Here's a more thorough analysis of Pope Francis, who's garnered a lot of positive media attention, primarily because his comments were taken to mean he was a "liberal", e.g. less conservative on abortion and homosexuality. This is written by the director of the Acton Institute's Rome office. Acton is an organization which promotes freedom and economic liberty within the moral vision of Christianity.
Some things in Rome never change. These include the hordes of
tourists cramming St. Peter’s Basilica and the Vatican Museums (or so my
tour guide friends tell me), the slow but steady increase in
professional and academic activity as the month of October approaches,
and political drama involving Silvio Berlusconi. I could also add the
lack of economic growth and generally dire prospects for the future,
unless, that is, you’re catering to the aforementioned tourists. But
somehow Rome still manages to survive.
He knows that Catholic's on the left are excited because they think they've found a kindred spirit in Pope Francis.
Another reliable occurrence is that a papal interview will create a
stir, especially when the Pope wades into matters concerning human
sexuality. This goes double for Pope Francis, whose interview was
simultaneously released in La Civiltà Cattolica and other Jesuit publications around the world, including America magazine,
on September 19. Since then, I’ve heard from friends asking me for my
thoughts about what he had to say, especially regarding those who are
“obsessed” with abortion, contraception and homosexuality. I’ve also
been asked how to interpret some of his statements on the less alluring
but equally important topic of economics, in particular those made
during his September 22 visit to the Italian island of Sardinia. The Catholic left couldn’t be happier, or so it appears.
Pope Francis definitely connects with the common people in ways John Paul and Benedict didn't.
But first some general impressions on the overwhelmingly positive
reception of Pope Francis these past six months. Talking with ordinary
Romans, from the barman to the dry cleaner to the taxi driver, it’s
obvious that Francis has reached the hearts of people in his diocese in
ways that Benedict XVI (certainly) and John Paul II (perhaps) never did.
No doubt some of this is due to Francis’s eschewing of some of the more
monarchical trappings of the papacy and his homespun ways of addressing
the crowds. He can talk about God, the sacrament of confession, and the devil
in ways that people understand, clearly showing a more pastoral than
intellectual approach compared to his immediate predecessors. While
unfair to Pope Benedict as a world-class theologian who expressed
himself in extraordinarily lucid ways, the “new style” seems necessary
when speaking to the unchurched,
a number that has been growing for the past several decades in North
America and Europe. Whether this popular enthusiasm will result in
people practicing the faith more regularly and attempting to live more
Christian lives is another question.
He doesn't think the Pope comments put him at odds with established church teaching though apparently he's open to re-examining the situation of divorced and re-married Catholics.
In fact, it’s this connection between practicing the faith, i.e.
following the rules of the Church regarding, for instance, Sunday mass
attendance and especially sexual morality, and living a Christian life
that seems to have some people perplexed about Pope Francis’s remarks.
On the one hand, he criticizes a “self-referential” and “small-minded”
Church, by which he seems to mean one that overemphasizes its own rules
at the expense of charity and mercy. On the other hand, Francis calls
himself a “son of the Church” who has neither the desire nor the ability
to change Church teaching on fundamental matters. (The one area he has
said he’s willing to explore is the situation of divorced and re-married Catholics, one that John Paul II and Benedict XVI also said may be re-examined.)
This apparent division between the “spirit” and the “law” of
Christian life is indeed a common but serious one that has most likely
contributed to the decline in Church attendance and general practice of
the faith. If I think I can skip Sunday mass for no good reason and
still be “ok” with God, why should I make the effort to go in the first
place? One hour a week for God becomes too burdensome and, from there,
it’s probably one or two steps to cohabitation, contraception, etc. and
before I know it, I’ve joined the ranks of the non-practicing and am on
the verge of being unable to explain why I call myself Catholic at all.
But, hey, I’m sure God will understand, won’t He? Rather than create a
mess by opposing “spirit” and “law,” we ought to be looking for ways to
integrate them.
His message change from his predecessors seems to be more one of emphasis though his statement's on issues abortion have caused concern among some Catholic pro-life advocates.
