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Loading... Last Testament: In His Own Words (2016)by Pope Benedict XVI, Peter Seewald
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Three book-length interviews with Joseph Ratzinger were published before he became Pope, the last two conducted by German journalist and lapsed-then-born-again Catholic Peter Seewald. They were followed by [b:Light of the World: The Pope, the Church, and the Sign of the Times - A Conversation with Peter Seewald|9709804|Light of the World The Pope, the Church, and the Sign of the Times - A Conversation with Peter Seewald|Pope Benedict XVI|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348448608s/9709804.jpg|14598155] , issued to some controversy when Ratzinger was on the Chair of Peter as Benedict XVI. To these must now be added Last Testament, which sees Benedict in the unprecedented role of “Emeritus Pope” and which, the publisher ominously tells us, will be Ratzinger’s last book. In the introduction to the book-interview, Seewald explains that Last Testament is based on several conversations held around the time of Ratzinger’s resignation, in preparation for a forthcoming biography of the Pontiff. This gives the impression that this book is an afterthought, a suspicion which is unfortunately borne out by the text. There are some interesting insights about Benedict’s papacy, the Vatileaks affair and the considerations which led to the resignation. However, the chapters which deal with the Emeritus Pope’s childhood, upbringing and his role in the Vatican II, rely heavily on Ratzinger’s previously published memoirs [b:Milestones: Memoirs 1927-1977|468104|Milestones Memoirs 1927-1977|Pope Benedict XVI|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348621807s/468104.jpg|456448], and the questions are more in the line of “requests for clarifications”. Moreover, not having read the said memoirs, I started to get the uncomfortable feeling that I was eavesdropping on a dialogue between friends whom I didn’t know too well. The editing of the book also seems to have been done in a hurry. My hardback edition closes with a detailed note about the font used (Bembo, in case you’re wondering). Ah, you might say, this is a publication for real booklovers! And so it was probably meant to be. Yet, I came across a couple of editing mistakes (questions in regular rather than italic font), some typos and also instances of dodgy translation. Nothing too serious, but not what I expect in such an edition. Despite my reservations, this remains an important document about a figure I admire. It is worth reading, if anything, for the striking image it conveys of the “conservative” Pope as a young theological firebrand reading Sartre, Hesse and Hindu texts and drinking wine with his comrades on the Trastevere. However, I found Light of the World more illuminating (if you’ll excuse the pun), whereas [b:God and the World: A Conversation with Peter Seewald|861455|God and the World A Conversation with Peter Seewald|Pope Benedict XVI|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348905284s/861455.jpg|846885], possibly the best of Seewald’s book-interviews with Ratzinger, provides a characteristically deep and wide-ranging discussion about practically all aspects of the Catholic faith. Last Testament: in His own Words Pope Benedict XVI with Peter Seewald. 2016. Seewald questions His Holiness on a variety of topics: the resignation, his childhood and family, his academic and clerical career, the papacy and the future of the Church. And Pope Benedict answers with his usual thoughtfulness and intelligence. What shines through as always in Pope Benedict’s love of God and the Church. Pearls of wisdom and kindness in every answer. I love this man Pope Benedict made history by being the first Pope in over 700 years to resign from office. The Catholic Church the world over was stunned. Worn out by corruption in the Church and by an endless series of clerical sex scandals, he decided that the resolution of all these problems was outside his power for a man of his age. Last Testament is nearest to an autobiography from the shy and private man who has remained “hidden to the world” in a former convent in the Vatican gardens. He breaks his silence on several issues no reviews | add a review
The story of the first Pope to resign in over 700 years. Pope Benedict made history when he became the first Pope in over 700 years to resign from office, stunning the Catholic Church the world over. At last,Last Testamentis a stunning and frank autobiography from the shy and private man who has since remained cloistered in a former convent in the Vatican gardens. In interviews with Peter Seewald, the Pope Emeritus breaks his silence on corruption within the Vatican, clerical sex scandals, and the challenge of reforming the Papacy. In these interviews, Benedict discusses such wide-ranging controversies as: - The "Vatileaks" case in which his butler leaked some of his personal letters that alleged corruption and scandal in the Vatican - The presence of a "gay lobby" within the Vatican and how he dismantled it - His alleged Nazi upbringing - His attempts at cleaning up the "dirt in the church" (clerical sexual abuse) - The mysterious private secretary "Gorgeous George" On a more personal level he writes with great warmth of his successor Pope Francis, who he admits has a popular touch, a star quality which Benedict himself has lacked. Much controversy still surrounds Pope Benedict's Papacy--in this book he addresses these controversies and reveals how at his late age, governing and reforming the Papacy and particularly the Vatican, was beyond him. No library descriptions found. |
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In the introduction to the book-interview, Seewald explains that Last Testament is based on several conversations held around the time of Ratzinger’s resignation, in preparation for a forthcoming biography of the Pontiff. This gives the impression that this book is an afterthought, a suspicion which is unfortunately borne out by the text. There are some interesting insights about Benedict’s papacy, the Vatileaks affair and the considerations which led to the resignation. However, the chapters which deal with the Emeritus Pope’s childhood, upbringing and his role in the Vatican II, rely heavily on Ratzinger’s previously published memoirs [b:Milestones: Memoirs 1927-1977|468104|Milestones Memoirs 1927-1977|Pope Benedict XVI|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348621807s/468104.jpg|456448], and the questions are more in the line of “requests for clarifications”. Moreover, not having read the said memoirs, I started to get the uncomfortable feeling that I was eavesdropping on a dialogue between friends whom I didn’t know too well.
The editing of the book also seems to have been done in a hurry. My hardback edition closes with a detailed note about the font used (Bembo, in case you’re wondering). Ah, you might say, this is a publication for real booklovers! And so it was probably meant to be. Yet, I came across a couple of editing mistakes (questions in regular rather than italic font), some typos and also instances of dodgy translation. Nothing too serious, but not what I expect in such an edition.
Despite my reservations, this remains an important document about a figure I admire. It is worth reading, if anything, for the striking image it conveys of the “conservative” Pope as a young theological firebrand reading Sartre, Hesse and Hindu texts and drinking wine with his comrades on the Trastevere. However, I found Light of the World more illuminating (if you’ll excuse the pun), whereas [b:God and the World: A Conversation with Peter Seewald|861455|God and the World A Conversation with Peter Seewald|Pope Benedict XVI|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348905284s/861455.jpg|846885], possibly the best of Seewald’s book-interviews with Ratzinger, provides a characteristically deep and wide-ranging discussion about practically all aspects of the Catholic faith.
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