Selecting the next pope
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On Monday, 115 cardinals will gather at the Vatican to select the
next pope. The process will largely determine the direction of the
Roman Catholic Church over the next few years and possibly decades.
Observers have speculated that the next pope could come from South
America or Africa. Others have said the next pope may hail from
Italy, where the majority of previous pontiffs have come from. What
should be the most important factor for the cardinals in choosing the
next pope?
The “Last Judgment” by Michelangelo dominates the wall behind the
altar in the Sistine Chapel where the cardinals will begin their
choosing business. Its powerful witness is that human beings are to
discern and do God’s will.
“What is God’s will for the people of the world?” should be
paramount for us all!
The electors who come from 52 countries on six continents will be
wise to be prayerfully mindful that they are determining a Christian
leader for the whole world, not only for their Roman Catholic Church.
They must be acutely aware that, after John Paul II, both the
church and the world have expectations of the pope that are very
different than they were before Karol Jozef Wojtyla’s election as the
265th Pope in 1978 when he was 58 years old.
The pope has more power than ever to bring together leaders, both
religious and secular, in the name of Christianity. (If I were a
betting man, which I’m not, I’d wager they will elect a Vatican
veteran or an Italian older than 58.) We need a person of prayer and
vision who will capture the imagination of the world. And, as the
outpouring of admiration and affection for John Paul II demonstrates,
we need such a leader now more than ever.
Christianity is not a one-size-fits-all enterprise. Electors
should prayerfully ponder how, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit,
the universal church may be maintained in unity of faith and life so
that ministry may accomplish services of love recognized by all
concerned to be God’s own.
The 266th Pope must understand diversity to be a blessing and find
resources for unity within our diversities. He (and we know the 266th
pope will be a he) must be a reformer and not only move forward
creatively into new areas of ministry (like shes), but take care with
areas in which there presently are significant and difficult
problems.
For example, personally, I find it scandalous that Cardinal
Bernard Law, the disgraced and unrepentant poster person for the
sexual-abuse crisis during his tenure as archbishop of Boston, will
be among those in the Sistine Chapel electing a leader for our world.
The cardinals, other bishops and priests like me have a lot of work
to do. All of us will do well be look, again and again, at “The Last
Judgment.”
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All
Angels Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Willing to listen.
Listening through dialogue, collaboration, study and inclusion
were the hallmarks of the Second Vatican Council, a gathering of
church leaders from around the world in the ‘60s to engage in the
critical process of renewing the Roman Catholic Church. Women and
non-Catholics were invited to these sessions. The next pope should be
chosen for his ability to lead the inspired work of a Vatican III.
The Pope should be willing to listen to the Catholic laity. He
should have appreciation for the sensum fidelium, or sense of the
faithful, as an essential source of church wisdom. He should be eager
to create and strengthen ways for the laity to have meaningful input.
The role of the pope in proclaiming Church teaching is often
overemphasized, while the fruit of the lived experience of the
Catholic in the pew is neglected. The next pope should listen to
parishioners and also those who have left the Church or who feel
marginalized.
The pope’s openness to listening to differing points of view
should be a factor in his selection. In the 21st century, authority
is earned by credibility, by reasoning, by education and by
persuasion, not by authoritarian tactics. More discussion must take
place on controversial topics such as end-of-life issues, stem cell
research, contraception, abortion, divorce, gay rights, women’s
ordination and married priests.
I have no doubt that some future pope will apologize to women and
seek reconciliation, but I am no longer certain it will occur in my
lifetime.
The pope should listen to the voices of moderate and liberal
Catholics and not allow fundamentalism to continue to dominate.
A pope should be selected based on his willingness to listen to
other bishops and work collaboratively. The National Bishops
Conferences should be encouraged to make decisions that reflect
sensitivity to the local churches and express cultural diversity. The
Sudanese Bishops’ statements in the ‘70s against female genital
mutilation and the U.S. Bishops’ leadership against segregation in
the ‘50s are examples of the inspired spiritual leadership of
national groups.
The pope should listen to economists. The church can play an
important role in the development of effective responses to the
threats of globalization. What can be done about starvation, child
labor, slavery, low wages, inhumane conditions and lack of healthcare
perpetuated by the political and corporate decisions which govern the
market economy? The pope must be able to contribute to the
development of an ethical framework on which to base the world
economy, and better educate the religious community about the new
dimensions of exploitation.
