Ratzinger Roman Apostasy Symbolism
Ratzinger Roman Apostasy Symbolism
Ratzinger Roman Apostasy Symbolism
Ratzinger's
Roman
Apostasy
Symbolism
Cover picture:
Following his papal inauguration ceremony (which has replaced
the papal coronation with the tiara), the newly elected Roman
pontiff, Joseph Ratzinger, with his Pan miter on 24 April 2005, on
St. Peter's Square,. The picture was published on 28 April 2005,
in the German magazine "Die Bunte", accompanied by the
following text: "A blessing for the world. A pope for all. Following
his papal inauguration ceremony, Benedict XVI. rides in the
popemobile through the crowds of enthusiastic believers touched
by his smile".
Dear reader,
The salvation of souls is in danger as never before. The truth is
increasingly disregarded and trampled upon. Engage in the
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2
Table of Contents
Prof. Dr. Wigand Siebel The Great Apostasy during the End
Times and the Signs of the Times 4
3
Prof. Dr. Wigand Siebel
Endnotes:
1 Der schwarze Brief, Lippstadt, No. 35/2006. The number 144 is derived from
Freemasonry symbolic numbers which encompass the number 666 and,
according to the Holy Scriptures (Apoc. 13:18), identify the Antichrist and,
moreover, mean Satan. The number 18 is made up of 6 + 6 + 6 and stands for
666. The number 144 contains 8 times (the number of corners of a cube) the
number 18 and, thus, stands for 8 times 666.
2 This applies to the Italian magazine "Chiesa viva", Brescia, which has
dedicated a 62-page magazine (No. 318, March 2006) to this topic.
13
Prof. Dr. Wigand Siebel
14
The purification must see to it that soul and body are not
disconnected from each other since "it is neither the spirit alone
nor the body alone that loves: it is man, the person, a unified
creature composed of body and soul, who loves. Only when both
dimensions are truly united, does man attain his full stature. Only
thus is love—eros—able to mature and attain its authentic
grandeur … True, eros tends to rise 'in ecstasy' towards the
Divine, to lead us beyond ourselves; yet for this very reason it
calls for a path of ascent, renunciation, purification and healing"
(para 5). Accordingly, at the first stage, a self-purifying power is
attributed to eros, and this empowers one to ascend toward the
Divine.
Now, how is eros able to lead us to the Divine? It has to
activate its power of purification with the help of agape. This is
explained as follows: In the search for love's inner unity, we were
confronted by "eros, as a term to indicate 'worldly' love and
agape, referring to love grounded in and shaped by faith. The
two notions are often contrasted as 'ascending' love and
'descending' love" (para 7). That is, eros is "possessive" love and
agape is "oblative" love. This seems to give both forms of love a
certain equality of order and importance. For "eros and agape—
ascending love and descending love—can never be completely
separated. The more the two, in their different aspects, find a
proper unity in the one reality of love, the more the true nature of
love in general is realized" (para 7). But one cannot precisely
ascertain from the text just what the "proper unity" of these two
dimensions is so that there can be no real clarity about what the
true essence of love is. With the introduction of the "fundamental
word" agape, the second stage of the concept of love in the
encyclical is reached.
Here, it becomes apparent that agape does not possess an
autonomy outside eros; it merely allows the spectrum of love
within eros to appear wider. Thus, the encyclical rejects the idea
that "descending, oblative love—agape—would be typically
Christian, while on the other hand ascending, possessive or
covetous love—eros—would be typical of non-Christian, and
particularly Greek culture. Were this antithesis to be taken to
extremes, the essence of Christianity would be detached from
the vital relations fundamental to human existence, and would
become a world apart, admirable perhaps, but decisively cut off
from the complex fabric of human life" (para 7).
15
Agape only holds a status within eros: "Even if eros is at first
mainly covetous and ascending, … it is less and less concerned
with itself, increasingly seeks the happiness of the other, is
concerned more and more with the beloved, bestows itself and
wants to 'be there for' the other. The element of agape thus
enters into this love, for otherwise eros is impoverished and even
loses its own nature. On the other hand, man cannot live by
oblative, descending love alone. He cannot always give, he must
also receive" (para 7). Agape can also liberate itself from eros,
but that is an aberration for “when the two dimensions are totally
cut off from one another, the result is a caricature or at least an
impoverished form of love" (para 8). So the one who lives
exclusively agape love represents a "caricature" or an
"impoverished" form of love. The questions present themselves:
What about love in religious communities with their ideal of
virginity? and What about God's love? Would the pure oblative
love of God appear then as an impoverished form?
