A Report by Robert Mickens. The original can be found here
If you thought Pope Francis had a master plan
for reforming the Catholic Church, you might want to think again.
According to one of the
rising stars among Church historians, Francis is putting the emphasis
elsewhere.
"The Church that
begins the Year of Mercy has been energized by a Jesuit pope who appears much
more intent on effecting an 'aggiornamento' open to the future than someone who
is setting out a long-range plan of 'reforms'," says Massimo Faggioli.
The Italian historical
theologian, who has been teaching the past several years at St Thomas
University in Minnesota, makes this observation: "Francis is an excellent
strategist, but he is no planner."
To some that might sound
strange, even a contradiction.
How can the pope be good at
strategizing, yet have no overall plan or program to reform the Church? What
exactly, then, is he trying to achieve?
Faggioli says it is
"aggiornamento." The concept -- which means, "bringing up to
date" or "up to speed" -- was one of the central goals that Pope
John XXIII envisioned for the Church when he announced his inspired decision to
convene the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965).
Unfortunately, John only
lived long enough to launch the project, having died after the first of what
would eventually be four council sessions. Nonetheless, he has always been seen
as the central figure of that monumental Church event and the driving force
behind the reforms it brought about.
Was it merely by chance or
was it by divine providence that Francis' first 1000 days as Bishop of Rome
should culminate on the 50th anniversary of the close of Vatican II, marked on
December 8 the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception?
That can be debated. But
one thing that cannot be denied is that the current pope chose the joint date
of these two milestones as the occasion to open the Holy Door at St Peter's
Basilica for a yearlong Jubilee of Mercy.
In the bull of indiction
for the extraordinary holy year, Francis stresses the "great need" to
keep Vatican II "alive," because -- among other things -- it was
"a true breath of the Holy Spirit" and it gave the Church a sense of
"responsibility to be a living sign of the Father's love in the
world."
He continues by quoting
Paul VI's address at the close of Vatican II, saying, "A wave of affection
and admiration flowed from the council over the modern world of humanity. …
messages of trust issued from the council to the present-day world. The modern
world's values were not only respected but honored, its efforts approved, its
aspirations purified and blessed. …"
Pope Francis calls the
council as a "new phase" of the Church's history. It is one where the
Church is more fully immersed in the world, in dialogue with its people and the
channel of God's mercy towards sinners, the poor, the weak and the
marginalized.
And as Bishop of Rome he
obviously sees his mission as reviving this project that was begun at the
council, but which was severely crippled by a mentality of retreat, restoration
and self-referentialism.
Not everyone in the Church
shares Francis' vision, as we all know. But according to one Italian bishop,
that's because they are really at odds with the Second Vatican Council.
"Francis has spoken
about a piecemeal World War III and, to use that same image, there is a
piecemeal offensive against Vatican II in which we see the pope as the direct
objective and the council as the real target of the attacks," says Bishop
Domenico Mogavero of Sicily.
"The enemies of
Francis are enemies of the council," he says, according to an article
published over the weekend.
"The criticisms they
are leveling at him are essentially the same that were aimed at John XXIII who,
like him, had the courage and farsightedness to call for a prophetic Church
that could read the signs of the times," the 68-year-old bishop maintains.
Others go even further.
"Francis has more
problems in Rome and at the Vatican than anything he runs into wherever he
travels around the world," notes Francesco Peloso, a longtime Italian analyst
of church matters.
He says that includes even
"the most sensitive and riskiest" issues relating to his own physical
safety and security.
"The traps set by the
Curia may be even more dangerous," Peloso claims in his article from last
weekend.
He says this paradox was
made clear by the pope's recent trip to Africa, which went off without a hitch,
while back at the Vatican opposition has only stiffened to Francis' undeniable
aim of decentralizing the Church.
All this naturally leads us
back to Massimo Faggioli's suggestion that the pope, who will be 79 on Dec. 17,
is a brilliant strategist but a lousy planner. And it forces us to ask some
serious questions, such as: "Does Francis have an outline or model of
where, exactly, he wants to take the Church? Does he have certain goals for
specific, concrete reforms? Or is he only trying to open up a dialogue and
process of group discernment?"
Certainly, he has given
more than a glimpse -- albeit piecemeal, to use that phrase in another context
-- of the type of reformed, renewed and outward-looking Church about which he
dreams. We see it most clearly in the apostolic exhortation, Evangelii Gaudium,
and in the interview with La Civiltà Cattolica (and the other Jesuit
publications) – both of which appeared in 2013. We grasp it in the brief
homilies he offers spontaneously at daily Mass. And we saw a bit more of it
more recently when he offered some profound reflections on the 50th anniversary
of the Synod of Bishops.
So, is there an overarching
plan?
Most likely Pope Francis
knows exactly which reforms he'd like to make, but realizes there are huge
obstacles to achieving them. However, that doesn't mean he will abandon his
goals, just that he will continue to search for creative ways to achieve them.
One thing is absolutely
evident. Like John XXIII he is a man of deep discernment who relies with
unshakeable trust on the guidance and inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
The Jubilee of Mercy,
itself the fruit of such inspiration, could prove to be another monumental moment
in the Church's recent history. And, depending on how the Spirit moves the
pope, it could be bigger than anything anyone has yet imagined.
[Robert Mickens is
editor-in-chief of Global Pulse. Since 1986, he has lived in Rome, where he
studied theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University before working 11 years
at Vatican Radio and then another decade as correspondent for The Tablet of
London.]
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