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Thursday, June 13, 2013

SANDRO MAGISTER OF CHIESA HITS THE NAIL ON THE HEAD, JUST LIKE I'VE BEEN SAYING--POPE FRANCIS IS INTO ABSOULTE "BISHOP OF ROME" I.E. PAPAL POWER!


MY COMMENTS FIRST: I've been saying all along and alone, until now, that even though the Bishop of Rome has stripped himself of the regalia of "monarchy" that His Holiness will become perhaps the most monarchical pope ever. His actions and decision making process have become the tiara, mozzetta, red shoes, lace and Sedia Gestatoria of His papacy! Not wearing these has disarmed the left, rallied the right and has become the Trojan Horse of victory!

Sandro Magister of Chiesa writes the following: He governs the Church like a superior general of the Jesuits. He listens, but decides on his own.

And then Magister makes this astute bombshell statement:

Bergoglio is also a Jesuit, and by now his actions have made it clear that he intends to apply to the papacy the methods of governance typical of the Society of Jesus, where the superior general, nicknamed the “black pope,” has practically absolute power.

His reticence in attributing to himself the name of pope and his preference for calling himself as bishop of Rome have made champions of the democratization of the Church rejoice.

But theirs is a blunder. When Francis, on April 13, appointed eight cardinals “to advise him in the governance of the universal Church and to study a project for the revision of the Roman curia,” he selected them according to his own judgment.


Magister's full article:

Bergoglio, the "Black Pope" Dressed in White

He governs the Church like a superior general of the Jesuits. He listens, but decides on his own. Even a McKinsey man has been called in to study the reform of the curia. Which Francis wants to purify from corruption and from the "gay lobby"

by Sandro Magister


ROME, June 13, 2013 - All that was lacking was a guru from McKinsey to design that reform of the curia which everyone expects from Pope Francis. And here he comes.

His name is Thomas von Mitschke-Collande, he is German and was the manager of the Munich branch of the most famous and mysterious company of managerial consulting in the world.

In matters of the Church, he knows his stuff. Last year he published a book with a title that was hardly reassuring: “Does the Church want to destroy itself? Facts and analyses presented by a business consultant.” The diocese of Berlin turned to him to get its accounts back in order, and the German episcopal conference asked him to draw up a plan to save on costs and personnel.

The idea of putting him to work for the reform of the Roman curia as well came from Reinhard Marx, the archbishop of Munich, one of the eight cardinals called by pope Jorge Mario Bergoglio to act as his advisor.

The proposal, which he welcomed enthusiastically, was made to him by Fr. Hans Langerdörfer, the powerful secretary of the German episcopal conference, a Jesuit.

Bergoglio is also a Jesuit, and by now his actions have made it clear that he intends to apply to the papacy the methods of governance typical of the Society of Jesus, where the superior general, nicknamed the “black pope,” has practically absolute power.

His reticence in attributing to himself the name of pope and his preference for calling himself as bishop of Rome have made champions of the democratization of the Church rejoice.

But theirs is a blunder. When Francis, on April 13, appointed eight cardinals “to advise him in the governance of the universal Church and to study a project for the revision of the Roman curia,” he selected them according to his own judgment.

If he had followed the suggestions of the preconclave,he would have found the “council of the crown” nice and ready. All he had to do was to call around himself the twelve cardinals, three for each continent, elected at the end of each synod and therefore of the last as well, in October of 2012. Elected by a secret vote and representative of the elite of the worldwide episcopate, containing almost all of the influential names of the last conclave: cardinals Timothy Dolan of New York, Odilo Scherer of São Paulo, Brazil, Christoph Schönborn of Vienna, Peter Erdö of Budapest, Luis Antonio Gokim Tagle of Manila.

But no. Pope Francis wanted his eight advisors to be chosen by himself alone, not by others. Called to answer only to him, not to an elective assembly as well.

He wanted one for each geographical area: Reinhard Marx for Europe, Sean Patrick O'Malley for North America, Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga for Central America, Francisco Javier Errázuriz Ossa for South America, Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya for Africa, Oswald Gracias for Asia, George Pell for Oceania, plus one from Rome, not of the curia strictly speaking but of Vatican City-State, the president of its governorate, Giuseppe Bertello.

Almost all of those chosen hold or have held executive positions in continental ecclesiastical institutions.

But this is exactly what happens in the Society of Jesus. Bergoglio was one of its provincial superiors and assimilated its style. In the leadership of the Society the assistants who surround the superior general, appointed by him, represent their respective geographical areas. The decisions are not made collegially. Only the superior general decides, with direct and immediate powers. The assistants do not need to agree with one another and with him; they advise the superior general one by one, in the greatest freedom.

One effect of this system upon the reform of the Roman curia announced by Pope Francis is that no commission of experts has been installed with the task of elaborating a unified and complete project.

The eight cardinals are asking separately for the contribution of persons they trust, of the most disparate profiles. In addition to the McKinsey man recruited by Cardinal Marx, at least a dozen of them have been consulted, from various countries.

Others have come forward of their own initiative, as for example Cardinal Francesco Coccoalmerio, president of the pontifical council for legislative texts, the designer of a project of reform centered upon a “moderator curiae" who would take care of the functioning of the machine.

In early October the eight will be gathered around the pope. They will deliver to him a sheaf of proposals. He will be the one to decide. Alone.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Not wearing these has disarmed the left, rallied the right"...

Rallied the right? Oh Puh-leeze. The "right" has been "mourning and weeping in this valley of vesture tears" since Francis appeared on the balcony of St. Peter's sans mozetta.

Rorate Coeli doesn't sound too "rallied" these days either.



Gene said...

Well, I have to agree with Anonymous. I would hardly call the "right" "rallying. I suppose I might be called rightist, and I am still holding my breath. The Left is never disarmed. They adapt, re-group, and move on with their agenda. The right could take a lesson or two from them...

Fr. Allan J. McDonald said...

But Marc, Marc, Marc, I have railed against the illicit celebrations of the new Roman Missal and many times. I am in full agreement with Fr. Z in his motto of "say the Black and Do the Red." I am in full agreement with allowing for ad orientem and/or the Benedictine altar arrangment and of all the things that could be returned to the new Missal, kneeling for Holy Communion and receiving the Host on the tongue would be a wonderful renewal moving forward.
Where we differ is also in what "Say the Black and Do the red" means, in that, the common chalice is allowed; Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion of whatever gender is allowed and female altar servers is allowed along with lectors of both genders. The vernacular is certainly allowed and verbal active participation as well as interior participation are not seen as mutually exclusive, which I applaud.