It is well-known that some segments of the Catholic Church
oppose Pope Francis and his vision of what the Church should be.
Even some cardinals and bishops as well as lay persons have
publicly challenged the pope’s openness to allow Catholics in certain circumstances who have divorced and remarried to receive Holy Communion.
On other fronts some of the hierarchy and even some seminarians object to Pope
Francis’ suggestion that clergy should reject clericalism, careerism, and elitism.
They resent being told they should smell like the sheep. Some Catholic bookstores (even in seminaries) carry few if
any books by or about Pope Francis.
They want him to go away.
They want him to go away.
The Argentine pope looks at the Church not only from the
traditional European point of view but also from a South American perspective. His
theology is influenced by writers whose names are well-known in Europe and
America (Thomas Aquinas, Romano Guardini, Yves Congar, Henri de Lubac) but also
by others scarcely known in the United States or Europe (Amelia Lezcano
Podetti, Alberto Methol Ferre, Guzman Carriquiry Lecour, Lucio Gera).
Massimo Faggioli, professor at the University of St. Thomas
in St Paul (MN), writes that “Pope Francis appears to be motivated by a more
historical and cultural vision, in line with the Latin American theology he
comes from, and by a more spiritual than theological vision for the ministry of
the Roman pontificate” (Pope Francis:
Tradition in Transition, Paulist Press, 2015, p.77).
Faggioli adds, “The shift of emphasis with Bergoglio, from
the theological to the spiritual papacy, has some unknowns for the future structure
of Catholicism” (ibid, p. 78).
Pope Francis is aware of both the task before him and the
obstacles he faces. That may be the reason he continually makes the plea, “Pray
for me.”
Marco Politi, author of Pope
Francis Among The Wolves (Columbia University Press, 2014) recalls a You
Tube skit which shows Francis plodding along with a refrigerator on his
shoulders, a gift for a poor widow. As he walks along he asks his two
secretaries who accompany him (but offering no assistance with the heavy load), “What
door do we deliver it?” One answers, “Number 1321, Your Holiness.” And Francis
asks, “Where are we now?” only to hear, “Number 23, Your Holiness.”
As he trudges along under his heavy burden, a number of
others, including two cardinals, stop him and ask for photos and blessings, but
none of them lends a hand. Finally he arrives at the widow’s house only to hear her refuse the gift because it is the wrong color! “It could have been worse,”
Francis murmurs as he sets off homeward.
Changing metaphors, I recall an old saying that “it’s hard to remember that you
came to drain the swamp when you’re up to your hips in alligators.”
Many of the cardinals who elected him to succeed Pope Benedict
XVI chose Cardinal Bergoglio with the hope that he would reform the Curia, the
Church’s bureaucracy, and rid the Church of the alligators.
He may well be up to his hips in opposition but it is a
fair assessment that he has not forgotten why he came to the swamp. For that reason his many supporters continue to pray for him!
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