
In October 2013, I wrote one of the more challenging pieces of my nearly 30 years as an author: a CWR editorial titled “Pope Francis: The Good, the Baffling, and the Unclear”. I won’t repeat much of it here; rather, I’ll just point to the end, where I wrote:
The bottom line, in many ways, is that the Church is not the pope’s to remake or revise or change. The role of the pope is more modest (which is not to say it is not divinely ordained or unimportant), as one pope explained not long ago: “The Successor of Peter, yesterday, today and tomorrow, is always called to strengthen his brothers and sisters in the priceless treasure of that faith which God has given as a light for humanity’s path.” Yes, that pope was Francis, in Lumen fidei, his encyclical on faith.
A great deal of ecclesial water passed under the bridge between then and now. I’m still convinced there was much good in the late pontiff’s reign, but also a great deal that was baffling and unclear. Further, there was, over the years, far too much that was harmful to the Church and her witness, as well as to the world at large.
Alas, I think Pope Francis often failed to strengthen his brothers and sisters in the Catholic Faith, and I believe attempts to ignore that point are not helpful in the least. I plan to write more about that point and related matters in the near future.
But I first wanted to hear from others. The following nine authors are serious and learned Catholics who have thought much and deeply about the thought and actions of Pope Francis. They do not always agree, and I think that is a good thing. They don’t profess to have all the answers, which is also a good thing.
O God, faithful rewarder of souls,
grant that your departed servant Pope Francis,
whom you made successor of Peter
and shepherd of your Church,
may happily enjoy for ever in your presence in heaven
the mysteries of your grace and compassion,
which he faithfully ministered on earth.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Pax Christi,
Carl E. Olson
Editor, Catholic World Report
Larry Chapp: “The disconnect between papal words and papal actions”
With the rise of modern media, the public footprint of the papacy has grown exponentially. This has been a mixed blessing. On one hand, it has increased the ability of the papacy to disseminate in a global instant its teachings and the overall optics of every papal trip and gesture. On the other hand—paradoxically, since it is the very nature of the new forms of media to reduce everything it touches into easily digestible “news of the day” tidbits—the various pronouncements from the Vatican have also been reduced to what media folks think will “sell”.
Pope Francis, depending on one’s theological perspective, was either woefully deficient in understanding this basic sociological fact, which caused him to fall victim to constant misinterpretation, or a master manipulator who counted on this media drift into populist binaries in order to bypass the entire ecclesial apparatus and speak directly to “the people” in a manner they could understand.
In my opinion, the answer is the latter, which complicates any assessment of his lasting legacy.
I think we see evidence of this papal strategy in the various performative contradictions of this papacy, which seem so vexing at first glance, but make sense as attempts to change the Church by first changing the cultural narrative about her. Specifically, the contradiction to which I am referring is that there was a disconnect (to put it mildly) between what Pope Francis taught on an official level and what he did in his various actions–actions including personnel decisions but also his many “off the cuff” remarks. Those remarks, in my view, were more strategically calculated than we think and part of an overall attempt to guide the media narrative precisely where he wanted it to go.
On the one hand, his official teachings in magisterial documents have all been capable of orthodox interpretations, despite what his putatively traditionalist detractors may claim. One can quibble about his change to the Catechism on the death penalty (we can quibble because after all, what does “always inadmissible” mean?) or his approach to communion for the divorced and civilly remarried (can long-standing church teaching really be changed by an ambiguous footnote in a single document?). But those very quibbles arose because of ambiguities in expression and therefore are not, in my view, evidence of explicit papal heterodoxy.
On the other hand, in his actions governing the Church, we see a decided privileging of personnel and policies that run directly contrary to those same teachings of the Church that the pope has upheld.
For example, on just the issue of homosexuality and despite his magisterial teachings on the topic, he went out of his way to promote priests, bishops, and even cardinals who have publicly dissented from Church teaching on that issue.
Furthermore, even though he has upheld the Church’s official moral theology in his teachings on matters relating to marriage and the family and sexuality, he nevertheless purged the John Paul II Institute on Marriage and the Family in Rome of most of its faculty. Those faculty members who taught in line with Veritatis Splendor were replaced with moral theologians of a more “proportionalist” mentality. He did the same to the Pontifical Academy for Life. And early in his papacy, Pope Francis praised the moral theology of Bernard Häring, one of the earliest theologians in the modern era to espouse a version of proportionalism. Häring, not insignificantly, was a very public dissenter from both Humanae Vitae and Veritatis Splendor, and an overall critic of almost the entire edifice of traditional Catholic moral theology. Yet Pope Francis thought he was a role model for how to do moral theology properly.
Actions speak louder than words. What the actions of Pope Francis indicate to me is a pope who wanted to change the Church in controversial ways, but to do so in a manner that did not rip the Church apart. Therefore, what he could not accomplish via papal fiat without creating a schism, he decided to pursue via a kind of ecclesial drift, but a drift that was engineered to go in the desired direction.
We see evidence of this preference for directed drift in the fact that Pope Francis, though a proponent of the “theology of the people” (and, therefore, was a bit of an ecclesial “populist”), nevertheless strongly opposed right-wing populism, in both secular politics and the Church. Therefore, when he said of the Church that “everyone is welcome” (Todos! Todos!), we must remember that his actions toward Catholics who espoused traditional moral theology and liturgy betrayed a decided slant in just who this “todos” included.
Along these lines, when one looks at his many statements disparaging theology and contrasting it with the simple faith of the people, and his upholding the truth of doctrines but then undermining them by characterizing them as lifeless abstractions and mere ideals that are at odds with “mercy”, and his constant references to the need for accompaniment in a manner that veered away from the law of gradualism and into the gradualism of the law, a picture begins to emerge. That picture is of a pope who pursued a pastoral strategy of valorizing the sentiments and experiences of “common people” in a direction emphasizing a moral and doctrinal minimalism centered around a “fundamental option” moral theology, which downplayed the importance of individual moral acts or doctrinal beliefs.
But those who want to continue to focus on a maximalist approach to faith and morals, and who want to valorize the heroism of the call to sanctity in that same “everydayness”, were often heavily criticized by Pope Francis as elitist, out of touch, pharisaical “backwardists” (indietrists).
This then brings me back to where I began. I think the performative contradictions of this papacy were the mark of a pope who learned well after Vatican II that, as even Pope Benedict XVI acknowledged, the Council of the media turned out to be the real Council, and the historical Council as such became an unreal abstraction. Thus, we see that the famous “spirit of Vatican II” emerged as the generative ecclesial engine that has driven the past 60 years of Church life.
I think that Pope Francis, in his clever manipulation of media words and images, sought to “continue the revolution” via the path of a kind of “theology of the people” to which his frequent media statements were geared. Statements such as “Who am I to judge?” pass from being an off-the-cuff remark of no magisterial significance to something of deep ecclesial weight when, after the remarks were spun in the media in a pro LGBTQ+ way, the Vatican remained silent. Which, of course, implies that the media spin, whether planned in advance or not by the Vatican, became the truth of what those words meant.
In my view, Pope Francis was not a heretic as his most fevered critics claim. But with all due respect for him and with sincere filial love for his soul, which I pray is with our Lord, his pastoral strategy was a recipe for institutional suicide. And that is something, perhaps, that is worse than heresy.
Larry Chapp, Ph.D., is a retired professor of theology who taught at DeSales University for twenty years. He received his doctorate from Fordham University in 1994 with a specialization in the theology of Hans Urs von Balthasar.
David Deane: “A figure too often fighting ghosts of the past”
The hours following His Holiness’ death were intense. I was more emotional and far sadder than I expected to be. I loved him: as Pope, and as the frail, fragile, beautiful, and earnest man he was. I’ve been praying for him, but stepping back from the sadness to do interviews with the media, I’ve been asked the same question again and again: “How will Pope Francis be remembered?”
These interviews are short, so there’s no time for a proper answer. A proper answer would begin with, “Remembered by whom?”
In secular media, Pope Francis was the everyman hero who stepped out of the TV shows and movies of the late 20th century. He wasn’t bound by stuffy convention; his speech, like his shoes, was plain and unpretentious. He stood up to the establishment and blew the minds of the ossified old curia in Rome. He scandalized the rigid pearl-clutchers with his unconventional ideas. In the secular imagination, he was Bruce Willis in Moonlighting, or Robin Williams in Good Morning, Vietnam.
To Catholic conservatives, he was the embodiment of 1980s theology and Church culture, resurrected like a character in a bad soap opera, dead in season 3, inexplicably back in season 4, stepping out of the shower like Bobby Ewing in Dallas. They saw his ‘vibe-first’ theology as unclear, but implemented with an iron fist, clamping down on the Latin Mass, silencing critics. His humility struck them as performative; his anti-clericalism, paradoxically, as papal authoritarianism.
The first group may remember Francis as the West remembers Mikhail Gorbachev, beloved reformer and rebel, the man who, intentionally or not, collapsed the old regime. The second group may also see him as a Gorbachev figure, but like the last loyal Bolsheviks, they regard him as someone who sought the approval of the Western liberal elite, even if it meant surrendering the Church’s identity to gain it.
My point is twofold. First, how Francis is remembered will depend entirely on who is doing the remembering. And secondly, Pope Francis, from the very beginning, seemed like a dated figure. The problems he identified in the Church were often ghosts from another era. His solutions felt like they belonged not to the second decade of the 21st century, but to the final quarter of the 20th. He was a man shaped by the 1980s. He saw the curia and the rigid ideologues he opposed as the two old white millionaires from Trading Places. He saw himself as Eddie Murphy.
Francis attacked a starched, arrogant, joyless Church, one whose priests harangued people with long sermons. I’m 51 years old. That Church is not the one I knew. As a child of the ’80s, I went to Mass with woolly-jumper-wearing priests and folk choirs who, two decades earlier, had swayed to the music of Peter, Paul, and Mary. That Church wanted to smell like the sheep; it wanted to move past the starched, arrogant, joyless Church of the past. It was, in essence, the Church Pope Francis longed for—the very Church I grew up in, in Ireland, in the 1980s.
So too with his theology—Francis often felt decades out of date. He critiqued theology rooted in abstract principles and railed against an all-male theological establishment. But theology hasn’t been an all-male discipline in a very long time. His war on abstract theology felt at least fifty years late. If you survey theological departments across the West, Francis, as ever, seemed to be preaching to (or “journeying with”) the already converted.
The arrogant Church he attacked had largely disappeared before his papacy began. The sexual abuse crisis, and the resulting public revulsion, left many priests too cowed to critique anyone from the pulpit. I’ve attended Sunday Mass in Ireland where priests, anxious not to upset or delay a restless congregation, skipped the homily entirely. In places like Canada, where disgust with the Church is so visceral that dozens of churches have been burned to the ground, Francis’ critique of clerical arrogance has been egregiously out of step.
Perhaps his war on clericalism was directed elsewhere. But here, too, there’s danger: the risk of imposing a Western lens on the Global South, assuming those churches are “where we were” fifty years ago. It’s a quasi-colonial posture, one that borders on the racist, seeing non-Western churches as merely our theological and cultural past.
Even his theological language, his deep Marian devotion, and his frequent invocations of Satan have all felt more like the lexicon of the past than the present. He seemed shaped by a particular time and place, and he stayed there, bearing both the blessings and burdens of Argentine Catholicism from six decades ago. Among the blessings was surely his Marian piety, more explicit, more intense, and more real than in any pope of the last hundred years.
Among the burdens was a desire to push the Church “forward” into a vision that, in truth, had already arrived in the 1980s: a Church stripped of liturgical richness that it deemed pompous and pretentious; a theology not critical of modernity but formed by it, adopting its assumptions, then adding, with a hint of biblical justification, “us too!” A Church that broke with generations past –those portrayed as indifferent to the poor, inward-looking, clericalist–and embraced a Church with the smell of the sheep.
But this Church was a novelty only in the imagination of Pope Francis. I only experienced a Church that didn’t smell of the sheep in movies, a sinister Church of actors with British accents. I heard about it in stories told by older clerics or lapsed Catholics, stories about the bad old days of an arrogant Church—and I believed these stories. Like the stories I heard as a child about banshees, these stories shook and scared me, but they referred to a past that, if it ever existed, was long gone by the time I was around.
Wider secular society loved him. Progressive culture, by its nature, is often retrograde. Consider how the French Revolution idealized ancient Rome. Its enemies exist as much in the imagination as in reality. Cultural artifacts like Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale or Netflix’s Adolescence are the “evidence” for things they oppose. Echoing this in style and content, Pope Francis’s progressivism made him a beloved figure in the wider culture. This is not a bad thing. The record numbers of people received into the Church just two days ago at the Easter Vigil may never have had Catholicism within their “Overton Window” were it not for the “Francis Effect.”
But these same people long for something radically different from wider progressive culture. They long for something eternal, something real and true. Therefore, in order to build on things Pope Francis made possible, the Church will need a very different kind of leadership, one for the second decade of the 21st century, not the eighth decade of the 20th century.
David Deane is Associate Professor of Theology at the Atlantic School of Theology (Halifax, Nova Scotia). His most recent book is The Tyranny of the Banal (Lexington Books/Fortress Academic, 2023).
Robert Fastiggi: “A very human and often misunderstood pope”
In n. 204 of his Major Catechism (Catechismo Maggiore) of 1905, Pope St. Pius X raises the question: “Come deve comportarsi ogni cattolico verso il Papa” [How should each Catholic behave towards the Pope?]. He replies: “Ogni cattolico deve riconoscere il Papa, qual Padre, Pastore e Maestro universale e stare a lui unito di mente e di cuore” [Each Catholic should recognize the Pope as Father, Shepherd, and universal Teacher and be united with him in mind and heart].
I begin my reflections on the papacy of Pope Francis with these words of Pius X as a Catholic who has been teaching theology in Catholic institutions of higher education since 1985. During my 40 years of teaching, I’ve done my best to be united with three popes—John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis—in mind and heart. It would be facile to dismiss the words of St. Pius X as “Ultramontanism” or “hyper-papalism.” It would likewise be facile to qualify Pius X’s response with the proviso: “as long as the Pope is teaching according to Catholic tradition.” It is Catholic dogma that “the Roman Pontiff is “the father and teacher of all Christians; and that to him, in the person of Blessed Peter, was given by our Lord Jesus Christ the full power of feeding, ruling, and governing the whole Church” (Council of Florence, Decree for the Greeks, A.D. 1439; Denz.-H, 1307).
Popes are human. They can sin, make prudential mistakes, and be negligent in their duties. In their ordinary Magisterium, they can teach something that is subject to future qualification, development, or even reversal. Despite the human limitations of each Roman Pontiff, we believe that
Divine assistance is also given to the successors of the apostles teaching in communion with the successor of Peter, and in a particular way, to the Roman Pontiff as Pastor of the whole Church, when exercising their ordinary Magisterium, even should this not issue in an infallible definition or in a “definitive” pronouncement but in the proposal of some teaching which leads to a better understanding of Revelation in matters of faith and morals and to moral directives derived from such teaching (Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Donum Veritatis, 1990, n.17).
The Church holds that “magisterial decisions in matters of discipline, even if they are not guaranteed by the charism of infallibility, are not without divine assistance and call for the adherence of the faithful” (Donum Veritatis, n.17).
I bring forward these opening points to put into context my evaluation of the pontificate of Francis. During his twelve years in office, I’ve tried to look upon him as “the pope chosen for us” (electum nobis) for whom the Church prays at the Good Friday liturgy. God, in his providence, has chosen to lead his people through imperfect instruments. Both Moses and David committed murder; the first pope, St. Peter, denied our Lord three times. The frailty of God’s chosen leaders is a reminder “that the transcendent power belongs to God and not to us” (2 Cor 4: 7).
As the pope “chosen for us,” Francis brought forward some important initiatives for which I am extremely grateful. In particular, I am grateful for the special years he proclaimed: the 2015–2016 Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy, which coincided with the 2014–2016 Year of Consecrated Life; the 2020–2021 Year of St. Joseph; and the current Jubilee Year of Hope. These special years have been accompanied by some excellent documents: the papal bull, Misericordiae Vultus (April 11, 2015) for the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy; the apostolic letter, Patris Corde, for the Year of St. Joseph; and the bull, Spes Non Confundit (May 9, 2024) for the 2025 Ordinary Jubilee of Hope. As Catholics, we have all been enriched by these papal reflections on mercy, the importance of St. Joseph, and the need for hope.
As the Roman Pontiff, Francis has left the Church with a collection of important documents that will be read and appreciated for many years to come. His first encyclical, Lumen Fidei (2013) was originally drafted by Benedict XVI so it should be considered a co-authored encyclical. It contains some deep insights into the life of faith within the Church and the dialogue between faith and reason. Francis’s second encyclical, Laudato Si` (2015), is a sustained reflection on the earth as our common home. It is grounded in Scripture and a sound theology of creation. His third encyclical, Fratelli Tutti (2020), takes up the themes of human fraternity and peace, and it stands in the great tradition of Catholic social teaching going back to Leo XIII. Finally, there is Dilexit Nos (October 24, 2024), Pope Francis’s encyclical on devotion to the Sacred Heart, which traces devotion to the Heart of the Savior from Scripture to recent times. In Dilexit Nos, Francis builds upon prior papal encyclicals on the Sacred Heart by Leo XIII (Annum Sacrum, 1899), Pius XI (Miserentissimus Redemptor, 1928) and Pius XII (Haurietis Aquas, 1956).
Although Pope Francis was considered “progressive” by many, his forms of piety were very traditional. In addition to his devotions to St. Joseph and the Sacred Heart of Jesus, he had a profound devotion to the Virgin Mary. Before and after his pastoral visits abroad, he would pray before the Marian icon, Salus Populi Romani (Health of the Roman People), located in the Basilica of St. Mary Major in Rome. His choice to be buried in this Basilica is an expression of his deep Marian piety. When speaking to a group of young people in Rome on June 29, 2014, Pope Francis said: “A Christian without the Madonna is an orphan.” Pope Francis also recognized the central role of Mary in the work of redemption. In his homily of January 1, 2020, he stated that “there is no salvation without the woman” (non c’è salvezza senza la donna).
In addition to his four encyclicals, Pope Francis published numerous apostolic exhortations and letters. Unfortunately, many of his apostolic letters never received much publicity. They deserve, though, to be read and better known. I especially appreciate his apostolic letters on the importance of the Christmas scene (December 1, 2019); on St. Jerome (September 30, 2020); on Dante Alighieri (March 25, 2021); on St. Francis de Sales (December 28, 2022); and on Blaise Pascal (June 19, 2023). Several of Pope Francis’s apostolic exhortations, such as Evangelii Gaudium (2013) and Amoris Laetitia (2016), are fairly well-known. More attention, though, should be given to Gaudete et Exsultate (2018) on holiness in today’s world; to Christus Vivit on young people; and to C’est la confiance (2023) on the 150th anniversary of the birth of St. Thérêse of Lisieux.
As he would be the first to admit, Pope Francis was not a perfect pope. During his 12 years as Pontiff, certain actions and documents of his received vigorous criticisms. His mistakes, I believe, were made without any ill intent. For example, it was a mistake for him to refer to the wooden statues thrown into the Tiber River as “pachamamas.” The Holy Father was only using the name for the statues that is employed by the Italian media. His mistake, however, led to a frenzy of accusations of idolatry that allegedly took place during an October 4, 2019, prayer service held in the Vatican Gardens. The narrative of “pachamama worship” has been thoroughly refuted, but some continue to use this accusation as a hammer to attack the Francis pontificate.
Catholics certainly have the right and sometimes the duty to express their opinions on matters that pertain to the good of the Church (see Lumen Gentium, 37 and canon 212§3 of the 1983 CIC). In my opinion, though, many critics of Francis went overboard. Certain criticisms challenged not only Pope Francis but papal authority itself. Now is not the appropriate time to rehash the controversies over chapter 8 of Amoris Laetitia, the inadmissibility of the death penalty, Traditionis Custodes, etc. I believe an orthodox and benevolent interpretation can and should be given to all of the teachings and decisions of Pope Francis.
In saying this, I am not “pope-splaining.” I am expressing my honest opinion after careful reading, study, and prayer. As with John Paul II and Benedict XVI, I’ve tried my best to be united in mind and heart with Pope Francis. I agree with what St. Pius X taught in 1905 about how Catholics should behave towards the pope. I hope to have the same unity of heart and mind with whoever is the pope chosen for us in the upcoming conclave.
Dr. Robert Fastiggi, Bishop Kevin M. Britt Chair of Dogmatic Theology and Christology, has been at Sacred Heart Major Seminary since 1999.
John Grondelski: “A pontificate of ambiguity, contradiction, and confusion”
John Donne insisted that “each man’s death diminishes me,” something especially true for Catholics when that man is the one we call “Holy Father.” As the visible head of the Church on earth, he plays a unique role in the lives of Catholics. But while de mortuis nil nisi bonum remains good counsel, truth also compels me to offer fainter praise for Pope Francis.
Criticism of a just-dead pontiff will be denounced by some: it’s not the Roman bella figura. I’ve been told on social media that Francis is the “most Christ-like Pope ever.”
Taking his counsel as to “whom am I to judge,” I dare not even imagine Francis’s relationship to God: that’s between them. But one can ask whether the Church in 2025 is better off than it was in 2013, and I think the answer is “no.” That’s why—aware some will criticize me—I think the past 12 years witnessed a pontificate of many lost opportunities.
Is a “Christ-like” Church one that emphasizes “accompaniment” while mumbling about conversion? Is the Church’s role to make people feel better in their accommodation of the Zeitgeist? Because, during this recent pontificate, the forces of secularism (abetted by Flemish and German episcopal cheerleaders) have advanced with apparent approval.
The Church in 2025 remains so mired in sexual abuse scandals that each new report is largely taken as “business as usual.” Because of that, the Church’s teaching authority on sexual matters is compromised and largely unheard. Indeed, this Pope did little to address that domain, while sending many mixed messages—moral and theological—in others.
Jorge Cardinal Bergoglio was elected to pursue necessary reforms in the Church. After a dozen years, those genuine reforms appear further away than ever, while the Barque of Peter has instead been rocked by unnecessary instability, but calling it “reform”.
Bergoglio was elected a decade after the scandals of mass priestly sexual abuse first shook the Church, primarily centered at that time in the Archdiocese of Boston. Electing somebody from outside Roman circles augured hope that the strong institutional reforms necessary to prevent the recurrence of such scandals.
Instead, much of Francis’s pontificate was dominated by more clerical sexual scandals, primarily homosexual, coupled with episcopal cover-up. The scandal unleashed in June 2018, of which ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick became the focal point, achieved what few would have imagined possible: it made the scope of the 2002 Boston scandals seem paler in comparison.
Since 2018, the ongoing drip-drip-drip of similar scandals, both big and small, has become so regular as to be almost a “new normal”. It also seems that too many Church leaders learned and changed little, at least in terms of what matters, from those scandals.
As in 2002, the institutional Church herself did not lead in the disclosure of those scandals. Indeed, much of what was learned came from secular sources–the non-Catholic press and judicial processes–while many leaders again circled the wagons. Under Pope Francis, for example, the Vatican report on how Theodore McCarrick got to where he did could be summarized as “everybody who knew anything is dead and anybody who is alive knew nothing.” That the report did not pass the public smell test is hardly news.
Pope Francis presided over all this. Worse, he appeared to blow hot and cold. He assured Catholics that “zero tolerance” would be applied—except to certain papal friends. He branded accusations of cover-up against a Chilean bishop as “slander,” until the accusations were shown to be true, after which Francis apologized. Accusations against traditional clerics—charges that even the Pope suggested were dubious—led to resignations accepted, while charges against less traditional clerics could spin out indefinitely in legal and canonical processes. Tone deafness was commonplace. Pope Francis made video statements with the artwork of Marko Rupnik hanging in the background, while his Dicastery for Communications chief could not understand what the controversy was about.
Amidst sexual, cover-up, and financial scandals, the effect of Pope Francis’s actions to pursue reform seemed to be intermittent, indeterminate, and often half-hearted. And it is those scandals, but especially the sexual scandal involving youth and dependent people, that compromise the Church’s ability to speak to the contemporary world, yet one Rome appears to let them fester.
Instead, the Church is focused on “reform” that few, except the Pope and some in his echo-chamber, were demanding. Francis’s particular fixation on “synodality,” a process he claimed essential to contemporary ecclesiology but which supporters struggled to define, is the primary example. This papacy has convened multiple synods, prefaced by even more preparatory meetings, whose outcomes have been ambiguous and sometimes even apparently at odds with the Church’s preceding tradition.
