He displayed his ease with himself as he was presented to the
crowds in St Peter’s Square that damp night on March 13th last.
There was the humour as he told how his cardinal-electors had gone to
the ends of the earth to find him, the unaffected humility as he asked
for the people’s blessing, and his choice of the name Francis.
These first impressions were underlined at his first public audience as
pope on March 16th when he met the world’s media and went off script to
explain how he chose the name Francis.
How his old friend Cardinal Claudio Hummes
told him “don’t forget the poor”, which immediately made him think of
Francis of Assisi. He commented, in a phrase which was a casual aside
but looks like defining his papacy, “how I would like a church which is
poor and for the poor!”
“Afterwards, people were joking with me. ‘But you should call yourself
Hadrian, because Hadrian VI was the reformer, we need reform . . . ’ And
someone else said to me: ‘No, no: your name should be Clement’. ‘But
why?’ ‘Clement XV: thus you pay back Clement XIV who suppressed the
Society of Jesus!’ These were jokes, ” he said.
Human complexity
Jokes from a pope and about what had taken place at the conclave that had just elected him are not commonplace.
But what really won over his
audience that morning was the warmth, the sense that this man liked
people, even liked that audience he was speaking to there in the Paul VI
hall.
Media people may be used to public figures trying to win them over but it was clear even then that Pope Francis wasn’t employing any strategy.
He just liked being with the people who were there, and as they were in
all their human complexity. This latter point he made explicit in his
final words that morning.
He said: “since many of you are not members of the Catholic Church,
and others are not believers, I cordially give this blessing silently,
to each of you, respecting the conscience of each, but in the knowledge
that each of you is a child of God. May God bless you!”
It was touching then in the breadth of the embrace and as underlined in
his words and actions since. Because this is a man whose broad soul has
a place for everyone.
Reaching out
Not since John XXIII has Catholicism had such a pope, a shepherd who reaches out to all of humanity while also remaining a true son of the church, which he made clear again in the interview published last Thursday.
And while the papacy of Francis has already brought with it a huge shift
in style more than substance, its effect is and will be truly
substantial. There are people now prepared to listen to this pope who
could hardly be bothered with his predecessors.
‘Heal the wounds’
‘Heal the wounds’
In words which will resonate with many, within and without the Catholic Church, Pope Francis said he saw the church “as a field hospital after battle”.
“It is useless to ask a seriously injured person if he has high
cholesterol and about the level of his blood sugars! You have to heal
his wounds. Then we can talk about everything else.
“Heal the wounds, heal the wounds . . . And you have to start from the
ground up. The church sometimes has locked itself up in small things, in
small-minded rules.
“This church with which we should be thinking is the home of all, not a
small chapel that can hold only a small group of selected people. We
must not reduce the bosom of the universal church to a nest protecting
our mediocrity.”
What his papacy brings with it is an end to the church of small things.
The full text of the Pope's interview is available here