By the time
you read this, the Conclave of Cardinals to select
a successor to John Paul II will have begun; it
may even have finished, and we will have a new
Pope. At the moment, speculation is rife as to
whom it may be: Josef Cardinal Ratzinger, in the
last Pontificate guardian of orthodoxy, to whom
running the Conclave falls as Dean of the Cardinals?;
Cardinal Arinze, head of the Congregation for
the Liturgy and a Nigerian?; Cardinal Scola, Patriarch
of Venice?; or one of the other handful of “most
likely” Cardinals, whom the Italians dub
Papabile? This writer cannot hazard a guess, and
can only repeat a Roman proverb --- “many
a Cardinal enters Conclave a Pope, and leaves
a Cardinal!” There is really no way of knowing
until it happens.
You may already know the answer when these sentences
hit your eyes, in which case speculation will
have begun regarding the new Pope and what policies
he will pursue. Again, we shall just have to wait
and see. There are a few indicators, but they
are not that helpful. One is the name that he
selects. Should he choose to be called “John
Paul III,” he will attempt, in all likelihood
to follow the course set by the late Pontiff ---
but that really tells us little, since his policies
often appeared to be contradictory. Should the
names Pius XIII or John XXIV appear, it will be
obvious that the new man considers himself “conservative”
or “liberal,” although in the latter
case that can be rather ambiguous. Should the
Successor of St. Peter reach back for one of the
older names --- Leo, Urban, Gregory, Innocent,
Benedict, or whatever --- there can be no telling.
Of course, given the course of the Papacy over
the past several decades, the Pope may dispense
with the tradition entirely, and just use his
own name. That would be very revealing --- or
not.
Another indicator shall be whether or not he decides
to revive the traditional coronation, or settles
for the sort of inauguration employed by the two
John Pauls --- the second of whom did indicate,
however, that the Crowning with the Tiara might
well return one day.
What is easier to see are the challenges facing
the new Pontiff. One is the legacy left by the
man we have just buried so spectacularly. What
amazes the informed observer is just how breathtakingly
wrong the common opinion of that legacy on the
part of major media in North America is. Those
worthies see John Paul II as a Pope who centralized
power in Rome and squelched dissent, causing many
pious seekers after priestesses, birth control,
gay marriage, abortion, divorce, married priests,
euthanasia, and so on untold pain. Oh, if only
he had loosened up!
The reality is in fact almost the opposite, and
far more complex. While it is certainly true that
John Paul II strongly proclaimed traditional teaching
in the areas that so upset the chattering classes,
there is rather more to the story. On the one
hand, he certainly raised the international face
of the Papacy and the Church, bringing it to 120
countries and maintaining diplomatic relations
with 174. The influence of the Holy See in international
affairs has probably not been so great since the
end of World War II, and nothing showed forth
that influence so much as his funeral. There too
one saw the tremendous pan-Catholic solidarity
he had engendered, passing over national and ritual
boundaries.
But in his last autobiographical book, he himself
wondered if he had not allowed the bishops too
free a rein, and any informed Catholic who has
lived under them will heartily agree. Under John
Paul II’s watch bishops defied Roman regulations
openly, and in many dioceses in Western Europe,
North America, and Australasia he had no more
affect on the running of things (and what was
vended by the bishops therein and their theologians
as Catholic teaching) than he did over Anglican
or Lutheran bishops. It is unlikely that the Holy
See has had as little say in the running of local
churches than at any time since the French Revolution.
So his successor will, on the one hand, have to
maintain the strengths of his pontificate, while
at the same time --- if he is to be successful
--- reassert his authority over his brother bishops.
The misrule by so many bishops of their diocese
has led not only to the pedophile and other scandals,
it has resulted in widespread disbelief in the
dogmas of the Faith on the part of many of the
(particularly higher) clergy, and corresponding
ignorance of them on the part of the laity. If
the Cardinal elected does not believe that this
situation is ideal (and he might, after all ---
history has shown us a number of such Popes) than
he will have to confront it. Fortunately, many
of the younger clergy are orthodox; clerical heresy
is really old hat, although many of its practitioners
still think of it as new and exciting; of course,
some people still see the Beatles as revolutionary.
Nevertheless, that is only the first hurdle. Another
is the absolute hatred of Christ and His Church
on the part of so many in the higher reaches of
government, media, and industry in the “developed”
world. The cabinets of such formerly Catholic
areas as Ireland, Spain, Belgium, and Quebec are
committed to “secularization,” by
which, in reality, they mean the rooting out of
Catholic beliefs and symbols from public life.
In all the others, the view of reality that dominates
the elites is more or less diametrically opposed
to that of the Church --- a situation abetted
by the inaction or even assistance of the sort
of prelates just referred to. Hence the views
of John Paul II by the media cited earlier. The
new Pope must face this as well, and doubtless
shall find inspiration, should he wish it, in
the figure of Charles I of Austria-Hungary, beatified
by the Pope last October. As John Paul II told
us, in the ill-fortuned Emperor we see a proper
example for all in public life.
In any case, the West is dying. Those who oppose
the Church’s teachings simply do not reproduce,
nor do their subjects. If Europe and the West
do not regain their Faith, they will disappear
in time. It is in Latin America, Africa, and Asia
that the future of the Church and the World lies,
if demographics mean anything. But there too,
the new Pope faces many challenges. The rise of
radical Islam, and proselytization by U.S.-funded
Evangelical Protestants in Latin America, are
problems that also must be dealt with. To do so,
Catholics have to regain the missionary fervor
that inspired the Apostles and the rest of the
first Catholics, and which has broken out anew
at various times in our history. That John Paul
II saw the need for this can be gleaned from his
encouragement of the “new evangelization”
and so many new and revived religious orders and
lay movements. But it really is essential that
belief in the necessity of the Sacraments and
the doctrines of the Church for salvation be reinstilled
in Catholics if they are to regain the sense of
urgency necessary to back these advances fully.
Of course, reunion with the East and bringing
to the Church right-minded Anglicans and Protestants
is another issue, akin to the last. For that matter,
something must be done regarding the organized
evangelization of the Muslims. Obviously, all
of these things also require good will on the
part of those being reached out to, and that is
something no one can guarantee, not even a Pope.
But it is something to be devoutly prayed for
and witnessed to.
In any case, whether or not the new Pontiff takes
an aggressive stand toward all of these challenges,
or prefers to wait and do what appears to be nothing,
all Catholics everywhere will wish him the best
in his new position, as will innumerable Heads
of State. Some few of the latter may even mean
it. But this writer will here and now take the
opportunity to wish him long life and victory,
as the old acclamations of the Roman people at
Papal visits once proclaimed.
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