Indeed, the question of teaching is the other major disappointment of Francis’s twelve years as Pope. The nave of St. Peter’s Basilica states in big black letters what is the role of the See of Peter: to confirm the brethren in the faith.
That has hardly been the outcome of the Francis pontificate. After almost 35 years of patient and clear teaching under Popes St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI, the Francis pontificate bequeathed the Church a dozen years of ambiguity, contradiction, and confusion. “Demos,” the apparent pen name of the late Cardinal George Pell, captured the tenor of this pontificate in his play on the traditional adage: from Roma locuta, causa finita (Rome has spoken; the case is closed) the Church has moved to Roma locuta, confusio augetur (Rome has spoken; the confusion grows).
Matters long considered doctrinally and/or disciplinarily settled suddenly seemed, under Francis, to be up for grabs, while certain circles began treating Francis’s pronouncements with a kind of ultramontane submission not seen since the early Pian era. Doctrinal confusion seemed to be part of the pontificate’s strategy. When ex tempore papal remarks in interviews raise eyebrows early in a pontificate, the problem can be attributed to that pontificate’s still getting its bearings. But when that process continues a decade later, it cannot be written off as the consequence of a Roman amateur hour. It then appears to be a deliberate program of strategic ambiguity, questioning received teaching and practices through what is said and what is left unsaid. This has particularly been the hallmark of Francis’s papacy regarding marital and sexual ethics, including Communion for the divorced and “remarried” as well as the Church’s clearly established teaching on homosexual behavior.
When one couples ambivalence about saying clearly what the Church has taught with the practical showcasing of those who practically undermine that teaching (e,g, Fr. James Martin, S.J., New Ways Ministry) as well as the readiness to blunt Church teaching in the name of an “accompaniment” that seems to mumble the call to conversion, what emerges is a Church offering an uncertain message. That should not be the Catholic Church, especially the post-Vatican II Church. But intended or not, that has been the effect of the Francis papacy. And when one combines such practical kneecapping of ecclesiastical tradition with the Church’s compromised voice for failing decisively to lance the boil of sexual scandals, it seems one must conclude that Francis’s papacy has left the Church’s teaching voice significantly weakened and impaired.
Unnecessary and unresolved scandal, coupled with what seems to be a process of doctrinal and disciplinary dilution, looks to be the legacy the Francis pontificate leaves the Church. Even more than Francis, his successor will have to be a clear-eyed and unrelenting reformer. And his task will, unfortunately, be that much harder, because he will have to make up for many unnecessarily lost opportunities over 12 years for a Church whose clear voice the world desperately needs.
John M. Grondelski (Ph.D., Fordham) is the former associate dean of the School of Theology, Seton Hall University, South Orange, New Jersey.
Michael Heinlein: “The missing mozzetta and the failure to build bridges”
I remember well when Pope Francis was introduced to the world on the loggia of St. Peter’s Basilica in March 2013. Allegedly, some in Chicago media heard the new pope’s baptismal name announced in Latin (Georgium) and thought the Windy City’s Cardinal Francis E. George, O.M.I. was elected supreme pontiff. Alas, he wasn’t.
But the image that day of the new Pope Francis on the balcony left me unsettled. He wasn’t wearing the mozzetta, a traditional piece of papal garb worn for centuries. And that Francis didn’t wear the red shoulder cape, worn by popes on such and many occasions since images have been captured, was itself a red flag to me. I remember thinking immediately, “This is going to be a wild ride.”
Now, I’m no ultra traditionalist. Papal vesture has changed since the Second Vatican Council. Some popes choose to use some of it, others opt to leave certain items in the papal closet. Fine. But choosing not to wear the things that popes wear was intended to send a signal. Time would only bear out what that signal would mean.
Making sense of Francis’ eschewal of a traditional and common item of papal vesture seemed to mirror how he eschewed a key papal duty stemming from one of the oldest papal titles: pontifex maximus. A relic of Roman antiquity, even for a time a title assumed by the emperors, the etymology of pontifex maximus connotes the importance of the pope as “bridge-builder.”
Indeed, there are many bridges that popes ought to build, and even, by his ministry, ensure those bridges are fortified and kept from collapsing. Popes bridge the gap between Christ and his Church. As pastor of pastors, the pope is to keep his flock connected to their Lord and Master through fidelity to what he handed on to us. Popes exercise this by their clarity in proclaiming the Faith, their strength in defending it, their pastoral tact in adapting it to their present age, and, hopefully, in personal witness through their authenticity, integrity, and holiness of life.
A pontifex maximus must also build and undergird bridges among the members of the flock. He must commit himself to fostering communion within the Church and among other Christian churches and communities. In this capacity, popes must strive to prevent fracturing among the Body of Christ, do whatever he can to pastor his flock so that none are left behind or cast aside. And through his instruction, he must build bridges between his flock and the poor and abandoned who need our care.
As the Church must also be a leaven in society and in the advancement of human solidarity, the popes also build bridges between the Church and all our brothers and sisters. Popes must bear witness to justice and speak on behalf of the voiceless, especially. But, as important as this might be, the pope’s role is not primarily as an NGO figurehead. And this aspect of the “job” is ineffective if the pontifex maximus cannot accomplish the other, more requisite duties.
Thinking back to the absence of that red mozzetta. Over a dozen years later, it has come to symbolize for me how Francis ultimately was unsuccessful in building the bridges he ought to have built and supported. Ultimately, Francis leaves behind a more fractured and polarized Church. His legacy is muddied by an inability to adequately defend the Faith against modern errors nor to provide the requisite clarity amid emerging moral and doctrinal questions. It’s a legacy of inconsistency, unclarity, and sometimes even divisive double-speak. It’s a legacy of ignoring serious voices with weighty concerns, among them some of his own cardinals, and giving private audiences to dissenters and global elites. It’s a legacy that fueled in the Church an ideological divide he often deplored. It’s a legacy of irregular and sloppy governance. It’s a legacy heralded by many for perceived tenderness and inclusivity while it saw traditionalist Catholics abandoned, making them an enemy within. It’s a legacy that rewarded ideological loyalty and punished perceived opponents. It’s a legacy that spoke tough about the clergy sexual abuse crisis, but failed to effectively build bridges with victim-survivors of abuse or deliver them justice. In the end, while some credited him with building bridges—which he did in many cases, some for good and some for ill—he also built far too many walls.
That wild ride I intuited internally in 2013 was sensed by others. Back to Cardinal Francis George, who died only two years into the Francis era, whose tenth death anniversary was just last week. He identified concerns early on in Francis’s pontificate and was the first notable American bishop to speak about them, at least in public. Among those was when George wondered aloud about the pope’s now-infamous “who am I to judge?” line. George was concerned whether Francis thoroughly understood “what has happened just by that phrase.” The cardinal regretted how that soundbite was “very misused … because he was talking about someone who has already asked for mercy and been given absolution, whom he knows well.”
He added: “That’s entirely different than talking to somebody who demands acceptance rather than asking for forgiveness.” The pope’s original remark concerned a Vatican staffer, Msgr. Battista Ricca, who oversaw the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta, where Pope Francis took up residency upon his election. Ricca had long been rumored to engage in homosexual misconduct, which was noted in the press shortly after Francis appointed him in 2013 as prelate of the Vatican Bank.
“Does he not realize the repercussions? Perhaps he doesn’t,” George asked. “I don’t know whether he’s conscious of all the consequences of some of the things he’s said and done that raise doubts in people’s minds.” And, George said, “The question is: why doesn’t he clarify” such statements that can be so easily taken out of context? “Why is it necessary that apologists have to bear the burden of trying to put the best possible face on it?”
And that was only 2014.
That burden will soon be squarely on the shoulders of the new pope. But the absence of the red mozzetta at the end of the 2013 conclave, and ever since, has come to symbolize all of the above and more. I can only hope that no matter who he is, the next pope will wear the red mozzetta when he walks out on the St. Peter’s loggia. In this Jubilee Year of Hope—the first jubilee in which a pope has died in 325 years—I will then have hope that the pope might be taking seriously the fullness of his role as pontifex maximus.
Michael R. Heinlein is the author of Glorifying Christ: The Life of Cardinal Francis E. George, O.M.I.
Jayd Henricks: “Pope Francis and the future of the Church”
We pray for the repose of the late Holy Father. May eternal rest be granted unto him, and may he pray for us who remain on the journey back to Our Father’s house.
With that being said, it is important in this moment to look back on his pontificate, to examine it in order to see what is approaching on the ecclesial horizon. Without a sense of where we have been, it is difficult to know where we need to go.
It should first be noted that Pope Francis was a man who highlighted the plight of the poor and a call for the Church to be a simple witness to the universal community to which we all belong. We should be grateful for this legacy. It is too easy for many of us to be caught up in the trappings of modern culture, with its distractions and self-focus. May we take seriously his love for the poor and material simplicity.
Nonetheless, it seems on balance the pontificate fulfilled Bergoglio’s vision to make a mess of things, and so it is my judgment this was a failed pontificate.
Perhaps that is unsurprising in that he followed two giants in the life of the Church, Saint John Paul II and Benedict XVI, both of whom should arguably be Doctors of the Church. Anyone who followed them would have very large shoes to fill—an almost impossible task. Comparing him to his immediate predecessors is, on one level, unfair, and yet on another, unavoidable.
Cardinal Bergoglio, it is widely reported, was elected with a mandate to reform the Roman curia. After 12 years of his leadership, there has been little improvement in the governance of the Vatican’s many offices. It still runs a significant deficit, its web of theological, pastoral, legal, and administrative offices does not seem to have a cohesive vision, and the rule of law has been inconsistent and sometimes arbitrary. There is no key through which his leadership can be understood. He dealt with his immediate subordinates roughly while repeatedly defending credibly accused cleric friends. He governed as a Jesuit, seemingly for Jesuits, even though he was elected as the universal pastor for all the faithful.
He was elected as a man of South America, where the faith was seen as more vibrant than that of Europe, and yet there have been few to no signs of spiritual growth in South America under his leadership. The Aparecido moment that was characterized as an infusion of new life never materialized in any significant way in South America or elsewhere under his leadership. In fact, Church attendance, vocations, and other key indicators declined sharply in South America during his papacy. Obviously, not all of that is his responsibility as secularism swept through most cultures with the force of a hurricane, leaving a spiritual wasteland in its wake. Nonetheless, there is nothing discernable that Pope Francis did to stem the tide in his native land.
The unexpected hallmark of his papacy is the notion of synodality, something that has yet to be defined in any precise way. We have been told it must be lived, not defined. Yet it’s clear that it has been used to advance heterodox positions, and it has marginalized those who are most faithful to the teachings of the Church. If there is an immediate legacy of synodality, it is one of division and confusion. Perhaps there will be long-term fruit from the Synod on Synodality, but that is very much an open question. The more likely scenario is that it will quickly fade from the ecclesial landscape and happily be forgotten.
One of the indirect benefits of the Francis papacy is a necessary correction to the cult developed around John Paul II and Benedict XVI. Both men, by their holiness and intellectual strength, drew devotion to themselves that sometimes eclipsed that which belongs exclusively to Christ. Looking back, I see how I was prone to that from time to time. As a priest friend of mine once said, Rome took the place of Jerusalem. This was not good for the life of the Church or for the faithful. Francis, unintentionally, has remedied this false elevation of Peter. Hopefully, this brings Christ back to the center of the faith for more of us. For this, we should be thankful for how the Holy Spirit can work in unexpected and mysterious ways.
What we are left with in the wake of the Francis papacy is a Church more confused and more divided than at any time since the immediate aftermath of Humanae Vitae. It is perhaps a comfort that the Church has seen division and confusion many times in her history, and yet she survives. This is a kind of proof of her divinity. No other institution could survive such trials.
And so, we look toward the future with confidence that the Holy Spirit remains in the Church as the source of her life. The next pope has a monumental task of bringing unity back to the Church through clarity of teaching and holiness of life. Let us pray that the Francis pontificate might be used in a mysterious way by the Holy Spirit to bring new life into what we know is the mystical body of Christ.
Jayd Henricks is the former executive director of government relations for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. He has an STL in systematic theology from the Dominican House of Studies.
