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WELCOME! CrossCurrents aims to provoke thought and enrich faith by interpreting current events in the light of Catholic tradition. I hope you find these columns both entertaining and clarifying. Your feedback and comments are welcome! See more about me and my work at http://home.comcast.net/~bfmswain/onlinestorage/index.html or contact me directly at bfswain@juno.com NOTE: TO READ OR WRITE COMMENTS, CLICK ON THE TITLE OF A POST.

Friday, November 22, 2013

#407: Is the Pope Catholic? The Francis Effect



The many and varied reactions to Pope Francis since his election reveal both the challenges he is posing to the American hierarchy, and the pitfalls they must overcome to meet those challenges.



When a devout, church-going Catholic takes the prayer card depicting Pope Francis off her refrigerator and throws it away, saying “Now I feel kind of thrown under the bus,” something is happening in Catholic life that deserves our attention.

What is happening is the “Francis effect”--a paradigm shift in the governance of the Catholic Church, and a course correction for the Church’s mission in the world.  Everyone--conservatives, bishops, progressives, average Catholics, even the general public--seems to sense this.  But they’re reacting in dramatically different ways, because while they all sense the Francis effect, they understand it differently.

Some simply reject certain statements of the new pope.  Others call them “borderline heretical,” or else “imprudent” or “reckless.”  Some express suspicion that Francis is undermining Catholic tradition, while others are backpedaling on their own positions to minimize any appearance of conflict the pope--or else they are claiming that the media is distorting his message by taking “off the cuff” remarks “out of context.”

Meanwhile, progressive Catholics are jumping on the Francis bandwagon, and some early signs suggest that alienated Catholics may be preparing to return to church practice.  And the U.S. Bishops, meeting last week in Baltimore, seemed challenged to decide their own response to the Francis effect.   

So far, the range of reactions suggests that some people are struggling to link their faith to Francis’--as if they wonder “If I’m a good Catholic, then what is this guy?” Meanwhile others believe Francis represents the hope of a return to a more humane, more centered Catholicism.

For me, the Francis effect does not mean that this pope is not a real Catholic.  On the contrary, it means he possesses a Catholic identity and vision penetrating enough to expose several pitfalls that have weakened the Church’s U.S. leadership in recent years.

Pitfall #1: Pope-Quoting.  In the wake of the tensions and polarization followed Vatican II, American Catholics struggled to find some unifying principle that was strong enough to overcome their differences.  Conservatives thought they had found such a principle: Quote the pope, label anyone who differs a “cafeteria Catholic,” and those who cannot toe the line will drift away. 

Aside from turning papal pronouncements into bludgeons to attack others, this approach also encouraged the creeping conviction that papal statements were beyond question--as if popes were infallible 24/7, something the Church has never taught.

But now the “Francis effect” has caught such conservatives in a double bind.

First, they don’t like quoting this pope--and they don’t much like it when others do either.  Suddenly they are looking inconsistent at best, hypocritical at worst.  And if they resort now to quoting other popes they will paint themselves as the very “cafeteria Catholics” (picking and choosing which Catholic positions they like) they have condemned for years. In short, they hate the taste of their own medicine.

Second, they still need a unifying principle, but now they need a new one.  For me, this challenges conservatives to acknowledge that Catholicism has always been unified by the same thing: its core traditional teachings, focused sharply on Trinity, Scripture, sacraments, and loving service.  These comprise the “Catholic forest” we all inherit and inhabit together.  Everything else--even papal pronouncements--is just trees.  This leads to my next point.

Pitfall #2: False Priorities.  True teachings can become false priorities when they are uprooted from the Catholic forest and isolated like a Christmas tree in a living room window.  By engaging so aggressively in the culture wars of the last 35 years, the U.S. hierarchy has focused public attention on trees like gay marriage, abortion, and contraception--and virtually abandoned their opinion-shaping leadership on anything else. As James Carroll observed:

In no nation has the hierarchy shown its colors as a force for reactionary politics more than the United States, where something over 400 bishops have, as a group over the last decade, practically served as a branch of the Republican Party.