One may rightly be anxious to see how the author solves this
difficulty in the third stage. The encyclical explains: The
"newness of biblical faith" consists in the tenant that there is only
one God and that for this Creator-God "his creation is dear to
him, for it was willed by him and 'made' by him … The one God
… loves with a personal love … God loves, and his love may
certainly be called eros, yet it is also totally agape" (para 9). The
argument for this view is based on the prophets' (particularly
Hosea and Ezekiel) description of "God's passion for his people
using boldly erotic images" (para 9). With that, the third stage
and likewise the goal has been reached.
With this three-stage developmental theory, the encyclical
has derived divine love from the worldly, possessive love of eros.
Accordingly there is no self-contained divine love. One must
conclude that it is contained in the love of man and woman,
however germinal. Nevertheless, God has an especially strong
dimension of agape in his eros (para 10). Thus "God's eros for
man" is a gift for "humanity … not only because it is bestowed in
a completely gratuitous manner, without any previous merit, but
also because it is love which forgives" (para 10).
However, this unusual derivation of divine love is not to be
measured with the narrow ell of logic. More governing is the
author's artistic creative power to construct a striking image. And
it is evidently more an initial proposal which presupposes a new
16
image of God and cannot have been thought through in every
sense. In any case, according to the letter, one must imagine a
God whose love is simultaneously both wholly possessive and
wholly oblative and who presents such an eros to humanity.
Were one to impute to this eros the real unification of utterly
possessive, sensual love (of which the letter gives no precise
information) with utterly oblative love, then he would have to
perform the impossible.
The encyclical did not want to use the clear Christian
terminology of the Gospels. Without prior collaboration, all of the
eight New Testament authors avoided the term eros. In fact, it
does not appear in the New Testament at all. The word generally
used is agape, and sometimes the word philia (friendship). The
encyclical admits this. In this respect, it marks a conscious
departure from traditional terminology. Why did the authors of the
New Testament avoid using the term eros? Certainly not only
because they knew the meaning of the word as sensual love and
the circumstances in the Greek-speaking world. "The internal
reason lies in the fact that sensual love is separated from the
divine love made visible in the incarnation of the Son of God by
an insurmountable chasm" (Fritz Tillmann, Handbuch der
katholischen Sittenlehre, Vol. IV,1, 4th edition, 1950, p. 62).
Therein lies the central legacy of Christendom. In his audacious
construction design, the Roman bridge builder has attempted to
overcome this chasm. However, one may dispute the durability
of the new bridge.
In any case, it is apparent that the encyclical's break with
Christian tradition on the objective level is hardly less significant
than its terminological break. For in the conception of the letter,
the specifically divine efficacy through grace has become
superfluous. This work of tidying up or tearing down belongs to
the well-known activity of modernism. But without the world of
grace, the divine sphere of "supernatural" becomes diluted in the
natural. God then seems to be more or less a result of earthly
development. In reality, the author has incorporated the ideas of
Teilhard de Chardin in his letter.
Ultimately, however, the question must be posed as to
whether the encyclical does justice to its title. Who is God and
wherein lies the fact that God is love? Christianity can give a
clear and unequivocal answer to this. Since God was love
already before creation, it is not enough to allude to the loving
17
activities of the divine persons toward the world. Unfortunately, in
this point, the encyclical leaves its readers essentially without an
answer. Love between persons is the will for community with the
other. When this will is present on both sides, love is fulfilled.
Thereby it always forms a triadic structure. In addition to both
lovers, there is always a third component containing the
normative and stabilizing power. In the love between friends, it is
friendship; in the love between man and woman, it is marriage.
This third dimension is constructed by both lovers and forms the
community which holds both together. The divine trinity can also
be viewed from this angle. There is the Father who loves the Son
and the Son who loves the Father. From the love of these two,
there emerges the Holy Ghost who is love in the specific sense
and at the same time forms the community of Father and Son.
Why did not the encyclical letter develop this correlation? The
texts published earlier by the author can give some clues. The
answer is: the author does not believe that Jesus is God's Son
and, thus, true eternal God (cf. "Zur Philosophie und Theologie
Joseph Ratzingers" edited by W. Siebel, SAKA Publishing
House, 2nd edition, Saarbrücken, 2005). Without this belief, one
cannot take the dogma of the Trinity seriously, and the attempt to
prove that God is love can only remain a torso. Hence, it is
understood that one must face with a certain scepticism Heinz-
Joachim Fischer's statement in his short commentary to the first
encyclical (Frankfurt General Newspaper, January 28, 2006):
"And obviously the 'Christian' God is being spoken of".
