I didn’t read this book for awhile because it took me some time to get over the feeling of betrayal I felt from Benedict’s abdication. But he’s one of the greatest theologians to have ever lived and regardless of my feelings re: the abdication and what came next his pastoral heart especially for those who find faith difficult in the current age won out. I’m sure glad it did.
His views on Protestantism are maybe the sharpest I’ve seen in his writing. Maybe privately he’s expressed these views before. In short, he believes they are Christians but have done away with vital aspects of how the faith has always been practiced since the time of the apostles.
He also soberly discusses the sex abuse crisis, and event that left me me cynical. He doesn’t flinch in his condemnation of it or his explanation of what led to it but he ends on a note of hope:
“If we look around with an attentive heart and listen, we can find everywhere today- among uneducated people, but also in the high ranks of the Church- witnesses who testify to God by their life and suffering. Unwillingness to notice them is a symptom of a slothful heart. One of the great essential tasks of our evangelization is, to the best of our ability, to create habitats of faith and above all to find and recognize them.”
“I live in a house in which a small community continually discovers, in the everyday routine, similar testimonies to the living God and gladly points them out to me. To see and to find the Church alive is a wonderful task that strengthens us, again and again making us glad in our faith.”