Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/147654
Title: Dante and the Ecclesial Paradox : rebuke, reverence, and redemption
Authors: Farrugia, Jonathan
Keywords: Dante Alighieri, 1265-1321
Benedict XV, Pope, 1854-1922
Paul VI, Pope, 1897-1978
Francis, Pope, 1936-2025
Catholic Church -- Pastoral letters and charges
Catholic Church -- Doctrines
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: MDPI AG
Citation: Farrugia, J. (2025). Dante and the Ecclesial Paradox: Rebuke, Reverence, and Redemption. Religions, 16 (8), 951.
Abstract: In the past hundred years, three pontiffs have written apostolic letters to commemorate anniversaries relating to Dante: in 1921, Benedict XV marked the sixth centenary of the death of the great poet; in 1965, Paul VI judged it opportune to write on the occasion of the seventh centenary of his birth; and in 2021, Pope Francis added his voice to the numerous others wishing to honour the memory of the supreme Florentine poet on the seventh centenary of his death. Each letter is a product of its time: one hundred years ago, the Pope—still confined within the Vatican and refusing to recognise the Kingdom of Italy due to the Roman Question—addressed his text “to the beloved sons, professors and pupils of literary institutes and centres of higher learning within the Catholic world”; Paul VI, in full accord with the spirit of the Second Vatican Council and its vision of a Church seeking collaboration with the world, addressed his writing to Dante scholars more broadly, and within the same letter, together with other academic authorities, established the Chair of Dante Studies at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Milan; Pope Francis today, in his outward-facing style of evangelisation, challenges everyone to (re)read Dante, whose teaching remains relevant seven hundred years after his death. Despite the differing political contexts and ecclesial agendas, Benedict XV, Paul VI, and Pope Francis are united on one point: Dante is a Christian poet—critical of the Church, certainly, but loyal to his faith and desirous of a religious institution that is more serious and less corrupt. This brief study presents the homage which the Church, today, seven centuries later, renders to this Poet—now widely recognised as a passionate witness of an arduous and active faith, in pursuit of justice and freedom.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/147654
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacTheCHPPA



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