The pope should be someone who will work with other religious
leaders to develop this global ethic. Religious leaders must look
beyond doctrinal differences and find common ethical principles that
can be effective in meeting the threats of globalization, nuclear
destruction, terrorism, slavery, torture and war.
This must be more than symbolic meetings showing respect for one
another’s religions or finding points of accord within theologies:
Rather, it must be standing together to face the challenges of those
for whom personal gain is the only motive. Theologian Hans Kung warns
that there can be no survival of our planet in peace and justice
without such a global ethic.
The pope should be someone who listens through prayer. When
Cardinal Bernardin came to Chicago, he consulted the local priests
about what he could do to serve them. They asked him to pray.
It is easy to be caught up in liturgy, counseling, administration
and good works and to neglect daily prayer. Prayer and meditation are
a deep listening to all of life.
A pope who listens will hear the cries of the suffering and know
what to do.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of
Orange County
Costa Mesa
A woman wrote to Abraham Lincoln that God had revealed which
generals to promote and which to relieve of command. She wanted to
meet personally with the president to offer the benefit of her
divinely inspired wisdom.
Lincoln wrote back, “Isn’t it ironic that God gave you information
about everything that should be done but that God gave me the job!”
The supreme quality to seek in any candidate for leadership --
religious, political, business, social, familial -- is the acceptance
of responsibility.
A leader must listen, digest viewpoints and receive counsel. But
ultimately, it is the leader who is entrusted with the job and is
charged with stamping his own imprint and fulfilling his particular
vision.
Referring to the pope, here is a steward of the past, a shepherd
of the present, and a safeguard of the future. He must be guided by
timeless verities as championed by his church. He must not calculate
his decisions according to the whims of the morning’s polls or adopt
a panicked response to the afternoon’s ratings. He must make his
choices in steady, firm response to a higher vision of purpose. It is
a man who exemplifies this quality that the cardinals will seek.
A religious leader must dream, must lift his eyes to the
mountaintops. One cannot soar when tethered to the ephemeral and
elusive goal of public acclaim.
An Israeli statesman, Abba Eban, said, “It is unrealistic to
expect leaders to ignore public opinion. But a leader who keeps his
ear permanently glued to the ground will have neither elegance of
posture nor flexibility of movement.”
A leader must set his sail through the shifting winds of popular
sentiment and persevere in matters of principle. He must listen to a
higher, still, small voice above the noise of the daily clamor.
Harry Truman, whose presidency included such momentous decisions
as the Marshall Plan and the first use of the atomic bomb, once said,
“I wonder how far Moses would have gone if he had taken a poll in
Egypt.”
Prime Minister David Lloyd George was “other-directed,” and famed
for his acute sensitivity to public opinion. Lord Keynes once said of
him, “When Lloyd George is alone in the room, there is nobody there.”
When the pope is alone in his room, the pope alone must be there.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
What a great affirmation to the majority of the Roman Catholics in
the world who are not Caucasian, for the first time to have their
spiritual shepherd share the same ethnicity. It would be a great day
if the Cardinals could see their way to appoint such a man.
This is definitely not the most important factor though. The most
important factors are:
* Finding a man sold out to the Gospel, with a personal close
relationship with Jesus.
* Finding a man of prayer.
* Finding a man who has the conviction and fortitude to stand tall
in defense of God’s word and the orthodox faith in face of a certain
onslaught.
I know that the Roman Catholic Church has its own criteria, but
regardless of our differences on other issues, if the new pontiff
could fit the above criteria, I would cheer him on.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
Whatever success the next pope has will hinge on his ability to
communicate compassion and love. This was Jesus’ great commandment,
“to love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your
soul, and with all your mind ... and to love your neighbors as
yourself.”
Whoever they pick must be a master at love and forgiveness. Fear
is fueled by egocentric conclusions that only love can dismiss. The
principles of love and forgiveness must define the thinking and
behavior of the next pope.
The next pope must also have a vision that heals the hearts and
minds of those who have been disenfranchised by the recent
revelations of a subculture of church leaders who have seriously
violated their moral standards. These issues must be brought forth
and those who knowingly deceived the authorities must be removed from
any positions of leadership.
This will require a strong, decisive and principled leader.
Anything less will sustain the suspicions and distrust that will
gradually erode the confidence necessary to rebuild.
Great leaders have four things in common: vision, principles,
communication skills and love. Such characteristics are the product
of a consistent desire to grow and improve. The next pope’s life and
behavior must reflect the highest spiritual standards.
SENIOR PASTOR
JAMES TURRELL
Center for
Spiritual Discovery
Costa Mesa
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