Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Liberation Theology Insider, "He Was Right. In fact, The Church Was Irrelevant For Us. And Not Only Her, Even Christ Himself"

Mingled with the theology with the current fashion and seemingly unstoppable Marxism. First they justify class struggle, then armed struggle which leads inevitably to violence. And many Catholics, including priests, religious and seminarians have followed this siren song. The result has been great suffering and serious cracks and splits in the Catholic Church by priests who bartered the cross with the machine gun. Clerics, who, instead of following the example of the saints, rather imitated the example of Che Guevara and fought in the guerrilla struggle through the cities and the jungle and were eventually shot by the police or military.
For this reason, the Latin American bishops condemned the contagious Marxist theology in 1979. The same was done in detail, explained by the doctrinal congregation, under the leadership of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger at the express request of Pope John Paul II, who was from in the Soviet-controlled Eastern Bloc, and was particularly sensitive to the topic. The CDF studied the phenomenon from the perspective of orthodoxy and the social doctrine of the Church. The condemnation was accomplished with two documents: Libertatis Nuncio (1984) and Libertatis Conscientia (1986). In both, it was noted that liberation theology was in a dependent relationship to the Marxist critique of society and is therefore incompatible with the Gospel message.
Leonardo Boff, today, with other colleagues of the anti-Church boulevard magazine Fatto Quitidiano has this intervention Ratzinger never forgiven. He turned his back on the church and began a personal vendetta against them, including through its Brazilian "Base Communities". A kind Brazilian Don Gallo . Recently Boff was reported to praise again and speak of Pope Francis effusively. And the media habitually gave him quite a hearing. It had been Boff, who had demanded on behalf of the Council, to the media, that "someone like Bergoglio" should not even be admitted to the conclave. 
The reason for the Boff did not mention, of course, is that Cardinal Bergoglio had met in Argentina Marxist liberation theology up close and dislikes. Bergoglio rejected the theses of Marxist theology and opposed his brothers in the Jesuit order, who joined Boff and Gutierrez. The result was a still ongoing resentment from parts of the Order against Bergoglio. As Boff has never forgiven him for the condemnation of the theology he created, so have some have the same Jesuits never forgiven Bergoglio. 
It is interesting in this context an interview that the Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo was held with Clodovis, the brother of Leonardo Boff. Clodovis, a member of the Servites, contradicted his brother:
"In the two documents published by Cardinal Ratzinger, he defended the original core of liberation theology: the commitment to the poor because of the faith. At the same time he criticized the Marxist influence. The Church can't do this. It's not like a civil society where people can say what they want. We are tied to a belief and if someone professes another faith, he closes himself from the Church. From the outset, it was clear the importance was to make Christ the foundation of all theology. In the hegemonic discourse of liberation theology, however, I have noticed that faith in Christ only appeared in the background. The anonymous Christianity of Karl Rahner was a great excuse to neglect Christ, prayer, the sacraments and the mission in which the focus was only on the change of social structures."
Clodovis Boff, formerly himself a representative of the Teología de la Liberación , who was already critical of it in 1986 and finally distanced from liberation theology in 2007, added: "In the 70s Cardinal Eugneio Sales withdrew my teaching license of Theology at the Catholic University Rio. Sales told me in a friendly way: "Clodovis, I think you are mistaken. Doing good is not enough to be a Christian. The center is to confess the faith ... " ""He was right. In fact, the Church was irrelevant for us. And not only Her, even Christ Himself "
Link (here) to  The Eponymous Flower

6 comments:

Qualis Rex said...

As someone who was also duped by the Jesuits into thinking Liberation Theology was a legitimate expression of Catholicism (there were 3 courses a quarter on this subject until the final year I attended), I not only sympathise with Clodovis, but admire his courage to admit he was wrong on the subject. When confronted by Catholics who opposed liberation theology, my response would always be "but look at all the good they are doing." It took me 4 years to realize the "good" translated into atheism, apostasy to Protestantism and secularization. These are the "fruits" of liberation theology...and it is exactly what Marx himself would have wanted.

clement said...

qualis rex- any true thinker is not "duped " by anyone perhaps you should learn to think for yourself and not let others do it for you ......

Qualis Rex said...

Clement I was born/raised Catholic attending Jesuit University at the time, being told by priests whose authority I had been taught to respect and believe that Liberation Theology was de facto doctrine. So, yes, shame on me for being a naive young man. If nothing else, the experience has taught me to think for myself (and recognize sanctimonious snipers and trolls when I see them).

Anonymous said...

sanctimonious snipers and trolls...Qualis Rex, don't you make some sniping trollish comment on every post on this website? Seems a bit hypocritical to find it in someone else, after the shameful comments you make.

Qualis Rex said...

Anonymous - I guess you don't see the utter hypocrisy in your own post there. Not surprising (nor inspiring).

Tancred said...

Lots of people were duped by the Sanctimonious class warriors in JesuuitSchools. I think Qualis Rex's story is compelling.