In an unprecedented move in modern times, Pope
Benedict XVI on Feb 28 voluntarily threw in the towel and abdicated his office. The Pope conceded that the pressure of the
work was getting too much, and at 85, his health cannot bear the pressure.
As soon as the Pope stepped aside, the exact nature
of the pressure of work started coming to light. In particular, the Italian newspaper La Repubblica claimed Pope Benedict “decided
to resign after receiving a dossier investigating the "Vatileaks
scandal" containing details of a network of gay prelates, some of whom
were vulnerable to blackmail.” See Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Francis#cite_note-vatileaks-220) .
In
the face of the never-ending paedophile charges against several high-ranking
priests, (virtually all around the globe), together with unimaginable financial
scandals in very high places, etc Pope
Benedict’s move is a masterpiece. First,
he literally saves his health and at the same time, secures a new lease of life
for his Church. At least, most critics
would be charitable enough to give the incoming Pope some breathing chance and
see what sort of reform jokers he might have under his sleeves – especially
with the old Pope still around to whisper into his ears!
It was no surprise that it took only a short
time to produce a successor to Pope Benedict.
Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, Bishop of Buenos Aires since 1998 and former
head of the Argentine Jesuit Order, was
reportedly the main runner-up at the conclave that had produced Pope Benedict in 2005; and he was reported to have graciously stepped
down for Benedict to prevent a long drawn-out exercise at that time. It is interesting that Cardinal Bergoglio
became Pope Francis on 13th March 2013, exactly 53 years after he officially
became a Jesuist (on 12th March, 1960).
Pope Francis
Going through the profile of Pope Francis, it is difficult not to see a
“good”, very likeable, compassionate,
and humble man. It would seem that if
any human being could foster peace of earth, Pope Francis could well be the
man. Unfortunately, man’s heart is
thoroughly degenerate, and the world’s situation direly critical. Clearly, good
wishes are not enough to accomplish anything.
Only the soon-coming Lord Jesus (and not a supposed ‘Vicar’ of His) can
save the world at this juncture. How is the new Pope addressing the real
essence of his job – salvation of souls in this world and in the hereafter?
Shortly after
his election, in a meeting with ambassadors from the 180 countries accredited
with the Vatican, Pope Francis called for more interreligious dialogue –
"particularly with Islam".[112] But that’s nothing new. Like Pope John Paul II who had gathered
together all manner of religious and spiritual expressions together at Assissi
(in honour of Francis of Assissi – see CA! Vol 2 No 6) the new Pope who took
his name after the same Francis, is with new zest, forging ahead with this
interfaith agenda.
The consummate “negotiator”
that Pope Francis is, even those who openly scorn God, attributing the beauty
and order of our complex universe to random forces of nature - all these will have a place in God’s
heaven. This is how the new Pope puts
it: God “has redeemed all of us, all of us, with the Blood of Christ: all of
us, not just Catholics. Everyone! (…) Even the atheists,” Everyone!” [138] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Francis#cite_note-144) . Of course, Pope or no Pope, the catholic
hierarchy could not allow that kind of statement! Thomas Rosica promptly corrected the Pope
by clarifying that non-Catholics who ”know” the Roman Catholic Church
can only get to Heaven by converting to
Catholicism.
Commenting on
this crucial central issue, the Wikipeadia article on the new Pope quotes
author Neale
Donald Walsch
: “it was regrettable that the hidden hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church
chose to officially retract the recent statement on eternal damnation bravely
made by its new leader, Pope Francis.” [139] In any
case even if Pope Francis could grant access to Heaven for all atheists, not
all of them would like to take up the offer!
Outspoken
atheist, Richard Dawkins
commented “Atheists go to heaven? Nope. Sorry world, infallible pope got it
wrong”
Showing the world the way to Heaven, validated by making
available here and now victory over sin,
is the bottom-line in religion. All the
admirable qualities of Pope Francis notwithstanding, turning round the fortune
of the tottering catholic institution would hinge on transforming people from
within, and not on another round of human philosophies and niceties. As much as we will like to wish Pope Francis well
in his new office, it is evident that if he does eventually finds the work too
daunting (like his predecessor), there may be no more room for possible
maneuvers by the Roman Catholic Church. It will then become all too clear that it is only
the Lord’s ideas and intervention that can save the world. In this sense, Pope
Francis might as well be the last Pope in the catholic church, as the famed
prophecy by catholic mystic, St Malachy,
allegedly predicts. (see CA! Vol 8 No 3)
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