Fr. George Rutler is a remarkably gifted dissenter from the Modern Project, even when that Project includes such as John Paul II and his biographer, George Weigel.
...Another subject for another day is how the theological dissidents and
dilettantish revisionists who patronised Wojtyła and loathed Ratzinger
burrowed into the cultural underground, suborning the media and
academies, waiting for their moment which, if tenuous and fragile, they
think had arrived. The geriatric modernists are breathing fresh air, and
the test will be how long their moment will actually last.
With scholastic realism, John Paul II believed that, in theology, 2+2
= 4. He did not subscribe to a Hegelian synthesis whereby truth is what
is left after “making a mess”. His Theology of the Body was of a vision
loftier and more demanding than instruction in how to kiss. If anyone
could express that even more clearly than Wojtyła it was Ratzinger,
whose masterful articulation confounded all stereotypes of German
obscurantism. John Paul evidently recognised that himself, which he is
why he relied on him so much, and that may have been another instance of
the wheel of Providence at work. Both of them were like Bunyan’s
pilgrim contending against “dismal stories” but they did so without
subjecting doctrine to casuistry, or condescending to rudeness and
insults.
The way John Paul focused on the horizon may at times have distracted
him from what was going on around his doorstep. His episcopal
appointments sometimes were perplexing and his idealism beclouded his
willingness to acknowledge abuses within the clerical system. My friend
Fr Stanley Jaki once expressed to me his caution that phenomenology
might be Wojtyła’s “Achilles heel” rather than the strength of his
philosophical narrative. It is curious that such a sublime visionary
should have been remarkably atonal in matters liturgical and artistic.
His pontificate boasted no Borromini, and its cultural landscape was
pockmarked with such offences as the Jubilee Church in Rome, the Divine
Mercy Shrine in Kraków, Los Angeles Cathedral and the pharaonic John
Paul II Cultural Center in Washington DC....
Indeed. George Weigel stopped in Milwaukee to address a charity dinner a dozen or so years ago, and was very clear in his distaste for Latin and the Old Rite movement. JPII was also distinctly un-enthused about the EF. But the fact remains that the Old Rite (EF) and its Latin lingua franca still have a near-monopoly on Beauty in the liturgy (although the Anglicans have done very well with English, by and large, as the exception to that rule.)
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