Much of the controversy over the Pope’s interview reminds me of
several Gospel passages, where Jesus is criticized by the Pharisees for
healing people on the Sabbath, dining with sinners, not condemning the
adulteress, and so on, and especially of the parable of the prodigal son
and the elder brother who’s upset that his father never threw a feast
for him. In all these cases, Jesus emphasizes mercy over justice in
order to draw us closer to Him instead of remaining attached to our
prideful selves. God’s justice would rightly condemn us all, while His
mercy offers us a chance at salvation if we’re humble enough to seek it.
But in no way does Jesus say that justice is useless or unnecessary.
As Pope Francis keeps reminding us, mercy is at the heart of Christ’s
message, yet mercy can’t exist without, nor can it negate, justice.
There’s no sense in forgiving someone for something that’s not wrong.
And if there’s no objective measure of right and wrong, don’t we live
under the “dictatorship of relativism”?
(Yes, that is Pope Francis, not just Pope Benedict, talking.) So while
some dissidents may think Francis wants to get rid of all those
hard-to-keep, outdated rules of Christian morality and thereby eliminate
the concept of sin as such, I’d still bet that he is on the side of “go
and sin no more.” Janet Smith points out
that Pope Francis may have unfairly caricatured those who have
dedicated their lives to fighting abortion and other deeply unjust,
damaging practices in order to bring others to Christ, while
underestimating the timidity of many pastors and bishops on these
issues. This is unfortunate and calls for clarification and action from
the Holy Father. But our real outrage should be directed to others who seek to turn Church teaching on its head.
He doesn't seem to be an economic conservative though that really hasn't be a moniker of past popes. They really haven't gotten into economic theory. Pope Francis experience of capitalism is the crony capitalism of Argentina.
Church teaching is clear when it comes to non-negotiable issues such
as abortion. On prudential matters such as the best way to create jobs,
faithful Catholics can and often do disagree. So when the Pope told workers in Cagliari
the indignity of unemployment “is the result of a global decision, of
an economic system which leads to this tragedy; an economic system
centered on an idol called ‘money,’” we may respectfully raise a few
basic economic questions. There’s no question that money is actually an
idol for far too many of the rich and powerful, with disastrous
consequences for themselves and the poor who are striving to improve
their living conditions. These are primarily the rich who hoard their
money and capital for themselves, a.k.a. misers. But how about the rich
and powerful who want to invest in new but unproven ventures? If we want
jobs for the poor so that they can have the dignity of work, how can we
do this without investments of money and capital? Don’t the poor need
capital and therefore capitalists just as much, if not more, than the
idle rich? As other popes have said, exclusion from the global economy is the main cause of poverty in the modern world, so what we actually need is more, not less, business.
Pope Francis undoubtedly believes what he says about the indignity of
work and the idolatry of money. Being more familiar with Argentina than
anywhere else, he has seen first-hand what “crony capitalist”
arrangements that lock out competition, and hence new opportunities that
could benefit the poor, look like. An economic system not based on
money and capital would have to be based on something else, such as a
barter or feudal economy. These alternatives may or may not claim to
place “human beings at the center,” but one thing they do not do is
offer the poor the same chance to become non-poor and even wealthy.
Instead of blaming the instrument of money, I would prefer encouraging
Christian capitalists and businesspeople to do their jobs well because
by doing so, they make possible the kinds of jobs that Pope Francis
wants for the people of Cagliari and beyond.
In the context of speaking about his authoritarian tendencies as
provincial general of the Jesuits, Pope Francis admitted he “has never
been a right-winger.” If by right-winger, he means forcing others to do
what he says in the name of social justice, he’s describing a Peronista,
which no sane person should want to be. Outside of Latin America,
however, there’s another kind of “right-winger” who promotes economic
freedom while also believing that Catholic teaching, moral and
otherwise, is true. I should know because I am one. Perhaps the
confusion has to do with how one understands the admittedly complicated
relationship between human freedom, political order, and God’s plan for
each and every one of us. Maybe political terminology dating from the
French Revolution is the problem. Or can’t Catholics be truly liberal, after all?
I suspect the ultimate outcome of his comments, his posture on the issues and his actions means a public repositioning of the church in the public mind without any change in substance on any major issues. In the long run, that will make true liberals more concerned.
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