Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Faith Works 4-29-06
Jeff Gill

Beneath Vatican Hill

The Roman Catholic Church traces her roots beneath the massive bulk of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, where fill that Emperor Constantine brought in to level a side of Vatican Hill covers an ancient cemetery.
Below the "modern" structure, the second on that constructed platform, tombs from before the time of Christ and just after now can be toured, with the conclusion of the visit to the excavations, or "scavi," come to the area just under the high altar, beneath the center of the vast dome designed by Michaelangelo.
It is what archaeologists and classical scholars believe is the burial place of Simon Peter, foremost of the apostles and leader of the Christian movement carried back to the heart of the Roman empire. Just to the south is the former Circus, or racetrack, where Peter was executed by upside-down crucifixion; the pylon marking one end of the course was an obelisk brought as spoil of war, the same obelisk now in the center of the piazza before the largest church in Christendom – perhaps Peter’s last sight on earth, now witness to the election and speeches and funerals of Peter’s successors, called bishops of Rome, or "il papa," or just pope.
This second week of our series on Christendom for Dummies (hey, it takes one to know one!) moves from the ancient traditions of Eastern, Orthodox Christianity back to the west, and the Catholic Christian wing of the faith.
Pope John Paul II said not long ago of the eastern and western branches of traditional Christianity that the church "breathes with two lungs," implying that while each can get along to some degree without the other, such a situation is not the best, and could be harmful. The years since World War II, and especially in the pontificate of John Paul II, have seen a renewal of relations between the Orthodox and Catholic "lungs" not dreamed of since 1204, when Crusaders in Constantinople plundered holy shrines to make up for not getting to Jerusalem, and leaders of Christianity both east and west anathematized, or cursed each other.
Tensions began much earlier, and came to a head with church councils around 1052, when understandings of the relationships between Father, Son, and Holy Spirit could not be reconciled (the "filoque" clause). But the stresses were as much geopolitical as theological, beginning with the sack of Rome in 410, and cracked beyond all repair, it seemed, with the sack of Constantinople in 1453.
The word catholic, small-c, means universal, and the Roman Catholic Church continues to struggle with catholicity both as promise and problem. The papal affirmation "no salvation outside the church" is meant more as assured promise than veiled threat, but is heard by many as a claim of absolute authority with limited justification.
One of the common, but unusual titles used by the leader of Catholic Christianity is "Supreme Pontiff." You hear it just down the road in the name of the Pontifical College Josephinum, signifying the role of the Roman Pontiff in that school over the local bishop of Columbus, along with the "P" in the former PIME seminary school between Heath and Hebron, once a papal property, now the retreat center for the Diocese of Columbus.
This is a title that goes back into the ancient heritage of Rome, given by the city-state to Julius Caesar as "pontifex maximus," or literally "supreme bridge builder." This title, signifying the responsibility for maintaining relationships between believers and various faith groups, was held by the Caesars and was given to the Papacy when the Roman Empire fell.
As modern Supreme Pontiff, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, has a responsibility he takes quite seriously, to share the Christian message and build bridges to believers around the world.
Modern Catholics hold a loyalty to their bishops as the organizing embodiments of their faith community, and a primary loyalty to the teaching pre-eminence of the bishop of Rome, where Peter was martyred and where his successors still worship and preside as the "daddy" in Italian vernacular, or "il papa."
The pre-eminence of the papacy is an obstacle to some in hoping for Christian union, and the embodiment of unity for many others. This tension reaches a head when the old St. Peter’s is being torn down and a new one planned, just after the year 1500, and a good Catholic monk named Martin Luther gets some strange ideas in Pope Benedict’s homeland of Germany.
The story continues next week!

Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and supply preacher around central Ohio; contact him through disciple@voyager.net.

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