Although recent portrayals of Benedict XVI play on his white-haired
grandfatherliness and his desire to fade into a quiet retirement of
books and music, many Catholics with long memories have images in their
minds of "God's Rottweiler."
During his time at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
(1981-2005), the office became one of the most controversial Vatican
agencies. He decried secularization, liberation theology, radical
feminism, homosexuality, religious pluralism and bioethics.
Numerous Catholics found themselves in hot ecclesial water: Fr. Hans
Küng; Jesuit Fr. Karl Rahner; Seattle Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen;
Leonardo Boff; Fr. Charles Curran; Fr. Tissa Balasuriya; Jesuit Fr.
Roger Haight; Fr. Matthew Fox; Loretto Sr. Jeannine Gramick and
Salvatorian Fr. Robert Nugent; Dominican Fr. Gustavo Gutiérrez; and
Jesuit Fr. Jacques Dupuis, among others.
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, a former theology professor and bishop of
Munich, was 54 years old when he was named to head the doctrinal
congregation, the office charged with upholding orthodoxy.
He criticized the overreach of bishops' conferences. At the time the
American bishops issued their pastoral letter in 1983 on war and peace,
Ratzinger was arguing that episcopal conferences have no standing to
teach on doctrinal issues. He criticized the International Commission on
English in the Liturgy -- comprising representatives of the major
English-speaking bishops' conferences -- on its approach to translation.
His first few years as head of the congregation dealt much with
liberation theology, a movement centered on the poor and one that
Ratzinger believed had ties to Marxism. In 1985, the Vatican silenced
the Brazilian Boff, at the time a Franciscan priest and scholar of
liberation theology. Ratzinger found Boff's 1981 book Church, Charism and Power troubling in its declarations on Christology and the structure of the church.
Often called the "father of liberation theology," Peruvian Dominican
Gutiérrez faced several Vatican investigations in the 1980s for his
writings.
Besides liberation theology, writings on sexual ethics became a hot
topic. In 1983, Hunthausen, a well-known progressive bishop, allowed a
Mass for Dignity, a group for gay and lesbian Catholics, in his
cathedral, which resulted in complaints to the doctrinal congregation.
The congregation then asked Washington Archbishop James Hickey to make
an official Vatican visitation. Hickey found "a number of other basic
doctrinal problems" in the archdiocese. In 1985, the congregation
appointed as auxiliary bishop Fr. Donald Wuerl (now cardinal-archbishop
of Washington, D.C.), a Pittsburgh priest with long experience in Rome.
In September 1986, Hunthausen announced he had transferred final
authority in five areas to Wuerl in accord with Vatican instructions.
A month later, Ratzinger published "On the Pastoral Care of Homosexual
Persons." The document warns of "deceitful propaganda" from
pro-homosexual groups and instructs bishops not to accept groups that
"seek to undermine the teaching of the church, which are ambiguous about
it, or which neglect it entirely." The letter refers to homosexual
orientation as an "intrinsic moral evil."
Curran, a moral theologian who led the American resistance to Humanae Vitae
in the late 1960s, was investigated by the congregation for his
teachings on sexual ethics and fired from his teaching position at The
Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., in January 1987.
Bishop Jacques Gaillot was removed as bishop of Evreux, France, in
January 1995 after he publicly challenged church teaching on several
issues, among them contraception, priestly celibacy, homosexuality and
the use of condoms in AIDS prevention programs. Tens of thousands of
French Catholics protested his firing. But the Vatican did not relent,
saying he was not in communion with the church. Gaillot was given the
titular diocese of Partenia, which no longer exists as a territorial
see.
In July 1999, after close to three decades of service to the gay and
lesbian community in the U.S., Gramick (then a School Sister of Notre
Dame) and Nugent were barred from ministry to the gay and lesbian
community by the congregation for not representing authentic church
teaching on homosexuality.
As different religions of the world acknowledged others, religious
pluralism became an issue. Ratzinger once called religious pluralism
theology the gravest threat of the church.
In January 1997, Sri Lankan theologian Balasuriya was excommunicated (a
penalty that was later lifted) after being accused of theological
aberrations, including assertions that Christianity is on the same level
as other religions.
In 1998, the Vatican criticized the book Toward a Christian Theology of Religious Pluralism
by Dupuis, a Belgian. After three years of investigation, in 2001 the
Vatican backed away from its initial finding of "serious doctrinal
error" in the book but said there were "ambiguities and difficulties on
important points which could lead a reader to erroneous or harmful
opinions."
In September 2000, the congregation released the document Dominus Iesus, which emphatically denied that other world religions can offer salvation independent of Christianity.
Many saw the document as clamping down on theological speculation on
religious pluralism, or creating a chilling effect for interreligious
dialogue.
After many years of investigation, the Vatican banned Haight from teaching and publishing in 2008 because of his 1999 book Jesus: Symbol of God. In it, the American Jesuit argued that other world religions can offer pathways to God alongside Christianity.