When Father Fabian Baez booked
his trip to Rome, he didn't have an appointment to meet with the pope,
so he gave himself ample time in the Eternal City to be able to arrange
some way to see him.
A week and a half in Rome seemed like plenty of time to meet up with the
pope "because I thought I needed to find a ticket, to get a ticket to a
general audience. Instead he found me," the priest told Catholic News Service Jan 9.
Father Baez, a parish priest in the pope's former Archdiocese of Buenos
Aires, arrived in Rome late Jan. 7 but did not manage to get a ticket to
the next day's general audience in St. Peter's Square.
He said he did not worry about it because he still had another week to
try. He still went to hear the catechesis anyway, sending out a message
on Twitter saying he was on his way to the square.
Little did he know a short time later he would end up having the best
seat in the house: first with the pope on the popemobile, then VIP
seating during the audience talk.
Father Baez said: "I had no ticket so I couldn't really come into the
square. I was outside the audience area. But he saw me from a distance."
The pope yelled to him, "What are you doing here?" the priest said. And he yelled back, "I came to see you!"
The pope had the driver stop the vehicle. He gestured to the priest to
come, "And I ran as best I could," squeezing past the people pressed in
front of him, past the large wooden barricades snaking through the
square and past a large security detail that is now used to protocol
being thrown to the wind.
The pope said, "Come, get on!" and gave the priest an empty seat next to his papal assistant.
The priest said that later, when he thought about it, he felt that phrase "Come, get on" was also meant for the whole world.
"When he invited me, he invited all priests to be near the people," he
said, and the pope was also inviting all people "to stand up, rise up
and go," and lift their hearts and lives up to the Lord.
When the priest from the church of Our Lady of the Pillar climbed onto
the popemobile, the pope told him, "The picture will go around the
world," as many unique and touching images capturing the pope
interacting with those around him have.
"I really didn't think about that" and the instant fame he was going to
have "because I was just so happy to see him. I've known him for 20
years; he was my bishop for 15."
"I hadn't seen him since he became pope and I really wanted to see him
and give him a big hug. I was so happy because I saw him and we spoke."
Father Baez spoke very fondly of his former bishop: "He's a very good
priest, whether he was a bishop, a pope, he is first and foremost a
priest.
"He showed all of us priests how to be a priest, how to care for people, to be a pastor with the smell of sheep," he said.
Father Baez's parish runs a school and two residential homes: one for
girls to live in while doing studies and one for homeless women with
children.
"We're not a poor parish, but we work for the poor," he told Catholic News Service.
The priest said Pope Francis "is the same man he was as a priest and as a
bishop," and his recent apostolic exhortation "Evangelii Gaudium" ("The
Joy of the Gospel"), contains "everything he thinks, everything he
believes, does and says" in his ministry -- "to proclaim Christ's love."
As a bishop, the pope always needed to demonstrate that love and show it
by example, the priest said, so "I think it is difficult for him" being
pope because his actions and mobility are more limited.
"He likes people, he likes being with the poor, hearing confession ..." he said.
Father Baez has seen a large uptick in his @paterfabian Twitter following.
He's replaced his header image with one of him and the pope hugging at
the end of the general audience and added a new bio: "Priest in Buenos
Aires. The pope once invited me to get on the popemobile with him. My
mission is to be a pastor and I am on Twitter because I want you to get
closer to God."