James Carroll is not alone in complaining.  Francis himself decried an obsession with “culture war” issues, arguing they were not worth the constant focus they have received, and the U.S. Bishops (despite two Illinois bishops launching a new attack last week on that state’s gay marriage law) seem to be acknowledging that the time has come to review their culture war strategy, as reflected by these remarks from Bishop Blasé J. Cupich of Spokane:

Pope Francis doesn’t want cultural warriors, he doesn’t want ideologues. That’s the new paradigm for us, and it’s making many of us think.

Certainly the message from Francis was unmistakable last week, when the papal nuncio to the United States addressed bishops meeting:

While, from various perspectives, American culture is characterized by diversity, this is true also of the Church. As Pope Francis…said: "The Church is never uniformity, but diversities harmonized in unity, and this is true for every ecclesial reality." But, we must take care that, for us as a Church, this diversity does not grow into division through misinterpretation or misunderstanding, and that division does not deteriorate into fragmentation.

I recently came upon an article on the political situation in America over the past fifty years which read: "The era of polarization began as Americans lost confidence in their leaders." Well said, since the Catholic Church will preserve her unity and strength as long as its people have trust in their bishops.

Pitfall #3: False Allies.  By and large, battling the culture war issues has aligned the U.S. Bishops (and therefore the public face of the Catholic Church) with the American religious right: the evangelical, fundamentalist, and Pentecostal denominations that have taken hard-right lines on homosexuality, school prayer, immigration, women’s roles, the First Amendment, etc.

From a political/ideological point of view, this makes sense.  But from a pastoral/theological point of view, it makes no sense at all. 

These extreme conservative churches do not accept Catholic teaching on the Bible.  They do not accept the Catholic sacraments. They do not accept the Catholic Mass.  They do not accept Catholic social teaching, or the authority of the bishops and the pope.  Many of them do not even accept the Catholic Church as a legitimate church representing the gospel message. 

Yet our bishops bond with them, and thus distance themselves from “mainline churches” (Methodist, Episcopal, Lutheran, Presbyterian, etc) that DO accept Catholic views on the Bible, the sacraments, the liturgy, and social justice--just because those churches disagree on women’s ordination or contraception. 

In a word, fighting the culture war has alienated us from our natural allies--faiths that share our core message--while linking us to faiths that oppose us on that very core but agree on a few specific political issues.  These are false alliances that reinforce the hierarchy’s focus on false priorities.

Pitfall #4: Collateral Damage.  Those same false allies are the only churches currently showing substantial growth in the United States.  And they don’t grow by converting atheists--they do it by poaching our members, and members of mainline Protestant churches.  In other words, not only are they false allies—they also are rivals in evangelizing. We’ve joined them in the culture wars, but in the battle for loyal, faithful followers, we are losing to them.

When the pew research polls report that 10% of all Americans (30 million people!) call themselves “former Catholics,” we know something is wrong.  Some have converted to other faiths, and many others have simply left.  We used to call them “lapsed” or “fallen away” Catholics.  But the truth is, they did not simply “fall,” nor did they jump--they were pushed.  Between the obsession with sex, the stress on culture wars, and the sex abuse scandals with its horrifying mismanagement in church affairs, the hierarchy has encouraged millions to shake the Church’s dust off their feet and walk away.  Continuing the culture wars will not bring them back--but it might send more Catholics over to the evangelicals!

The Francis effect, however, is the paradigm shift that just might bring them back.  My own opinion is that most of these 30,000,000 ex-Catholics have not lost their faith, but they have lost their confidence in the institution and its public leaders.  The Francis effect suggests that their alienation is not all that deep.  They may well be willing to come back if, following the example of Francis, our bishops do three things.

First, they can turn their attention to the core of our tradition, the “Good News” about Jesus, his Father, his Spirit, the Bible, the sacraments, especially the Eucharistic liturgy, and love of neighbor in service and social justice.  In other words, they can go back to the basics!