Fr. Robert Imbelli: “The paradoxes of Pope Francis”
News of the death of the Pope sent me back to a small book published by America Press in 2013: A Big Heart Open to God. It contains the famous first interview of Pope Francis with Antonio Spadaro, S.J. The interview took place a short five months after the papal election. In his introduction to the book Father Spadaro remarks that the Pope expressed “his great difficulty in giving interviews;” stating “that he prefers to think carefully rather than give quick responses.” Twelve years, and an estimated five hundred interviews and press conferences later (including one on “60 Minutes”!) one cannot but smile at this paradox of a Pope, both reticent and all too garrulous.
Pressed by Spadaro to characterize himself, the Pope confessed forthrightly: “I am a sinner.” He then continued, using words that struck me at the time and have continued to replay in my mind. Francis said: “I am a bit astute … a bit naïve.” So reads the acceptable English translation. The Italian sounds more colorful and even a tad alarming: “un pò furbo … un pò ingenuo. “Furbo” perhaps better rendered as “cunning” or “shrewd,” often with something of a negative connotation: an “operator.” Cunning and ingenuous – another paradox.
A further paradox has been amply commented upon. Pope Francis will doubtless be known as “the Pope of synodality:” his call to active discernment and collegial participation in the life of the Church at all levels by the holy and faithful people of God. Yet he has also been the Pope of the “motu proprio,” issuing far more than his two predecessors combined. A salient manifestation of this rather imperial governance is his willful failure to convoke the College of Cardinals for crucial discernment and counsel. One harmful result is a widely dispersed crop of Cardinals who have scant knowledge of one another as they enter Conclave. Who knows what this may portend in terms of possible manipulation or protracted duration.
Pope Francis’s inaugural apostolic exhortation, Evangelii Gaudium, contains passages of splendid insight and stirring summons to evangelization. Here is a passage that has had special resonance for me. “The primary reason for evangelizing is the love of Jesus, which we have received, the experience of salvation which urges us to ever greater love of him. What kind of love would not feel the need to speak of the beloved, to point him out, to make him known?” (no. 264).
Yet this same Pope, in the ensuing years, often blunted his call to evangelization by dire warnings against “proselytizing” – an undertaking he never ceased to excoriate nor bothered to define. The unhappy result was that the repeated cautions often overshadowed the evangelical elan.
When America published the Pope’s initial interview, it also invited twelve Catholics of diverse backgrounds and ages to contribute preliminary impressions. I was one of the commentators, perhaps the lone voice to raise some polite concerns and tentative reservations. One of these was my perception of a certain indecisive “relativism” shading some of the new Pope’s remarks. This concern has been amplified over the years, especially in the realm of dialogue with the world religions.
At times, the Pope even seems to have verged upon an endorsement of the various religions as equally valid paths to God. However praiseworthy his efforts at religious dialogue, especially with Islam, such unnuanced observations, both orally and in writing, manifest scant coherence with his otherwise pronounced Christocentrism as shown, for example, in his lovely last encyclical on the Sacred Heart: Dilexit nos.
Significantly, both in the initial interview and in various comments made throughout the years of his pontificate, Pope Francis has shown great regard for the person and works of his Jesuit confrere, the late Henri de Lubac. It is the Lubacian strain in writings like Evangelii Gaudium and Dilexit nos that may well remain as the lasting legacy of Pope Francis.
De Lubac notably composed three volumes entitled Paradoxes. But he never attenuated his conviction and confession that Jesus Christ is the God-man, who does not suppress the paradoxes of our lives, but realizes their transfiguration through the life-giving Paradox of his Cross.
Perhaps this Lubacian stimulus inspired the words of Pope Francis last November to the participants in the plenary session of the International Theological Commission. Evoking the coming celebration of the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, he issued a stirring appeal to those present and to the entire schola theologorum. Francis said: “This Council was a milestone in the history of the Church but also of all humanity, because faith in Jesus, the Son of God made flesh ‘for us and for our salvation’, was defined and professed as a light that illumines the meaning of reality and the destiny of all history. In this way, the Church responded to the exhortation of the Apostle Peter: “Worship the Lord, Christ, in your hearts, always ready to answer anyone who asks you about the hope that is in you” (1 Pet 3:15).
This exhortation, addressed to all Christians, can be applied in a particular way to the ministry that theologians are called to exercise as a service to the People of God. You are called to foster an encounter with Christ and to attain a deeper understanding of his mystery, so that we can better appreciate ‘what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses all knowledge’ (Eph 3:18-19).”
It is nothing short of Providential, then, that the very last homily written by Pope Francis (delivered in his name at the Mass of Easter Sunday) makes explicit reference to de Lubac. Francis cited one final time “the great theologian Henri de Lubac” who wrote: “It should be enough to understand this: Christianity is Christ. No, truly, there is nothing else but this. In Christ we have everything!”
For me, these words represent the moving, faith-filled testament of this paradoxical Pope: the summons to encounter Christ and to enter ever more deeply into his life-giving, transforming mystery. One fervently prays, then, that the paradoxes of Jorge Mario Bergoglio–like our own–may be fully untied and transfigured in Christ.
Father Robert Imbelli, a priest of the Archdiocese of New York, is the author of Christ Brings All Newness (Word on Fire Academic).
Matthew J. Ramage: “The ecological legacy of Pope Francis”
Among the many aspects of Pope Francis’s life and legacy that are worthy of our consideration, I am especially interested in his relationship with his predecessors—how he either extended or diverged from the trajectory set by those who preceded him in office. In this regard, it is no secret that many of us were disappointed by certain decisions made by our late pontiff, having had hoped for greater continuity with the course of renewal chartered by other recent popes. However, one notable area of continuity—and even development—lies in Francis’s work of articulating a robustly Catholic theology of creation and its care.
The Argentine pontiff spoke often on this theme, most recently at length in his 2023 apostolic exhortation Laudate Deum. Undoubtedly, however, his most significant treatment of the environment came in his 2015 Laudato Si’, the first papal encyclical ever to be dedicated to the theme of care for creation. In this lengthy and circuitous text, Francis brought the ancient wisdom of the Church to bear on the pressing challenges of environmental stewardship in our age. What many may not realize is that, in doing so, his work firmly followed in the footsteps of his predecessors in the chair of St. Peter—from Pope St. Paul VI who foretold a looming “ecological catastrophe,” to Pope St. John Paul II who described the work of “ecological conversion” as “an essential part” of Christian faith, to “the Green Pope” Benedict XVI.
The first of Francis’s major contributions in this domain was his retrieval of the ancient Christian teaching that an intimate bond unites every creature in heaven and on earth with one another and with their Triune Lord—“a covenant between human beings and the environment, which should mirror the creative love of God, from whom we come and towards whom we are journeying.” This covenant with creation represents one of the most distinctive aspects of Catholicism’s vision of the natural order that can contribute to the renewal of life on our planet today, as it urges us to behold all of God’s creatures as participants with us in a cosmic communion of love and praise.
Although Francis actually borrowed this concept from Benedict XVI (often without his editors acknowledging it), this element of Francis’s pontificate is critically important. It provides a richer foundation for what mainstream environmentalism seeks with the idea of animal rights, yet in a way that is more authentically biblical, deeply human, and scientifically serious. From this perspective, the duty to care for other creatures stems not from an assertion of their personhood or equality with man but from the place they occupy within our extended covenantal family. Thus, even as he stressed “the unique and central value of the human being,” Francis crucially taught that all creatures in this cosmos “are linked by unseen bonds and together form a kind of universal family, a sublime communion which fills us with a sacred, affectionate and humble respect” (Laudate Deum, §67).
The second major hallmark of Francis’s environmental legacy is his explicit introduction of the concept of integral ecology into papal vocabulary. As far as I can tell, this terminology had previously appeared in Vatican circles only within the International Theological Commission’s 2009 work In Search of a Universal Ethic: A New Look at the Natural Law. The term itself was coined in the past century as a way of capturing the deep interconnectedness between humans and the wider created world. Integral ecology emphasizes that what we normally think of with the concept of ecology (understanding and caring for the natural world) is inextricably bound up with human ecology, which is to say the truth of man’s integration in the created order and his endowment with a nature that has unique gifts and needs. In this context, Francis poignantly cited Benedict’s teaching that “man, too, has a nature that he must respect and that he cannot manipulate at will.”
As understood by Francis, integral ecology is the holistic practice by which we seek to achieve the well-being of humans and other creatures in a society where they are often seen as unrelated or even pitted against one another. On this front, he liked to cite Benedict’s teaching that “the way humanity treats the environment influences the way it treats itself, and vice versa.” Yet, while John Paul II and Benedict XVI had already spoken extensively on human ecology, neither explicitly linked it to environmental ecology under the framework of integral ecology. For this conceptual synthesis, the Church owes Francis a debt of gratitude.
One striking feature of integral ecology that Francis particularly emphasized is the sanctity of human life beginning at conception. While previous popes (notably John Paul II in Evangelium Vitae) consistently professed the sanctity of life from conception to natural death, I’m not sure that any pope has advocated so adamantly for the dignity of embryos as did Francis in lines like these:
When we fail to acknowledge as part of reality the worth of a poor person, a human embryo, a person with disabilities—to offer just a few examples—it becomes difficult to hear the cry of nature itself; everything is connected (§117).
Since everything is interrelated, concern for the protection of nature is also incompatible with the justification of abortion. How can we genuinely teach the importance of concern for other vulnerable beings, however troublesome or inconvenient they may be, if we fail to protect a human embryo, even when its presence is uncomfortable, and creates difficulties? (Laudato Si’, §120).
As these statements illustrate, Francis recognized both the destruction of embryos and the pervasive wastefulness of modern culture as symptoms of a broader “throwaway culture” that pervades present-day Western society. In this light, he raised a critical question: How can we be expected to respect non-human nature if we do not even respect our own human nature? Unlike so many secular environmentalists, Francis steadfastly resisted the urge to privilege other creatures at the expense of the most vulnerable of our species—replacing an unchecked anthropocentrism with an equally destructive neo-pagan “biocentrism.”
Much more could be said about Francis’s ecological legacy that I cannot address at the moment. But, thankfully, this is precisely the kind of theme that I regularly address in my “God’s Two Books” column here at Catholic World Report. Among the other dimensions of Francis’s vision that would be worth considering in more detail, I will close by calling attention to just two more that have yet to receive the consideration they deserve: his call for the cultivation of “ecological virtues” (Laudato Si’, §88) and his 2016 declaration of care for creation as a new corporal and spiritual work of mercy. (Although I cannot elaborate on these ideas further here, I have explored them in greater depth in Chapter 9 of my book The Experiment of Faith: Pope Benedict XVI on Living the Theological Virtues in a Secular Age.) As with integral ecology, the terminology here may be new, but the underlying concept emphasized by our late pontiff stands in firm continuity with the teachings of his predecessors–and indeed marks a further development of them.
Matthew J. Ramage, Ph.D., is Professor of Theology at Benedictine College, where he is co-director of its Center for Integral Ecology.
Amy Welborn: “Pushing the papal limits in the post-Conciliar Church”
In 1980, British writer David Lodge published a novel about the lives of a group of young Catholics before and after the Second Vatican Council. The American edition of the novel was called Souls and Bodies, but the original English title—How Far Can You Go? – is far more apt, expressing as it does, a double reference to the faith-fueled sexual anxieties of these young people and even more fundamentally, to faith itself during the period: But in matters of belief . . . it is nice question how far you can go in this process without throwing out something vital.
The papacy of Pope Francis is, in a way, the culmination of that particular post-Conciliar question: how far can you go? Dogma? Liturgy? Curial organization? Ecclesiology? Commentators and historians will continue to hash over those matters for the near and distant future. The lazy will use the word “boomer” at least once per essay or social media post. The issue that Francis’ papacy highlighted, and we might even say embodied, though, is more fundamental than those particulars, though. It’s about the source and focus of our faith.
We know the drill, not only because it’s been unpacked for us by intellectual historians and theologians, but because we’ve lived it. Is faith what feels right or what is objectively true? We know what the answer is in 2025: even Christian religious faith in general has come to center on personal experience rather than objective truth over the past couple of centuries, the past and tradition of all types devalued as useless or even harmful to the spiritual needs of modern man.
Of course, none of this was taught by the Second Vatican Council–far from it–but this is the world of the post-Conciliar Church as it is lived and experienced with the journey that began with the “immemorial” Mass turning out to not be so immemorial after all one weekend in November 1969 and eating meat on Friday transformed from sin to not-a-sin just as quickly.
