From Yahoo/AP:
“Pope at 85: Gloves come off
as Francis' reform hits stride”
(Pope Francis attends a meeting
with priests, religious men and women, seminarians and catechists, at the
Cathedral of Saint Martin, in Bratislava, Slovakia, Sept. 13, 2021. Pope
Francis is celebrating his 85th birthday Friday, Dec. 17, 2021, a milestone
made even more remarkable given the coronavirus pandemic, his summertime
intestinal surgery and the weight of history: His predecessor retired at this
age and the last pope to have lived any longer was Leo XIII over a century ago.)
Pope Francis celebrated his 85th
birthday on Friday, a milestone made even more remarkable given the coronavirus
pandemic, his summertime intestinal surgery and the weight of history: His
predecessor retired at this age and the last pope to have lived any longer was
Leo XIII over a century ago. Yet Francis is going strong, recently concluding a
whirlwind trip to Cyprus and Greece after his pandemic-defying jaunts this year
to Iraq, Slovakia and Hungary. And he shows no sign of slowing down his
campaign to make the post-COVID world a more environmentally sustainable,
economically just and fraternal place where the poor are prioritized. Francis
also has set in motion an unprecedented two-year consultation of rank-and-file
Catholics on making the church more attuned to the laity. “I see a lot of
energy,” said the Rev. Antonio Spadaro, one of Francis’ trusted Jesuit
communications gurus. “What we’re seeing is the natural expression, the fruit
of the seeds that he has sown.”
But Francis also is beset by
problems at home and abroad and is facing a sustained campaign of opposition
from the conservative Catholic right. He has responded with the papal
equivalent of “no more Mr. Nice Guy.” After spending the first eight years of
his papacy gently nudging Catholic hierarchs to embrace financial prudence and
responsible governance, Francis took the gloves off this year, and appears
poised to keep it that way. Since his last birthday, Francis ordered a 10% pay
cut for cardinals across the board, and slashed salaries to a lesser degree for
Vatican employees, in a bid to rein in the Vatican’s 50-million-euro ($57
million) budget deficit. To fight corruption, he imposed a 40-euro ($45) gift
cap for Holy See personnel. He passed a law allowing cardinals and bishops to
be criminally prosecuted by the Vatican’s lay-led tribunal, setting the stage
for the high-profile trial underway of his onetime close adviser, Cardinal
Angelo Becciu, on finance-related charges.
Outside the Vatican, he hasn’t
made many new friends, either. After approving a 2019 law outlining the way
cardinals and bishops could be investigated for sex abuse cover-up, the past
year saw nearly a dozen Polish episcopal heads roll. Francis also approved term
limits for leaders of lay Catholic movements to try to curb their abuses of
power, resulting in the forced removal of influential church leaders. He
recently accepted the resignation of the Paris archbishop after a media storm
alleging governance and personal improprieties. “In the past year, Pope Francis
has accelerated his efforts at reform by putting real teeth into the church’s
canon law regarding finances,” the Rev. Robert Gahl, director of the Pontifical
University of the Holy Cross’s Program of Church Management, said. “While
celebrating his birthday, Vatican watchers are also looking for more concrete
signs of compliance regarding the pope’s new rules, especially from those who
report directly to him within the Vatican,” Gahl said in an email, noting that
a change in culture is needed alongside Francis’ new policies and regulations.
Despite Francis' tough line, the
pope nevertheless got a round of birthday applause from Holy See cardinals,
bishops and priests who joined him for an Advent meditation on Friday morning.
Later in the day, he welcomed a dozen African and Syrian migrants whom the
Vatican helped resettle from Cyprus. If there was anything Francis did this
past year that riled his critics, it was his July decision to reverse his
predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, and reimpose restrictions on celebrating the
old Latin Mass. Francis said he needed to take action because Benedict’s 2007
decision to allow freer celebration of the old rite had divided the church and
been exploited by conservatives. “Some wanted me dead,” Francis said of his
critics. Speaking with fellow Jesuits in Slovakia in September, Francis
confided that he knew his 10-day hospital stay in July for surgery to remove 33
centimeters (about 13 inches) of his large intestine had fueled hope among some
conservative Catholics eager for a new pope. “I know there were even meetings
among priests who thought the pope was in worse shape than what was being
said,” he told the Jesuits, in comments that were later published in the
Vatican-approved Jesuit journal La Civilta Cattolica. “They were preparing the
conclave.”
That may not have been the case, but if
history is any guide, those priests might not have been wrong to have at least
discussed the prospect. Benedict was 85 when he resigned in February 2013,
becoming the first pope to step down in 600 years and paving the way for
Francis' election. While enjoying robust health at the time, Benedict said he
simply didn’t have the strength to carry on. Before him, John Paul II died at
age 84 and John Paul I died at 65 after just 33 days on the job. In fact, all
20th-century popes died in their early 80s or younger, with the exception of
Pope Leo XIII, who was 93 when he died in 1903. Early on in his pontificate,
Francis predicted a short papacy of two or three years, and credited Benedict
with having “opened the door” to future papal retirements. But the Argentine
Jesuit made clear after his July surgery that resigning “didn’t even cross my
mind.”
That is welcome news to Sister
Nathalie Becquart, one of the top women at the Vatican. Francis tapped her to
help organize the two-year consultation process of Catholics around the globe
that will end in 2023 with a meeting of bishops, known as a synod. Becquart
knows well what the pope is up against as he tries to remake the church into a
less clerical, more laity-focused institution. “It’s a call to change,” she
told a conference this week. “And we can say it’s not an easy path.”
^ Pope Francis has done so many
great things for the Roman Catholic Church and for the world in general. I wish
him a very Happy Birthday and hope he continues his great work. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/pope-85-no-more-mr-080144569.html
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