MEET POPE FRANCIS
HABEMUS PAPAM!
WE PRAISE THE LORD FOR THE NEW POPE!
THE FIRST LATIN AMERICAN POPE,
THE FIRST JESUIT POPE!
POPE FRANCIS I
(CARDINAL JORGE BERGOGLIO, ARCHBISHOP OF BUENOS AIRES)
New pope, Jesuit Bergoglio, was runner-up in 2005 conclave
Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires, Argentina
John L. Allen Jr.
| Mar. 3, 2013 NCR Today
Conclave 2013
ROME
In the days leading up to the conclave, John Allen offered a
profile each day of one of the most frequently touted papabili, or men who
could be pope. On March 3, he profiled Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who was
elected March 13 to be Pope Francis. Here is the profile Allen wrote:
While there are still no tracking polls to establish who's
got legs as a papal candidate, the 2013 conclave at least has one objective
measure not available in 2005: past performance. Many of the cardinals seen as
candidates now were also on offer the last time around, and someone who had
traction eight years ago could be a contender again.
By that measure alone, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of
Buenos Aires, Argentina, at least merits a look.
After the dust settled from the election of Benedict XVI,
various reports identified the Argentine Jesuit as the main challenger to
then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. One cardinal later said the conclave had been
"something of a horse race" between Ratzinger and Bergoglio, and an
anonymous conclave diary splashed across the Italian media in September 2005
claimed that Bergoglio received 40 votes on the third ballot, just before
Ratzinger crossed the two-thirds threshold and became pope.
Though it's hard to say how seriously one should take the
specifics, the general consensus is that Bergoglio was indeed the
"runner-up" last time around. He appealed to conservatives in the
College of Cardinals as a man who had held the line against liberalizing
currents among the Jesuits, and to moderates as a symbol of the church's
commitment to the developing world.
Back in 2005, Bergoglio drew high marks as an accomplished
intellectual, having studied theology in Germany. His leading role during the
Argentine economic crisis burnished his reputation as a voice of conscience,
and made him a potent symbol of the costs globalization can impose on the
world's poor.
Bergoglio's reputation for personal simplicity also
exercised an undeniable appeal – a Prince of the Church who chose to live in a
simple apartment rather than the archbishop's palace, who gave up his
chauffeured limousine in favor of taking the bus to work, and who cooked his
own meals.
Another measure of Bergoglio's seriousness as a candidate
was the negative campaigning that swirled around him eight years ago.
Three days before the 2005 conclave, a human rights lawyer
in Argentina filed a complaint charging Bergoglio with complicity in the 1976
kidnapping of two liberal Jesuit priests under the country's military regime, a
charge Bergoglio flatly denied. There was also an e-mail campaign, claiming to
originate with fellow Jesuits who knew Bergoglio when he was the provincial of
the order in Argentina, asserting that "he never smiled."
All of that by way of saying, Bergoglio was definitely on
the radar screen. Of course he's eight years older now, and at 76 is probably
outside the age window many cardinals would see as ideal. Further, the fact he
couldn't get over the hump last time may convince some cardinals there's no
point going back to the well.
That said, many of the reasons that led members of the
college to take him seriously eight years ago are still in place.
Born in Buenos Aires in 1936, Bergoglio's father was an
Italian immigrant and railway worker from the region around Turin, and he has
four brothers and sisters. His original plan was to be a chemist, but in 1958
he instead entered the Society of Jesus and began studies for the priesthood.
He spent much of his early career teaching literature, psychology and
philosophy, and early on he was seen as a rising star. From 1973 to 1979 he
served as the Jesuit provincial in Argentina, then in 1980 became the rector of
the seminary from which he had graduated.
These were the years of the military junta in Argentina,
when many priests, including leading Jesuits, were gravitating towards the
progressive liberation theology movement. As the Jesuit provincial, Bergoglio
insisted on a more traditional reading of Ignatian spirituality, mandating that
Jesuits continue to staff parishes and act as chaplains rather than moving into
"base communities" and political activism.
Although Jesuits generally are discouraged from receiving
ecclesiastical honors and advancement, especially outside mission countries,
Bergoglio was named auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires in 1992 and then succeeded
the ailing Cardinal Antonio Quarracino in 1998. John Paul II made Bergoglio a
cardinal in 2001, assigning him the Roman church named after the legendary
Jesuit St. Robert Bellarmino.
Over the years, Bergoglio became close to the Comunione e
Liberazione movement founded by Italian Fr. Luigi Giussani, sometimes speaking
at its massive annual gathering in Rimini, Italy. He's also presented
Giussani's books at literary fairs in Argentina. This occasionally generated
consternation within the Jesuits, since the ciellini once upon a time were seen
as the main opposition to Bergoglio's fellow Jesuit in Milan, Cardinal Carlo Maria
Martini.
On the other hand, that's also part of Bergoglio's appeal,
someone who personally straddles the divide between the Jesuits and the
ciellini, and more broadly, between liberals and conservatives in the church.
Bergoglio has supported the social justice ethos of Latin
American Catholicism, including a robust defense of the poor.
