The following comes from a March 14 posting by George Weigel on National Review Online.
Rome — The swift election of Jorge Mario Cardinal Bergoglio, S.J., as bishop of Rome is replete with good news — and not a little irony. To reverse the postmodern batting order, let’s begin with the good news.
A true man of God. The wheelchair-bound beggar at the corner of Via della Conciliazione and Via dell’Erba this morning had a keen insight into his new bishop: “Sono molto contento; e una profeta” (“I’m very happy; he’s a prophet”). That was certainly the overwhelming impression I took away from the hour I spent with the archbishop of Buenos Aires and future pope last May — here was a genuine man of God, who lives “out” from the richness and depth of his interior life; a bishop who approaches his responsibilities as a churchman and his decisions as the leader of a complex organization from a Gospel-centered perspective, in a spirit of discernment and prayer. The intensity with which Cardinal Bergoglio asked me to pray for him, at the end of an hour of wide-ranging conversation about a broad range of local and global Catholic issues, was mirrored last night in his unprecedented request to the vast crowd spilling out of St. Peter’s Square and down toward the Tiber to pray for him before he blessed them. Gregory the Great, in the sixth century, was the first bishop of Rome to adopt the title Servus servorum Dei (Servant of the Servants of God). That ancient description of the supreme pontiff of the Catholic Church will be embodied in a particularly winsome way in Pope Francis, who named himself for the Poverello of Assisi, the most popular saint in history.
A pope for the New Evangelization. The election of Pope Francis completes the Church’s turn from the Counter-Reformation Catholicism that brought the Gospel to America — and eventually produced Catholicism’s first American pope — to the Evangelical Catholicism that must replant the Gospel in those parts of the world that have grown spiritually bored, while planting it afresh in new fields of mission around the globe. In our May 2012 conversation, the man who would become pope discussed at some length the importance of the Latin American bishops’ 2007 “Aparecida Document,” the fruit of the Fifth General Conference of the Bishops of Latin America and the Caribbean. The essential message of that revolutionary statement (in which there was not the least bit of whining about Protestant “sheep-stealing” but rather a clear acknowledgment of Catholicism’s own evangelical deficiencies in Latin America) can be gleaned from this brief passage, which I adopted as one of the epigrams for my book, Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the 21st-Century Church:
The Church is called to a deep and profound rethinking of its mission. . . . It cannot retreat in response to those who see only confusion, dangers, and threats. . . . What is required is confirming, renewing, and revitalizing the newness of the Gospel . . . out of a personal and community encounter with Jesus Christ that raises up disciples and missionaries.
. . .
A Catholic faith reduced to mere baggage, to a collection of rules and prohibitions, to fragmented devotional practices, to selective and partial adherence to the truths of faith, to occasional participation in some sacraments, to the repetition of doctrinal principles, to bland or nervous moralizing, that does not convert the life of the baptized would not withstand the trials of time. . . . We must all start again from Christ, recognizing [with Pope Benedict XVI] that “being Christian is . . . the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction.”
Here, in a statement that then-cardinal Bergoglio had a significant hand in drafting, is what John Paul II and Benedict XVI have called the “New Evangelization” in synthetic microcosm:
* The Church of the 21st century cannot rely on the ambient public culture, or on folk memories of traditional Catholic culture, to transmit the Gospel in a way that transforms individual lives, cultures, and societies. Something more, something deeper, is needed.
* That “something” is radical personal conversion to the Lord Jesus Christ and an embrace of the friendship he offers every human being: a friendship in which we both see the face of the Father of Mercies (who calls us out of our prodigality into the full dignity of our humanity) and learn the deep truth about our humanity (that it is in making our lives into a gift for others, as life itself is to each of us, that we come into human fulfillment).
* This conversion of minds and hearts builds a community that is unlike any other: a “communion” of disciples in mission, who understand that faith is increased as it is offered and given away to others.
* That communion-community best embodies the truth of the human condition if each individual member of it, and the Church itself, fully embraces the entire symphony of Catholic truth, and in doing so, lives the moral life as a life of growth in beatitude, in compassion for others and in evangelical charity.
* Finally, this communion-community lives “ahead of time,” because it knows, through the Easter faith the Church will celebrate in a few weeks, the truth about how the human adventure will end: God’s purposes in creation and redemption will be vindicated, as history and the cosmos are fulfilled in the New Jerusalem, in the Wedding Feast of the Lamb where death will be no more and every tear will be wiped away (Rev. 21:2–4).
