destruction of war, the
Church is the only authority - not authority but structure - that
remains intact. This is a fact! We offer treatment, treatment to
AIDS victims too, and we offer education, helping to establish good
relationships with others. So I think we should correct that image
that sees the Church as spreading severe "no's". We work a lot in
Africa so that the various dimensions of formation can be integrated
and so that it will become possible to overcome violence and
epidemics, that include malaria and tuberculosis as well.
BR:
Holy Father,
Christianity has spread around the world starting from Europe. Now
many people think that the future of the Church is to be found in
other continents. Is that true? Or, in other words, what is the
future of Christianity in Europe, where it looks like it is being
reduced to the private affair of a minority?
Benedict XVI:
I would like
to introduce a few subtleties. It is true, as we know, that
Christianity began in the Near East. And for a long time its main
development continued there. Then it spread in Asia, much more than
what we think today after the changes brought about by Islam.
Precisely for this reason its axis moved noticeably towards the West
and Europe. Europe - we are proud and pleased to say so - further
developed Christianity in its broader intellectual and cultural
dimensions. But I think it is important to remind ourselves about
the Eastern Christians because there is the present danger of them
emigrating, these Christians who have always been an important
minority living in a fruitful relationship with the surrounding
reality. There is a great danger that these places where
Christianity had its origins will be left without Christians. I
think we need to help them a lot so that they can stay. But getting
back to your question: Europe definitely became the centre of
Christianity and its missionary movement. Today, other continents
and other cultures play with equal importance in the concert of
world history. In this way the number of voices in the Church grows,
and this is a good thing. It is good that different temperaments can
express themselves, the special gifts of Africa, Asia and America,
Latin America in particular. Of course, they are all touched not
only by the word of Christianity, but by the secular message of this
world that carries to other continents the disruptive forces we have
already experienced. All the Bishops from different parts of the
world say: we still need Europe, even if Europe is only a part of a
greater whole. We still carry the responsibility that comes from our
experience, from the science and technology that was developed here,
from our liturgical experience to our traditions, the ecumenical
experiences we have accumulated: all this is very important for the
other continents too. So it is important that today we do not give
up, feeling sorry for ourselves and saying: "Look at us, we are just
a minority, let us at least try and preserve our small number!". We
have to keep our dynamism alive, open relationships of exchange, so
that new strength for us comes from there. Today, there are Indian
and African priests in Europe, even in Canada, where many African
priests work; it is interesting. There is this reciprocal give and
take. But if in the future we receive more, we also need to continue
giving with courage and with growing dynamism.
ZDF:
This is a subject that
has already been touched partially, Holy Father. When it comes to
important political or scientific decisions, modern society does not
base itself on Christian values, and the Church, according to
research, is considered mainly as a warning voice or a controlling
voice. Should not the Church emerge from this defensive position and
assume a more positive attitude with regard to the building of the
future?
Benedict XVI:
I would say
that in any case we have to stress better what we want that is
positive. And we must do this, above all, in dialogue with cultures
and religions because, as I think I have already said, the African
Continent, the African spirit and the Asian spirit too, are
horrified by the coldness of our rationality. It is important for
them to see that this is not all we are. On the other hand, it is
important that our secular world comes to understand that the
Christian faith is not an impediment but rather a bridge for
dialogue with other worlds. It is not right to think that a purely
rational culture has an easier approach to other religions just
because it is tolerant. To a large extent what is missing is a
"religious centre-piece" which can act as a point of departure and
arrival for those who want to enter into a relationship. That is why
we must and can show that precisely because of the new intercultural
environment in which we live, pure rationality separated from God is
insufficient. We need a wider rationality that sees God in harmony
with reason and is aware that the Christian faith which developed in
Europe is also a means to bring together reason and culture and to
integrate them with action in a single and comprehensive vision. In
this sense, I believe we have an important task, namely, to show
that this Word which we possess is not part of the trash of history,
so to speak, but it is necessary today.
VR:
Holy Father, let us talk
about your travels. You live in the Vatican and maybe it hurts you
to be far from people and separated from the world, even in the
beautiful surroundings of Castel Gandolfo. You will be turning 80
soon. Do you think that, with God's grace, you will be able to make
many more Trips? Do you have any idea of where you would like to go?
To the Holy Land or Brazil? Do you know already?
Benedict XVI:
To tell the
truth, I am not that lonely. Of course, there are, you may say, the
walls that make it more difficult to get in, but there's also a
"pontifical family", lots of visitors every day, especially when I
am in Rome. Bishops come and other people; there are State visits.
