Pope, Citing Islam, Criticizes Holy Wars and Fanaticism
Violence is 'contrary to God's nature,' he
says in a lecture at the college where he once taught.
By Tracy Wilkinson
Times Staff Writer
September 13, 2006
REGENSBURG, Germany — Pope Benedict XVI stepped into the volatile realm
of religious violence Tuesday, warning that fanaticism was "contrary to
God's nature" and quoting a historical criticism of Islam likely to
inflame tensions in the Muslim world.
Speaking
to academics at the University of Regensburg, where he taught theology
in the 1970s, the pope traversed centuries of Islamic, Greek and
Christian philosophy to decry holy wars and forced conversions, and to
hold up Christianity as the "profound encounter of faith and reason."
The
pontiff's lecture was long, dense and subject to wide interpretation.
Rather than criticize Islam directly, he cited a Byzantine emperor's
harsh condemnation of Islam, its founder Muhammad and holy war.
Benedict used the word jihad, choosing the emotionally and politically
loaded Arabic term for holy war or struggle.
"Violence
is incompatible with the nature of God and the nature of the soul,"
Benedict said. "Not to act in accordance with reason is contrary to
God's nature."
In contrast to fanatic abuse of religion, the
pope said, in Christianity "the fundamental decisions made about the
relationship between faith and the use of human reason are part of the
faith itself."
Ultimately, the pope's long exposition was not
about Islam but about his favored themes: the dangers of secularism in
the Christian West and the need to better know God, as well as the wish
to open "genuine dialogue" among faiths and cultures.
But the remarks on Islam, however couched, were likely to draw the most
attention.
Benedict's
disdain for radical Islam, and the use of religion to justify
terrorism, is well known. Last year, during his inaugural trip as pope
— to Cologne, Germany — he chastised Muslim community leaders for
failing to steer young people from "the darkness of a new barbarism,"
and he has asserted the fundamental importance of Europe's Christian
roots and character.
In November, Benedict is scheduled to
travel to Turkey, a Muslim nation and a candidate to join the European
Union, in what promises to be a prickly expedition.
At the
university in this medieval city, on the fourth day of a six-day tour
of his native Bavaria, the pope quoted Byzantine Emperor Manuel II in
conversation with "an educated Persian": "Show me just what Muhammad
brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and
inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he
preached."
Departing from his prepared text, the pope twice
reminded the audience that he was quoting someone else, an indication
that he was aware of the sensitivity of the comments.
Manuel II
was speaking at the end of the 14th century in Constantinople. It was a
time of great tumult between the Christian and Muslim worlds and about
50 years before the fall of the city, then the capital of eastern
Christendom, to the Muslim Ottomans.
The pope said the emperor
would have been aware of the Koran's instructions on the waging of holy
war as he argued that the spreading of the faith through violence was
"something unreasonable."
Father Federico Lombardi, the pope's
spokesman, said Benedict was not attacking Islam but highlighting
forced conversions and holy war as historical examples of the violent
use of religion.
The pope "does not want to give an
interpretation of Islam as something violent," Lombardi told reporters.
"We know that inside Islam there are many different positions, not only
violent but nonviolent too."
Benedict, the consummate professor,
chose his words carefully. Whether he intended a more overt criticism
or was provoking intellectual debate was not clear. During his 17
months as pope, Benedict has displayed a sharp intellect and deep
theological grounding, but not always the keen geopolitical ear of his
predecessor, John Paul II.
In comments earlier Tuesday during an
outdoor Mass at a Regensburg sports field, with more than 200,000
people in attendance, Benedict foreshadowed some of the themes in his
university lecture.
Christians, he said, must learn to recognize
the "pathologies and the life-threatening diseases" that undermine
their faith and "the ways that God's image can be destroyed by hatred
and fanaticism." It is important, he said, "to proclaim confidently
that this God has a human face."
Dressed in golden vestments and
preaching from a large white altar, Benedict also used the Mass to
revisit his stance on creation and evolution, alluding to what he
called "creative reason," which suggests that the formation of the
universe was more than a "mathematically ordered cosmos."
God
"is our origin and future," he said. "When God is subtracted, something
doesn't add up for man, the world, the whole vast universe…. With this
faith we have no reason to hide, no fear of ending up in a dead end….
God does not leave us groping in the dark."
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times