That is the message that Pope Francis will take to the world: Gospel-centered Catholicism, which challenges the post-mod cynics, the metaphysically bored, and the spiritually dry to discover (or rediscover) the tremendous human adventure of living “inside” the Biblical narrative of history.
A reforming pope. One of the principal dynamics of Conclave 2013 was a settled determination among a clear majority of the cardinal electors to see that the next pontificate addresses, in a root-and-branch way, the incompetence and corruption that has made too much of the Roman Curia an impediment to the New Evangelization, rather than an instrument of it — and in doing so, to empower the good people of the Curia to give the world Church the benefit of their remarkable talents. Pope Francis is not going to have a happy time reading the 300-page report on Vatileaks and related Roman messes that is waiting for him in the papal apartment. But he will read it with a reformer’s eye, with the aid of some very shrewd and reform-minded veterans of the Curia, and with a clear understanding from his own experience (as related to me last May) of what went wrong in the management of the Church’s central administrative machinery under the leadership of Benedict XVI’s cardinal secretary of state, Tarcisio Bertone, S.D.B. It may be reasonably expected that real reform, in both curial culture and curial personnel, will follow in due course. The sooner the better, many would say.
A pope in defense of human rights and democracy. Pope Francis has left behind an Argentina in which he was a stern critic of the Cristina Kirchner government’s deepening of that beautiful country’s democracy deficit, and of Madam President’s commitment to a public policy of bread-and-circuses wedded to legally enforced lifestyle libertinism — what Benedict XVI aptly called the “dictatorship of relativism.” At a moment when the momentum of the democratic project in Latin America is flagging (while new opportunities are opening up in places like post-Chávez Venezuela and the inevitable post-Castro-brothers Cuba), the new pope should be able to rally Catholic forces in defense of religious freedom and other civil liberties in a continent where they are now under assault. And if he can do that at home, he can do it throughout the world.
Pope Francis is also deeply committed to the Church’s service to and empowerment of the poor, as he made unmistakably clear in his ministry in Buenos Aires. But those Gospel-based commitments should not lead anyone to think that he will be Paul Krugman in a white cassock. That seems very unlikely.
And now for the ironies.
The 2005 runner-up takes the checkered flag in 2013? Well, not really. Cardinal Bergoglio was used in 2005; he knows precisely who used him and why; and while he is a man of the Gospel who is not looking to settle scores, he is also a man of prudence who knows who his friends, and who his enemies, are. Here’s the story:
In April 2005, the progressive party (which was a real party then) came to Rome after the death of John Paul II thinking it had the wind at its back and clear sailing ahead — only to find that the Ratzinger-for-pope party was well-organized; that Ratzinger had made a very positive impression by the way he had run the General Congregations of cardinals after John Paul II’s death; that he had deep support from throughout the Third World because of the courtesy with which he had treated visiting Third World bishops on their quinquennial visits to Rome over the past 20 years; and that, after his brilliant homily at John Paul’s funeral Mass, he was indisputably the frontrunner for the papacy.
Confronted with this reality, the progressives panicked. Their first blocking move against Ratzinger was to try and run the aged Carlo Maria Cardinal Martini, S.J., emeritus archbishop of Milan, who was already ill with Parkinson’s disease and had retired to the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Jerusalem. The idea was not to elect Martini pope; it was to stop the Ratzinger surge. Then, when Ratzinger blew past Martini with almost 50 percent of the vote on what was assumed to be the “courtesy” first ballot (where some votes are cast as gestures of friendship, esteem, etc.), and subsequently went over 50 percent the following morning, the panic intensified. Martini was summarily abandoned (or may have told his supporters to forget it). The progressives then tried to advance Cardinal Bergoglio — who was very much part of the pro-Ratzinger coalition; who embodied “dynamic orthodoxy,” just like John Paul II and Joseph Ratzinger; who had been persecuted by his more theologically and politically left-leaning Jesuit brethren after his term as Jesuit provincial in Argentina (they exiled him to northern Argentina where he taught high-school chemistry until rescued by John Paul II and eventually made archbishop of Buenos Aires); and who was doubtless appalled by the whole exercise on his putative behalf.