18
Dr. Carl Angermayr
22
In an interview with Otto von Habsburg reproduced in the book,
this curious mixture of Christian and anti-Christian symbols is
paid absolutely no attention. In searching the entire contents of
the publication to try to find out why the Greek God of shepherds
and their flocks has quasi received the honor of being the "patron
saint" for the Paneuropean Union, one will come away
disappointed. Thus, one has to rely on conjectures. Was this to
herald the era of the universal god Pan as a substitute for
Christianity in Europe?
It would have to be regarded as out of the question for
Ratzinger to have been borne along by the political conception of
a pan world in order to expand the idea from a pan-European to
a pan-religious one. However, it has been shown that Ratzinger
can be coupled with another spiritual movement. One would
hope that his personal allegiance would have gone no further
than including in the Catechism a Christianized portrait of a
shepherd. At that time, one could perhaps have leaned toward
this view.
23
The emblem shows the god sitting on a tree stump, his
shepherd's staff in one hand. With the other, he holds to his lips
the typical flute associated with him. The explanation on the
overleaf of the Catechism asserts that the illustration is an
"originally pagan image from a shepherd's life." So Ratzinger in
no way conceals the fact that both emblems - the one on the
Catechism as well as the one on the coronation miter - depict a
pagan god.
That is certainly something quite new in Christian
iconography. Bygone popes enamored with the Renaissance
allowed a naked David, a scantily clad Moses and a Christ as
judge with a lightly fluttering towel around his mid regions, even
pagan sibyls, to grace their tombs and the decorations in the
Vatican chapel - but certainly never before a Zeus, a Hercules or
an Aphrodite. And now all at once a Pan?
Things are not improved by the fact that the Pan image
Ratzinger has used is said to come 'from a Christian gravestone'
in the Catacombs of Domitilla, as explained in the text opposite
the front page of the Catechism. For that certainly does not mean
that the theological heads of the Catholic Church can place this
idiosyncratic early take over in Christian iconography with its
nostalgic frivolous elegance at the center of the Catholic doctrine
of salvation. There are still a few other categories to consider, by
God.
Pan had adorned the front page of the 'Catechism of the
Catholic Church' a full twelve years before the election of
Benedict XVI and, at that time, must have caused a certain
sensation. Shortly after the coronation celebrations in April 2005,
I myself discovered a picture of the papal coronation miter on the
front page of the newsletter of the Rottenburg diocese,
recognized the Pan emblem, was appalled and made a copy -
but lost it. Then, several weeks later, I received the 28 April 2005
issue of the German magazine BUNTE, in which I found multiple
copies of the coronation miter reproduced in the most brilliant
colors; for example, on page 77, in an especially impressive
closeup. - It was not until a few weeks ago that an acquaintance
made me aware of the fact that the emblem had found its place
in the Catechism for years.
24
Ratzinger's Pan miter
25
4. Is it really Pan adorning the front page of the
"Catholic Catechism"
and Ratzinger's coronation miter?
27
the emperor's representative. It "consists of a circular white
woolen stole, approximately three fingers broad in size, worn
about the neck, from which in front and in back short pendants
dangle, each decorated with an additional cross."14 For its use in
the church, it is made of lamb's wool, conveying the symbolism
of the Good Shepherd. Up into the 60s, the pallium was worn
during the liturgy in the church - and only there.
But is it not here perhaps actually a Christian avowal of the
Crucified? The question cannot be answered unequivocally in
the affirmative. For both crosses are partially covered. A small
stab with a gray round head has been laid over each one. Could
these be fasteners for holding both
parts of the pallium together? In the
history of the pallium, there have
certainly been such pins,
sometimes adorned with jewels.
