What an interesting topic for further research!
I certainly understand wanting to wear one’s habit or something similar.
But I’m interested to know if the Religious who became Popes tended to break away from what was considered at the time traditional papal protocol (excluding the vestments).
We have to remember that the papacy as we know it is a secular papacy. The last religious to be pope was in the 1700s. I’d have to look up the year. For 200 years, the secular clergy has dominated the papacy and the same secular clergy has standardized certain practices that we now believe to be part of the papacy.
Back in the day of Pope Nicholas who was a Franciscan and Pope Pius who was a Dominican and so forth, a secular pope was not as common. Most popes came from the religious orders. The customs were much more fluid that they have been since the secular clergy took over the papacy. In other words, there was not many practices that were customary. The one custom, if we can call it such, is that the pope was treated with great deference. We wouldn’t be having this discussion in the 13th century. Who were clergy, religious and laity to even discuss it. He was the pope and he did as he pleased. Case in point, the Rule of St. Francis. Honorius III overruled Honorius II to approve the Rule of St. Francis, but held on to the decree of Honorius II to deny the Dominicans a rule of their own.
The same came to dress and ceremony. Many popes also came from noble houses such as the Borgias. They brought with them certain customs that were not innate to the papacy, but to their royal places in society. Many of these remained with the papacy, such as red shoes and a red mantle. Later, pius tradition would say it was representative of the blood of the martyrs. But Church scholars say that’s not true and has never been said by any pope.
We have gotten into a rut, because we had had secular clergy as popes for 200 years. They come without traditions of their on, unlike the religious orders.
Hope I can mention this.
The Holy Father is from Argentina (Of Italian roots).
My son’s Godfather is from Venezuela (of Italian roots himself) perhaps slightly younger than the Holy Father by a year or so.
My son’s Godfather is very gentlemanly. He’s the type to open car doors, walk a woman to her front door to make sure she gets in ok, he offers his seat. Actually, the Holy father’s mannerisms and speech when he speaks Italian remind me a great deal of my son’s Godfather.
I find it very charming, because it isn’t something that we really see anymore.
I interpreted the bow as a gentlemanly action by the Pope. I’m sure his mannerisms have been set before he became a Pope.
Be careful with that one. Someone already go into trouble calling Pope Francis “Italian”. He was not pleased. He made it clear that his parents were Italian immigrants and that he is Hispanic and from Argentina. The tuth is that his Italian is not too good. I speak Italian fluently and he sounds like me. There are certain sounds that when I make them, you can tell that I’m an anglophone. With him, you can tell that his Hispanic. Especially his cadence is very Spanish.
But can’t Pope Francis technically dispense himself of the vows required by the Jesuits?
He can. Anyone who can dispense others can dispense himself. However, why would he want to cease to be someone to become something? A pope occupies a ministry in the Church. When he dies or retires, he ceases to be pope.
A religious belongs to a class of persons in the Church, almost like an ethnic group. Alive, retired or dead, Pope Francis will always be a Jesuit. It is greater than the papacy, because it says something about his soul, not his job. I don’t mean great as in more valuable than the Petrine Ministry. That’s a different subject. I’m speaking about an identity
Thank you Br. Jr. but this has nothing to do with my comment. I personally pray for a Papal Coronation because Catholics need to see that ceremony within the Church,
I understood you from the beginning. My question to you remains unanswered. Even if every pope this century had a papal coronation, once you elect a religious, there would be no coronation. How would you feel about that?
More importantly, does the Church create a law the overrules the religious life so that a religious elected to the papacy must accept a coronation?
Such a law could be theologically in error?