Retrospect on a Pontificate
George Weigel April 23, 2025
During the
March 2013 interregnum following the abdication of Pope Benedict XVI, and in
the conclave itself, proponents of Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, S.J., as
Benedict’s successor described him as an orthodox, tough-minded, courageous
reformer who would clean the Vatican’s Augean stables while maintaining the
theological and pastoral line that had guided the Church since John Paul II’s
election in 1978: dynamic orthodoxy in service to a revitalized proclamation of
the gospel, in a world badly needing the witness and charity of a Church of
missionary disciples.
That was how I had perceived Cardinal Bergoglio when we met
for over an hour in Buenos Aires ten months earlier. During that conversation,
the cardinal expressed gratitude for what I had done to explain John Paul II to
the world in Witness
to Hope. In turn, I told him how taken I was with the 2007 “Aparecida Document,” in which the bishops of Latin America
committed themselves to a future of intensified evangelization. It was, I said,
the most impressive explication of the New Evangelization I had yet read, and I
thanked him for the leading role he had played in drafting
it.
So, when Cardinal Bergoglio was elected pope on March 13,
2013, I anticipated a pontificate in broad continuity with its two
predecessors, if with distinctive personal accents. So, I daresay, did most of
the cardinals who voted to make the archbishop of Buenos Aires the 266th bishop
of Rome. Francis, it was thought, would be a reforming pope who would further
energize the Church for mission and evangelization by straightening out the
Vatican mess that had destabilized the pontificate of Benedict XVI.
That is not quite what transpired over the next twelve
years.
Pope Francis’s evident compassion for the dispossessed and
the poor certainly helped the world understand better that the Catholic Church
follows its Lord in extending a healing hand to the marginalized on the
peripheries of society. His inaugural apostolic exhortation, Evangelii
Gaudium (The Joy of the Gospel), was a ringing affirmation of the
evangelical intention of the Second Vatican Council, in continuity with John
Paul II’s great encyclical Redemptoris
Missio (The Mission of the Redeemer) and the Aparecida Document.
So was the pope’s challenge to young people at his first World Youth Day in
Brazil: Don’t be afraid of trying new ways to bring others to Christ, even if
some of those ways don’t work.
Yet within a year of his election, Pope Francis re-opened
what was thought to be the settled question of whether Catholics in canonically
irregular marriages—who remain members of the worshipping Church—could
legitimately receive Holy Communion. In doing so, he set in motion dynamics
that would become an impediment to the re-evangelization of the secularizing
Western world and sowed confusion where the New Evangelization had seen great
success, not least in sub-Saharan Africa. This pattern of unsettling what was
thought settled continued throughout the pontificate and engaged questions of
the moral life (including the Church’s response to the increasingly bizarre
claims of the sexual revolution), questions of Church order (including who the
Church was authorized to ordain), and questions of Catholicism’s relationship
to world powers eager to bring the Church to heel (as in China).
In late 2016, Pope Francis invited me to what would be my
third and last private audience with him. It was a friendly, candid
conversation, like its predecessors. But when I suggested that the arguments
over Holy Communion for those in irregular marriages, which had intensified
following his apostolic exhortation Amoris Laetitia (The Joy of Love), were an
impediment to the passionate evangelization he had proposed in Evangelii
Gaudium, the pope dismissed my concerns by saying, “Oh, arguments are
fine.” Of course they are, I thought, in many other circumstances. But is it in
the nature of the papacy to unsettle what has been settled?
There remains a great work of reform to be done in Rome:
financially, theologically, and otherwise. Even more fundamentally, however,
the next pontificate must understand what the Francis pontificate seems not to
have grasped: Christian communities that maintain a clear understanding of
their doctrinal and moral identity and boundaries can not only survive the
acids of post-modernity; they have a chance to convert the post-modern world.
By contrast, Christian communities whose self-identity becomes incoherent,
whose boundaries become porous, and who mirror the culture rather than trying
to convert it wither and die.
For as always, the bottom-line question for the Catholic
future is, “When the Son of Man returns, will he find faith on earth?” (Luke
18:8)—the “faith which was once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 1:3),
and none other.
George Weigel’s column “The Catholic Difference” is
syndicated by the Denver Catholic, the official publication of
the Archdiocese of Denver.
https://firstthings.com/retrospect-on-a-pontificate/
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