Cardinal Gerhard Müller has said that Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was “disappointed” that the cardinal’s position as the Vatican doctrinal chief was not renewed.
Cardinal Müller made the comment in an interview with the press agency Deutsche Presse-Agentur, published in Die Welt.
Benedict appointed Cardinal Müller in 2012 as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), a position Benedict himself had held from 1981 to 2005. The Vatican says that the CDF’s role is to “spread sound doctrine and defend those points of Christian tradition which seem in danger because of new and unacceptable doctrines”.
It has long been customary for the prefect of the CDF to continue until he resigns or reaches the age of retirement. Francis, however, replaced Cardinal Müller at the end of his five-year term with Archbishop Luis Ladaria, previously the CDF’s secretary.
Two weeks ago, Cardinal Müller said that his removal was abrupt, and announced with no discussion or advance warning. Pope Francis “did not give a reason”, the 69-year-old cardinal said. “Just as he gave no reason for dismissing three highly competent members of the CDF a few months earlier.” Cardinal Müller said this approach was at odds with the Church’s social teaching, saying: “I cannot accept this way of doing things. As a bishop, one cannot treat people in this way.”
In the new interview, Cardinal Müller criticised the culture within the Vatican as sometimes exhibiting an excessive devotion to the Pope.
“Every Catholic, especially every bishop and every cardinal, has a positive and constructive relationship with the Pope,” the cardinal said. “But that is anything but courtly behaviour and an obsequious manner, against which Pope Francis has always spoken.” He said modern media helped to create a personality cult around the Pope.
Cardinal Müller said that when he arrived in Rome, he was often seen as a “typical German theology professor, who doesn’t understand that two plus two can equal five as need be.” But he said he had “never been” an opponent of the Pope.
Glitch hits Catholic fan pages
Dozens of Catholic fan pages whose followers numbered in the millions disappeared from Facebook last week.
The pages were restored a day later. A Facebook spokesman said: “All pages have now been restored. This incident was triggered accidentally by a spam detection tool. We sincerely apologise for the issue this has caused.”
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