Amid widespread speculation about
a complete and quick reorganization of Vatican departments and rumors
in the Italian media that Pope Francis was going to close the Vatican
bank, a top Vatican official told everyone to calm down.
"It's a bit strange; the pope still has not met the group of advisers he
chose and already the advice is raining down," said Archbishop Angelo
Becciu, the substitute secretary for general affairs in the Vatican
Secretariat of State.
The Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, ran a front-page interview
April 30 with Archbishop Becciu, whose job is similar to a chief of
staff.
Asked about rumors that Pope Francis intended to close the Institute for
Religious Works, commonly called the Vatican bank, Archbishop Becciu
said, "The pope was surprised to see attributed to him phrases that he
never said and that misrepresent his thought."
Vatican bank employees joined the pope April 24 for his morning Mass; in
his homily the pope said the story of the church is part of the story
of God's love for humanity and human beings' love for God; Pope Francis
said bureaucracies, structures and offices -- like the Vatican bank, for
example -- must never get in the way of living and sharing that story
of love.
"In the context of a serious call to never lose sight of the essence of
the church," the pope's reference to the Vatican bank was simply an
acknowledgment that some of the employees were present, the archbishop
said.
As for the panel of eight cardinals Pope Francis named April 13 to
advise him on "the governance of the universal church and to study a
plan" to reorganize the Roman Curia, Archbishop Becciu said, "at this
moment it is absolutely premature to advance any hypothesis about the
future structure of the Curia."
"Pope Francis is listening to everyone, but wants to hear first of all
from those he chose as advisers," the archbishop said. The eight
cardinals -- including Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley of Boston and Cardinal
George Pell of Sydney -- are supposed to hold their first formal meeting
in October.
In the meantime, Archbishop Becciu said, Pope Francis has asked all the
heads of Vatican congregations and councils to stay on "for now." As of
April 30, the pope had not offered any Vatican office head a more
permanent position, but he also has asked Vatican officials with an
expired five-year appointment to continue in their jobs, the archbishop
said.
"This shows the desire of the Holy Father to take the time he needs for
reflection -- and for prayer, let's not forget -- in order to have a
complete picture of the situation," he said.
Archbishop Becciu was asked about a commentator's opinion that by
appointing a group of advisers Pope Francis was putting in jeopardy the
primacy of the papacy. The archbishop dismissed the claim.
"It's a consultative body, not a decision-making one, and I truly do not
see how Pope Francis' decision could put primacy into question," he
said. Appointing advisers does, however, demonstrate how "the Holy
Father wants to exercise his ministry," listening to the opinions of
cardinals from around the world.
In the church, Archbishop Becciu said, consultative bodies work on the
parish, diocesan and universal levels and religious orders have them,
too, but the bodies do not lessen the authority of the pastor, the
bishop, the pope or the orders' superiors.
Outside the church, he said, people might think a council without
decision-making powers is irrelevant, "but that would mean comparing the
church to a business." In the church, he said, advisers and members of
councils "help the superior in the work of discernment, in understanding
what the Spirit is asking of the church at a precise historical
moment."