Pope Francis has helped the Society of St Pius X in its efforts to
buy a beautiful church and complex in the centre of Rome, according to
the Italian newspaper Il Foglio.
Vatican commentator Matthew Matzuzzi said the Pope played a “decisive
role” in speeding up the purchase of Santa Maria Immacolata
all’Esquilino.
The church, round the corner from Rome’s Lateran basilica, is
expected to become a study centre and later, it is hoped, the
headquarters of the SSPX.
Matzuzzi said the Pope’s intervention was made through Mgr Guido
Pozzo, secretary of the pontifical commission Ecclesia Dei, which seeks
to bring traditionalists into full communion with the Church.
He said the SSPX superior general Bishop Bernard Fellay stayed at the
Pope’s Santa Marta guesthouse along with two other officials, Fr Alain
Nely and Bishop Alfonso de Galarreta, during negotiations last month.
The neo-Gothic church, located on the Esquiline, one of the seven
hills of Rome, was built between 1896 and 1914 for a now disbanded order
of Franciscans, the Grey Friars of Charity.
The complex buildings next
door were formerly used for a school.
It would not be the first time the society has been able to count on the assistance of Pope Francis.
The then Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, Archbishop of Buenos Aires,
intervened when the Argentine government sought to deny the society
permanent residence in the country on the grounds that it was not
Catholic.
Fr Christian Bouchacourt, the SSPX district superior, appealed to Cardinal Bergoglio, who reportedly told him: “You are Catholic, that is evident. I will help you.”
Matzuzzi also claimed that an agreement between the Holy See and the
SSPX that would establish the society as a personal prelature was now
close.