Pope Francis is celebrating his 77th birthday in relatively quiet
fashion, which isn't stopping others from marking the occasion --
including, improbably enough, the pro-gay magazine The Advocate, which named him its Person of the Year.
In truth, however, Francis had already given himself a major birthday
present 24 hours before by shaking up the membership of the
Congregation for Bishops in order to lay the groundwork for a new
generation of "Francis bishops."
In the United States, attention was understandably focused on the
nomination of Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C., and the
effective removal of Cardinal Raymond Burke, president of the Apostolic
Signatura, the Vatican's supreme court. Putting in the moderate Wuerl
and taking the strongly conservative Burke off couldn't help but seem a
signal of the kind of bishop Francis intends to elevate in the United
States.
As pope, however, Francis is responsible not just for the 6 percent
of the world's Catholic population that lives in the United States, but
the whole shooting match, 1.2 billion faithful all over the planet.
In that regard, it's worth looking at the other appointments Francis
made Monday to the Congregation for Bishops -- 30 in all, including 12
new members and confirmations for 18 prelates who already sat on the
body.
For the sake of analysis, two assumptions need to be stipulated:
· The 12 new members best reflect Francis' personal touch, given
that most of the 18 confirmations were for Vatican personnel whose jobs
generally entitle them to a seat at the table;
· The kind of man Francis picks for the Congregation for Bishops
is, in effect, a proxy for the kind of bishops he wants this panel to
identify.
If those postulates are correct, we can draw some early conclusions
about what a "Francis bishop" looks like -- ideological moderates with
the broad support of their fellow bishops and a real commitment to the
social Gospel.
From Mexico, Francis turned not to Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera,
generally seen as a John Paul II protégé and a champion of the church's
conservative wing, but to Cardinal Francisco Robles Ortega of
Guadalajara, who comes from a working-class family in Jalisco and,
though he's never been part of the liberation theology movement, has
good relationships with progressive sectors of the Mexican church.
Robles commands the respect of his brother bishops, having been
elected in November 2012 to take over as president of the episcopal
conference. He's also drawn good marks for his candor and lack of
defensiveness, among other things offering an apology in a recent homily
for "the scandals of those who lead the church."
From Colombia, Francis tapped Cardinal Rubén Salazar Gómez, who has
occasionally come under fire for alleged waffling on the church's moral
teachings.
In 2011, he drew criticism for voicing qualified support for the
de-penalization of drugs, and in 2012, he was compelled by the Vatican's
Secretariat of State to amend comments implying acceptance of the
de-penalization of abortion in three cases anticipated by Colombian law,
including rape, incest and threats to the life of the mother.
Despite those controversies, Salazar too has the support of his
fellow bishops, having twice been elected president of the Colombian
conference.
From Westminster in the United Kingdom, Francis elevated Archbishop
Vincent Nichols, generally seen as a doctrinal and political moderate
who has been criticized from the right in the U.K., among other things,
for his allegedly lukewarm support for the old Latin Mass and for the
new structure created under Benedict XVI to welcome former Anglicans
into the Catholic church.
On the other hand, admirers say Nichols is a gifted administrator and
builder of consensus who serves as the elected president of the
bishop's conference in England and Wales.
In terms of new Vatican personnel named to the Congregation for
Bishops, Francis added several of his own nominations, including his new
secretary of state, Archbishop Pietro Parolin, and the new prefect of
the Congregation for Clergy, Archbishop Beniamino Stella. Both are
veteran Italian diplomats known for pragmatic and generally
nonideological approaches.
Francis also tapped two Vatican officials he inherited from Benedict
XVI, including one, Brazilian Cardinal João Braz de Aviz, prefect of the
Congregation for Religious, who has occasionally come under fire for
allegedly being too soft, including in the Vatican's ongoing examination
of American nuns.
His efforts to promote reconciliation with religious women began even before he got to Rome in an interview he gave to NCR the day his Vatican appointment was announced.
"I want to learn from them and walk with them," he said of the
sisters. "You have to see people up close, get to know them, what will
help them overcome whatever problem there is."
Certainly no one can accuse Bráz de Aviz of having lived a sheltered
life, disconnected from the sufferings of ordinary people in the
developing world.
As a young priest, Bráz de Aviz was once on his way to a village to
say Mass when he stumbled upon an armored car robbery. He was shot
during the crossfire, with bullets perforating his lungs and intestines
and one eye. Although he survived and surgeons were able to save his
eye, he still carries fragments of those bullets in his body.
To be sure, Francis did not exactly flush out the more conservative
elements from the congregation. For instance, he confirmed Cardinal
George Pell of Australia, who's also a member of the pope's Council of
Cardinals, as well as Spanish Cardinal Antonio Cañizares Llovera,
prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and known around Rome as
the "little Ratzinger" -- not only because of his diminutive size, but
also his affinity for Benedict's doctrinal views.
No doubt, Francis thinks it's important to maintain some balance,
helping to ensure that bishops around the world are capable of
understanding the concerns of all types of Catholics.
There's equally no doubt, however, that as of Monday, Francis shifted
the center of the gravity inside the body responsible for selecting
bishops towards the middle -- not just with the American members, as it
turns out, but across the board.
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