"We live in the most unequal part of the world, which
has grown the most yet reduced misery the least," Bergoglio said during a
gathering of Latin American bishops in 2007. "The unjust distribution of
goods persists, creating a situation of social sin that cries out to Heaven and
limits the possibilities of a fuller life for so many of our brothers."
At the same time, he has generally tended to accent growth
in personal holiness over efforts for structural reform.
Bergoglio is seen an unwaveringly orthodox on matters of
sexual morality, staunchly opposing abortion, same-sex marriage, and
contraception. In 2010 he asserted that gay adoption is a form of
discrimination against children, earning a public rebuke from Argentina's
President, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.
Nevertheless, he has shown deep compassion for the victims
of HIV-AIDS; in 2001, he visited a hospice to kiss and wash the feet of 12 AIDS
patients.
Bergoglio also won high marks for his compassionate response
to the 1994 bombing in Buenos Aires of a seven-story building housing the
Argentine Jewish Mutual Association and the Delegation of the Argentine Jewish
Association. It was one of the worst anti-Jewish attacks ever in Latin America,
and in 2005 Rabbi Joseph Ehrenkranz of the Center for Christian-Jewish
Understanding at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Connecticut, praised
Bergoglio's leadership.
"He was very concerned with what happened, Ehrenkranz
said. "He's got experience."
Nevertheless, after the conclave of 2005 some cardinals
candidly admitted to doubts that Bergoglio really had the steel and "fire
in the belly" needed to lead the universal church. Moreover, for most of
the non-Latin Americans, Bergoglio was an unknown quantity. A handful
remembered his leadership in the 2001 Synod of Bishops, when Bergoglio replaced
Cardinal Edward Egan of New York as the relator, or chairman, of the meeting
after Egan went home to help New Yorkers cope with the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
In that setting, Bergoglio left a basically positive but indistinct impression.
Bergoglio may be basically conservative on many issues, but
he's no defender of clerical privilege, or insensitive to pastoral realities.
In September 2012, he delivered a blistering attack on priests who refuse to
baptize children born out of wedlock, calling it a form of "rigorous and
hypocritical neo-clericalism."
The case for Bergoglio in 2013 rests on four points.
First and most basically, he had strong support last time
around, and some cardinals may think that they're getting another bite at the
apple now.
Second, Bergoglio is a candidates who brings together the
first world and the developing world in his own person. He's a Latin American
with Italian roots, who studied in Germany. As a Jesuit he's a member of a
truly international religious community, and his ties to Comunione e
Liberazione make him part of another global network.
Third, Bergoglio still has appeal across the usual divides
in the church, drawing respect from both conservatives and moderates for his
keen pastoral sense, his intelligence, and his personal modesty. He's also seen
as a genuinely spiritual soul, and a man of deep prayer.
"Only someone who has encountered mercy, who has been
caressed by the tenderness of mercy, is happy and comfortable with the
Lord," Bergoglio said in 2001. "I beg the theologians who are present
not to turn me in to the Sant'Uffizio or the Inquisition; however, forcing
things a bit, I dare to say that the privileged locus of the encounter is the
caress of the mercy of Jesus Christ on my sin."
Fourth, he's also seen as a successful evangelist.
"We have to avoid the spiritual sickness of a
self-referential church," Bergoglio said recently. "It's true that
when you get out into the street, as happens to every man and woman, there can
be accidents. However, if the church remains closed in on itself,
self-referential, it gets old. Between a church that suffers accidents in the
street, and a church that's sick because it's self-referential, I have no
doubts about preferring the former."
On the other hand, there are compelling reasons to believe
that Bergoglio's window of opportunity to be pope has already closed.
First, he's eight years older than in 2005, and at 76 he
would only be two years younger than Benedict XVI was when he became pope.
Especially on the heels of a papal resignation on the basis of age and
exhaustion, many cardinals may balk at electing someone that old, fearing it
would set the church up for another shock to the system.
Second, although Bergoglio was a serious contender in 2005,
he couldn't attract sufficient support to get past the two-thirds threshold
needed to be elected pope. Especially for the 50 cardinals who were inside the
conclave eight years ago, they may be skeptical that the results would be any
different this time around.
Third, the doubts that circulated about Bergoglio's
toughness eight years ago may arguably be even more damaging now, given that
the ability to govern. and to take control of the Vatican bureaucracy, seems to
figure even more prominently on many cardinals' wish lists this time. Although
Bergoglio is a member of several Vatican departments, including the
Congregations for Divine Worship and for Clergy, he's never actually worked
inside the Vatican, and there may be concerns about his capacity to take the
place in hand.
Fourth, there's the standard ambivalence about Jesuits in
high office, both from within the order and among some on the outside. That may
have been a factor in slowing Bergoglio's progress last time, and nothing has
changed the calculus in the time since.
Whether Bergoglio catches fire again as a candidate remains
to be seen; one Italian writer quoted an anonymous cardinal on March 2 as
saying, "Four years of Bergoglio would be enough to change things."
Given his profile, however, Bergoglio seems destined to plan an important role
in this conclave – if not as king, then as a kingmaker.