It was a last-ditch blocking move, perhaps constructed around the idea that a Third World candidate like Bergoglio would peel off Ratzinger votes. In any event, it was a complete misreading of the 2005 conclave’s dynamics and a cynical use of Bergoglio, who would almost certainly have been abandoned had the stratagem worked — and it failed miserably.
Thus it may be safely assumed that the coalition that quickly solidified and swiftly elected Jorge Mario Bergoglio as pope in 2013 had little or nothing to do with the eminent cabal that tried to use him in 2005. Pope Francis was elected for who he is, not for taking the silver medal eight years ago.
The first Jesuit pope? Well, yes, in a manner of speaking. Bergoglio is an old-school Jesuit, formed by classic Ignatian spirituality and deeply committed to an intelligent, sophisticated appropriation and proclamation of the full symphony of Catholic truth — qualities not notable for their prevalence among many members of the Society of Jesus in the early 21st century. I suspect there were not all that many champagne corks flying last night in those Jesuit residences throughout the world where the Catholic Revolution That Never Was is still regarded as the ecclesiastical holy grail. For the shrewder of the new pope’s Jesuit brothers know full well that that dream was just dealt another severe blow. And they perhaps fear that this pope, knowing the Society of Jesus and its contemporary confusions and corruptions as he does, just might take in hand the reform of the Jesuits that was one of the signal failures of the pontificate of John Paul II….
— George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow of Washington’s Ethics and Public Policy Center. His new book is Evangelical Catholicism: Deep Reform in the 21st-Century Church.
Read the original posting here.
As usual, Weigel hits the nail on the head. I especially appreciated his comments:
“The Church of the 21st century cannot rely on the ambient public culture, or on folk memories of traditional Catholic culture, to transmit the Gospel in a way that transforms individual lives, cultures, and societies. Something more, something deeper, is needed.”
In other words, no extremists (or any ilk) are able to transmit the Gospel in a manner that truly transforms souls. Something better is needed.
Rodda, Weigel makes sense, but not your “extremists” interpretation.
R.B. says “something better is needed” = Such as RB’s *extremely* disrespectful blogoshere example of calling the new Pope “Frank”. RB (really bad) and not especially wise.
May our new Pope Francis I be given the wisdom of Solomon and the courage of David facing a Goliath of indifference to Almighty God.
His name isn’t really Pope Francis either (that is the English translation) and the Vatican has emphasized that it is not Francis I.
The Latin American Bishops’ comments also struck me as being especially wise:
“A Catholic faith reduced to mere baggage, to a collection of rules and prohibitions, to fragmented devotional practices, to selective and partial adherence to the truths of faith, to occasional participation in some sacraments, to the repetition of doctrinal principles, to bland or nervous moralizing, that does not convert the life of the baptized would not withstand the trials of time. . . .”
Go get ’em, Pope Frank! Start with Bertone and his insiders! You have my prayers…
And the JESUITS!!!
Stop!
There are PLENTY of outstanding, God-fearing Jesuits in this world! Fr. Mich Pacwa on EWTN is a prime example…
Rodda, there have been only three or four outstanding Jesuits ever mentioned on this site … but you claim there are many. Can you come up with a fourth one?
AMEN!!!
Excellent article…It’s good to know more info on our Pope Francis. God bless our Pope!
I hope Pope Francisco will use the dignity of the Chair of Peter to further the faith. In two days he dressed down at the balcony and at his first mass. Eight years of Benedict gone in one day. Benedict waited for an entire year before making changes. Waiting is an excellent tradition for new parish priests in Germany. Learn how the place works first. I understand the excitement of a Spanish-speaking Holy Father but we need a good communicator and administrator, not a public transportation rider.
So, Gratias…let me get this straight…you think wearing a fancy gold tiara and ermine capes and gold vestments are the best way to promote the Gospel of Jesus?
If Pope Francis chooses to be more simple in his approach (like Saint Francis and, for that matter, Jesus himself), why be angry with him?
The “dignity of the Chair of Peter” will come from his ministry, his words, his actions, his example — not from the outfits he wears, or the kind of transportation he chooses.
“…a fancy gold tiara and ermine capes and gold vestments…” would have been a huge turn off. Had Pope Francis done that he would have already been done.
Gratias, I loved the white ermine and red robes that Pope Benedict wore because they reminded me of St. Nicholas, and they were right for him, but let this pope be himself, however he chooses to dress, as long as it is with dignity and decorum.
And, by the way, we do not know if that was real ermine or fake, or ermine from areas where the animals are prolific.Some of the fake fur is very beautiful.
