When it came to the Roman Catholic Church’s relations with other religions, the now retired Pope Benedict XVI
was a bit like that elderly uncle of yours who means well but always
seems to say the wrong thing at the table.
There was the speech in 2006
when he seemed, fairly or not, to suggest that coerced conversion was
one of Islam’s core tenets.
Or his rebooting of the sainthood process
for Pius XII—the World War II-era Pontiff widely criticized for his
perceived silence during the Holocaust—a
campaign that further alienated Jews.
Of the messes Benedict left his
successor to clean up at the Vatican, these were among the messiest,
especially in a globalized age when interfaith dialogue is more
essential than ever.
Fortunately, newly elected Pope Francis looks willing to roll up his
cassock sleeves and start mopping.
At a meeting on Friday, March 22,
with foreign diplomats accredited to the Vatican, the 76-year-old
Argentine, the first Pontiff ever from the western hemisphere, made it
clear that an ecumenical revival is high on his agenda.
“It is not
possible to establish true links with God while ignoring other people,”
he said—adding surprisingly but emphatically, “I am thinking
particularly of dialogue with Islam.”
The Pope’s remarks came a day after his unusual Vatican
meet-and-greet with leaders and representatives from an array of
different faiths, whom he had made a point of inviting to his
installment mass on Tuesday.
Among them was Bartholomew I, the first
Eastern Orthodox patriarch to attend a Papal investiture since his
Christian church split with Rome in 1053, as well as Protestants, Jews,
Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists, who heard Francis pledge to promote
“friendship and respect between men and women of different religious
traditions.”
One shouldn’t underestimate how uncommon that shift in rhetoric and
gesture is for the Catholic Church—or how important it potentially is to
broader international relations, given the 1.2 billion Catholics the
Vatican represents worldwide.
Every religion has adherents who think
their faith is God’s only true WiFi network. And that impulse can turn
intolerantly violent, as the past couple decades have all too often
shown us. Certainly no one is accusing the Catholic Church of returning
to its Inquisition past.
But one of its more troubling tics is an
attitude of theological superiority and exclusivity toward other
religions, including fellow Christian denominations. And it can be as
irksome to people in Miami as it is in Mecca.
Ask the Rev. Albert Cutié, the former Catholic priest who was once a
clerical TV star known as “Father Oprah.” Cutié became an Episcopal
priest a few years ago after the paparazzi snapped him cuddling on a
beach with a woman who is now his wife.
But Cutié claims that celibacy
wasn’t the only factor. In his 2011 book, Dilemma, he says he
began thinking of bolting the Catholic priesthood a decade ago—after his
bosses blasted him because a prominent Cuban-American Presbyterian
minister, who had been invited to attend a high-profile funeral mass for
the Cuban singer Celia Cruz that Cutié was leading, inadvertently
received communion, something the church insists non-Catholics may never
do.
“I had to ask myself,” Cutié writes, “what are you doing in this
inflexible…institution?”
Cutié, as well as other Catholics and many Protestants, were
astonished at the hierarchy’s fire-and-brimstone reaction to a harmless
ecumenical miscue, especially when a genuinely horrific scandal—the
priestly sexual abuse crisis—was raging inside the church at the time.
But the incident points up, as Cutié notes, how rigid an institution’s
self-image vis-à-vis other groups can become after it’s endured for more
than two millennia. Even, that is, a half century after the modernizing
1960s church council known as Vatican II, when the Catholic hierarchy
was supposed to have dropped its assertion that “error has no rights”—a
medieval-style motto that essentially meant all other religions should
be outlawed—in favor of more ecumenical outreach.
Few expect Francis—a hardliner on most other church doctrines like
opposition to birth control, women priests and gay marriage—to be a
historic reformer like Pope John XXIII, who launched Vatican II before
he died in 1963.
Yet in terms of interfaith efforts, Francis could
emulate if not surpass John. As my colleague and Argentina native Andres
Oppenheimer reminds us in the Miami Herald this
week, Francis was an interfaith pioneer back in Buenos Aires. As an
archbishop, he often rubbed elbows with and sometimes prayed with
clerics of numerous other religions, even the Evangelical churches that
millions of disaffected Latin American Catholics have been turning to in
recent decades.
Many conservative Catholics responded as angrily as if he’d, well,
given a communion wafer to a Presbyterian.
But Francis’ well publicized
empathy for the poor had most likely led him and his ministry to a
deeper understanding of the fundamentally Christian as well as human
precept of walking in other people’s shoes, be they Catholics or Sikhs.
And that mindset will be critical in the 21stcentury, when
religion is again playing a prominent role in world affairs. How
positive a role depends to a large degree on whether believers finally
accept the fact that religion isn’t realpolitik.
That considering other
peaceful and charitable faiths to be as valid as their own isn’t some
spiritually milquetoast surrender to relativism—that on the contrary,
it’s precisely what a peaceful and charitable faith demands.
At the same time, reform-minded Catholics hope that better interfaith
ties will prod their church to broaden its own outlook—to acknowledge
that letting doctrine evolve, for example, through humane changes like
recognizing divorce doesn’t make Catholicism itself any less valid.
That
might not happen during Francis’ Papacy.
But by reaching his hand out
to other faiths, he may well be sowing seeds of reform to be reaped by
the next Pope.