By now, most Catholics have heard the story. I heard it myself from a priest who had worked with Bergoglio through the years, and then met him as Pope during that first year of this pontificate full of surprises. Father José shook the Pope's hand and then asked him frankly, “What is going on? All those years I never saw you crack a smile and now this?”
And
the Pope explained that after the votes were read, and he said his
yes, he left the Cardinals and went to a small chapel to pray. “I felt something come
upon me, and it hasn't left yet.”
We are witnessing the unexpected,
uncontainable power of the Holy Spirit.
Francis
is happy without being young or rich or physically attractive. He's
happy with the happiness of the beatitudes, and that's a sign of the
Holy Spirit. It was Paul who told us that the fruits of the Spirit
were “first of all, love, joy, peace, patience.” Paul pointed to
these as evidence that the Gospel he preached was true. It was so
manifest, it supported all his other assertions. Best of all, when
people witness these signs of God's presence, they can't help but
think, “I want
that!”
There's
something else.
As
attractive as Pope Francis with that authentic joy, people can tell
he is not under any kind of pressure or constraint. There is no goad,
no negative provocation, no force. He is clearly not acting from a
dry, grinding sense of obligation. Joy and freedom go together.
I see
Francis as Peter in the mode of—you won't be surprised—Paul. He
is a free
man.
Free
from political correctness; free from cultural norms that have
nothing to do with the Gospel; free from the pressure of people's
expectations. He is not beholden to anyone.
He
is free from anxiety, free from fear, free to transcend—and this was
a big part of his message here in the United States—free to
transcend every form of polarization. He's not afraid of listening to
people who disagree with him even on fundamental things. “Division
of hearts doesn't overcome any difficulty.”
His
freedom is united to a unique kind of patience: Francis is willing to let
things play out, without skipping steps to get to the goal, without
trying to “force solutions” (as they say in the 12-step
programs), because his freedom is not based on optimism, but on God.
He
doesn't have to conform to anything but the Gospel, and neither do
we. The Holy Father's freedom is a witness to his profound security,
and to the trustworthiness of God, of the Gospel, of the Church.
It is this same freedom-in-patience that the Pope is exercising (and calling for) in the messy process of the current Synod. Pope Francis is confident that the Holy Spirit is guiding the Church, and that there is nothing, absolutely nothing, to fear.
It can be a temptation to take a headline about the Synod far too seriously and run with it, whether into euphoria or into dread. How can you foster the presence of the Holy Spirit in your own soul so that you will be a sign of God's faithfulness for the people around you the way Pope Francis is for many people around the world?
It can be a temptation to take a headline about the Synod far too seriously and run with it, whether into euphoria or into dread. How can you foster the presence of the Holy Spirit in your own soul so that you will be a sign of God's faithfulness for the people around you the way Pope Francis is for many people around the world?
3 comments:
Even how he speaks, low almost inaudible, . You would think he'd be trying to be sure everyone can hear and understand him loud and clear.
Don't forget, he only has one lung to work with...
oh I didn't know that. I still need the scholars of the Catholic church like yourself to interpret and explain what the Pope s says for lay and non Catholics like myself.
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