Second, they can focus on our true pastoral priorities.  We are hemorrhaging members, and need to grow.  Our active members lag behind in their Catholic identity.  Our liturgies fail to inspire.  The sacraments are languishing (the sacrament of Matrimony, for example, has been in trouble for nearly 50 years).  Our rank-and-file still think that social justice is optional equipment in their faith, and they think the Bible should be read literally, and they lack practice in faith-sharing.  All this begs for effective leadership in the Francis mold.

Third, the bishops can lead us all in reaching out.  But that means welcoming back the very people that conservative Catholics wanted gone.  It means opening the doors to dissenters, it means embracing difficult questions, it means welcoming different and difficult attitudes of suspicion, skepticism, and even hostility.

Perhaps this is the real threat imbedded within the Francis effect: that it could end up restoring Catholicism’s “prodigal sons” to their rightful place, while the loyal “good” sons struggle with resentment and anger to see the “lost sheep” welcomed back into the fold.

This gentle man Francis may have unleashed some powerful winds of change.  But be assured: this pope is very, very Catholic.  And we need more Catholics like him.

  © Bernard   F. Swain PhD 2013

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

#406: Paris Press Warms to Francis

My second article profiling the impact Pope Francis is having in the land once called “the Oldest Daughter of the Church.”


In France the print media remains a prominent shaper (and mirror) of public opinion.  Paris maintains several daily newspapers as well as weekly news magazines and monthly commentaries. 

The Catholic press is no exception.  Among dozens of periodicals, La Croix is the nation’s daily Catholic newspaper, and La Vie (formally La Vie Catholique) offers weekly coverage and commentary in a glossy, Time magazine format.  Neither has a U.S. equivalent.

Which is not to say that the general public is paying close attention to the Catholic press.  When I stopped at a news kiosk outside Paris’ Saint-Lazare train station in mid-October and ask for La Vie, the vendor hesitated, then pull the issue off the rack that turned out to be for the week of July 25-31st! It had been sitting there, unwanted and unreplaced, for more than two months.

http://www.lavie.fr/
No matter. A mid-summer edition proved more than useful to my main goal: to sample the French media’s reaction to Pope Francis.  It happens that this edition offered a lengthy account of the new pope’s agenda for reform--especially financial reform--within the Vatican.

This independent, lay-managed magazine pulled no punches.  The caption above the pope’s photo said: “THE POPE KNOWS that it is urgent to clean up the church.” Then the article opened by declaring that Francis’ July 19 decision to launch an across-the-board audit of the activities of the Holy See was without precedent, and offered this assessment:

Managed for centuries the “Italian” way--that is to say, according to unwritten “laws” inspired by nepotism and corruption--the world’s smallest state needs a serious house cleaning.

The magazine went on to describe the audit as the “third stage” in Francis’ program of Vatican reforms. 

The first was his April 13 creation of an advisory commission of eight cardinals (including one American, Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston).  The second was his June 23 decision to launch a commission to supervise the reorganization of the Vatican Bank.

La Vie’s reporter noted that the new audit commission was comprised, not of insiders, but of “seven independent laypeople, all noted experts” in their fields: judicial, economic, financial, and administrative.  They are to operate in total independence, the article said, and report directly to the pope himself--thus “eliminating any in-house bureaucratic ‘filters’ interested in masking or minimizing Vatican dysfunctions.”

Moreover, the commission’s mandate explicitly states that no Vatican office may restrict or limit the commission’s access to any documentation or information.

After reporting all this, La Vie’s reporter concluded with a brief commentary:

Therefore there can be no doubt about Francis’ very strong intention to reform the Church, while in pastoral matters he urges Catholics to venture from their cocoon into the “existential outskirts” of the world.  Thus the Franciscan revolution is only just beginning.

Meanwhile, another glossy but secular weekly, Le Point, chose to interview Swiss theologian Hans Kűng about Francis. 

