He still goes by "Bergoglio" when speaking to friends, seems
reluctant to call himself pope and has decided to live in the Vatican
hotel rather than the grand papal apartment in the Apostolic Palace.
It
might seem as if Pope Francis is in a bit of denial over his new job as
leader of the world's 1.2-billion Catholics.
Or perhaps he's simply
changing the popular idea of what it means to be pope, keeping the
no-frills style he cultivated as archbishop of Buenos Aires in ways that
may have broad implications for the church.
The
world has already seen how Francis has cast aside many trappings of the
papacy, refusing to don the red velvet cape Benedict XVI wore for
official occasions and keeping the simple, iron-plated pectoral cross he
used as bishop and archbishop.
On Thursday, his
belief that a pope's job is to serve the world's lowliest will be on
display when he washes the feet of a dozen young inmates at a juvenile
detention center in Rome.
Previous popes have celebrated the Holy
Thursday ritual, which re-enacts Christ's washing of his disciples' feet
before his crucifixion, by washing the feet of priests in one of Rome's
most ornate basilicas.
Such moves hint, even at
this early stage, only two weeks into his papacy, at an apparent effort
by Francis to demystify the office of pope.
Unlike his predecessors, he doesn't sign his name "Pope Francis," ending his official correspondence simply "Francis."
To
those closest he is still Bergoglio, and this week, Italian state radio
broadcast a voice mail he left wishing a friend Happy Birthday. "It's
Bergoglio," the pope said, using the surname he was born with.
Even on Day One, Francis didn't acknowledge he was pope.
Speaking
on the loggia of St. Peter's Basilica after his election the night of
March 13, Francis told the tens of thousands gathered there that the
cardinals' task during the conclave had been to "give Rome a bishop."
And
bishop of Rome is the title he has emphasized repeatedly ever since —
not vicar of Christ, or any of his other official titles.
"I
do think there is something about trying to reduce the awesomeness, the
grandeur and majesty of the papacy," said John Allen Jr., Vatican
columnist for the National Catholic Reporter. "Part of this is just his
personality. He's never liked pomp and circumstance."
Indeed.
Even after he became Argentina's top church official in 2001, the
former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio never lived in the ornate church
mansion that Pope John Paul II stayed in when visiting, preferring
simple rooms in a downtown building, warmed by a small stove on frigid
weekends when the heat was turned off. He did his own cooking and rode
the bus to get around town.
In that same vein,
Francis announced this week that he wasn't moving into the papal
apartment in the Apostolic Palace and would stay instead in the
Vatican's Santa Marta residence, the antiseptically clean,
institutional-style hotel where he and the 114 cardinals who elected him
pope were sequestered during the conclave.
Calling
the hotel home, Francis indicated that he wants to live in a community
with ordinary folk, not the gilded cage of the Apostolic Palace.
He
will eat in the common dining room as he has for the past two weeks,
and celebrate 7 a.m. Mass in the hotel chapel as he has each day,
inviting Vatican gardeners, street sweepers, hotel workers and newspaper
staff to attend.
The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the decision to stay put in the hotel had been taken "for now."
"We'll see how it works," he said.
In
one concession, Francis did move in recent days from the hotel's
cramped Room 207, where he had stayed as cardinal, into Room 201, the
larger papal suite, which has a study and sitting room to receive
guests.
The furnishings are a step up from the simple fare of the rest
of the hotel: dark wood armoires and a bed with a matching headboard
carved with an image of Christ's face.
Francis'
initial refusal to move into the hotel's papal suite is perhaps
understandable, given the reluctance with which he accepted the job in
the first place.
On Wednesday, the Vatican revealed
what Francis said in the Sistine Chapel when he was formally asked if he
accepted the outcome of the vote. "I am a big sinner. Trusting in the
mercy and patience of God, in suffering, I accept," he answered.
The
decision not to take up residence in the Apostolic Palace might also
signal a desire to keep his distance from the dysfunctional Vatican
government Francis has inherited.
One of his major tasks will be to rid
the Vatican bureaucracy of the mismanagement, petty turf battles and
allegations of corruption that were revealed in leaks of papal documents
last year.
Francis does go to work each day at his
"office" in the Apostolic Palace, where he meets with various Vatican
officials. He uses the ornate Clementine Hall for larger audiences, such
as his first formal addresses to representatives of the world's
religions and the diplomatic corps accredited to the Holy See.
In
his March 20 audience with religious leaders, Francis sent an important
signal about his view of the papacy and its relationship with other
Christians.
He addressed the spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox
Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, as "my brother" — a
fraternal nod to a church that split from Rome 1,000 years ago and has
remained separated in part over disputes about the primacy of the pope.
To
make that message abundantly clear, Francis' chair was on the ground —
the same level as all the other religious leaders — and not on a
raised platform.
Two days later, when Francis greeted diplomats
accredited to the Holy See, his chair was up on a platform.
"To
have a simpler view, less grandiose sense of the trappings of the
papacy might be saying, 'I want to be able to relate to you at a
different level,'" said Anton Vrame of the Greek Orthodox archdiocese in
the U.S.
Francis' gestures, choices and emphasis
were clearly an indication of his personality and the simplicity for
which Jesuits are known, Vrame said.
"Is it a further simplification of the papacy that we've seen over the years? Potentially. It remains to be seen," he said.