The halls of history might hold
some clues as to what kind of impact Pope Benedict XVI's resignation
will have on the church and how to navigate a smooth transition, said a
U.S. scholar.
"All these problems surrounding how to treat Benedict, what to call him,
how he will be dealt with in his life after the papacy, how his death
will be dealt with, all of these are new" questions, said Joshua Birk, a
fellow at the American Academy in Rome and expert in medieval
Mediterranean history.
To find some answers or at least some guidance, "we sort of have to go
back to these medieval cases (of papal resignation) because we literally
have nothing else" to go by, he said on Feb. 15.
There's not much in the annals to sift through, however. Papal
resignations are extremely rare with only four in the past 1,100 years,
he said. And almost every case involved popes who were pressured to step
down.
Only the voluntary resignation of St. Celestine V in 1294, he said, can
offer relevant parallels to help the church make sense of the free and
willful resignation of Pope Benedict.
The case of Pope Celestine also resulted in some innovative changes that he brought with his decision to resign, he said.
For example, Birk said, the principles behind Pope Celestine's decision
to step down and "how Celestine articulated the ability of a pope to
resign are incredibly important," as is the papal bull he issued
establishing rules for an abdication.
The late 13th-century pope also "established the ground rules for how
papal conclaves will operate in selecting the pope," said Birk, who
teaches history at Smith College in Northampton, Mass.
The formal process used for centuries to select a new pope, a process
that generally follows the death of a pope, is actually the model St.
Celestine established for "how to select a pope after a resignation," he
said.
Before Pope Celestine, the selection process was "less formalized" and
often operated much differently from one papal selection to the next, he
said.
"Celestine is the one who really lays down the papal bulls establishing
the rights of the conclave and how they'll act under these
circumstances" of a vacant see, he said.
Just as Pope Celestine's bold move carried with it important and lasting
norms and traditions, so too, may Pope Benedict's decision usher in a
new approach, the scholar said.
"For a pope that is generally viewed as incredibly conservative and very
traditionalist, this resignation actually shows a remarkable innovation
on his part," Birk said.
While the idea of resignation may have been bandied about with other
popes, only Pope Benedict has really embraced it with the "modern
understandings of health, illness and the abilities of modern science to
prolong life even in times of sickness," he said.
"The innovation Benedict has shown in resigning may give the College of
Cardinals more leeway and may allow them to be more innovative and
perhaps more forward-thinking in their selections," he said.
It's difficult to evaluate the problems caused directly by Pope
Celestine's resignation and those caused by his successor, Pope Boniface
VIII, the historian said. Boniface imprisoned his predecessor out of
fear his many political enemies might "use Celestine against him," try
to set him up "as an antipope or even make the argument that Celestine's
resignation is illegitimate and that Boniface isn't exactly pope."
The church will have to grapple with what having a retired pope in the wings will mean, he said.
Though there is no danger of any harsh medieval treatment, the church
will have to simply look at "how this transfer is negotiated" or handled
and Celestine's case "can be tremendously useful for us to look at."
Birk said Pope Benedict felt a great affection for St. Celestine.
He declared a Celestine Year from August 2009 to August 2010 to
commemorate the 800th anniversary of the saint's birth and he visited
the saint's relics twice during his pontificate. During a trip to
L'Aquila in 2009, Pope Benedict placed the long woolen pallium he
received when he was elected on the saintly pope's casket and left it
there as a gift.
Pope Celestine is mostly remembered for "his reluctance to take up this
sort of burden of the Apostolic See" and "actually flees when he hears
word he is going to be made pope," Birk said.
He was plucked at the age of 79 from his secluded life as a Benedictine
monk and hermit and thrust into the pontificate after the College of
Cardinals broke a two-year-long deadlock and elected him in 1294.
While he never fled, Pope Benedict never kept his reluctance to become pope a secret.
The then-78-year-old pontiff told a group of German pilgrims the day
after his installation that he equated the growing consensus among
cardinals to elect him pope as "an axe" getting ready to fall on his
head. He had been looking forward to a life of peaceful retirement and
said he felt "inadequate" for a job that demanded great "dynamism" and
strength.
Pope Benedict's coat of arms features a bear carrying a pack,
symbolizing the weight of the episcopate.
Pope Benedict has said the
image gave him the encouragement to carry out his ministry like a beast
of burden, but with confidence and joy.