Australian cardinal criticises Pope Benedict XVI
BY Agencies1 March 2013 7:51 AM IST
Agencies1 March 2013 7:51 AM IST
Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, criticised outgoing Pope Benedict XVI on Thursday, describing his historic resignation as destabilising and questioning his governance skills.
Pell, Australia’s representative at next month's secret conclave to elect a successor, said Benedict was a ‘brilliant teacher’ but ‘government wasn't his strong point’ in a candid interview on the eve of the pope's departure.
‘I think I prefer somebody who can lead the Church and pull it together a bit,’ Pell told commercial television.
He pointed to the so-called ‘Vatileaks’ scandal, in which Benedict's butler leaked secret papal memos revealing intrigues between rival groups of cardinals, though he said it was ‘very easy to be wise after the event’.‘I think the governance is done by most of the people around the Pope and that wasn't always done brilliantly. And I'm not breaking any ground there – this is said very commonly,’ Pell added in a later radio interview from the Vatican.
Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric also said the 85-year-old pontiff's decision to resign – the first pope to do so since the Middle Ages – set a worrying precedent for the Church.
Pell, Australia’s representative at next month's secret conclave to elect a successor, said Benedict was a ‘brilliant teacher’ but ‘government wasn't his strong point’ in a candid interview on the eve of the pope's departure.
‘I think I prefer somebody who can lead the Church and pull it together a bit,’ Pell told commercial television.
He pointed to the so-called ‘Vatileaks’ scandal, in which Benedict's butler leaked secret papal memos revealing intrigues between rival groups of cardinals, though he said it was ‘very easy to be wise after the event’.‘I think the governance is done by most of the people around the Pope and that wasn't always done brilliantly. And I'm not breaking any ground there – this is said very commonly,’ Pell added in a later radio interview from the Vatican.
Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric also said the 85-year-old pontiff's decision to resign – the first pope to do so since the Middle Ages – set a worrying precedent for the Church.
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