This choice reflected a not-entirely-subtle agenda: to contrast the new pope with his predecessor.  For Kűng is not only the last working survivor of the “periti” (theological experts advising the Bishops) at Vatican II, he was also a close collaborator with Joseph Ratzinger, later Benedict XVI. 

Hans Kűng
Moreover their relationship was the stuff of drama. Two years after the Council concluded, in 1967, Kűng lobbied his faculty at the University of Tubingen to offer Ratzinger a teaching position.  Kűng also covered teaching responsibilities for Ratzinger while his colleague finished his first book, Introduction to Christianity.  But the student upheavals of 1968 pushed them apart.  Soon Ratzinger had left for another university, had ceased his collaboration with Kűng on the journal Concilium, and had developed a posture increasingly critical of Kűng’s progressive positions. 

Eventually Ratzinger took over the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith (formerly the Holy Office), where he was instrumental in stripping Kűng of his status as an officially Catholic theologian.  After his election as pope, he hosted Kűng for a 4-hour private luncheon that appears to have been amicable but fell short of reconciliation.

So Le Point had every reason to believe that Kűng’s take on the new pope would be formed by his own special assessment of Benedict’s papacy.

Kűng did not disappoint.

Asked about Benedict, Kűng said Benedict had resigned due to the “crisis” besetting the church from all angles: sex-abuse, cover-up, financial mismanagement, falling numbers of priests, parishioners, and sacraments. The unspoken point: Benedict left behind a mess.

Asked what difference Francis might make, Kűng opined that both Francis’ words and acts move the Church toward “renewal” rather than “restoration.” This was an implicit but pointed barb at Benedict’s traditionalist tendencies.  Kűng noted, for example, that Francis did not add a “+” or “pp” when he signed his name to a personal letter to Kűng: a small sign of Francis’ willingness to forgo customs he finds unnecessary.

“He has already overturned the style, language, protocol, and tone of the Vaticanesque culture” in Rome, said Kűng.  This shift in style, Kűng thinks, clearly heralds a shifting agenda: “He will not put obstacles in the way of John XXIII’s reforms from Vatican II.” Again, this is an implicit critique, reflecting Kűng’s longstanding and well-known conviction that both Benedict and John-Paul II had blunted the reforming impact of the Council.

Asked if Francis would bring “continuity” or “rupture” to Catholic life--a loaded question, since Benedict had long championed “continuity” and blames people like Kűng for causing “rupture”-- Kűng dodged deftly:

He will bring neither.  Already we can see that he keeps to the substance of the faith.  But it is a new paradigm for how the faith should be expressed at all levels.

The interviewer asked: does that mean that, as one bishop has already suggested, Francis will be a “revolutionary pope”?

“Yes,” Kűng replied.  “But a prudent revolutionary.” He will, Kűng continued, change what needs changing but not force changes without considering their impact on the people.  “After all, he is not an autocrat.  He is a pastor.” Again, Kűng’s pleasure with Francis reflects his displeasure with Benedict, whom he believes never displayed real pastoral leadership.

These samplings confirmed what I’ve heard from the many people I interviewed during my time in Paris: that while the French media had not flooded them with accounts of the new pope, still all the news they did read was good news.

The general theme that emerged from my interviews and my reading was that people find Francis a refreshing change, and they are hopeful (but not yet confident) that in tackling a wide range of urgent reforms he will succeed where both Benedict and John-Paul II failed.

  © Bernard   F. Swain PhD 2013

Saturday, October 26, 2013

#405: New Pope Promotes “Global Warming”

A profile of the impact Pope Francis is having in the land once called “the Oldest Daughter of the Church.”


Six months after the election of Pope Francis, I was curious to explore the reaction of non-American Catholics.  And since my best access to church people outside the U.S. is in France, French Catholics (and even non-Catholics) where my best option.

