There have been a number of attempts to reform the Roman
Curia, but the new Pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio SJ, has the best
opportunity to date.
Much criticism has been directed at
the Roman Curia in the past few months and that has only intensified in
the immediate run-up to the 2013 conclave.
The media, fuelled by
documents emerging from the so-called VatiLeaks scandal, have portrayed
it as a dysfunctional bureaucracy mired in sexual and financial
impropriety.
Some even depict it as the root cause of all the Church’s
problems.
Others maintain that the alleged corruption and vice inside
its various departments prompted Benedict XVI’s sudden resignation from
the Chair of St Peter, in a similar way to the moment when the 1968
student riots led him to leave his professorial chair at the University
of Tübingen.
Defenders of the Roman Curia and those who want to
reform it were reportedly the main two opposing blocs squaring off in
the conclave. At least that’s the storyline many reporters and
commentators were following, especially the pundits from Italy.
However
compelling, the “Curia vs reformers” billing has been simplistic. Think
of this: at least 51 of the 115 cardinal electors have worked in the
Vatican’s central bureaucracy, either currently or in the past. And like
the so-called reformers, almost all of them agree that “the Pope’s own
house has to be put in order”, as Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, a
non-Curialist, so vividly put it.
Certainly there are divisions
in the curial camp; some quite sharp. But these factions still agree on
at least one thing – that Curia reforms should be led by insiders like
themselves who already know where all the light switches are in the
Apostolic Palace, rather than by outsiders who are coming in from the
dark.
Indeed, there is a long-standing view that only a pope who is an
insider can be trusted with reforming the Curia. That’s what happened
with the election (exactly 50 years ago next June) of Paul VI. And it
was supposed to happen with the election in 2005 of Benedict XVI.
Unfortunately, it did not.
But Francis is the first Pope from
the Americas, and the first from outside Europe in over 1,000 years, and
there is a firm belief among the cardinals and many bishops around the
world that he must show a greater interest in administration than his
predecessor did. That includes carrying out an internal bureaucratic
reform at the Vatican.
The Roman Curia is, after all, “the
complex of dicasteries and institutes which help the Roman pontiff in
the exercise of his supreme pastoral office for the good and service of
the whole Church and of the particular Churches”.
That description comes
directly from the apostolic constitution, Pastor Bonus, the document
that Pope John Paul II issued in 1988 to – yes – reform and reorganise
this centuries-old institution once known as the papal court.
It
is generally acknowledged that this was only a mild reform compared to
the radical reorganisation that Paul VI carried out in the aftermath of
the Second Vatican Council.
On the day before the council came to an end
in December 1965, Paul issued a motu proprio to reform the Holy Office
(now the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith).
It was a
highly symbolic first step in a rapid succession of decrees that would
culminate in the complete overhaul of the Curia in 1967 with the
apostolic constitution, Regimini Ecclesiae Universae.
This
46-year-old text remains to this day the basic blueprint for the
Vatican’s central bureaucracy. It began the process of
internationalising a Curia that was for centuries monopolised by
Italians.
It took steps to make the Curia’s work more efficient and
internally coordinated by decreeing that the various offices hold
regular inter-dicasteral meetings.
And it made diocesan bishops members
of the major Vatican offices, which was seen as providing a practical
way for them to assist the pope in governing the whole Church.
Pope
Paul’s restructuring effort was thus aimed at enhancing the Vatican II
doctrine of episcopal collegiality.
In the first years after the
council it seemed to be succeeding, even despite resistance from the
Curia’s “old guard”.
But by the second half of the long pontificate of
John Paul II, that resistance had regrouped and many bishops around the
world began complaining that the Curialists had clawed back much of the
controlling power that Paul’s reforms had taken from them.
More
and more the Roman Curia began forming policy without widespread
consultation.
Then during the last eight years under Benedict XVI, there
was yet another turn. Rather than reform the Curia, the Pope just
ignored it and began issuing motu proprio decrees.
These were decrees
issued by his “own initiative” and seemingly without consultation,
either with the Curia or the world’s bishops.
When the cardinals
who gathered in pre-conclave meetings spoke of Vatican reforms, they
were mainly addressing the pope’s and the Roman Curia’s relationship
with bishops and their national conferences.
The media, on the other
hand, seemed to be looking only at the more sensationalist aspects of
dysfunction in the Curia – the alleged scandalous activity that was
hinted at in the VatiLeaks documents.
“How is this next pope
going to govern the Church?” asked Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor before the
conclave got under way. “A lot of bishops and cardinals think it has to
be done perhaps in a more collegial way. It is not just the pope who
rules the Church, it is the Pope with the bishops,” he said.
In other
words, it is not the pope with the Roman Curia, and certainly not the
pope with the Curia instead of with the bishops.
The Secretariat
of State, the nine congregations, three tribunals, 12 pontifical
councils and a variety of other offices provide support services to the
Pope.
In principle these departments deal only with matters “reserved to
the Apostolic See and those which exceed the competence of individual
bishops and their groupings, as well as those matters committed to them
by the Supreme Pontiff” (Pastor Bonus, 13).
Decisions of “major
importance” are not supposed to be taken without the Pope’s explicit
approval. The people who staff these offices – including the executive
officers – are appointed to five-year terms, though many of these men
tend to spend their entire priestly lives in the Roman Curia, often in
the same office.
The office heads are supposed to meet “several
times a year”, though there is no fixed rule.
Additionally, there is a
council of 15 residential cardinals, from dioceses around the world,
that studies the economic and organisational questions related to the
administration of the Holy See. It meets “usually twice a year” under
the presidency of the Cardinal Secretary of State.
There seems
to be no overall coordination and it is strange that only the heads of a
few of these offices even have regular meetings with the pope whom they
are meant to serve. This must change.
A Roman Curia that is not
functioning well will have a crippling effect on the effectiveness of
the Pope’s ministry and on the Vatican’s relationship with particular
Churches throughout the world.
Pope Francis I should make it a
top priority to appoint a Secretary of State and other top aides that
will move immediately to fix “his” Curia and bring it more fully into
line with the vision set out by Paul VI and the Second Vatican Council.
However,
that alone will not resolve the Church’s more crucial crisis, which is
its increasingly anachronistic model of monarchical governance.
Francis
I could provide a marvellous service to church unity if he consults
widely with the world’s bishops and tries to find a fruitful way of
restoring the more ancient and more evangelical model of synodal
governance.
Tinkering with the Roman Curia while ignoring this bigger
problem would be like healing a broken foot on a cancerous body.
As
Paul told the Corinthians, if one part suffers, every part suffers with
it.