++ [ originally posted by isha00 ] ++
That is not the point. The decision was made to respect his suffering, his agony.
Italy is living this situation in a very profound way, the Pope is not regarded only as the successor of Saint Peter here, the bond people have with him is something more deeply than that. That's because of his attention to young people, the way he showed that ill people have still lots to give, his strenght in the last years. He brought something fresh, something new to the church. You have to see the decision under this light.
To make an example I can tell you about me. I'm catholic, but I don't go to church and I'm oftenly critic reagarding the church, but the Pope is for me something special anyway, he teaches people great things with his example (never to give up, for example), even to the non-catholic ones.
That is not the point. The decision was made to respect his suffering, his agony.
Italy is living this situation in a very profound way, the Pope is not regarded only as the successor of Saint Peter here, the bond people have with him is something more deeply than that. That's because of his attention to young people, the way he showed that ill people have still lots to give, his strenght in the last years. He brought something fresh, something new to the church. You have to see the decision under this light.
To make an example I can tell you about me. I'm catholic, but I don't go to church and I'm oftenly critic reagarding the church, but the Pope is for me something special anyway, he teaches people great things with his example (never to give up, for example), even to the non-catholic ones.
...But I still see this decision as hypocritical one. It's just the cultural difference between catholics and lutherans, I didn't reckon that it really is THAT big until now.