During two weeks in mid October, I interviewed roughly 20 people.  They included one bishop, six priests, four practicing Catholics, five non-practicing Catholics, a Protestant, a few non-observant Muslims (one of whom is a product of Catholic schools), and even a self-professed atheist.

What emerged was a rather complex but remarkably consistent image of a pope who has quite suddenly raised hopes (and also questions) among a wide range of French people.  And the periodicals I consulted confirmed the sense that Francis has ushered in a sudden climate change in the Catholic world that is already touching the world at large.

The very first person I interviewed spoke for all that followed by declaring herself perfectly satisfied to see a non-European elected pope.  “The only good European choice was another Jesuit, Carlo Maria Martini [former Archbishop of Milan], but it was too late for him [he died in August 2012].  This man seems to have the same kind of open spirit.” She said this even though Martini was famously progressive, not a word usually applied so far to Francis.

The bishop I spoke with declared that, despite the world’s reaction, Francis’ election was no surprise.  “After all,” he reminded me, “he finished second in the balloting in 2005.” He also took time, as did many I spoke with, to comment on Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation.

“He had the courage necessary to resign,” said the bishop, who had spent several hours with Benedict in Rome only a year ago.  He told me that Benedict had seen the effect of John-Paul II’s staying on too long, had watched the ailing pope lose control of church governance to a curia in bad need of reform.  He knew he himself was not a governor by nature, and that the job required too much for him.

The bishop was convinced, moreover, the Benedict’s resignation will become a precedent, so that future popes will routinely retire, thus opening the door to younger candidates.

Francis, the bishop thinks, is returning the Church to the renewal-and-reform agenda of Pope Paul VI, and doing it in the style of John XXIII.  As for the future, he said: “We will see if the body follows the head”-- observing that many Bishops do not share the general public’s enthusiasm for Francis.  (Just this week, of course, one German bishop was removed due to his lavish lifestyle.  No doubt many other Bishops are feeling nervous about their own excesses.)

Many others echoed these views.  A non-practicing couple said that Benedict had been “too austere,” and they found Francis “warmer” and especially liked his distaste for ornate institutional formalities.  But they wondered if he can do the job needed.

The young Arab I interviewed (Muslim by heritage but Catholic in schooling) was convinced that Benedict could not deal with the multiple crises facing him: scandal, leaks, the Vatican bank, corruption, and rampant careerism at virtually all levels.  He thought that Francis’ election came “just in time” since much needs changing.  Francis strike him as a “peoples’ pope” with the advantage of third world roots.  He noted the symbolic power of the pope washing the feet of prisoners and women, and expressed some confidence that, if Francis alters the tone of Catholic leadership and makes reforms, that will mean real progress even without any doctrinal changes.  “The Catholic church moves through history very slowly,” he noted, “step by step.”

One non-practicing woman told me that she has already noticed how popular Francis is among French people.  “He has definitely changed the PR image of the Church, for the better.”

Next I interviewed a very devout older woman who began by saying how much she had liked Benedict, and how much she admired a resignation that was “wise, courageous, and well-time--especially compared to John-Paul II.” But she also detected an “immediate shift in tone” when the newly-elected Francis asked the crowd to bless him, when he refused some ceremonial garb, and when he refused to live in the papal apartments.  She found his words, such as his comment on homosexuals, to offer a fresh take on Catholic tradition that she considered “a good thing for the Church”--especially beyond Europe.

A group of parish priests just outside Paris had less to say.  The consensus was that French people generally saw Francis’ election and performance as “good news”, but they also knew of some “extremists” (mostly traditionalist Catholics) worried about possible changes in liturgy.

An older, practicing couple observed that there had not been a lot of news coverage of Francis in the French media, at least not compared to the coverage that John-Paul II had received.  But, they added, “all the news has been good news”--unlike the bad press Benedict had received.

A priest I have known for more than 15 years confirmed that Francis has received consistently good press, even in the non-Christian media.  “And they never give us any gifts!” he observed--suggesting that Francis has made a genuinely good impression on secular journalists who are otherwise prone to skepticism in their coverage of the Church.

