Pope Benedict XVI Confirmed Dead – In a sad development, Pope Benedict XVI has been confirmed dead.

News about his death was shared on Saturday, December 31, 2022, and his death comes eight years after he resigned as Pope due to health reasons.

His death was made known by The Vatican said in a statement that reads;

“With sorrow I inform you that the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, passed away today at 9:34 in the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican.

Further information will be provided as soon as possible.”

Pope Benedict was among a group of children who presented flowers to Cardinal Archbishop of Munich Michael von Faulhaber when he was five years old.

He later announced that he wanted to be a cardinal after being struck by the cardinal’s distinctive garb. He attended the Aschau am Inn elementary school, which was renamed in his honor in 2009.

His family, particularly his father, despised the Nazis, and his father’s opposition to Nazism resulted in family demotions and harassment.

He was conscripted into the Hitler Youth after his 14th birthday in 1941, as membership was required by law for all 14-year-old German boys after March 1939, but he was an unenthusiastic member who refused to attend meetings, according to his brother.

In November 1945, he and his brother Georg entered Saint Michael Seminary in Traunstein, and later studied at the Ducal Georgianum of the Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich.

They were both ordained on June 29, 1951, in Freising by Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber of Munich, whom Ratzinger had met as a child.

His dissertation on Augustine of Hippo, titled The People and the House of God in Augustine’s Doctrine of the Church, was completed in 1953. His habilitation (qualification for a professorship) was completed at Bonaventure.

It was completed in 1957, and he began teaching at Freising College in 1958. Pope Benedict was deeply influenced by the ideas of Italian German Romano Guardini, who taught in Munich from 1946 to 1951 while studying in Freising and later at the University of Munich.

The intellectual affinity between these two thinkers, who would later become decisive figures for the twentieth-century Catholic Church, was preoccupied with rediscovering the essentials in Christianity: Guardini wrote The Essence of Christianity in 1938, while Ratzinger wrote Introduction to Christianity in 1968, three decades later.

In 1951, he began working as a chaplain at the parish of St. Martin, Moosach, in Munich. Pope Benedict became a professor at the University of Bonn in 1959, with his inaugural lecture on “The God of Faith and the God of Philosophy”.

He transferred to the University of Münster in 1963. During this time, he was a peritus (theological consultant) to Cardinal Frings of Cologne and attended the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965).

He was appointed Archbishop of Munich and Freising on March 24, 1977, and ordained a bishop on May 28, 1977. Cooperatores veritatis (Latin for “cooperators of the truth”), from the Third Epistle of John, became his episcopal motto, a choice on which he commented in his autobiographical work Milestones.

At the age of 78, Benedict XVI was elected as the 265th Pope. Since Pope Clement XII, he is the oldest person to be elected Pope (1730–1740). He was a cardinal for longer before becoming Pope than any other Pontiff since Benedict XIII (1724–1730).

Source: www.ghgossip.com

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