But the two red threads with which
each stab is tied to its cross belies
such an interpretation. The stabs
are stuck under or in the threads
and, thus, have no fastening
function for the pallium itself. The
red threads could be fasteners only
A match lying on the cross?
if they were sewn to the alb. This
would, however, complicate the removal of the pallium, so that
theory must be discarded. Apparently, there are precious stones
set into the "head" of the stab which points upward. In the center
of the wider head, there seems to be a larger jewel and,
surrounding it, one can see, when the picture is enlarged, lighter
dots which could be tiny diamonds. But since the stabs
themselves have no fastening function, they are evidently only
decorative stabs, not decorative needles. Why, then, are the
stabs lying directly on top of the crosses? A possible significance
could be attached to the covering stabs if one wanted to think of
them as a symbol of the nails of the cross. Then the widened
gray "heads" of the stabs would have to be the nailheads. The
form and existence of the stab heads, however, contradicts this
notion since, in antiquity, nails had no heads because every nail
had to be individually forged. In addition, the blunt lower end of
the stab does not fit with such a view. To the observer, both the
28
form and color of the stabs on the pallium make them seem more
like "matches".
One could regard the covering up or decoration of both
crosses as a negligible matter, requiring no further attention,
were it not for the fact that they, as with the image of Pan,
reappear. Ratzinger's predecessor, Karol Wojtyla, also used this
peculiar combination. A picture of him published in 199315 shows
two crosses under each other, one of them decorated with the
small stab and one only with the two thread fasteners. This leads
to a more conclusive explanation. There are differences between
Wojtyla's and Ratzinger's attire: to begin with, the older picture is
only in black and white, in which case both crosses could have
been black in color. However, the color is not the crucial matter.
Whereas Ratzinger wore both crosses on his shoulders, Wojtyla
placed them underneath each other in the middle of his chest.
Here, too, they are either embroidered onto or dyed into the
pallium.
29
objected that the nail in relationship to the cross would be much
too large and would have been better placed beside the cross,
as in the portrayals of the suffering tools of Christ. The search for
a tolerably convincing Christian interpretation of the symbolic
worth of the stabs covering the crosses is in vain.
Why is Wojtyla's lower cross devoid of a stab? Possibly
because there is no necessity of symmetry when there are no
crosses on the two shoulders. But this makes the symbolism of
these two crosses more salient. One can now explicitly infer from
this combination that the purpose of the two (red?) threads was
not merely to fasten the decorative stab. They have an additional
statement to make: the threads basically countermand the
message of the crosses as Christian symbols! A cross with
clearly visible threads joining its horizontal and vertical beams is
more indicative of an electric fan than of a Christian symbol.
Thus, the change to the lower motif divests the cross of its
Christian character.
One could consider this an overstated appraisal were it not
for the fact that, in his left hand, John Paul II holds forward
toward his onlookers another striking symbol. It is the disgraceful
Cross which Paul VI introduced to the public—disgraceful,
repulsive, showing the Crucified without
any form of dignity and transcendence.
The one who exhibits such a cross, with
its warped crossbeam, as an image of
Christ must have a deep animosity for
the Savior and His work of salvation. No
believing Christian would put such a
figure on show, sporting a smile and
clenching the legs of the Crucified,
given that such gestures are irreverent
to the divine Savior, amounting to a
volitional degradation of His person.
With this stance, could the "match" be
31
So the length of the section is even more astonishing. The
introducti
on to the practical part quotes from the Church Father Saint
Augustine. It says: “If you see charity, you see the Trinity”. But
Ratzinger does not divulge to his readers what the Holy Trinity is.
The mention of the Trinity in this quote is, in fact, the one and
only mention of the Trinity in the entire encyclical - despite giving
the first paragraph (19) the title "The Church's charitable activity
as a manifestation of Trinitarian love." What follows are rather
unrelated thoughts in which the Father, the Son and the Holy
Spirit do appear, but they are not related to the Holy Trinity as
such. The result is that the three divine Persons appear, to a
large extent, as nondescript hollow words. So the description of
the practice of love has to substitute for the missing main part.
However, an attempt to develop trinitarian love from the practice
of charitable activity by Christians is unsuccessful.
Helmut Waldmann has also noticed the "emphasis on
charitable activity" in Ratzinger's letter.17 He arrives at the
conclusion: "With the emphasis he places on practical actions,
Benedict XVI deals with the subject in the same manner as
Emperor Julian the Apostate, who lived more than 15 centuries
before him (361-363). The whole world at that time was deeply
impressed with Christians' charitable activity and, after his
reversion to paganism, the Emperor called upon his subjects to
not let themselves be outdone by Christians." Waldmann did not
point out, though, that, in his encyclical, Ratzinger had also
referred to the apostate Emperor.