Right from the start, this priest said, Francis “broke through the screen” like a movie character bursting into the audience, so that people were approaching my priest friend with favorable comments right from day one.
     This priest agreed that Benedict's resignation was a reaction to John-Paul II’s long demise.  “The last time I saw John-Paul II in Rome,” he told me, “he was long gone.” He regarded the resignation a mark of Benedict’s “honesty and integrity.” He hoped it would become the precedent for future popes but, unlike the bishop I spoke with, he was not sure--and insisted that no one was.

Like some others, he personally agreed that Francis’ manner and priorities echoed the papacy of John XXIII more than anyone else, and for him this was reason to hope that the legacy of Vatican II could be recovered and preserved.

Two evenings later, at a large social gathering, a man approached me to ask what Americans thought of the new pope, and then offered his own view: “I think he’s going to be the bishop of all the poor--and I think that is a good thing!”

On my last day, I spoke with a self-proclaimed “atheist” (later he re-labeled himself “agnostic”) who offered his opinion of the new pope without being asked.  Francis, he said, was creating a fresh impression of openness and reform--just like John XXIII had done at Vatican II.  Given that this man was not a Christian, and also not old enough to remember John XXIII personally, I took his opinion to reflect a historical awareness rare among most Catholics--and a broad sense of what this new papacy promises.

All in all, The French seem happy and impressed with Francis and relieved to get beyond John-Paul II and Benedict. For them, it feels like a new season of warmth after a long chill. But they are holding their breath—and their judgment—to see what Francis can actually accomplish. Even so, some of them realize that what he has already accomplished—to show the world, by his character and manner and words, the Church’s warm, human, humble face—is a historical achievement all by itself.

Next: what French journalists are saying.
  © Bernard   F. Swain PhD 2013

Sunday, October 6, 2013

#404: An Epochal Change?

Pope Francis’ latest interview, with the founder and editor of La Repubblica, provides the clearest and bluntest signals yet about this pope’s vision and agenda. 

