CNN.com Lectures Catholic Church on How to Be 'Light Unto All Nations'
At CNN.com,
correspondent Ben Wedeman touted "what some Catholics want in next
pope," and by "some Catholics" he meant those who thought Pope
Benedict's papacy was too conservative or inward-looking. He arrogantly
prescribed that if the next pontiff focuses on social justice and has a
global outreach, "Then perhaps the Catholic Church can be a light unto all nations."
Since when could CNN reporters tell the Catholic church what it should be doing? Wedeman hammered the church's problems, "a church in which the gap between the shepherd and his flock seems to be growing ever wider." He hyped the "Winds buffeting the church."
All
of his guests aired complaints of some sort about Benedict's papacy.
The first guest claimed she didn't "need a contact to reach God." The
second wanted the next pope to have a "liberal plan for the church,
something like John XXIII did."
"With Rome in the grip of
winter, the windows of the Pope's offices overlooking St. Peter's
Square are closed. Winds buffeting the church come from outside
Europe," Wedeman noted.
A transcript of the segment, which aired on CNN.com on February 13, is as follows:
BEN WEDEMAN, CNN senior international
correspondent: The basilica of Santa Maria in Trastevere is one of
Rome's oldest churches. But today, tourists seem to outnumber the
faithful. In this age of uncertainty, buildings such as these are more
monuments to art and architecture rather than a bridge between mortals
and the Almighty. 18 year-old student Eva Bertelli walks by the church,
but doesn't enter.
EVA BERTELLI, student: (Unintelligible)
WEDEMAN: "I don't need a contact to reach God," she says. "I don't need an intermediary on earth to resolve my problems."
Pope Benedict's surprise announcement that he's about to resign has
once more brought the crisis in the Catholic Church into sharp focus, a
church in which the gap between the shepherd and his flock seems to be
growing ever wider. Torn asunder by pedophile scandals, financial
controversy, a crisis of faith.
Reginald Segar, a doctor from Louisiana visiting Rome, says it's time for change.
REGINALD SEGAR, doctor from Louisiana visiting Rome: You know, somebody
who can bring in new ideas with the – maybe a little bit more liberal
idea – liberal plan for the church, something like John XXIII did,
where he opened up the windows of the church to let the Spirit come in
and help guide us.
WEDEMAN: With Rome in the grip of winter, the windows of the Pope's
offices overlooking St. Peter's Square are closed. Winds buffeting the
church come from outside Europe.
Vatican City may be based in Rome, but in many respects the Catholic
church is no longer a European institution. Only one in four Catholics
lives in Europe, and now that it's time to elect a new pope, many say
that it's time that the Pope reflect that new reality.
The flock may be shrinking here and in North America, but it's growing
in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Pope Benedict tried shoring up
Catholicism on his native continent. A mistake, perhaps, says Father
Carmine Curci, who spent years in Africa and Latin America.
FATHER CARMINE CURCI, Misna News Agency: His life was more European. He
didn't like to travel a lot. Even though he liked to talk with African
people, to talk with Latin American people. Maybe now it's too late.
WEDEMAN: Too late for this pope, but not for the next.
FATHER BERNARDO CERVELLERA, Asia News: A missionary pope towards Europe.
WEDEMAN: Fr. Bernardo Cervellera runs a Catholic news service
specializing in Asia. He believes it's not the birthplace of the next
pope that matters, but rather a focus on social justice.
CERVELLERA: Focusing on human being and not on profit, all these things
which are terribly modern because we have an economic crisis in which
the need of the people are forgotten, the need of finance are
immediately answered to.
WEDEMAN: Then perhaps the Catholic Church can be a light unto all nations.