Remarkably, the apostate Emperor appears twice in
Ratzinger's encyclical.18 The figure of the apostate Roman
Emperor must have particularly preoccupied him. In the first
passage, the encyclical has the following text: "A mention of the
emperor Julian the Apostate († 363) can also show how
essential the early Church considered the organized practice of
charity. As a child of six years, Julian witnessed the
assassination of his father, brother and other family members by
the guards of the imperial palace; rightly or wrongly, he blamed
this brutal act on the Emperor Constantius, who passed himself
off as an outstanding Christian. The Christian faith was thus
definitively discredited in his eyes. Upon becoming emperor,
Julian decided to restore paganism, the ancient Roman religion,
while reforming it in the hope of making it the driving force behind
32
the empire. In this project he was amply inspired by Christianity.
He established a hierarchy of metropolitans and priests who
were to foster love of God and neighbour. In one of his letters, he
wrote that the sole aspect of Christianity which had impressed
him was the Church's charitable activity. He thus considered it
essential for his new pagan religion that, alongside the system of
the Church's charity, an equivalent activity of its own be
established. According to him, this was the reason for the
popularity of the 'Galileans'. They needed now to be imitated and
outdone. In this way, then, the Emperor confirmed that charity
was a decisive feature of the Christian community, the Church."
In the second passage it says: "The increase in diversified
organizations engaged in meeting various human needs is
ultimately due to the fact that the command of love of neighbour
is inscribed by the Creator in man's very nature. It is also a result
of the presence of Christianity in the world, since Christianity
constantly revives and acts out this imperative, so often
profoundly obscured in the course of time. The reform of
paganism attempted by the emperor Julian the Apostate is only
an initial example of this effect; here we see how the power of
Christianity spread well beyond the frontiers of the Christian
faith."
7. Is God charity?
35
9. The German bishops in the footsteps of Ratzinger
10. Does Ratzinger, like Julian the Apostate, see the rebuilding
of the temple in Jerusalem as an important goal?
It is not acknowledged …
1. that the new Rome subsequent to Vatican II has produced a
myriad of alterations in teaching and rite which have led to a
fundamental transformation;
2. that Roman ecumenicism means the renouncement of the
Catholic Church's claim to absolute truth;
3. that the concept of church has been radically altered,
debasing the Catholic Church - in contrast to the compulsory
teaching - to a position alongside other Christian
communities to a mere "realization" of the "Church of
Christ";
4. that the Roman teaching of universal salvation is a
satanically-driven turning away from morality, holiness and
divine judgment;
5. that Rome has disseminated a multitude of heresies;
6. that the new Roman teaching has led to the meaningless of
the Church for governments, their morality and their
prosperity;
7. that the new rites for the majority of the sacraments, as they
have been invented by the new Rome, have invalidated
them, defying God;
8. that the new Roman celebration of the Eucharist is no longer
a sacrifice and, consequently, affords no transubstantiation
so that the tabernacles in the Roman-ecumenical church are
empty;
9. that the vernacular corruption of Christ's words of
transubstantiation (from "for you and for many" into "for you
and for all") in the celebration of the eucharist has brought
about a brazen proclamation of the teaching of universal
salvation in the liturgy, which represents an outrageous
affront to Jesus Christ;
41
10. that the new Roman consecration of bishops is null and void
and, thereby, the apostolicity of the Church has been
undermined;
11. that we find ourselves in the End Times;
12. that a pope publicly expressing a heresy loses his office
immediately and without any verdict;
13. that the interreligious day of prayer for peace in the world in
Assisi in 1996 clearly showed the demonic and apostate
character of the new Rome;
14. that desiring allegiance to the new Rome does not allow
battling against its false teachings at the same time;
15. that Benedict XVI is an unteachable destroyer of the
foundations of the Catholic faith, as can be unmistakably
seen from his inaugural encyclical.
44
12. Ratzinger's "papal" coat of arms
The coats of
arms of John
Paul II and
Benedict XVI
45
Ratzinger's innovation has already been interpreted a sign of his
inclination to strengthen "collegiality" with bishops.