Now, when you strip structures away, that vacuum will be filled. By worldly sensibilities, by false teachings, and, in the current Christian world, the power of personalities and emotional connections. And when you have a universal Church in a world of mass media and celebrity culture, you have a prime landscape for persons to supplant principles and for allegiances a human figure – aka the Pope – to overshadow communion with and in Christ.
No, ultramontanism is not new at all. But the phenomenon we’ve seen with the past twelve years – which grew out of trends from the previous two papacies, to be honest – a focus on the person of the Pope as the embodiment of the Faith in the world, one whose seemingly every comment on a plane bleeds (for some) into magisterial territory – that’s definitely new.
This did not begin with Pope Francis, of course, but during the course of his papacy, the personal appeal he held for some, along with his own style of theological writing (in which his primary sources were Scripture and his own words), leadership and communication – as well as almost universal ignorance and confusion about various levels of papal authority – only served to heighten, both in the public eye and the reality of Church governance – a sense of the papacy primarily as a space for Francis’ person, preferences and agenda to be centered, rather than an office of one who is, as Benedict XVI wrote, “….not an absolute monarch whose will is law; rather, he is the guardian of the authentic Tradition and all that traditionally entailed.”
This, it seems to me, is the most significant way that Pope Francis represented his generation that had come of age during and right after the Second Vatican Council. Not his particular disdain for the Traditional Latin Mass or his Häring-shaded moral pronouncements, but in the insistent location of the action of the Holy Spirit in an experience or a “reality” to the practical exclusion of much that has gone before, and even more seriously, a determination that what has gone before is of no value and even an obstacle to encountering God in the present. In short, the hermeneutic of discontinuity, right there.
Which then, on the level of the visible Church universal, becomes oddly centered on whoever is Pope at the moment.
As many have noted, this leads to confusion, but it also leads to the ironic state in which we found ourselves during the Francis papacy: the rich, thick stuff of tradition, doctrine and yes, even law, is set aside in the name of the freedom of the spirit or making a mess, but what that leaves us with is the word, presence, preferences and person of other human beings filling the vacuum, sometimes in yes, authoritarian ways.
And so, after twelve years in the question that the Francis papacy leaves us with is the end game of all of this, the natural consequence of this process, all centered on the man in white: How far can you go in elevating the person of the Pope – his interests, agenda, concerns, personality – as synonymous with “Church?”
Amy Welborn is the author of over twenty books on Catholic spirituality and practice, and writes extensively at her blog, Charlotte was Both.
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I like the clarity of Larry Chapp’s writing. Yes, PF’s ambiguity was deliberate. He created it for the purpose of “being nice”. It is easy to prove: if a man is misinterpreted, he corrects a misinterpretation. That never happened, even in the most desperate cases when the faithful begged him for a clarification. A clarification would mean either to upset the world or to break off from the Church teaching. PF used mass-media to create an “all inclusive, very nice” image of himself.
PF was a heretic though, a psychological heretic. His heresy was that he put his need to be liked above Jesus Christ = above the Truth. He valued “being nice” much more than being good. This heresy is well-known in the field of human psychology. In the world it is just annoying; in the Church, being dressed in metaphysical, it is a disaster.
I hope for whoever a Pope, with one quality only: a Pope who loves Christ more than himself and anything else. If we get such a Pope (no matter how flowed), there will be hope.
Anna:
Knowing and greatly appreciating your main theme these several years during the tenure of the Pontiff Francis, I share this discerning essay from David Warren, from April 5, 2018:
https://www.davidwarrenonline.com/2018/04/05/more-merciful-than-jesus/
Thank you Chris.
“This troubles me a great deal, but even more, his refusal to answer direct questions about what he has said, or is reported to have said. Instead he leaves his staff to issue “plausible denials” — sophistical obfuscations — then goes back to playing conventional pope again, for the conventionally faithful, until his next irruption. He is playing a game with us — a game with the heart, mind, and soul of every Catholic.”
Yes, I easily recognize the person(s). There are a multitude of them in the parishes, inspired by PF and feeling justified by his example. I see those people, especially priests, being the major problem. All theological deviations (often covert and subtle) of PF’s reign are not a product of an honest intellect laboring over some maxima of the faith, they are a product of a flowed self-seeking psyche and should be seen as such. Actually, they are not even a product but a by-product.
I will add here something that has been occupying my mind for years re: abuse in the Church. Imagine a person, a chameleon for the purpose of “being nice” living in the secular world. Let’s say he is a boss in a company. And so, when one of his subordinates proposes some improvement the boss phrases him profusely and promises to implement it – while not thinking so and having no such intention. “Chameleon” goes on just like that; his subordinates do not dare to challenge him (his very “nicety” stops them) but they are becoming confused and frustrated. “Why does he agree with us if he actually does not? Why does he say he will use our proposals if he never does?” (By the way, this is a technique employed in ‘Synod of Synodality’; it is designed for a prevention of a real discussion but uses an appeal to the masses as a cover up for a party line) From a point of view of clinical psychology, such a boss gives a HOPE, a hope that a person’s talents will be used for good but he never fulfills that hope. He parasitizes on people’s hope, a very natural desire to be useful, to contribute to this world. But this is not all. He crushes not just a hope but a person as such. A person thought he was heard at last; later he will find that no, he was not – he was manipulated and lied to. Again, this is what ‘Synod of Synodality’ is doing – telling people that “they” want to hear them while not having such an intention (my statement is based on facts which I observed during the local sessions in which I have actively participated).
In a secular world, such a person would eventually be seen as a liar. Some, with a psyche matching his (“enablers” in psychology), would phrase his desire “not to upset anyone”, “inclusiveness” and so on. They would naturally form his support group, effectively shutting up those who disagree via a favorable, for a boss, “explaining”. The most decent people would free the organization, being fed up with a fog the boss and his followers create. Those who cannot flee would stay having no hope, working in a kind of paralysis. Their personhood would be severely compromised in such an environment where the words mean nothing, the environment of lost hopes and lost people. This is bad but it is human bad.
Now take this boss and ordain him, make him a priest or a bishop; his organization now is the Church. Our Church. A priest now lies non-stop for the purpose of looking nice. He gives a hope to a person that his skills will be used for the Church but he never follows his promises. If a person (who has all credentials for doing so) points to him that there is a sacrilege on the altar and it is offensive to Christ thus it must be removed, a priest displays a horror on his face, enthusiastically agrees and pronounces a moral judgement over that sacrilege – but never removes it and so it goes, a new sacrilege and same reaction and over again. And, while the boss was just sitting in his secular office not representing anyone but himself, a priest now is “an icon of Christ” during Mass at least – the same priest who lies, and puts sacrileges on, then promises to remove them and then does not and so, endlessly. I described something I witnessed personally but the abundant cases of such behavior are all over the globe. Practically all covering the abuse belongs to that category.
This psyche, of a boss-priest and of his enablers is the major problem in the Church. Why am I saying “enablers”? Because such priests abide only via fear and silence. I recently explained to two parishioners, male cradle Catholics, the wrongness of the “installation” on the side altar, what exactly it conveys being in the liturgical space and so on. They agreed wholeheartedly with my explanation and were disturbed. Furthermore, they said they will pray for intention, for “that thing to be removed”. However, it was very clear to me that, being “good Catholic” they will not approach a priest (as I did) and will not ask him to remove it. It is unthinkable to them. Apparently, it is more offensive to (politely) challenge a priest for Christ’s sake than to receive communion (Christ) in the church which shows a disrespect for that very Christ.
And so, unless you stop being silent (laity), the disease will continue developing.
Agreed, the lay faithful should speak up, but they should expect some form of martyrdom.
Our Lord advised prayer, fasting and almsgiving. The laity should pray for God’s will regarding donations and fast from funding apostates, resisting the temptation to receive honors for bankrolling honorariums. McCarrick maneuvered with our money. And, as the late Cardinal Pell knew well, even revolutionaries like Franciscus needed capital.
I just wrote a letter to a priest, Anna. Different issue but same idea. It’s been on my conscience for some time. I was advised twice in Confession to do that. So, other priests agree that laypeople shouldn’t remain silent. If we don’t speak up respectfully that’s our choice. It’s 2025. Not 1225.
From 2001 through 2004, yours truly was on the Archdiocesan Pastoral Council. At an informal recess moment during one of the dozen listening sessions held across the geography, I overheard a layperson asking a parish priest: “why don’t you say something about that [whatever the grievance was] to the chancery.”
His response: “You laity should do that, ‘they’ don’t listen to us.”
Too bad that recent efforts to correct “clericalism” end up as more of the same…
@ Peter D. Beaulieu
Careful Peter. Your astute comments are visible worldwide. Of more than like special interest is your wish to see clericalism ended. Canonically any baptized Catholic can be elevated to the papacy.
Pardon my ignorance. What IS an “installation” on the side altar, and what does it convey in liturgical space?
Thanks.
Meiron, if it helps, to install in formal Church language refers to a clerical appointment. I believe Anna may be referring to the Tabernacle containing the Holy Eucharist being ‘installed’, or placed in a side altar, which many in the Church object to.
Although Anna refers to it as “that thing”, which may mean some irreligious effigy. Only she can resolve the matter as you suggest.
Additionally, as I perceived the travesty of relegating the Real Presence to a side altar is the analogous reference to the formal installment of a cleric. That Christ is reassigned in prominence, and relegated to an assignment of lesser interest.
We may ask, how many of the faithful, including clergy, pay any attention whatsoever to Christ ‘installed’ to a side altar. No. bows, kneeling, making the sign of the cross. Zero acknowledgement. Yet if the parish was told that the Tabernacle contained the Man in the Moon, I’m confident they’d be awakened with interest, even reverent visits.
No Fr Peter,
It is not what I meant by “an installation”. I meant placing on a consecrated altar the items which don’t belong there thus they create a kind of an installation (an art term), making out of the altar something else or giving it a double meaning. A good example of such “creativity” was placing onto St Peter’s altar in the Vatican a Pachamama bowl – a case known to many. It is very postmodern. It also allows to one who did it to claim “I meant nothing like that”.
Your clarity Anna and Larry Chapp give us courage! Thank you! You have removed the intellectual deceptions foisted upon us for 12 years!
Thank you all for your many contributions over the years and for your forbearance of my foolishness.
Amoralist Laetitia compelled me in conscience to comment in defense of the Catholic Faith in practice. With the death of Franciscus, there is renewed hope for a Pope. As the Bishop of Rome and guest of the Vatican, Franciscus refused the responsibilities of a Holy Father but utilized all the authority. May the abuses and heteropraxy of Franciscus be corrected and annulled as necessary by a willing Pope.
Pray with me that there will never again be a cause to defend the Faith of Christ in practice from His Vicar.
Happy Easter!
As Bishop of Rome, Franciscus never signed with “PP” (Papa Pontifex) in his name, any more than he did as Bishop of Buenos Aires. Nor did Franciscus want the title of Pope in death.
“The tomb should be in the ground; simple, without particular ornamentation, bearing only the inscription: Franciscus.” Testament of Franciscus
Franciscus is called Pope by the faithful because he took the office of Pope, the Bishop of Rome, etc. So naturally, everyone assumed Franciscus was Pope. But Franciscus never wanted to teach and preach as a Pope, just to be obeyed as a sovereign.
The faithful want a Pope, a Holy Father, like they want a priest to be called “Father.” Some priests say: “Call me Jorge.” This might be very uncomfortable for the faithful but not for the priest.
What’s to be done? If we respect the wishes of Franciscus, we should simply call him Franciscus. As such, a Pope can have no concerns about annulling a pontificate that never had a willing Pope, just a Bishop of Rome who said: “Call me Franciscus.”
Excuse me for Synodaling with myself. What’s a fool to do in such foolish times?
The day Franciscus was elected, he said from the balcony:
“You all know that the duty of the Conclave was to give a bishop to Rome.”
From the beginning to the end, Franciscus never chose to act as more than the sovereign Bishop of Rome. Handed the power of a supreme monarch, Franciscus declined to be what he was by the authority of his Office: our Holy Father, the Vicar of Christ, a Pope. Understandably, the faithful insisted on these titles, like abandoned children who insist on calling their biological father: “Papa.”
Franciscus had other agendas than traditional papal roles. Franciscus had a whole planet to save!
Think about it: Franciscus showed us how to disobey the Commandments in practice. So why should we be surprised that Franciscus disobeyed the Papacy in practice?
Goodly pointed question, that one there at the end, O Wise One.
