Posted on 01/13/2017 1:27:32 AM PST by BlessedBeGod
Faced with opposition, leaders can try to find common ground with their foes, reaching across the aisle, or they can forge ahead, determined not to be slowed down. The holidays this year seemed to confirm that Pope Francis has chosen door number two.
ROME Faced with opposition, leaders generally have two broad choices. Either they can try to find common ground with their foes, reaching across the aisle, or they can forge ahead, determined not to be slowed down.
You can try a little of both, but in general the one tends to undercut the other, so mixing them is usually an exercise in futility. Which one a given leader chooses normally is a combination of personality, circumstances, and the political lay of the land.
This holiday season, we saw in Pope Francis a leader who seems to have selected door number two a basic damn the torpedoes! stance.
In Rome, the holidays are prime time for a pope. Hes on stage a great deal, and because it tends to be an otherwise slow news period, his messages attract even greater interest.
Highlights include:
Those are nine major moments when the eyes of the world, especially the ecclesiastical part of it, are on the pope. Moreover, they come at a time when people are usually in a festive mood, more inclined to let bygones be bygones, so they create a natural chance for any pontiff to do some fence-mending if he perceives the need.
One might have thought Francis would be thinking along those lines this year, given the tumult unleashed in 2016 over his document Amoris Laetitia, and the perception in Catholicism of a deepening divide between those encouraged by the popes reform-minded, pastoral approach, and those alarmed about what they see as a lack of clarity and resolve in the defense of tradition.
Francis is certainly capable of trying to overcome such divides. In a speech at the close of the 2014 Synod of Bishops, he urged the Church to shun both a hostile rigidity and a false mercy,” in language that drew thunderous applause and was widely seen as an effort to assure both sides in the synod’s debates that the pope understood them.
However, reaching across the aisle wasnt quite the spirit Pope Francis exuded this holiday season. Instead, he appeared to project resolve to keep going.
Things began with his curia speech on Dec. 22. Francis acknowledged his reform efforts have run into opposition, distinguishing between open resistance, which he said is constructive, and hidden and malicious resistance, which he said sprouts in distorted minds and shows itself when the devil inspires bad intentions, often wrapped in sheeps clothing.
Accusing some of your critics of doing the devils work, needless to say, is not exactly the tone of a leader for whom job number one is healing.
(Granted, Francis did say that even malicious criticism merits being heard, listened to and encouraged to express itself, but its unlikely that people in the Church who may have felt targeted by the pope including, perhaps, a few sitting in the room that morning got far beyond being linked with the devil.)
On New Years Eve, as he often has in the past, Francis warned Christians against being narrow-minded, succumbing to sterile nostalgia, and being prisoners of an all-or-nothing attitude.
In itself, such language doesnt represent a dig at anyone, and it fit into the spiritual call to conversion the pontiff wanted to deliver.
Yet since those phrases have become code words in the Amoris debate, often used by the documents supporters to describe the positions of its critics, Franciss homily probably wouldnt have been taken as conciliatory by the opposition especially Catholics whove themselves been called narrow-minded or nostalgic in the heat of an Amoris debate.
Even stronger was the pontiffs vocabulary for the feast of the Epiphany on Jan 6, when he derided the prophets of doom who dont want anything to change, insisting on nothing more than the usual fare.
Again, prophets of doom is something of a loaded phrase in Catholic argot. Its associated with a celebrated speech St. Pope John XXIII gave at the opening of the Second Vatican Council in 1962, and was taken as a reference to conservatives in the Roman Curia who were less than thrilled about the idea of calling a council in the first place.
Since then, its become shorthand for tradition-minded opposition to progressive change in Catholicism, and would have been heard by insiders as a rebuke.
Also striking was the absence anywhere along the way of a papal version of the rhetoric we typically hear from other kinds of leaders seeking common ground there are good people on both sides of the aisle, were all Americans who love our country, I too have made mistakes, etc.
Nor were there any of the gestures a desire for bipartisanship usually breed, such as a conciliatory holiday photo-op or phone call with one of the opposition leaders, at least any that have become public knowledge.
Not only was there no such gesture, but a new front opened up over the holidays in the perceived antagonism between the pope and American Cardinal Raymond Burke, one of the authors of a set of dubia directed at the pontiff about Amoris, in a dispute over the Knights of Malta.
Bottom line: The holidays seemed to offer Pope Francis chances to reach out, and he didnt bite.
So, what’s going on?
One possibility, of course, is that Francis simply is convinced hes on the right course, and doesnt intend to allow what he regards as wrong-headed thinking to drive him off it.
Added to that might be a diagnosis that resistance is being exaggerated, amplified by a social media echo chamber. Certainly most polling suggests Francis still enjoys strong grassroots support, and the longer his papacy goes on, the more the balance among bishops around the world is tipping in favor of his own men.
Perhaps, too, Francis has reached the sobering conclusion that in this period of history, efforts at compromise and bipartisanship just dont work, and to get anything done you have to move forward and not look back. To the extent American politics is any guide, one could understand that view.
Theres also the psychological point that close friends of Pope Francis say hes got a bit of a stubborn streak, and isnt temperamentally inclined to rethink decisions. Theres a Jesuit element too, since Jesuit superiors are expected to consult widely before reaching conclusions but be firm about applying them once they have.
It could also be that the popes reading is that the other side doesnt seem terribly interested in compromise anyway, so slowing down to try to build consensus risks throwing good money after bad.
Whatever the case, what the holiday season appeared to indicate is that Francis is moving full steam ahead, so the short-term forecast could be for additional drama.
Whether that’s healthy is in the eye of the beholder, and perhaps can only be judged with time. What one can say for now is that there are few signs, at least so far, that 2017 looms as the year of a great ecclesiastical Kiss of Peace.
The Church is in such a mess, and I hope it will weather the storm of this Pontificate with the teachings of the Deposit of Faith intact. I’m just holding on to prayer and the sacraments and the truths taught by the Magisterium in the Catechism of the Catholic Church that I signed on to at my conversion and baptism.
Maybe someday we’ll have a Pope who understands how insignificant all these homilies and speeches are, and begins to pay attention to removing heretical bishops and appointing holy ones.
Damn the torpedoes? How Protestant. The Pope anathematized the torpedoes.
Francis’s plan is to let heresy and mortal sin run riot in Chicago, Washington, San Diego, New York, Boston, Newark, Rome, etc., without imposing it elsewhere. Let the dominoes fall over time.
He hates those who are calling for clarity.
Pray that this “papacy” may end quickly. A heart attack would be quick, but might short-circuit the process of correcting Bergoglio’s heresy.
Well Pope Francis is 80 and his mind may not be all there.
He is is up there in years and I do see him stepping down.
Francis’ harsh absolutism toward traditionalists (aka folks who try to follow the teachings of the church) is ironic, since he is all about MERCY.
That might cause him to be unable to write legibly or manage a ping list.
Or even basic HTML.
I am not catholic, but this pope is opening a Palestinian embassy in the Vatican... evil is afoot.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.