C
commenter
Guest
Much of the problem is related to style. I don’t know how much of this is nationality, how much is spirituality (including Jesuit training), and how much is individual personality.
Pope Benedict would give a lecture. He would, privately, gather information from many viewpoints, and many people, in advance. He would weigh the options - privately - then present, in public, the conclusion.
Pope Francis is giving a seminar. In public, he seeks every viewpoint to be aired. He may even summarize some of those controversial views aloud, to clarify “Am I hearing you right?” He may even weigh, aloud, the views of different people, including even non Catholics or secularists. Then he follows up - not necessarily that day - with a conclusion. All his conclusions have been totally orthodox.
In other words, Francis talks in public far more than Benedict. When he is quoted, the media does not always tell you what part of the process this is coming from. If the media were fair, this is attractive to people because they can see the Church is not arbitrarily inventing dogmas, there is a deep logic going on here. But if the media is not fair, it puts the Church’s credibility at risk long term, because he is so easy to misquote, or to quote out of context. The people don’t usually hear the conclusion, thoroughly orthodox. They do hear the controversial comments he either elicits from people, or even repeats himself.
The problem is that his style makes it easy for the media to drive an imaginary wedge between Francis and his predecessor, and between Francis and his (likely type of) successor. Something like this happened after Pope John XXIII died. He was painted up to be radically different, more loving, less doctrinal, and totally different from his successors. In the future, the secularists will paint a mostly false Francis to undermine his successor. They will say he was an unsuccessful hero, but later right wingers recaptured the Vatican, and dogma and bureaucracy replaced love and tolerance.
Pope Benedict would give a lecture. He would, privately, gather information from many viewpoints, and many people, in advance. He would weigh the options - privately - then present, in public, the conclusion.
Pope Francis is giving a seminar. In public, he seeks every viewpoint to be aired. He may even summarize some of those controversial views aloud, to clarify “Am I hearing you right?” He may even weigh, aloud, the views of different people, including even non Catholics or secularists. Then he follows up - not necessarily that day - with a conclusion. All his conclusions have been totally orthodox.
In other words, Francis talks in public far more than Benedict. When he is quoted, the media does not always tell you what part of the process this is coming from. If the media were fair, this is attractive to people because they can see the Church is not arbitrarily inventing dogmas, there is a deep logic going on here. But if the media is not fair, it puts the Church’s credibility at risk long term, because he is so easy to misquote, or to quote out of context. The people don’t usually hear the conclusion, thoroughly orthodox. They do hear the controversial comments he either elicits from people, or even repeats himself.
The problem is that his style makes it easy for the media to drive an imaginary wedge between Francis and his predecessor, and between Francis and his (likely type of) successor. Something like this happened after Pope John XXIII died. He was painted up to be radically different, more loving, less doctrinal, and totally different from his successors. In the future, the secularists will paint a mostly false Francis to undermine his successor. They will say he was an unsuccessful hero, but later right wingers recaptured the Vatican, and dogma and bureaucracy replaced love and tolerance.