• Skip to content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

St. Mary's Church, Roslyn: Pastor's Page

  • St. Mary’s Website
  • Pastor’s Page

Papal Election

Election of Pope Francis

March 17, 2013 by Rev. McCartney

My dear people of St. Mary’s:

“Brothers and sisters … You know that the duty of the Conclave was to give a bishop to Rome. It seems as though my brother cardinals went almost to the end of the world to get him. But here we are.”

With those words, the pontificate of Pope Francis began. The news came as a surprise to all of us, since the former Jorge Cardinal Bergoglio was not high on the list of any of the papabile the news media told us to expect. And so many firsts! The first pope from Latin America; the first Jesuit; the first to take the name of Francis; the first from the southern hemisphere; the first to be ordained after the Second Vatican Council; and the first native Spanish speaking pope in more than five-hundred years.

Pope Francis, even before appearing on the balcony to greet the faithful, placed a call to his predecessor, Benedict, the Pope Emeritus. By the time you read this, they will have already had a private meeting. How interesting to think of a conversation between two bishops of Rome! It says so much that Pope Francis wanted one of his first acts to be leading the people of the world in prayer for Benedict XVI.

I am sure that by now you have read the new Holy Father’s biography. Born in Buenos Aires in 1936 to Italian immigrant parents, he took a degree in chemistry before discerning his vocation. Ordained as a member of the Society of Jesus in 1969, he served as a novice master, theology professor, and the Provincial (regional superior) of Argentina for the Jesuits. He became rector of the seminary where he had studied, and also served as the pastor of a parish. He studied in Germany and obtained a doctorate in theology, and worked as a confessor and spiritual director in El Salvador and Spain. In 1992 Blessed John Paul II named him an auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires, and in 1998 he became the archbishop of that diocese in his own right. He was elevated to cardinal in 2001, and also served as president of the Bishop’s Conference of Argentina for six years.

His reputation for simplicity and personal holiness is well-known, and is certainly connected to his selection of the name Francis. As archbishop, he chose to live in a simple apartment with an elderly bishop and he cooked and cleaned for them both. He used public transportation instead of a private car, and frequently wore a simple priest’s cassock on his daily journeys through the city. His love for Christ has manifested itself in a great compassion and concern for the poor, and has also made him a zealous advocate for life issues, and a vocal opponent of abortion and same-sex marriage.

The media is expecting Pope Francis to be a reformer, and I believe they are both right and wrong. We should recall that St. Francis of Assisi, the great reformer of the Thirteenth Century, had a great love of the papacy, and a very strong personal commitment of obedience to the pope and fidelity to the teachings of the Church. I believe we shall see Pope Francis inaugurate a reform of the Vatican bureaucracy and initiate a great drive for spiritual initiatives in the church. But the “reform” the news media is hoping for and expecting, a change in fundamental Catholic Church teaching, will not (and, indeed cannot) happen. In short, the Pope will be Catholic. And as Catholics, we must begin right away to assist him with our prayers. In the words of the old prayer for the Pope: May the Lord preserve him, give him a long life, make him blessed upon the earth, and may the Lord not hand him over to the power of his enemies.

−Fr. McCartney

Filed Under: Papal Election

Conclave

March 10, 2013 by Rev. McCartney

From the Desk of Father McCartney

As we arrive at the Fourth Sunday of Lent, the members of the College of Cardinals continue to meet in Rome in preparation for the election of the new pope. By the time you will read this, we should know the date of the opening of the “conclave” which will begin the actual voting process. That word has an interesting history.

Pope Clement IV died in 1268. When the cardinals met in Viterbo, Italy, to elect the new pope, there were divisions among the French and Italian cardinals, each group wanting the pope to come from their home country. The impasse lasted two years and nine months, the longest interregnum period in the Church’s history to this day. It was only brought to a conclusion when the good citizens of Viterbo, having had enough, locked the cardinals in, and then removed the roof from the building, exposing them to the elements. The townspeople did, however, periodically send in bread and water. Eventually, on September 1, 1271, Pope Gregory X (an Italian) was elected.

Interestingly, he was not even there. Nor was he a cardinal. At the time of his election, he was a papal legate (ambassador) in Palestine, fighting a crusade with Prince Edward “Longshanks” of England, who would later become King Edward I (the king depicted in the movie Braveheart). When informed of his election, he immediately departed Palestine, but it took the new pope three months to get back to Italy.

Pope Gregory, wanting to avoid a repetition of the farce that resulted in his own election, issued a papal bull in 1274 outlining rules for future papal elections. In the document entitled Ubi periculum, he decreed that in future the cardinals should be locked in con clavis (“with a key”), and not permitted to leave until a new Pope had been elected. And so that is why the election of a new pope is said to be done in conclave to this day.

−Fr. McCartney

____________________________________________________

For the best live coverage of and commentary on the daily events regarding the conclave and the election of the new pope, go to EWTN at channel 135 in our area.

Filed Under: Papal Election

Primary Sidebar

March 2021
M T W T F S S
« Feb    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Categories

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Footer

Copyright © 2021 · Log in