Thus, the sole remaining emblems of papacy in the papal
heraldry are the keys. For Jesus said to Peter: "And I will give to
thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou
shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven: and
whatsoever thou shalt loose upon earth, it shall be loosed also in
heaven" (Mt 16:19). But if Jesus was merely human, how could
He have given the keys to the kingdom of heaven? For the
viewer of the coat of arms, too, the possible meaning of the keys
under the bishop's headdress is to be questioned. For their
placement under the striped miter pushes aside the symbolism of
the keys as an expression of the papal office. And since
Ratzinger has used the sign of the cross on his coat of arms as a
mere ornamental adjunct, he is insinuating that he does not feel
himself to be the earthly representative of the Savior Jesus
Christ. After all, in Ratzinger's apostate view, Jesus was only
human. Only on the cross (or in the resurrection) was he exalted
by God to "God's son". As a mere man, he could not have
secured salvation. In this respect, Ratzinger's "papal" coat of
arms reveals a certain logical consistency, following from his
fundamentally false point of departure.
Endnotes:
1 Encyclical letter Deus caritas est, para 4.
2 Encyclical letter Deus caritas est, para 9.
3 Cf. Wigand Siebel: Der Katechismus des Vatikanum II (5 parts). In: SAKA-
vom 25. Dezember 2005 - Die Sache hat leider einen Pferdefuss. In
www.linkloader.de/Waldmann.
8 See e.g. W.H. Roscher (ed). Ausfuehrliches Lexikon der griechischen und
Poetscher.
11 See Der Kleine Pauly, Vol 2, Muenchen 1979, s.v. Dionysos (paragraphs
79f) by F. Kiechle.
12 See at length in W.H. Roscher, op. cit., (paragraphs 1347ff) by K. Wernicke.
13 See Der Kleine Pauly, op. cit., s.v. Pan (para 445) by W. Poetscher.
14 Thomas Klauser: Artikel Pallium in LThK, Vol 8. Freiburg im Breisgau 1963,
col. 7f.
15 The picture appeared on the front page of the 2nd issue (Feb 1993) of the
church and the subversion of the sacraments can be found in "The Oratory
Catechism. Roman Catholic Catechism and Instructions for the Faithful in
Today's World." SAKA-Verlag, Saarbruecken 2000.
25 An excellent overview of the problems connected with the new consecration
rites, along with associated literature, with the staggering conclusion of the
invalidity of the new rites can be found in the standard work of an
international committee: Rore Sanctifica, 2 vols, Οditions Saint-Remi, F-
33410 Cadillac 2005.
26 RP Pierre-Marie O.P.: "Le nouveau rituel de consécration épiscopale est-il
47
With irrefutable pictorial documentation, this booklet argues that in the Roman
church, which still calls itself the "Catholic Church", a reversion to paganism
is taking place. The one mainly responsible for this development is the priest
(his consecration as bishop is, without doubt, invalid) and theology professor
Joseph Ratzinger, who as Benedict XVI is leading the Christians following
him into apostasy, having left the world in the dark until now about his actual
intentions. After his election as "pope," he has shown himself to be a patron
for the veneration of the heathen gods Pan and Eros and, as his liturgical
vestments on his inaugural day on St. Peter's Square in Rome and his coat of
arms demonstrate, attempts where he can to repress the cross. As an apostate
fallen from faith, he feels an affinity with the Roman emperor Julian the
Apostate and storms into a future which might be conducive to the rebuilding
of the temple in Jerusalem.
On Joseph Ratzinger's
Philosophy and Theology
(German only)
Prof. Dr. Wigand Siebel (Ed.). 4th edition, 2007. 144 pp. EUR 9.80
Whoever wishes to get an idea of who Benedict XVI really is and what he
really believes will not be able to forego this all-important book! Or did you
already know what has been scrupulously substantiated in this anthology
by many competent scholars: that in his most famous work, "Introduction to
Christianity" (1968), as well as in a number of later books, Joseph
Ratzinger maintains. Here is a sampling:
The three divine Persons do not each possess the whole divine being.
Not until the resurrection did Jesus become the Son of God; He is not
of the same substance with the Father.
God did not become human; rather, a human has become God.
In holy mass, we are not making a sacrifice to God.
There are no priests except Christ.
The bodily assumption of Mary into heaven is only a flowery phrase.
There is no bodily resurrection.
Hell is empty.
It is futile to pray for the poor souls in purgatory.
Christ is not coming on doomsday as a judge; there will be no final
judgment of the world.
The one "Church of Christ" is complied of all schismatic and heretical
sects together.
Every single one of these theses is a heresy which has been ceremonially
repudiated by the Roman Catholic Church! Nevertheless, as "Benedict
XVI", Joseph Ratzinger has allowed new editions and reprints of all of
these books, as well as his "Introduction to Christianity" (already available
in many languages), to be published. An unfathomable scandal!
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