Pope to Ratzinger Prize-winners: a symphony of truth
Pope emeritus Benedict XVI with the recipients of the 2017 Ratzinger Prize in Theology, Nov. 17,2017.- RV |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis received the
recipients of the 2017 Ratzinger Prize in Theology on
Saturday morning. Catholic Professor Karl-Heinz Menke of the
Theological Faculty of the University of Bonn, Lutheran Professor Theodor
Dieter of the Institute for Ecumenical Research in Strasbourg, and
Orthodox composer Arvo Pärt, share the Prize this year, which Benedict
XVI established in 2010 as the leading international award for
research in Sacred Scripture, patristics, and fundamental theology.
Broadening horizons of the Ratzinger Prize
This year, therefore, marks the first time in which the
Prize is given to someone not engaged in strictly theological endeavor.
When the prize-winners were announced in September, the
President of the Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Vatican Foundation, Fr. Federico
Lombardi SJ, said, “Benedict XVI’s appreciation for the art of music
and the highly religious inspiration behind the musical art of Pärt,
justified the attribution of the prize also outside of the strictly theological
field.”
In remarks to the roughly 200 guests, including the
prize-winners and officials of the Ratzinger Foundation on
Saturday morning in the Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace, Pope
Francis said, “I welcomed with joy the idea of broadening the horizon
of the [Ratzinger] Prize to include the arts, in addition to the theology and sciences,
which are naturally associated with it.” He went on to say, “It is an
enlargement that corresponds well with the vision of [Pope emeritus] Benedict
XVI, who so often spoke to us in a touching manner, of beauty as a
privileged way of opening ourselves to transcendence and to meeting God.”
Ecumenical focus
The Prize this year also had an ecumenical element.
In addition to Pärt’s Orthodoxy, the year, 2017,
is the 500th anniversary of the beginning of the Lutheran movement in
Christianity, and Lutheran Professor Theodor Dieter one of the
three recipients. “The truth of Christ,” said Pope Francis,
“is not for soloists, but is symphonic: it requires docile collaboration,
harmonious sharing.” The Holy Father also said, “Seeking it,
studying it, contemplating it, and transposing it in practice together, in
charity, draws us strongly toward full union between us: truth becomes thus a
living source of ever closer ties of love.”
Pope Francis concluded, saying, “[C]ongratulations,
therefore, to the illustrious prize winners: Professor Theodor Dieter,
Professor Karl-Heinz Menke and Maestro Arvo Pärt;
and my encouragement to [the Ratzinger] Foundation,” so that, “we might
continue to travel along new and broader ways to collaborate in research,
dialogue and knowledge of the truth. – a truth that, as Pope Benedict has
not tired of reminding us, is, in God, logos and agape,
wisdom and love, incarnate in the person of Jesus.”
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét