A Look Back at Pope Francis' 2016 Highlights
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis is celebrating the 47th
anniversary of his priestly ordination on Tuesday 13th December. He will soon
mark another milestone, when he turns 80 years old on Saturday 17th December.
As this significant year comes to an end, we take a look back at some of the
Pope’s highlights over the past twelve months, which include six overseas
visits and the Extraordinary Jubilee Year of Mercy.
Susy Hodges spoke to John Allen, editor of Crux and
author of nine books on Vatican and Church affairs, about what the legacy of
the Pope’s activities and documents might be at the end of 2016. Mr Allen is
one of the world’s leading Anglophone commentators on the papacy.
Reflecting on the Jubilee Year of Mercy, Allen remarked that
the Pope would probably call it the “peak moment” of his papacy, during which
the message about the importance of mercy in the Church was revivified. He
added that the call for every diocese around the world to spend time carrying
out concrete works of mercy could be thought of as the most significant
“lasting impact” of the Jubilee Year.
When asked about the Pope’s own works of mercy during the
Jubilee, such as meeting with prisoners and those who had left the priesthood,
Allen asserted that the Pope surely aimed to “set a tone” and “recalibrate” the
image of leadership in the Church.
Moving on to speak about the Holy Father’s Pastoral Visits
in 2016, Allen suggested that the most striking might be the shortest; the
one-day trip to the Greek island of Lesbos in April. According to him, this
visit displayed the overarching themes of the Year of Mercy: ecumenism and
reaching out to the peripheries. Pope Francis met with the Ecumenical Patriarch
of Constantinople and the Archbishop of Athens and all Greece during the visit
to the island, and he brought refugees back to the Vatican with him onboard the
papal plane.
Allen went on to call the publication of Amoris
Laetitia, the Pope’s post-synodal apostolic exhortation, “groundbreaking”,
both because the document is “magnificently pastoral”, and because it is
“controversial”. Referring to the question about whether to allow the divorced
and civilly remarried access to the sacraments, Allen suggested that the Holy
Father wants to see how the document would be interpreted around the world.
Allen was also asked about the ongoing reforms in the Roman
Curia, and about the significant anniversary and birthday that the Holy Father
celebrates in 2016. He reflected on the Pope’s “very active” lifestyle,
suggesting that he derives most pleasure from “reconnecting with his priestly
roots”, seeing himself as the “world’s parish priest’.
The entire interview can be heard below. Allen begins by
reflecting on the lasting impact of the Jubilee Year of Mercy.
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