The cardinal who heads Pope Francis’ Council of Cardinals said the
Catholic Church is entering a “new era” and accused critics of the
pope’s statements on economic injustice of failing to “understand
reality.”
“I’m firmly convinced we are at the dawn of a new era in the church,
just as when Pope John XXIII opened its windows 50 years and made it let
in fresh air,” said Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga of
Tegucigalpa in an interview with Germany’s Cologne-based Kolner
Stadt-Anzeiger published Jan. 20.
“Francis wants to lead the church in the same direction that he
himself is moved by the Holy Spirit. This means closer to the people,
not enthroned above them, but alive in them,” said the cardinal, who
leads the council appointed by Pope Francis to work on reform in the
Roman Curia and advise him on church governance.
In addition, Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga said, the pope favored
“above all, a simpler life and leadership” from priests and bishops in
line with the “sometimes forgotten message of Jesus,” and believed they
should go out to people, rather than “sitting in our administrative
offices and waiting for people to come.”
He said most Catholics were “behind the pope” and added that he
believed Cardinal-designate Gerhard L. Muller, prefect of the Vatican’s
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, could be less absolute in
his defense of authority in the church.
“I understand it. He’s German and a German professor of theology on
top of it. In his mentality, there is only right or wrong, that’s it,”
said Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga.
“But I say: The world, my brother, isn’t like that. You should be
slightly flexible when you hear other voices, instead of just listening
and saying, no, here this is the wall. I believe he’ll get there, and
understand other views. But for now he’s still only at the beginning.”
The cardinal’s remarks follow recent criticisms of Cardinal-designate
Muller, formerly bishop of Regensburg, Germany, for what some bishops
and cardinals see as an overly rigid stance on church teaching in some
areas.
The archbishop was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI to head the
doctrinal congregation in July 2012 and named a cardinal by Pope Francis
Jan. 12.
Speaking Jan. 21 at a Catholic university symposium in Venice,
Cardinal-designate Muller said he believed church life should not be “so
much concentrated on the pope and his Curia.”
He said the pope’s
November apostolic exhortation, “Evangelii Gaudium” (“The Joy of the
Gospel”), did not, “contrary to superficial interpretations, contain any
instructions for a change of direction or revolution.”
However, in the interview, Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga said the
pope’s priority was that the church should “reach the common people,”
and show compassion through “a different kind of care for the world,
especially the needy.”
He added that there had been “a lot of shouting” against the pope’s
“critique of capitalism” in “Evangelii Gaudium,” especially in “U.S.
business circles” who did not “understand reality.”
“Who says capitalism is perfect, especially since the recent financial market crisis?” the cardinal said.
“This crisis didn’t hit the poor, but rich America and rich Europe,
and it wasn’t the invention of liberation theology or the result of the
‘option for the poor.’ When no one criticizes capitalism, this is
something false,” he said.
Asked about calls for the church to change its attitude to divorced
and remarried Catholics, Cardinal Rodriguez Maradiaga said the church
was “bound by God’s commandment” that “what God has joined together, man
must not divide.”
However, he explained that there were “many ways to interpret” the
commandment, and “still much room for a deeper interpretation” without
reversing the teaching.
The cardinal said an October Synod of Bishops on the family would
tackle new social issues such as surrogate parenthood, childless
marriages and same-sex partnerships which were “not even visible on the
horizon” at the last family synod in 1980.
“We have the traditional doctrine, and, of course, the traditional teaching will continue,” Cardinal Rodriquez Maradiaga said.
“But pastoral challenges require timely answers. They can’t any longer come from authoritarianism and moralism.”
He said the cardinals who elected Pope Francis in March knew that “much had to change in the church.”
He added that changes now “high on the agenda” included plans to make
the Synod of Bishops a “useful and powerful tool of collegial
leadership,” rather than a body “meeting in Rome every three years,” and
the creation of a new Congregation for the Laity to reflect the fact
that laity “constitute the vast majority of God’s people.”
A new constitution for the Curia also was planned, the cardinal said.
It would replace Pope John Paul II’s 1988 apostolic constitution,
“Pastor Bonus,” on the structure and responsibilities of the Curia.
The
cardinal promised it would be “something completely new, not just a
modification or adaptation.”
“There are plenty of staff in the Curia who agree it cannot stay as
it is and are supporting us with their own proposals. The Curia is by no
means a monolithic bloc,” he said.