You understand and other members of your silent synod understand. We must work to undue what ungodly ones have done. Read an elegy to sadness at what has not been; see Anthony Esolen write on the Death of a Father at Crisis.
God is Wise, our Savior. I own my transgressions. (Psalm 51, 2 Corinthians 5). Happy Mercy Sunday!
Esolen is always interesting but let’s explore the proposed need to undo damage done.
Can the Church consider a declaration of nullity in the case of Franciscus?
What would prevent a pontificate from declaring a previous pontificate annulled? For instance, could a future pontificate say that Franciscus took the Papacy with a Lack of Consent? Did Franciscus demonstrate Deceit if he entered the pontificate based on a false representation?
O Wisdom! As Mary pondered the complex simplicity of her child, so must we as she is a perfectly human model for growing her Son within us.
Deacon, Maryland Chris, and Turabdin suggest qualities the new pope should bring. We could own those for ourselves: 1) We could work toward a renewed appreciation for the ‘mysterium tremendum’ of divine worship; 2) We could extend ourselves to contemplation through every hour of our remaining days; 3) We could develop habits of humility, of obedience, of refining and following our conscience; and 4) We could study and pray for the ability to think and teach more clearly and in line with prior Magisterial teaching. 5) We conform ourselves to the beauty of Christ. We acknowledge our sins, but with contrition, penance, and repeated conversion and confession, we accept the glorious Mercy which He readily wills to give which we’ve been made ready to receive.
To nullify a pontificate, I suppose that’s best left to God. God alone could command and achieve that outcome with the help of a holy and willing new pope and priestly hierarchy. A holy kingdom of His people could help. I trust that such will be done, but likely not here on earth….
Happy Mercy Sunday to you and yours too!
In the meantime, what can the faithful do with a father on the naughty list who abandoned them? Persevere with Christmas cheer!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dl1e7jMzk-M
This idea of the faithful feeling abandoned by their father like Elf is silly and sad, but behind it is a true tragedy:
Franciscus accepted the power of the papacy to reduce the papacy to the Bishop of Rome. From the first day to his tomb, Franciscus rejected the papal responsibilities but kept all of its authority to promote his ideological agendas.
This Divine Truth is simple and yet profound, to state, “if there is a union of a private nature, there is neither a third party, nor is society affected”, is to deny that we are Called to be “Temples Of The Holy Ghost”, in all our relationships, to deny God’s Universal Call to Holiness in all our relationships , and to deny the Sacramental essence of Perfect Life-affirming and Life-sustaining Salvational Love, and thus this statement, which serves only as an attempt to deny that sin done in private relationships, as long as there is not “a third party”, and the two parties agree, is not, in essence, sin, can never be reconciled to The Cross. In fact, it is this false ideology, which includes the erroneous “personally opposed to sin…” has led to a failure to Love one another as Christ Loves us, and to desire Salvation for our beloved, for if it were true that it is Loving and Merciful that we remain in our sins, and not desired to overcome our disordered inclinations toward sin, by accepting God’s Gift of Grace and Mercy, we would have no need for Our Savior, Jesus The Christ✝️🙏
At the heart of Liberty Is Christ, “4For it is impossible for those who were once illuminated, have tasted also the heavenly gift and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, 5Have moreover tasted the good word of God and the powers of the world to come…”, to not believe that Christ’s Sacrifice On The Cross will lead us to Salvation, but we must desire forgiveness for our sins, and accept Salvational Love, God’s Gift Of Grace And Mercy; believe in The Power And The Glory Of Salvation Love, and rejoice in the fact that No Greater Love Is There Than This, To Desire Salvation For One’s Beloved.
“Hail The Cross, Our Only Hope.”
“Blessed are they who are Called to The Marriage Supper Of The Lamb.”
“For where your treasure is there will your heart be also.”
Pray for an affirmation of The Unity Of The Holy Ghost(Filioque) and thus a restoration of The Papacy✝️🙏🌹💕
A Diogenes with cursor at hand I searched for an honest assessment. Confusion was mentioned 10x by the authors Grondelski prize winner with the most. Heretic. A dastardly word to be mentioned for a deceased Roman pontiff was mentioned just once. That by L Chapp, although expectedly in the negative.
Winning line from Irish born David Deane, “Francis attacked a starched, arrogant, joyless Church, one whose priests harangued people with long sermons. I’m 51 years old”. Now his praise for the wonder Church of Francis, swaying at Mass to the sounds of Peter Paul and Mary.
Jayd Henricks and Amy Welborn, are the two who alone make mention of Francis’ words making a mess. Hendricks honestly says Pope Francis was a failed pontificate. Amy Welborn honestly notes about making a mess, that in the void left by jettisoning tradition, what that leaves us with is the word, presence, preferences and person of other human beings filling the vacuum, sometimes in yes, authoritarian ways.
David Deane, the only outright Francis I aficionado, was at least honest from his rosy perspective. The rest from theirs as well. And to end my joining editor Olson’s prayer given in his introduction.
Pray to and trust in the Holy Spirit. “Thy will be done.”
So far, I’m with David Deane.
Francis and co. seem to be stuck in the ’70s.
Our hymnals have been held hostage by the 70’s, that’s for sure.
If Erik von Kuenehlt-Leddhin were still with us and included in this symposium, he would simply remind us that “all revolutions are rooted in hatred of the father.” So, an Observation, here, less about Pope Francis than his possible institutional legacy, a relevant Quote from history, and an incisive Question:
FIRST, on the question whether, instead of a two-thirds vote, it now might be a possibly consensual and “conversation” style conclave that might select the next pope (see Weigel today: https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2025/04/23/a-new-model-conclave/); and further, whether the 2008 “Ecclesial Assembly” replicates in a “backwardist” way (!) the Tennis Court Oath of 1789 and the resulting “National Assembly” in revolutionary France.
SECOND, about diluting the “hierarchical communion” of the Church (Lumen Gentium) into the secularist zeitgeist of our day, and the earlier Tennis Court Oath, this from historian E. E. Y. Hales:
“The higher clergy [read Holy Orders] assumed that, when the Estates-General met at Versailles [read Rome], their own Estate, which was the ‘First Estate, the “Estate of the Church’ [read “synod of bishops”] would deliberate and vote separately, and would submit its proposals to the King [read papacy] for his approval. But, through the influence of the cures [read theologians and such], matters turned out very differently. When the Estates of the clergy, and the nobility, and the ‘Third Estate’ assembled, it was found out of the 296 deputies representing the Estate of the clergy no less than 208 were cures; and these cures proceeded to show their readiness to vote with the Third Estate, and many of them even insisted upon taking their seats with that Estate [read “synodal” roundtables]. They thus compelled the Crown [read papacy and “hierarchical communion”] to give way and abandon its original plan, by which the three Estates were to have deliberated and voted separately, in favour of one vote [read town hall meeting in place of a real “synod of bishops”]. And by doing so they secured the triumph of the Third Estate, which was as numerous as the other two Estates put together. The ultimate victory of the Revolution [read inverted pyramid or congregational church] was thus assured; the higher clergy and the nobility had been defeated by the parish priests of France. Unwittingly they had made the French Revolution” (“The Catholic Church in the Modern World: A Survey from the French Revolution to the Present,” Image, 1960, pp. 34-35).
That went well…
QUESTION: for the Church: is the “2028 Ecclesial Assembly” as much French as it is German; and for the Conclave’s newcomer cardinals in the Apostolic Succession and from outside the secularist and failing West…Quo Vadis?
“The first group may remember Francis as the West remembers Mikhail Gorbachev, beloved reformer and rebel, the man who, intentionally or not, collapsed the old regime.”
Gorbachev was no reformer or rebel, nor did he play any role in the collapse of the Soviet Union. By the time he came to office, the Soviet Union was in freefall, economically, morally and politically. It only survived as long as it did because of the admiration of leftist intellectuals (see Paul Samuelson) who say it as proof of concept of the viability of a superstate and industrial espionage.
I believe that Mr Grondelski’s question as to “whether the Church in 2025 is better off than it was in 2013,” very much addresses the Pope Francis legacy.
This Symposium was an excellent idea, excellently argued. My opinions align more with Chapp, Deane, Grondeleski, and Heinlein–but less charitably. I have a longstanding bet with our esteemed editor that the next pope will be even worse. That’s ten cents I’d be delighted to lose.
Yours truly is 51% certain that you will lose your dime…
And more certain, if someone would graffiti over the entrance to the Sistine Chapel the wisdom attributed to St. John Chrysostom: “The road to hell is paved with the bones of priests and monks, and the skulls of bishops are the lampposts that light the path.”
I don’t know if any cardinals will read this or if someone out there has contact with a cardinal. But please, please, do not settle in this conclave. I know most cardinals want to do God’s Will and listen to the Holy Spirit. Do not vote for a candidate that that is self-seeking prideful. Choose the one who will seek to steward the treasure of our Catholic Faith. Which is ultimately Jesus Christ and His Church. If the conclave takes weeks…who cares. We want a Saint in the Petrine office.
Mostly well and good although there are still folks like Fastiggi who try to peddle the (dishonest) and risible claim that the problematic aspects are all just a matter of “misunderstanding/misinterpretation.” Never mind it was Francis who often refused to clarify what he was supposedly being misinterpreted over, but on the contrary, directed and permitted what one could call quasi-official/authoritative efforts that promoted the heterodox “misinterpretation.” Or, even after explaining matters, the problems only remained. For the latter, one can think of Card. Fernandez meeting with African bishops and Coptic leaders over Fiducia Supplicans; but which concerns- which were doctrinal not just prudential- only remained after hearing the interpretation straight from the horses’ mouth! And Fernandez even further said he and Francis “agree” with the statements of the former in which they reject the teaching in the document!! But it’s everyone’s imagination that there’s heterodox content in the document…
It will be interesting to see what the cult of Francis does when a future pope- perhaps the one coming in a matter of weeks- corrects, however directly or indirectly, various doctrinal “teachings” of Francis. (It’s naive or foolish to think that all such things will be allowed to stand as they are.) Will these folks apologize and admit they were wrong when they proclaimed error as orthodoxy and publicly attacked people with quite legitimate criticisms as dissenters, schismatics, sedevacantists? They can’t simply claim they were just trying to follow the pope, when they went well beyond that. In that regard, notice that Fastiggi unwittingly but explicitly indicates his ultimate aim has not necessarily been to promote the truth, the deposit of Faith, Revelation, but to go along with whatever Francis said. There’s no harm in admitting that there’s ambiguity or confusion, or that every appearance indicates there is a contradiction with accepted doctrine, and perhaps be unable to explain it, and leave it at that. This would not necessarily involve disobedience, as donum veritatis notes. It’s yet another thing to actively push any explanation, some of them even opposed to one another, to explain the problem away, and call people who don’t accept those explanations as dissidents. Fastiggi’s buddy and editor of wherepeteris, Mike Lewis, has already said that if the next pope is someone he doesn’t like, such as a Card. Burke, Lewis will not be able to support them. Touche!
Fastiggi quotes Pius X, and yet can’t tell the difference between the Pope and the Papacy. In this, very much like Pius IX who once famously revealed, “I AM Tradition!”
Dear Peter,
I certainly can distinguish the office of the Papacy from the Pope in the abstract, but St. Pius X said that we must be united in mind and heart with the Pope not the Papacy. In Church history, some medieval canonists, Conciliarists, and (later) some Gallicans tried to distinguish between the authority given to the Petrine See (sede) from the occupant of that See (sedens). At Vatican I, the sede/sedens distinction (as understood by these groups) was rejected. According to Pastor Aeternus, chapter 2, Peter’s primacy over the whole Church is given to “whoever succeeds Peter in this chair” (Denz.-H., 3057). Primacy is given to Peter’s successor (the sedens) and not simply to the papal office (the sede). The statement alleged to have been made by Bl. Pius IX to Cardinal Fillipo Maria Guidi (Io, io sono la tradizione! Io, io sono la chiesa! [I, I am the tradition! I, I am the church!]) might have been made, but if it was made, it must be understood as a personal, emotional, and hyperbolic outburst and not an official papal teaching. Tradition and the Church are certainly more than any individual Pope. We must, though, accept what Vatican I and other councils teach about the authority (both ordinary and extraordinary) of the Roman Pontiff.
Question re your quote from Pius X’s catechism: What exactly must a Catholic do to demonstrate his union with the pope in mind and heart? Would it be profession of the same Creed? Would it consist of following Church precepts? By virtue of one’s Baptism? How is union recognized? Who would judge one’s perfection or failure at such union?
