An American priest and scholar who was awarded the annual Ratzinger
Prize for Theology by Pope Benedict XVI on Oct. 20 was both thrilled and
surprised to receive the honor.
“It was a total surprise for me, but I'm really touched that they would
think of me for this and that it would bear the name of our present
Holy Father, whom I have always admired a lot,” said Father Brian Daley,
a Jesuit professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame.
The 72-year-old shared the honor with French Catholic lay philosopher, Remi Brague.
“Fr. Daley and Professor Brague are exemplary for the transmission of
knowledge that unites science and wisdom, scientific rigor and passion
for man, so that man might discover the true 'art of living,'” the Pope
said at the Vatican ceremony.
Established in 2010 by the Joseph Ratzinger Vatican foundation, the
award is described as an effort to “promote the publication,
distribution, and study of the writings” of the former university
professor, known today as Pope Benedict XVI.
In an interview with CNA after Saturday's event, Fr. Daley reflected
that the winners of the prestigious award tend to be those “who do the
kind of theology and philosophy that the Holy Father himself is
interested in.”
Pope Benedict, he noted, has “worked for so many years on the Church
fathers and medieval theology – he has a wonderful book on Augustine, he
has one on St. Bonaventure – and then also on the interface between
faith and philosophy, faith and reason.”
“I studied the early Church,” he added, and co-recipient Remi Brague
“works on the relationship of religion and faith within a democracy and
modern culture, with both Islam and Christianity.”
“So, I think these are both things that the person of the Holy Father is very interested in.”
Fr. Daley, a scholar specializing in the early Church fathers, said
these formative theologians and pastors should serve to inspire
Christians of every age and advance the work of the New Evangelization,
the topic being addressed at the bishops' synod currently underway in
Rome and ending Oct. 28.
“I think there is that liberating effect” in reading about the early Church, he said. “Many of the people we read, as Church fathers, are really good
theologians – highly sophisticated people of many different skills and
outlooks. They were not uniform. But they presented different approaches
to making sense of the Christian faith in their own time.”
Touching on the role theology plays in the modern world, Fr. Daley said
“we're always thinking about how we can make sense, how we can give
account for the faith that we share.”
“Theology does that. What I do is one part of doing that. Seeing
theology as something alive, that draws on its past but is constantly
thinking about itself, enables us to continue that process with more
freedom.”?
The award ceremony was not the first time Fr. Daley has met the Pope –
the two became acquainted when he was studying theology in Germany and
met the future pontiff at a seminar in 1970.
“He spoke on the subject of Christology; who is Christ for us?” Fr.
Daley recalled. “It was a little group, maybe 20 people in all. And we
all had dinner together and Cardinal Ratzinger celebrated Mass for us
every day.”
“It was a very intimate gathering. I don’t know if he remembers my
presence there, but I definitely remember his. I never dreamed he'd be
Pope.”