Who
could deny that the episcopal ordination and installation of the second most
important out of the two metropolitan archbishops in a wee Protestant, European
country with a statistically almost insignificant Catholic population — Saint
Andrews and Edinburgh circa 116,000 Catholics, Glasgow circa 225,000 Catholics;
total population of Scotland in excess of 5,000,000 — is wholly insignificant
in the greater scheme of Catholic things?
Well,
me actually.
Two
days before Mgr Leo Cushley formally took up his responsibilities, an interview
given by his former most important boss gave rise to an excess of joy among
those who hate the Catholic Church — from the New York Times to the Pink News
via CNN and the National Catholic Reporter; I can’t tell you about The Tablet,
I never read it now that it has ceased to be a Catholic magazine, but I
wouldn’t be surprised.
Our
new Holiness, Pope Francis, they have proclaimed, has declared that
homosexuality, abortion, artificial insemination, embryonic stem cell research,
divorce and remarriage, marriage of priests — they haven’t, at least not yet,
included marriage of priests to each other — ordination of women and anything
and everything else you care to add, no matter how apparently absurd never mind
outrageous, is now OK. That which had been taught by Pope Benedict XVI and his
264 predecessors and the man to whom they owe their lineage’s and teachings’
very existence, Jesus of Nazareth, Son of Mary, the Christ, are oot the windae.
Halelujah.
Or not, as the case may be.
For
those of us now upset, confused, fearful and full of doubt in face of this apparent massive, papal
U-turn it would seem prudent that we yet again follow Para Handy’s sage advice:
Let us pause and consider.
Is
it at all likely that this could be true?
Fortunately,
all we need do is turn to Archbishop Leo’s words as the Mass of Episcopal
Consecration drew to its close on Saturday, September 21. Because he worked so closely with
Pope Francis, Mgr Leo had been granted the unusual privilege for a newly
appointed bishop or archbishop to be called in for a chat with His Holiness. He
recalled: “One of the things he communicated then and in the coming days — Mgr
Leo routinely saw him in the course of his normal duties (HMcL) — was the idea
that I should be merciful in my ministry here.
“Merciful. This has already become a key word in his
pontificate, and it’s an idea that comes to him from the Gospels but filtered
through his thinking about a quotation that he likes from the Venerable Bede,
the famous English historian. The Pope told me to look up the Office of
Readings for the day and to find his motto, the words “miserando atque eligendo”, where Christ mercifully looks upon
Matthew and chooses him.
“But
he explained that being merciful doesn’t mean being soft. It means being gentle
but also firm at the same time. This is what the Pope asked me to be for all of
you. It is also Pope Francis’s proposal for the way we priests ought to be with
each other: firmly resolved to be merciful, to forgive, to be humble, to
re-build, to dialogue.
“The
Holy Father proposed this in his own gentle and fraternal way, but also with
the strength of loving conviction and experience.”
It
is worth, I think, pointing out that Pope Francis when he was Cardinal
Archbishop of Buenos Aires was loath to grant interviews with the Press. It may
well be either he knew of, or, had learned from those who knew of, the fact
that in February of 1959, Good Pope John released for publication part of the
text of a speech that Pope Pius XI had intended to deliver to his cardinals
twenty years earlier, on 11 February 1939, the day after he died. It read in
part:
“You know how badly the
Pope’s words are treated. People read our allocutions or addresses — not only
in Italy — in order to falsify their meaning, sometimes inventing altogether
and attributing to us the most utter nonsense and absurdities. Recent and past
history are so perverted in a certain press that it is said that there is no
persecution in Germany, and this denial is accompanied by false and calumnious
allegations of mixing in politics, just as Nero’s persecution used the charge
of setting fire to Rome.
“Take care, dearest
brothers in Christ, and never forget that there are observers and tale-bearers
(call them “spies” and you will be nearer the truth) who will listen to you in
order to denounce you, having understood nothing of the matter in hand or got
it all wrong. They have in their favour – one must remember how Our Lord
thought of His executioners – only the good sovereign excuse of ignorance.”
This,
according to some controversial, interview granted by Pope Francis was
conducted by Fr Antonio Spadaro SJ, editor in chief of La Civiltà Cattolica on
behalf of several Jesuit journals from across the world. As always, Jorge Mario
Bergoglio was paying his debts. As Pope, canonically he is no longer “SJ” but
at heart he is.
And
that word “canonically” and that word “heart” lead us directly to the pastoral,
evangelical impulse behind Papa Bergoglio’s advice to Archbishop Leo (as
revealed at his consecration/induction) and to the Catholic Church more
generally (as revealed in his interview).
One
of the great teachers of Canon Law in the Twentieth Century at the Pontifical
Gregorian University in Rome was Servant of God Fr Felice Maria Cappello SJ,
Confessor and Canonist. Professor at the Greg 1920-1959, he daily heard the
confessions of brother Jesuits, secular priests, bishops, archbishops and
cardinals as well as of the laity of all walks of life at the nearby Church of
Saint Ignatius until shortly before his death on March 25, 1962.
Dr
Edward Peters, a lay American canon lawyer, has asked the followers of his Blog
to invoke Fr Cappello’s intercession for the recovery of his son, Thomas Peters,
who was recently very seriously injured in a swimming accident. He makes note
of the good confessor’s advice to the student priests whom he taught:
“Principles are principles, and they remain firm and are always to be defended.
But all consciences are not the same. In applying principles to consciences, we
must do it with great prudence, much common sense, and much goodness. In your
opinions and decisions never be severe. The Lord does not want that. Be always
just, but never severe. Give the solution that offers the soul some room in
which to breathe.”
Never
be severe, always be merciful! Exactly what Pope Francis has said to Archbishop
Leo and to his brother bishops and fellow priests is, then, really nothing new.
Indeed, William Shakespeare said it long ago in The Merchant of Venice (Act IV,
Scene1):
The
quality of mercy is not strained
It
droppeth as the gentle rain from Heaven
Upon
the place beneath
It
is twice blessed:
It
blesseth him that gives and him that receives.
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