I agree, I love Pope Benedict XVI, and love our new Pope Francisco, and I’m looking forward to follow him…. We at this end can begin by knowing fully the Message of Fatima, Pray the Holy Rosary daily, the Eucharist, Prayer daily…. and Obedience to the Holy Father and Sacrifices…..
PRAYER HAS BEEN THE MAIN OBJECTIVE TO COMMUNICATE WITH GOD……
So, Mackz, you don’t see expressions of oppulent luxury conveying the Gospel of Jesus?! Then you would want Pope Francis to shed all such manifestations of the love of money? Great, so you also favor getting rid of the Vatican bureaucracy and curia, which are de facto expressions of wealth. Or do they all hang out with the pope and help him decide the will of God? Do you ever wonder why a pope needs all sorts of advisors instead of simply opening his ears to God?
Skai, I’m sure if YOU were at the Holy Father’s side, he would require no other advisers.
Gratias I understand your sentiment….being humble is also understanding those things. Benedict is very humble…..and he had no issue wearing them….refusing to accept those roles can also dissolve humility for a moment…..
It’s hard being humble…even when the moment we understand that we are being humble, that is when pride swept in. Pray for our Pope….this is all new to him. God bless Pope Francis.
It reminds me of when John Paul II came in and did things differently-most notably his travel and his wanting to be with people.
Profound insight, Anonymous.
“THOSE JESUITS, THEY SHOULD BE SUPPRESSED AGAIN, THEY WILL BURN IN HELL, HERSEY IS THEIR VOW”!! Those disgusting quotes come from the self righteous far right wing reactionary catholics of this site that hate the SOCIETY OF JESUS, ALL I CAN SAY IS “THOSE JESUITS” have done it again!! I wonder who Leo Cardinal Burke voted for, HIMSELF?!!! It is clear that the Lord continues to bless the SOCIETY OF JESUS with wonderful holy men. Also, the HOLY SPIRIT sure did show up in force for this conclave!!!! As a JESUIT educated man I am very pleased with the choice of the HOLY SPIRIT!!
Before you judge TEM, I would suggest you look deep into your stand against the natural law….being against it is hateful and one does not need to be verbal about it….
There is righteous hatred TEM…I suggest you pray to help you understand what that is. Being against the Natural law that God has placed on mankind is far more hateful than what you quoted as hate. Perhaps it may have been harsh but scandal provokes anger in some….now imagine what happens spiritually when one breaks God’s natural laws….maybe it’s something you may never understand…..but with prayer and love all is possible….
Thomas Edward Miles you are a barrel of contradictions.
TEM, how would you know whether the Jesuits referred to are not traveling to Hell because of their wanton heresy?
The choice, TEM, was that of the cardinals. Possibly God would have preferred someone else.
You’re absolutely right…
One even suggested there is a “righteous hatred” that can be directed towards other humans which is pure blarney!
Christians cannot hate other humans else they are not Christians. It’s that simple…
TEM,
Knowing Cardinal Burke as I do, I would venture to say that he was probably a major supporter of Pope Francis!
May God have mercy on your soul,
Kenneth M. Fisher
Good to hear, Kenneth. So far Pope Francis is saying good things. Maybe the conclave has been picking these “old guys” because they may be more willing to martyr themselves than the younger ones. Also, Pope Francis reportedly stood up in the face of anti-Catholic so-called “she devil” president of Argentina on contraception. This may signal a resolve by this Pope to kick xxx and take names.
The “she devil” President of Argentina? It seems that the idea of women in positions of authority is repugnant to you, Skai.
What is it about “women in authority” that excites the left? Is it the evisceration of the masculinity of men?
The answer, which is found over and over in Holy Scripture, is adultery and idol worship. These are what stops the personality development of those who compose society. The consequence is institutionalized sodomy. It is a very clear and simple to understand formula for those who bother to read the Bible and believe what God says through His Church.
PA, “She Devil” is the public name of the woman president of Argentina. It is what she is known as. For a history expert, you sure don’t have much knowledge of history.
Thanks so much Kenneth. Your opinion matters!
Maybe, TEM, the new Jesuit Pope Francis will hammer the SJ’s for their incredible arrogance. Maybe he will throttle their money machine that seems to have brought the Vatican into the limelight of the secular authorities.
