In winning election as Pope Francis, Jorge Mario Bergoglio defied the
papal pundits, even though they should have seen him coming.
His rise
marks the decisive shift within Roman Catholicism toward Latin America
and the developing world.
In theological terms, he represents
continuity, yet he is the first non-European pope in more than 1,000
years, and also the first Jesuit.
He is a doctrinal conservative who battled gay marriage in Argentina
and fellow Jesuits who were more liberal.
But he also rebuked priests
who denied baptism to children born out of wedlock and has spoken
strongly for social justice. He is the first pope to take the name of
the saint known for his devotion to humility and to the poor. He is
likely to weigh in often on behalf of the world’s poorest regions.
“We live in the most unequal part of the world, which has grown the
most yet reduced misery the least,” Bergoglio told Latin American
bishops in 2007. “The unjust distribution of goods persists, creating a
situation of social sin that cries out to Heaven and limits the
possibilities of a fuller life for so many of our brothers.”
That his election was a surprise is, in itself, surprising. It was
widely reported that he came in second to Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger —
Pope Benedict XVI — in the 2005 conclave. John Allen, the well-sourced
Rome correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, cited a prelate
who said that Bergoglio had given Ratzinger “something of a horse race.”
Bergoglio’s support stayed intact in the ensuing eight years, and one
church official said that he received roughly 30 votes on the first
ballot on Tuesday, a strong showing in the 115-member conclave that
placed him in a commanding position to win early after only five rounds
of voting.
In the run-up to the conclave, however, he was pushed down the list
of probable victors, partly because of his age — he is 76 — and partly
because some cardinals wondered whether he had the toughness to take on a
Vatican bureaucracy in desperate need for reform. This will now be
tested.
More liberal American Catholics seeking change in the church’s stance
on the role of women and sexuality cannot expect much movement from
Pope Francis. He is a traditionalist, although the same could be said of
all other potential winners. Francis was an early critic of liberation
theology, which united Catholics and movements on the political left in
Latin America.
Yet an American bishop noted that the choice of Francis would not be
greeted as a clear victory by conservatives, either. On liturgical
issues, he has opposed those who seek to roll back changes instituted by
the Second Vatican Council.
This bishop also noted that in his first speech as pope to the crowd
in St. Peter’s Square, Francis laid heavy stress on his role as the
“Bishop of Rome,” rather than emphasizing his standing as the leader of
the church.
This could, the American bishop said, be a signal that
Bergoglio is sympathetic to forces in the church unhappy with the
concentration of power in the papacy who have called for a
decentralization of authority away from the Vatican.
The conclave also pointedly stepped away from cardinals with close
ties to the Curia, as the Vatican bureaucracy is known, and also from
the early Italian favorite, Cardinal Angelo Scola of Milan.
In the end, it is Pope Francis’ standing as a Latin American and as an advocate of the poor that may well define him.
His connection to Argentina is not without ambiguity. He has come
under criticism for not speaking up strongly against the brutal
Argentine junta that ruled the country from 1976 to 1983. Yet he is
unlike some past leaders in the Latin Church who allied themselves with
privilege.
He gave up the archbishop’s mansion in favor of a small apartment,
and used public transit.
He’s worked in his nation’s slums and asked his
priests to do the same. He has outlined the shortcomings of unregulated
capitalism, and of the International Monetary Fund.
For many Catholics, a great deal of hope rests on the new pontiff’s
choice of the name Francis, the saint who disdained formal authority,
devoted himself to a simple life, cared passionately about the
marginalized, and saw actions as counting far more than proclamations.
It is said that St. Francis once declared, “Preach the Gospel always.
If necessary, use words.”
For a pope, it’s a challenging approach.