I’ll answer my question. Ratzinger, in his introduction to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, comments on its authority:
“The individual doctrine[s] which the Catechism presents receive no other weight than that which they already possess. The weight of the Catechism itself lies in the whole. Since it transmits what the Church teaches, whoever rejects it as a whole separates himself beyond question from the faith and teaching of the Church.”
Jimmy Akin explains: “Thus the Catechism presents the teaching of the Church without elevating the doctrinal status of those teachings beyond what they otherwise have. Consequently, one must look to other documents and to the tradition of the Church to establish the doctrinal weight of any particular point in the Catechism. Since the Catechism treats many things that not only have not been taught infallibly but which also have been proposed in the most tentative of fashions (esp. in the area of social teaching), there remains due liberty for theologians (and others) when they encounter something that has been proposed only tentatively.
“This was what allowed Cardinal Ratzinger to say, in his 2004 memorandum, that ‘There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia.'”
The faithful, having endured the Francis’ papacy, has every right and duty to question the truth or goodness of a pope’s non-infallible teaching.
Pius X catechism (p. 37, Archive ed.) asks:
Are we obliged to believe all the truths the Church teaches us?
Yes, we are obliged to believe all the truths the Church teaches us, and Jesus Christ declares that he who does not believe is already condemned.
Writing at First Things, Protestant Carl Trueman’s article, “Pope Francis, My Worst Protestant Nightmare” ends with a quote:
“As a Catholic friend once said to me about the last papal election, the Holy Spirit never errs. But, he added, the same cannot be said for the College of Cardinals.”
Fastiggi here posits that we should accept Francis as “the pope chosen for us.” Yes, indeed. An appropriate analogy is God’s accepting the king which the chosen people wanted in His stead. (See 1 Samuel 8 and 12. The first prophet and last judge Samuel argues, with God, that the people should not have a king. God complied with the wish of the people and Saul was chosen ‘for the people.’ Saul was such a poor leader that he eventually lost his reign: “For rebellion is as the sin of divination, And insubordination is as iniquity and idolatry. Because you have rejected the word of the Lord, He has also rejected you from being king.” (1 Samuel 15:23)
Just as God’s providence allows ‘frail’ leaders (as Fastiggi allows Francis may have been), so God’s providence allows evil-doers and false teachers among Church leaders.
Fastiggi believes that all decisions and teachings of Francis should be given an orthodox and benevolent interpretation. Did Francis give the same to Christ? Did Francis give orthodoxy and benevolence to the Bride of Christ? Did Francis give orthodoxy and benevolence to Church teaching which preceded him?
Fastiggi advises that now is not the time to revisit Francis’ teachings which some have reasoned to be heterodox, heretical, or uncharitable in pastoral practice. Since Francis failed to offer clarity or to answer dubia for questionably ambiguous statements or teachings during his lifetime, what is the rationale or good reason the faithful should not bring full front and center in his death those issues which Francis left us in disarray, in ambiguity, and/or lacking in charity?
The man who refused papal titles is dead. The works of Franciscus have ceased. Our work continues.
It is false to claim that Pope Francis never offered clarifications. A significant example concerns the “non-negotiable values” that Pope Benedict XVI had so forcefully highlighted as foundational to Christian ethics. In 2014, Francis remarked in an interview, “I have never understood non-negotiable values” — a statement that, frankly, caused deep dismay among many of the faithful.
Yet, six years later, in Fratelli tutti (2020), Francis explicitly corrected himself, affirming with clarity and conviction the existence of “permanent values” that “transcend consensus” and are “never negotiable” (§§ 211–214). A Pope who acknowledges and remedies an earlier misstep shows humility and fidelity, not heresy.
Moreover, those who sincerely oppose modernism would do well to recall that Francis, far from advancing modernist dreams, deeply disappointed their expectations: he praised Saint Thomas Aquinas as the “Common Doctor” of the Church, not Karl Rahner; he resisted pressures to dismantle the foundations of Catholic moral teaching; and he refused to surrender to the spirit of relativism, even when ambiguity in pastoral tone sometimes caused confusion.
To commemorate the death of a Roman Pontiff with caricatures and recriminations serves no good cause — least of all when genuine modernists are even now maneuvering to enthrone one of their own. A bitter or ideological spirit weakens the very Tradition it claims to defend.
The Church deserves better than narratives fueled by resentment. If we do not defend the truth with charity, we will soon find ourselves defending neither.
You’re doing a not-caricature of Pope Francis but without modernisms and recriminations, work-through, then?
If you truly believe Francis never made a mess, never acted with un-charity, never left ambiguity in his wake, I suggest you write to the postulator and to the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints.
In light of some responses, and in the hope that other readers may be seeking clarity rather than controversy, I would like to offer two brief passages drawn from Pope Francis’s own words — spoken not in footnotes or interviews, but in public catecheses and homilies, with unmistakable seriousness. Both passages explicitly denounce the spirit of relativism and the temptation to negotiate away fidelity to God under the guise of progress. They are, in fact, among the strongest condemnations of spiritual worldliness and “adolescent progressivism” voiced by any recent Pontiff.
In the first, Pope Francis draws a dramatic parallel between modern ideological trends and the apostasy described in the books of the Maccabees, citing also Robert Hugh Benson’s prophetic novel The Lord of the World:
“Negotiating one’s fidelity to God is like negotiating one’s very identity. Robert Hugh Benson — son of the Archbishop of Canterbury, later a Catholic convert — saw this clearly. In The Lord of the World, he prophetically describes the spirit of worldliness that leads to apostasy. It is helpful also to recall the Maccabean period, when, little by little, people began to follow a certain ‘adolescent progressivism’, doing what everyone else did. The result? Death sentences, human sacrifices. Do you think human sacrifices no longer happen today? They happen — many, many of them — and there are laws that protect them.”
In the second, the Pope speaks with sober clarity about the danger of abandoning fidelity in pursuit of a worldly relevance:
“This is the spirit of worldliness that Jesus did not want for us, and from which He asked the Father to protect us. It begins with a perverse logic: ‘Let us make alliances with the surrounding peoples — we cannot remain isolated or bound to our old traditions.’ Some, filled with enthusiasm, went to the king to negotiate. But they were not negotiating mere customs; they were negotiating fidelity to the God who is always faithful. This is apostasy. The prophets call it adultery. Jesus calls it a ‘wicked and adulterous generation’ — a people who sell off their faithfulness for a false idea of progress. And yes, they may still speak of ‘values’, but these are emptied-out values — only nominal, not real.”
Whatever one’s personal evaluation of Pope Francis may be, passages such as these — and there are many — deserve to be weighed with honesty. They refute the common trope that his magisterium is relativistic, and reveal instead a complex but coherent moral vision rooted deeply in Scripture, Tradition, and a Thomistic anthropology (which he has explicitly praised). That some prefer to ignore these moments is unfortunate — but they exist, and they complicate the narrative.
Mr. G,
Whatever words Francis said is of no interest to many of us here now. See my earlier post of today 6:53 AM, about five entries above yours.
It matters little what Francis may have said, the Catholic faithful are under no obligation whatsoever to attend or believe or follow or promulgate anything he may have said which the Church has not already said in toto. You may cherry-pick, Fastiggi may cherry-pick, and other Catholic-Lite authors may cherry-pick words of non-infallible doctrinal bits/pieces/hopes/nonsense which Francis may have thrown out from many an aerosolized height. We should intellectually examine about, pray, and discern the truth and goodness of his words. If they impugn his own earlier words or actions, if they impugn the words of the Church prior to him, we are under no obligation to his words which, you note, he may have relativized to suit his own pride, his own ‘humility,’ his own day, time, place, person or other accident of his papacy.
Instead, we place our faith in Christ and in his good and truthful faithful teachers.
Good day, sir. I shall not write to you more.
The only thing missing so far from so much “Francis news” emanating from official Catholic news services is SANTO SUBITO!!!!
As for the upcoming conclave, what we don’t have (seemingly) is the St. Gallen Mafia and Uncle Ted McCarrick orchestrating the outcome before the conclave even begins. I say “seemingly” because I’m not convinced that there aren’t operatives in the hierarchy insuring that the wreckage of the Bergoglian Papacy continues uninterrupted.
Re hierarchical operatives insuring the Bergoglian wreckage continues? I cast my vote not for the man himself, but for his kissing lips. All sorts of strange alliances and dalliances are possible from one man’s lips to another…
Thanks for this collection. I found all essays thoughtful and relatively succinct.
So much «queer» about this pontificate from start to finish that a wide sweep of the broom may be necessary to clear the mess it leaves behind. A total new look set of players?
Ex Africa aliquid novi?
[“….not an absolute monarch whose will is law; rather, he is the guardian of the authentic Tradition and all that traditionally entailed.”]
Here is my suggestion for the new Pope in order to maintain tradition, – to quote Pope Francis: “a poor church for the poor”.
Catholic Education in Solidarity with the Poor
Recent popes have declared that the “rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer”. This same criticism could be applied to Catholic education: Catholic schools and colleges are serving more the rich; and less the middle class and poor.
When my grandparents emigrated from Ireland in the early 1900s, the Catholic church in the United States already had in place a parochial school system designed primarily for immigrants. However, these schools are now too expensive for today’s immigrants.
St. Ignatius of Loyola, when he established Jesuit schools and colleges in the sixteenth century, insisted that no tuition fees be charged to the students in order that the poor might participate with the rich. Today, student fees in some of our Catholic colleges are exceeding $60,000 a year.
Should Catholic education include, as part of its mission, the goal of reducing the gap between the rich and poor?
Practically speaking, the Catholic schools must give up general education in those countries where the State is providing it. The resources of the Church could then be focused on Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and other programs which can be kept open to the poor. These resources could then be used to help society become more human in solidarity with the poor. Remember, the Church managed without Catholic schools for centuries. It can get along without them today. The essential factor from the Christian point of view is to cultivate enough Faith to act in the Gospel Tradition, namely, THE POOR GET PRIORITY. The rich and middle-class are welcome too. BUT THE POOR COME FIRST.
A parish stewardship program could provide free tuition to all participating but few parishes seem interested in that.
The poor do not come first, nor should limited funds and resources be redirected toward the poor. That sounds more like Marxism than the gospel.
In the interests of needed precision, three comments:
FIRST, has the “loving preference for the poor” and vulnerable been co-opted as a too-politicized “preferential option for the poor”?
Paul Sigmund notices this change in wording from “the Instruction on Christian Freedom and Liberation” (1986), in his commentary on Gustavo Gutierrez, in John Witte Jr. and Frank Alexander (eds.), “The Teaching of Modern Roman Catholicism” (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), p. 296.
SECOND, regarding the related issue of impartial justice, not politics: “Show neither partiality to the weak nor deference to the mighty, but judge your fellow men justly” (Lev 19:15).
THIRD, regarding your (William Horan) priority on evangelization, yes…
On evangelization, Pope John Paul II defines the concern for “the poor” broadly: “This option is not limited to material poverty, since it is well known that there are many other forms of poverty, especially in modern society–not only economic, but cultural and spiritual poverty as well” (Centesimus Annus, 1991, n. 57). St. Leo the Great remarks that, “…when [Christ] says: Blessed are the poor in spirit, he shows that the kingdom of heaven is to be given to those who are distinguished by their humility of soul rather than their lack of worldly goods.”
The parochial schools were mostly staffed by members of religious communities. With lay staff, salaries are much , much higher. I assume that’s a large part of the problem.
The organizers and collaborationists of “The Amazon Synod” contradict Robert Fastiggi’s narrative that “the wooden statues were not Pachamamas.
In April 2019, six months before the Pontiff Francis presided over his televised blasphemous Pachamama stunt, his collaborators had a PRAYER TO PACHAMAMA published in the Journal Missio, a journal of the Italian Bishops Conference.
That was reported at Catholic Culture by Phillip Lawler, st the link here: https://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=43919&repos=4&subrepos=2&searchid=2530124
This “thoroughly refutes” Robert Fastiggi’s narrative about the Pachamama blasphemy stunt.