“Bergoglio is an old-school Jesuit, formed by classic Ignatian spirituality and deeply committed to an intelligent, sophisticated appropriation and proclamation of the full symphony of Catholic truth …..”
This describes most of the Jesuits teaching at Loyola High School in the ’62 – ’66 period while I was there. I was shown a glimpse of the newer, ‘progressive’ Jesuits when a priest told our senior Religion class that the only way to commit a mortal sin was to commit it with the primary intent being to hurt God. That bit of absurdity, that license (for lack of a better term) was a strong indication of what’s wrong at USF, LMU, etc. I hope the new pope inspires real reform in his order to make them return to their roots.
OK, so is Pope Francis a programmed Jesuit actor or is he a man of free will who responds to God regardless of what the Jesuit background might be?
Ad Maoiam Dei Gloriam. God help him to achieve it.
Hot air, or hot collars? Can reality surpass hype?
“Pope Francis told cardinals, ‘May God forgive you for what you’ve done'”: Was he joking as spun by media, or did God put the words in his mouth?
CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH:
882 The Pope, Bishop of Rome and Peter’s successor, “is the perpetual and visible source and foundation of the unity both of the bishops and of the whole company of the faithful.” “For the Roman Pontiff, by reason of his office as Vicar of Christ, and as pastor of the entire Church has full, supreme, and universal power over the whole Church, a power which he can always exercise unhindered.”
Mackz, when is the last time you saw a pope exercise “unhindererd” all this power mentioned in CCC #882? Haven’t you wondered why they keep bringing out new catechisms? Or would you wonder why the CCC would say this, when we all know God himself does not treat anyone as a robot? When, that is, did you ever see God make everyone holy? The more I read of the CCC, the more I wonder about what Pope Emeritus said about the “filth” in the Church. Say, Mackz, why don’t you see if #882 is a magisterial statement? Odds are it won’t hold up to the test.
“…Our sociologists of religion tell us that the influence of a parish has a radius of six hundred meters. In Buenos Aires there are about two thousand meters between one parish and the next. So I then told the priests: «If you can, rent a garage and, if you find some willing layman, let him go there! Let him be with those people a bit, do a little catechesis and even give communion if they ask him». A parish priest said to me: “But Father, if we do this the people then won’t come to church”. “But why?” I asked him: “Do they come to Mass now? No”, he answered. And so! Coming out of oneself is also coming out from the fenced garden of one’s own convictions, considered irremovable, if they risk becoming an obstacle, if they close the horizon that is also of God…” — Pope Francis
Good quote, Rodda. Maybe Pope Francis has what it takes to make good things happen.
According to CNSNews, Pope Francis said in his first Mass as pope, “When we profess Christ without the Cross, we are not disciples of the Lord, we are worldly: we may be bishops, priests, cardinals, popes, but not disciples of the Lord,” the pope told the cardinals.” Is this not exactly what Pope Emeritus Benedict said, that bishops must “become holy”? Why are these popes saying this so plainly and clearly, and repeating it? Could it be due to the fact that the bishops and laity are anything but holy? Now, if you do not know what “holy” means, or you assume that you do know what it means, and are puzzled to any degree why they are saying it, then get to the library and read up on it for an hour at least … but know that even that will not do do unless you carry your Cross with you at the same time.
Now we have a Jesuit Pope! Wow! And, he took the name of Francis! Now the Church can go back to its Vatican II roots and concentrate on issues of Social Justice. The naysayers of the Church can learn what it really means to be Catholic. And, that is not the same as wanting the Pope or the Bishops to be vested in the robes of the old church. Maybe Pope Francis will open the window that the “conservatives” have been trying to close. I look forward to an open Church, free of all of the trappings of the middle ages. Maybe now, we can get rid of the Bishop’s coat of arms, twenty foot trains on their robes, etc. You noticed, I’m sure, that he asked the Cardinals to not wear their scarlet cassocks for a mass, but to wear simple black. He eschewed the limo for a simple VW. He paid his own bill at the hotel. He rode on the bus with the other Cardinals. All of these are symbols for our Bishops. Get out of the mansions, stop thinking you are princes when in fact you should be servants. Do away with drivers. Drive your own car. Etc, Etc! Open the books and let the parishioners see the finances. The Pope is one of us. It is time for the Bishops to follow! A new day has dawned.
It can be called “American”, but it’s a European culture with European tyrannical top down master slave social dynamics. The USA rejected this third world social system long ago, but is presently importing it.