There are also personalities who want to talk to me personally, and
not just about political issues. In this regard there are all kinds
of encounters that, thank God, are continually granted to me. And it
is also important that the seat of the Successor of Peter be a place
of encounter, do you not think? From the time of John XXIII onwards
the pendulum began to swing in the other direction, too: the Popes
started going out to visit others. I have to say that I have never
felt strong enough to plan many long Trips. But where such Journeys
allow me to communicate a message or where, shall I say, they are in
response to a sincere request, I would like to go, with the right
"dosage" of Journeys that are possible for me. Some are already
planned: next year there is the meeting of the Latin American
Episcopal Council, CELAM, in Brazil, and I think that being there is
an important step in the context of what Latin America is living so
intensely, to strengthen the hope which is so alive in that part of
the world. Then, I would like to visit the Holy Land, and I hope to
visit it at a time of peace. For the rest, we will see what
Providence has in store for me.
VR:
Allow me to insist.
Austrians also speak German and they are waiting for you at Mariazell....
Benedict XVI:
Yes, it has
been agreed. Quite simply, I promised them, a little imprudently. I
really liked that place and I said: Yes, I will come back to the
Magna Mater Austriae. Of course, this immediately became a promise
that I will keep, that I will keep gladly.
VR:
I insist further. I
admire you every Wednesday when you hold your General Audience.
Fifty thousand people come. It must be very tiring. Do you manage to
hold out?
Benedict XVI:
Yes, the Good
Lord gives me the necessary strength. And when one sees the warm
welcome, one is obviously encouraged.
DW:
Holy Father, you have
just said you made a rather imprudent promise. Does this mean that,
despite your ministry, despite the many protocols and limitations,
you have not lost your spontaneity?
Benedict XVI:
I try, in any
case. As much as things are fixed, I would like to keep doing some
things that are purely personal.
BR:
Holy Father, women are
very active in many different areas of the Catholic Church. Should
not their contribution become more clearly visible, even in
positions of higher responsibility in the Church?
Benedict XVI:
We reflect a
lot about this subject, of course. As you know, we believe that our
faith and the constitution of the College of the Apostles binds us
and does not allow us to confer priestly ordination on women. But we
should not think either that the only role of importance one can
have in the Church is that of being a priest. There are many tasks
and functions in the history of the Church: Starting with the
Sisters of the Fathers of the Church up to the Middle Ages, when
great women played fundamental roles until modern times. Think of
Hildegard of Bingen who protested strongly before the Bishops and
the Pope, of Catherine of Siena and Bridget of Sweden. In our own
time too women - and us with them - must always seek their proper
place. Today, they are very present in the Dicasteries of the Holy
See. But there is a juridical problem: according to Canon Law the
power to take legally binding decisions is limited to Sacred Orders.
So there are limitations from this point of view, but I believe that
women themselves, with their energy and strength, with their
predominance, so to speak, with what I would call their "spiritual
power", will know how to make their own space. And we will have to
try and listen to God so as not to oppose him but, on the contrary,
to rejoice when the female element achieves the fully effective
place in the Church best suited to it, starting with the Mother of
God and with Mary Magdalene.
Holy Father, recently there
has been talk of a new fascination with Catholicism. What is the
attraction and the future of this ancient institution?
Pope Benedict XVI:
I would
say that the entire Pontificate of John Paul II drew people's
attention and brought them together. What happened at the time of
his death remains something historically very special: how hundreds
of thousands of people flowed towards St Peter's Square in an
orderly fashion, stood for hours, and while they should have
collapsed, instead they resisted as if moved by an inner strength.
Then, we relived the experience on the occasion of the inauguration
of my Pontificate and again in Cologne. It is very beautiful when
the experience of community becomes an experience of faith at the
same time; when the experience of communion does not happen just
anywhere but that this experience becomes more alive and gives to
Catholicism, its luminous intensity right there in the places of the
faith. Of course, this has to continue in everyday life. The two
must go together. On one hand, the great moments during which one
feels how good it is to be there, that the Lord is present and that
we form a great community reconciled beyond all boundaries. From
here we get the impetus to resist during the tiring pilgrimage of
everyday existence, to live starting from these bright points and
turning towards them, knowing how to invite others to join our
pilgrim community. I would like to take this opportunity to say: I
blush when I think of all the preparations that are made for my
Visit, for everything that people do. My house was freshly painted,
a professional school redid the fence; the Evangelical professor
helped to do the fence. And these are just small details, but they
are a sign of the many things that are done. I find all of this
extraordinary, and I do not think it is for me, but rather a sign of
wanting to be part of this faith community and to serve one another.
Demonstrating this solidarity means letting ourselves be inspired by
the Lord. It is something that touches me and I would like to
express my gratitude with all my heart.
