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'Francis
Revolution' Rolls on in Both Symbols and Substance
By John L. Allen Jr. National Catholic Reporter
January 29, 2014
http://ncronline.org/news/vatican/francis-revolution-rolls-both-symbols-and-substance
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Pope Francis kisses a child
during a pastoral visit to the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of
Jesus in Rome Jan. 19. (CNS/Reuters/L'Osservatore Romano)
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Vatican
City
In ways both substantive and symbolic, the "Francis
revolution" rolled on in January with personnel shuffles, policy
signals and gestures intended to reinforce the pope's vision of a
more merciful church devoted to the world's peripheries.
One eyebrow-raising move came Jan. 15, when Francis
announced an overhaul of the council of cardinals responsible for
supervising the Institute for the Works of Religion, better known
as the Vatican bank.
The bank has long been a magnet for scandal. Francis
removed all but one of the five cardinals appointed to govern the
bank by Pope Benedict XVI shortly after his resignation
announcement in February 2013.
Most notably, Francis ousted Italian Cardinal Tarcisio
Bertone, the former secretary of state, whose perceived inability
to manage the inner workings of the Vatican helped fuel an
anti-establishment mood in last March's papal election.
French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the
Pontifical Commission for Inter-religious Dialogue, is to remain
on the panel, while the new members are Italian
Cardinal-designate Pietro Parolin, who replaced Bertone as
secretary of state; Cardinal Christoph Schönborn of Vienna;
Cardinal Thomas Collins of Toronto; and Spanish Cardinal Santos
Abril y Castilló, archpriest of the Basilica of St. Mary Major.
All five are perceived to have Francis' trust, and both Schönborn
and Collins have a record of calling for reform in bank
operations.
While the overhaul represents a break with the past,
sometimes change is measured as much by what doesn't happen as
what does. Two bits of Vatican silence in January seemed to
illustrate the point.
As a sensational criminal investigation of a financier
with links to the country's intelligence services unfolded in
Italy, Vatican officials held their fire despite charges of
corruption within the Camillian religious order and allegations
that financier Paolo Oliverio cultivated questionable
relationships with various Vatican departments and cardinals.
Officials also kept mum on a case involving Msgr. Nunzio
Scarano, a former Vatican accountant dubbed "Monsignor 500 Euro"
for flashing large bank notes, who faced new criminal charges
Jan. 21 related to money-laundering. He was originally arrested
last June for alleged involvement in a scheme to smuggle $30
million in cash on behalf of a family of shipping magnates.
Not long ago, officials might have asserted sovereignty
or complained of media and judicial persecution. This time,
virtually the only comment came from a Vatican bank spokesman to
NCR saying that Scarano's accounts were frozen in July
when the Vatican launched its own criminal inquest.
January also brought signals that policy shifts may be
in the offing.
Speaking to the Italian Catholic journal Jesus,
Bishop Marcello Semeraro confirmed that Francis wants to
recognize greater powers for bishops' conferences, including
"authentic doctrinal authority." That possibility was first
raised in Francis' November document Evangelii Gaudium.
Semeraro, bishop of the Italian diocese of Albano, was
named by Francis as the secretary of his Council of Cardinals in
April. Semeraro also dismissed criticism of the decision to
circulate a public questionnaire ahead of October's Synod of
Bishops on the family.
"The beauty of this moment is that the church feels
encouraged to ask questions," he said. "The church doesn't just
have answers; it also needs to ask questions."
Francis sent a signal of sensitivity to Jewish concerns
ahead of his May trip to the Holy Land by telling Rabbi Abraham
Skorka of Argentina, an old friend with whom the future pope
collaborated on a 2010 book, that he's willing to delay sainthood
for Pope Pius XII until Vatican archives from the World War II
era are completely open.
The pope moved to heal wounds inside the church by
sitting down Jan. 18 with 101-year-old Arturo Paoli, a member of
the "Little Brothers of the Gospel" order. Paoli spent 45 years
in Latin America and was one of the forerunners of liberation
theology, long viewed with ambivalence in Rome.
Francis also continued to engage major world concerns,
convening a Jan. 13 summit on Syria that broke with U.S. policy
by calling for the inclusion of Iran in the Jan. 22 "Geneva II"
summit. The pope's cachet has bred an expanding list of world
leaders beating a path to his door, including President François
Hollande of France Jan. 24, and the White House has announced
that U.S. President Barack Obama will arrive March 27.
Two other gestures seemed calculated to underscore a
message of mercy.
On Jan. 12, Francis baptized 32 children in the Sistine
Chapel, including a girl whose parents are married civilly but
not in the church. It was apparently the first time a child from
an "irregular" marriage was baptized in a public papal Mass.
A week later, Francis visited Rome's Basilica of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus, described by its pastor as "a periphery in
the center."
Located near Rome's main train station, the parish has a
large homeless and migrant population. Among the guests of honor
at Mass was an elderly homeless woman, who was allowed to bring a
shopping cart with her few possessions into the church.
Finally, there was an indication that Francis' concern
for the poor is filtering down to the next generation of clergy.
On Jan. 10, students at the Pontifical Urbaniana
University, which draws seminarians from the developing world,
organized a funeral for a 63-year-old homeless man who had died
of cold in the area around the Vatican. It was celebrated by
Polish Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, who's responsible for the
pope's personal charitable initiatives and who's become a Roman
celebrity.
"I'm a bishop of the streets," Krajewski said. "It's
normal that I would do this."
The fact that "bishops of the streets" have risen to
such renown is, arguably, yet another echo of the "Francis
effect."
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