Just when I began to fear I had wasted 40 years working in the trenches of a church unwilling to renew itself despite the historic impetus of Vatican Council II (1962-1965), along comes the miraculous election of a pope who begins to proclaim, in a loud global voice, the very things that have gotten me blacklisted and even fired over many years.
A recent example: after a Catholic layperson proposed by visit to his parish to discuss adopting my Fidelis leadership formation program, the pastor checked out my blog.  There he found that I had written this:
After nearly 35 years of Catholic officials obscuring the vision of Vatican Council II, the new pope may already be rescuing its legacy
In reaction, the pastor wrote:
I went to his blog and saw this line. That's all I needed to see. I didn't need to read anything else.…To imply that JPII and Benedict have "obscured" Vatican II makes my blood boil!!!!!!
Of course, I never referenced those two popes.  I referred only to one “Catholic official” by name: Bernard F. Law, who resigned in disgrace as Archbishop of Boston after his role in the sex abuse scandal became public.  For this the pastor accused me of being “heterodox”--something less than an authentic Catholic.
But here is what Francis said when asked about the place of Catholicism in global culture:
Our goal is not to proselytize but to listen to needs, desires and disappointments, despair, hope. We must restore hope to young people, help the old, be open to the future, spread love. Be poor among the poor. We need to include the excluded and preach peace. Vatican II, inspired by Pope Paul VI and John, decided to look to the future with a modern spirit and to be open to modern culture. The Council Fathers knew that being open to modern culture meant religious ecumenism and dialogue with non-believers. But afterwards very little was done in that direction. I have the humility and ambition to want to do something.
Note these words: “But afterwards very little was done in that direction.” In short, Vatican II has not been implemented.
When the interviewer suggested, as I had, that Catholic officialdom was to blame, saying “I think that the institution [of the church] dominates the poor, missionary church that you would like,” Francis replied this way: “In fact, that is the way it is, and in this area you cannot perform miracles.”
Perhaps the pastor I quoted considers this pope heterodox as well? 
That same pastor also decided he could judge me without ever meeting me, saying:
This Swain beaut is NOT to be invited to speak at a group associated with St._____[parish]...Studying heterodoxy as if it were orthodox Catholicism will NOT happen at St._____[parish]under my watch!
I’ve encountered this sort of unprofessional, disrespectful, judgmental, even un-Christian tone time and again over the years—usually but not always from members of the clergy.  To me, such behavior simply does not compute with the role of pastor, which ought to be marked by humility and service.  Instead, in this case we got a name-calling watchdog.  Sadly, I was not shocked.  I have seen it too many times before.
Pope Francis is not shocked either.  When the subject of “narcissism” comes out in the interview, Francis is quick to note the link between narcissism and power:
I don't like the word narcissism…it indicates an excessive love for oneself and this is not good, it can produce serious damage not only to the soul of those affected but also in relationship with others, with the society in which one lives. The real trouble is that those most affected by this  -  which is actually a kind of mental disorder  -  are people who have a lot of power. Often bosses are narcissists.
With the interviewer suggest that “many church leaders have been” narcissists, Francis does not shrink from the truth:
You know what I think about this? Heads of the Church have often been narcissists, flattered and thrilled by their courtiers. The court is the leprosy of the papacy.
No doubt Francis has seen in his own work as archbishop that narcissism also shows up among the lower-level heads of parishes and dioceses.
Of course, whenever I, a life-long layperson, have criticized pastors, priests, or deacons for such behavior, some people have labeled “anti-clerical.”  They mean it as a negative judgment, even a condemnation of my character and good faith.
But Pope Francis makes it seem like a badge of honor.
When he notes that the interviewer is “a non-believer but not anti-clerical,” the interviewer replies: “True, I am not anti-clerical, but I become so when I meet a clericalist.”
Francis then smiles and says:
It also happens to me that when I meet a clericalist, I suddenly become anti-clerical.  Clericalism should not have anything to do with Christianity.
This is not, of course, a case of the pope attacking clergy.  In decrying “clericalism,” he is decrying certain attitudes and behaviors: privilege, arrogance, presumption, paternalism--things that pertain to power, position, and rank, but not to the ministry of a Good Shepherd.  Such things are not conveyed by Holy Orders, but they are nevertheless sometimes adopted by the ordained.
In effect, Pope Francis is calling out the emperor’s new clothes--or, rather, the old trappings of the imperial Church that Catholicism adapted from the Roman Empire.  When he calls Vatican courtiers the “leprosy of the papacy,” he is bluntly naming the rot that has infested too much of Catholic life - - and not just at the Vatican itself.
I would not be human if I did not feel some vindication and even validation in this.  As a child of the 1960s, I chose the Church (rather than politics) as a vehicle for social justice and peace; I brought up my kids in an inner-city “ghetto” so they would live with the poor in a neighborhood more like the rest of the real world than an American suburb; I devoted my work to parish at great sacrifice, and I suffered the petty resentments and punishments of officials too weak to deal with someone like me, who could exert influence without the benefit of rank, office, or Roman collar.
For the last 20 of my 40 years in ministry, it has seemed like the bright promise that the Church held when I started out was being worn away by the inertia of the institution’s power structure.  And as I saw the number of “lapsed” Catholics grow, I knew they had not fallen away--they had been pushed.  This was a discouraging realization, which called into question the years I had invested in Catholic renewal.
Finally, however, we have a leader who speaks the truth: that the institution not only is not always right, but sometimes does active harm to the Church’s own mission.
But the very fact that the “man at the top” sees the problem and claims “the humility and the ambition” to do something about it gives me great hope, both for my own work and for the mission of the Church.
So I find great kinship with the Italian editor who interviewed Francis, a non-believer who nonetheless concluded by saying:
This is Pope Francis.  If the church becomes like him and becomes what he wants it to be, it will be an epochal change.
  © Bernard   F. Swain PhD 2013