Holy Father, you spoke about
the experience of community. You will be coming to Germany for the
second time following your election. After the World Youth Day and,
for different reasons, after the World Football Championships, the
atmosphere seems to have changed. The impression is that Germans
have become more open to the world, more tolerant and more joyful.
What would you still like from us Germans?
Benedict XVI:
I would say
that from the end of the Second World War German society began an
inner transformation; the German mindset, too, was further
reinforced after reunification. We have become more deeply part of
world society and, naturally, we have been changed by its mentality.
Aspects of the German character, which others were not aware of
before, have come to light. Perhaps we were always depicted too much
as always very disciplined and reserved, which has some basis in
truth. But if we now see better what everyone is seeing, I think it
is lovely: Germans are not just reserved, punctual and disciplined,
they are also spontaneous, happy and hospitable. This is very
lovely. This is my hope: that these virtues may continue to grow and
that they may last and may receive an additional impetus from the
Christian faith.
VR:
Holy Father, your
Predecessor beatified and canonized a huge number of Christians.
Some people say even too many. This is my question: beatifications
and canonizations only bring something new to the Church when these
people are seen as true models. Germany produces relatively few
saints and blesseds in comparison with other countries. Can anything
be done to develop this pastoral sphere so that beatifications and
canonizations can give real pastoral fruit?
Benedict XVI:
In the
beginning I also thought that the large number of beatifications was
almost overwhelming and that perhaps we needed to be more selective,
choosing figures that entered our consciousness more clearly.
Meanwhile, I decentralized the beatifications in order to make these
figures more visible in the specific places they came from. Perhaps
a saint from Guatemala does not interest us in Germany, and vice
versa, someone from Altötting is of no interest in Los Angeles, and
so on, right? I also think that this decentralization is more in
keeping with the collegiality of the episcopate, with its collegial
structures, and that it is suitable for stressing how different
countries have their own personalities and these are especially
effective in these countries. I have also seen how these
beatifications in different places touch vast numbers of people and
that people say: "At last, this one is one of us!". They pray to him
and are inspired. The blessed soul belongs to them and we are happy
there are lots of them. And if, gradually, with the development of a
global society, we too get to know them, that is wonderful. But it
is especially important that multiplicity also exists in this field,
because it is important that we too in Germany get to know our own
figures and are happy for them. Besides this issue there is that of
the canonization of greater figures who are examples for the whole
Church. I would say that the individual Bishops' Conferences ought
to choose, ought to decide what is best for them, what this person
is saying to us, and they should give visibility to people who leave
a profound impression, but not too many of them. They can do this
through catechesis, preaching or perhaps through the presentation of
a film. I can imagine some wonderful films. Of course, I only know
well the Church Fathers: a film about Augustine, or one on Gregory
Nazianzen who was very special (how he continually fled the ever
greater responsibilities he was given, and so on). We need to show
that there are not only the awful situations we depict in many of
our films; there are also wonderful historical figures who are not
at all boring and who are very contemporary. We must try not to
overload people too much but to give visibility to many figures who
are topical and inspirational.
DW:
Stories with humour in
them, too? In 1989 in Munich you were given the Karl Valentin Orden
Award. What role does humour play in the life of a Pope?
Benedict XVI:
I am not a man
who constantly thinks up jokes. But I think it is very important to
be able to see the humorous side of life and its joyful dimension
and not to take everything too tragically. I would also say it is
necessary for my ministry. A writer once said that angels can fly
because they do not take themselves too seriously. Maybe we could
also fly a bit if we did not think we were so important.
When you have an important
job like yours, Holy Father, you are much observed. Other people
talk about you. I was reading and I was struck by what many
observers say: that Pope Benedict is different from Cardinal
Ratzinger. How do you see yourself, if I may be so bold as to ask?
Benedict XVI:
I have been
taken apart various times: in my first phase as professor and in the
intermediate phase, during my first phase as Cardinal and in the
successive phase. Now comes a new dissection. Of course,
circumstances and situations and even people influence one because
one takes on different responsibilities. Let us say that my basic
personality and even my basic vision have grown, but in everything
that is essential I have remained identical. I am happy that certain
aspects that were not noticed at first are now coming into the open.
Would you say that you like
what you do, that it is not a burden for you?
Benedict XVI:
That would be
saying a bit too much, because it really is tiring. But in any case,
I try to find joy here, too.
Conclusion (Bellut, ZDF): In
the name of my colleagues, I would like to thank you sincerely for
this conversation, for this "world first". We are looking forward to
your upcoming Visit to Germany, Bavaria. Good-bye. Top
Main |