The first thing this morning Pope Francis went secretly to pray at the basilica church of St Mary Major
in Rome.
It is a custom for a new pope to go to this great church to
pray, but for Pope Francis it was the first thing on his agenda.
While
he was there he made it a point to pray at the tomb of Pope St Pius V.
Is this significant?
Does it matter?
If it is significant what does it signify?
First of all, it is
significant.
Popes are aware of the historic nature of their office.
They know that the papacy is one. All the popes exercise the same
ministry and they all complement one another–even the wicked ones in
their way fulfilled the divine providence.
Furthermore, the Popes know
their actions and words are significant. This is why they carefully
choose their papal name. Benedict XVI chose his name for sound and
significant reasons.
Francis chose his name for sound and significant
reasons.
During his papacy, Benedict paid two very significant visits to
the tomb of Pope St. Celestine V – the pope who decided that a pope
could abdicate, and the only one who did abdicate for the good of the
church.
Benedict then follows his example and abdicates for the good of
the church.
The very first thing Francis does is go to St Mary Major to pray at the tomb of Pius V.
So
who was Pope St Pius V? He was a reforming pope who reigned from 1566-
1572. He cleaned up the curia, excommunicated heretical bishops, cleaned
up the immorality in the church and swept the church clean– paving the
way for the great surge in the church we call the Counter Reformation.
He also excommunicated the tyrant Elizabeth I of England and formed the
Holy League–a confederation of Catholic armies which eventually defeated
the Ottoman Empire at the Battle of Lepanto. Pius V also instituted the
Feast of Our Lady of Victories (nor the feast of Our Lady of the
Rosary).
St Francis lived during a time of corruption, wealth and
power in the church. He heard Christ say to him, “re-build my church.”
Will Pope Francis also hear the call from Christ to “re-build my church”
and not only be a new Francis but a new Pius V?
I think we will see
some high drama in the months to come. Certainly if his reputation in
his native Argentina is anything to go by, we may well see a Pope who is
uncompromising in his proclamation of the fullness of the Catholic
faith.
He stood up against an aggressive secular authority when they
tried to impose same sex marriage and abortion.
He also stood up to his
clergy and led by example with an austere life committed fully to the
gospel.
He also stood up against the clergy who wanted to get involved
in politics. He has said ambition and power seeking are a sin.
Will
Pope Francis be the “new broom” the Vatican needs right now?
What will
happen when he cleans up the Vatican, and then turns his broom to
secular society?
Like Pius V, does he perceive the Muslims as a threat
to be dealt with rather than a friend to be reconciled?
If he attacks
the secular dogmas of free sex, abortion, homosexuality and feminism
what will be the outcome?
Will he be the person to lead us, like Pius V
in a crusade against immorality and corruption both in the church and
without?
If he makes enemies will he last long?
Does he have the
strength to do this job?
Is this precisely why the Cardinals elected
him–to clean up the mess we are in once and for all?
This may be an even more exciting election than any of us predicted...