Dear Chris,
To prove that Pachamama idolatry took place during the October 4, 2019 prayer service in the Vatican Gardens you would need to establish that the wooden statue of a pregnant woman was understood to be a Pachamama goddess idol and that the participants in the prayer service had the intention of worshiping Pachamama as a goddess. The name “Pachamama,” though, was never used during the prayer service, and neither you nor Phillip Lawler know whether there was the intent to worship a pagan goddess during the prayer service. The wooden statue of the pregnant woman was one of a number of items placed on a circular mat during the prayer service. A Franciscan Friar said the items on the mat were “symbols of earth, water, seeds, and martyrs.” When the wooden statue of the pregnant woman was brought before Pope Francis, an indigenous Catholic woman identified the statue as “Our Lady of the Amazon.” Pope Francis later said the wooden statues placed in the Church of Santa Maria in Traspontina were there “without idolatrous intent.” I believe it was a mistake for Pope Francis to refer to the statues as “Pachamamas,” but he was correct to note that there was no idolatrous intent associated with the statues. Perhaps you will argue that Pope Francis was lying. How, though, can you or Mr. Lawler prove that he was lying, and how can you prove there was idolatrous intent? We need to avoid rash judgment because it is a violation of the 8th commandment (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, nos. 2477 and 2478).
The “Prayer to Pachamama” in a publication of the Italian Bishops Conference does not prove that there was idolatrous intent during the prayer service of Oct. 4, 2019. This is so because the word “Pachamama” was not used during the prayer service. It’s also the case that the cult of Pachamama does not exist in the Amazon. It exists in only some isolated regions of the Andes. I’ve been told this by some priests from Peru as well as by others from area. The “Prayer to Pachamama” found in the Italian Bishops’ publication is only there to show that the pre-Christian people in South America had a reverence for Mother Earth, which is what “Pachamama” means. The reverence for Mother Earth should be understood as a “praeparatio evangelica” or a “preparation for the Gospel.” This is how St. John Paul II twice referred to the “Pachamama.”
John Paul II, Feb. 3, 1985 in a homily given during a Liturgy of the Word service in Cuzco, Peru, said:
“La Iglesia, en efecto, acoge las culturas de todos los pueblos. En ellas siempre se encuentran las huellas y semillas del Verbo de Dios. Así vuestros antepasados, al pagar el tributo a la tierra (Mama Pacha), no hacían sino reconocer la bondad de Dios y su presencia benefactora, que les concedía los alimentos por medio del terreno que cultivaban.”
[The Church, in fact, welcomes the cultures of all peoples. In them she encounters the footprints and the seeds of the Word of God. Thus, your ancestors paid tribute to the earth (Mama Pacha); in this they did nothing but recognize the goodness of God and his beneficent presence, which gave them food by means of the land they cultivated]
John Paul II in a homily given in Cochabamba, Bolivia on May 11, 1988 refers to “pachamama” as the ancestral name given to the earth, which is the work of God and a reflection of divine Providence:
“El Señor sigue acompañando con su ayuda vuestro trabajo. El cuida de las aves del cielo, de los lirios que nacen en el campo, de la hierba que brota de la tierra (Mt 6, 26-30). Esta es la obra de Dios, que sabe que necesitamos del alimento que produce la tierra, esa realidad varia y expresiva que vuestros antepasados llamaron la “Pachamama” y que refleja la obra de la Providencia divina al ofrecernos sus dones para bien del hombre.”
[The Lord continues to accompany your work with his aid. He takes care of the birds of the sky, the lilies that sprout in the field, the grass that grows from the earth (Mt 6:26-30). This is the work of God, who knows that we have need of the food from the earth, this manifold and expressive reality that your ancestors called the “Pachamama” and which reflects the work of divine Providence offering us his gifts for the well-being of man].
The inclusion of the Pachamama testified to by Pope Francis to be Pachamama, among other things, 1. is the violation of the 8th and 2. is the undoing of the premises of your argument. Fastiggi.
In addition, you “don’t want to pass judgment on intent” so you just ignore all relevant evidences. Now this has two parts if you care to look at it carefully. But I am not giving it away here.
Further, discussions by any Pope about ancestralist items is not a program for liturgical elevation; it’s a dialogue about grace absent. This is the same problem in the comment by Timothy Mabwanda in the CWR article Surveying Synodality (see link). Christ came through the Chosen People alone and not through other ancestries.
https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2025/04/12/surveying-synodality/
Dear Elias,
Thank you for your comments. I don’t believe it’s fair to accuse Pope Francis of violating the 8th commandment by referring to the wooden statues as “Pachamamas.” He was simply using the term for them that the Italian press was using. In retrospect, the use of this term was a mistake but not a sin. Moreover, the word “Pachamama” (Mother Earth) need not be associated with pagan idolatry. Unfortunately, those with a bias against Pope Francis and the Amazon Synod seized on the word “Pachamama” to support their accusation of idolatry. I don’t ignore the alleged evidences. I simply am not persuaded that they prove that idolatry took place during the prayer service in the Vatican Gardens on Oct. 4, 2019. In judging the morality of human acts, we need to consider the object chosen, the end in view of the intention, and the circumstances of the action (see Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1750-1761). Without knowing the moral object or the intentions of those who prayed before the symbols of the Amazon on Oct. 4, 2019, it strikes me as rash judgment to conclude that idolatry took place. Moreover, the circumstances were not those of a scheduled act of idolatry. The whole event was a Catholic prayer service celebrating the Canticle of the Creatures of St. Francis of Assisi. The accusation of idolatry is a very serious one. Unless there is undeniable evidence that idolatry was intended, faithful Catholics should withdraw such an accusation.
The item is objectively profane and idolatrous. This is not ascertained by intent.
The Bible tells us to avoid even the appearance of evil. The use of a questionable idol in liturgy is par for the course for Francis. It was inappropriate regardless of the intent.
There is more to Francis involvement in pachamamma prayer ceremonies. Fr. Z’s blog has two posts on Pachamamma-related idols–black earth-filled bowls with red flowers–which were placed on the ALTAR at St. Peter’s during the Easter Vigil Mass at the Offertory and remained there throughout the Consecration.
So not only did Francis bless the pachamamma statue in a Vatican Garden prayer ceremony, he further allowed at least one Pachamama in “front of the main altar at St. Peter’s and then carried in procession to the Synod Hall. Pope Francis said prayers in a ceremony involving this image and then joined in this procession. When wooden images of this pagan deity were removed from the church of Santa Maria in Traspontina, where they had been sacrilegiously placed, and thrown into the Tiber by Catholics outraged by this profanation of the church, Pope Francis, on October 25, apologized for their removal and another wooden image of Pachamama was returned to the church. Thus, a new profanation was initiated. On October 27, in the closing Mass for the synod, he accepted a bowl used in the idolatrous worship of Pachamama and placed it on the altar.” https://francisclooney.hsites.harvard.edu/blog/pope-amazon-and-pachamama (The author is a Harvard Jesuit theology professor; he positively spins the pachamamma idol shenanigans.)
https:/wdtprs.com/2020/04/amazing-coincidences-pachamama-bowl-vigil-of-easter-in-st-peters-annuario-pontificio/
https://wdtprs.com/2019/10/ritual-bowl-for-demonic-pachamama-placed-on-st-peters-altar-at-closing-mass-of-amazonsynod
Maybe the controversy is not so much about formal “idols” as it is about the unwillingness to truly “inculturate” natural religion and ancestral symbolisms (Mother Nature) with a new and distinct Christology?
Adaptation—while also removing what violates integrity of the Faith.
With indiscriminate openness to Pachamama (a niche in the St. Peter’s Basilica pantheon!), why are we reminded of polyglot Islamic belief and any such expression of natural religious “belief”—always to be distinguished from unique and supernatural “faith” in the Self-disclosing person of Jesus Christ:
“Islam has not wanted to choose between Heaven and Earth. It proposed instead a blending of heaven and earth, sex and mysticism, war and proselytism, conquest and apostolate. In more general terms, Islam proposed a blending of the spiritual and the temporal worlds which neither in Islam nor among the pagans have ever been divided” (Jean Guitton, “Great Heresies and Church Councils,” 1965, p. 116).
Pachamama and the “inclusive” pluralism of religions. Arius was excluded (!) at Nicaea.
This was an interesting spectrum of takes on the Francis pontificate, a good idea and well done. It baffles me that some are still able to be Francis apologists, assuming positive intent. Larry Chapp said it best: “Actions speak louder than words.”
While I hope you win the bet, Carl, I think I have to side with Sandra. I think Pope Francis was planning for this election from the moment he himself was elected. He has stacked the deck pretty well.
He “strengthened his brothers and sisters” by teaching and inspiring them to act justly, love mercifully, and walk humbly on this fragile Earth with God.
Are you referring to David Haas and his ridiculous show tunes or Franciscus, who rehabilitated abusers like McCarrick, Rupnik, et al.?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgLpXrs2FNI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SacVVsb9VKI
https://www.stkate.edu/newswire/news/david-haas-investigation-concluded
Better to praise St. Peter, a willing Pope, a Holy Father:
“Peter said to them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is to you and to your children and to all that are far off, every one whom the Lord our God calls to him.” And he testified with many other words and exhorted them, saying, “SAVE YOURSELVES FROM THIS CROOKED GENERATION.” (Acts 2:37-40)
In what world is sowing confusion, silencing critics, supporting homosexuality, attacking traditional Catholics, suppressing the Latin mass, and protecting ssxual predators a demonstration of love and justice? Just curious.
Athanasius!
Don’t forget putting an atheistic government in charge of the Catholic Church in the most populous country on earth.
Not to mention correcting Jesus’ incorrect wording of the Lord’s prayer.
(Sigh.)
And somehow people view Bergoglio as being humble.
Why has no one answered the question of what is an installation?
Shame on all of you? Especially the priests here ron
Rin, I asked the question, but Anna in the past denoted me less than human so she likely doesn’t read my posts. I would not expect HER to answer. Maybe no one else knows what she is talking about, or you are the only one who has read my post.
Anna is apparently of past or present Russian Orthodox persuasion. She has in the past identified abstruse problems in the RCC to which Roman Catholics were oblivious. I’m guessing that Orthodox canons say something about the use or the ‘installation’ of side altars in relation to Divine Liturgy. I’m also guessing that Anna is privy to some significantly brilliant Orthodox theology while we lowly Roman dogs have no idea what she is talking about! All along, here we were thinking that side altars, obviously installed, attached to walls or anchored to floors, were not so bad. Perhaps we’ve been wrong.
Essentialized single-oriented profiles in evil belong to fallen angels not living men. Men are subject to change and sway and their layered motivations while in this life; and those predestined for damnation can’t achieve evil perfected-ness until they have died when they are fully subjugated in hell with some satisfactions.
Also to note, not even in the lodge is there a single craven mentality or distinguishing evil trait. Men in there are all mixed in cravenness, crooked intentions, extremes of pride and false humility, envying drives, manifold stupidities, manipulativeness (not necessarily from pride), rot-filled pietisms, dastardly sufferance and so forth.
Men outside the lodge can be the same but they are not necessarily caught into processes of common evil obedience and subjection to Lucifer or “lodge tradition” or lodge mechanizing or lodge calculations.
Evil obedience or obeisance or indifference, etc., in the lodge, brings in its own set of deformations that can be worse than the things you’ve picked up on from secular psychology and believe to be well-defined, complete, or exclusive.
I have no idea what “the installation” is or was that has been mentioned here. Left just so, it is not speaking well.
Lodgers often take from Scripture and turn it to their own sense –so much like the heretic qua heretic. For example, “he returned to the father” is a lodge adaptation. On being announced a lodge meeting is in session.
Edit, include final sentence: The reason essentialized evil belongs with the fallen angels is because they were first of all, before they fell, angelic uniquely.
I intend to read all these opinions, but am pausing to praise the first one, Larry Chapp’s. I think he is exactly right. A remark I’ve made multiple times over the past five years or so, after I more or less gave up on Francis: He was a bad pope, not in the personal moral sense, but in the simple functional sense that he was bad at the job of being pope, like a builder whose collapse. He revivified the post-Vatican II “conservative” vs “progressive” conflict which has so damaged the Church and which I had so hoped was slowly fading away.
I intend to read all these opinions, but am pausing to praise the first one, Larry Chapp’s. I think he is exactly right. A remark I’ve made multiple times over the past five years or so, after I more or less gave up on Francis: He was a bad pope, not in the personal moral sense, but in the simple functional sense that he was bad at the job of being pope, like a builder whose buildings collapse. He revivified the post-Vatican II “conservative” vs “progressive” conflict which has so damaged the Church and which I had so hoped was slowly fading away.