There have been bad popes, to be sure.
I don't mean "bad" in the
sense that they performed their duties badly, but "bad" in that they
clearly were not good people.
Even -- or especially -- conservative
Catholic historians will tell you this.
But it's been a long time since we have had such a pope.
The modern
era has seen a lot of good men come to the Vatican wanting to inspire
the world toward more faith, more observance and more good works, as
Christ's vicar on earth.
What is it, then, that spoils their good
intentions?
Simply put, the men who surround the pope, known as the Roman curia,
are mostly to blame.
These are the bankers, the lawyers, the
publicists, the career politicians and the bureaucrats of the Roman
Catholic Church.
There are thousands of them.
They are, in fact, the men
who run everything.
You may have heard about the VatiLeaks scandal this year involving
Pope Benedict XVI's personal butler, a married family man named Paolo
Gabriele, the closest layperson to the pope, who was convicted of theft
for photocopying private documents, sentenced to 18 months under house
arrest.
We know that he didn't do it for money.
Even the prosecutors
will admit that the pope's butler did not earn a penny stealing
documents and then leaking them to journalists.
Why did he do it?
Gabriele was acting out of love for the pope and his Church. He
copied and stole 82 boxes of documents that demonstrate how the Roman
curia thwart the pope's good intentions at every turn.
Some of the
documents demonstrated how the curia resist attempts to bring spending
under control.
Some show the bickering that happens behind closed doors,
and the attempts to use marketing to cover-up problems.
And some of the
documents simply show men in important positions who are incompetent,
lazy or both.
Now, on Nov. 12, according to the Catholic News Service, an
accomplice of the butler, a computer technician by the name of Claudio
Sciarpelletti, has also been found guilty by a Vatican court.
Sciarpelletti was sentenced to four months in a Roman jail, but then the
judge quickly cut the sentence in half saying that Sciarpelletti had
never done anything wrong before.
Of course he hadn't! Like the butler,
the computer tech was acting out of love for his pope and his Church.
The rumor is that Pope Benedict XVI will likely pardon his butler,
and then give him another position in the Vatican, for life. That would
be a just reward for his "crimes."
But then, how can this situation be fixed, so that good things can
get done by the good people in the Vatican?
For starters, it would be
terrific to see the next pope selected from outside of the College of
Cardinals.
Upon a pope's death, a conclave is held in which a large
standing committee known as the College of Cardinals is sequestered in
the Sistine Chapel until they select the next pope by a two-thirds
majority.
More than seven centuries have gone by since the College of Cardinals
last picked someone from outside of their own club for the job.
In 1378
the Archbishop of Bari was elected from outside the conclave, becoming
Pope Urban VI. More memorably, 84 years earlier, in 1294, Pope Celestine
V was selected by the College when he was simply a hermit in the
mountains outside Rome.
Celestine was shocked to be told that the
College wanted him to be the next pope. He reluctantly accepted the job
and then ruled for only 15 weeks.
The curia completely overpowered him.
Celestine V never had a chance.
Then he became the only pope in history
to ever willingly quit and walk away.
I am one among millions of Catholics around the world who are
watching the VatiLeaks scandal involving the pope's butler, and now the
Vatican computer technician, and thinking: the problem is not the butler
and the techie.
The problem is not the pope.
It is the curia.
If we
cannot fire them all and start over then let's at least pick the next
pope from outside Rome, outside the College of Cardinals.
Let's find a
good man who wants to do good, and who won't allow the curia to mess him
up.