I thought the Pope was above the law and policies of other Popes or even Councils. So unless the above idea is doctrinal (which seems very unlikely), the Catholics would be correct in assuming that a Pope can take control and fix the issues if he wanted to.
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So to summarize the problem, it has to do with having many Jesuits who are in powerful academic positions presenting unorthodox ideas to young Catholics. In my eyes, the solution has to do with having much stricter standards and faster enactment of disciplinary measures among the Jesuit order due to its unique nature. So while we can afford to have a straying Franciscans who carries out primarily charity work, we cannot afford to have a Jesuit academic who always writes against the authority of the Church.
It sounds like there is a great deal of misunderstanding here coupled with wishful thinking. Let’'s begin with the simplest point, your statement about Franciscans. Whoever told you that primarily charity work knows nothing about Franciscan men. Franciscan women are predominantly apostolic. This is true. Franciscan men are predominantly university educators, theologians, preachers, writers, retreat masters and contemplatives. There are many in other works of charity, but that is not the main thrust of the order. It’s main thrust is to live in poverty as an end in itself. The Franciscans have the greatest number of doctors in the Church. All of them have been educators. There are far more Franciscans and Dominicans in higher education than Jesuits.
Next, let’s look at the issue about the pope taking control of an order. The Right of Exemption stems from a doctrine. While the Right of Exemption explained by Trent is not a dogma, it is based on the belief of the Church that solemn vows place an individual in a state in life that is more intimately united to Christ and to the Church. That’s why those vows are solemn. The number of religious allowed to make solemn vows are very few. Among those are the Jesuits. In fact, the Society of Jesus was the last religious order ever founded. Therefore, they are the last religious individuals to make solemn vows. No order has been founded after the Jesuits.
The pope is not bound by previous popes, canon law, councils, encyclicals or any other legislation except that which comes through Revelation itself. Here is where solemn vows enters the picture. Solemn vows comes from the religious life of Christ himself. They are revealed to us in Christ’s life, just as is the priesthood, just like other points that are part of our faith. Solemn chastity, solemn obedience, and solemn poverty are part of Christ’s human identity. When a man or woman makes solemn vows, he or she enters into a covenant where his goal in life is to live the Gospel. Teaching, nursing, gardening, preaching, administering, etc are all part of his life, because they are responses to the demands of the Gospel. They are not the motive for which a person makes solemn vows. As St. Paul says, we put on Christ and we conform to Christ in all things, even the cross. That’s the impact of a solemn vow. One vows to do perfectly what everyone is called to do. Intentional failure to obey perfectly is a double sin. It is a sin of disobedience. It is a breach of the covenant to obey as perfectly as Christ obeys in the Gospels.
After the last debacle with the Jesuits, when the Holy See tried to suppress them, popes have made it a policy not to interfere in the affairs of exempt religious. That has always made popes, bishops and other authorities in the Church very hesitant to interfere with exempt religious.
Take for example the investigation of women religious in the USA. It does not include exempt women religious. Only sisters in simple vows are under the mandate issued by the CDF, not nuns in solemn vows.
This creates another very delicate situation for popes. To interfere in the internal affairs of exempt religious of one order can create an impression that this is now going to be par for the course. This would send such negative ripples through the orders with exempt religious that it would take years to undo the damage.
For centuries exempt religious have operated autonomously with the direct guidance of their superior general who operates under obedience to the Holy Father. To interfere would upset that chain of command. Essentially, the pope would be going over a superior general’s head.
As the successor of St. Peter he has the right to do it. But would it be in the best interest of the Church? Unlikely. The popes have always given them plenty of latitude to self-direct and to redirect themselves when they are off track. This is not easily done overnight. We have to be patient. This is what is often lacking today. We live in a world where so much happens so fast, that we forget that in the Church an hour is a decade, a decade is a century, and a century is a millenium.
Very often such negative reports come from people who have heard or read something, but have never sat down with a Jesuit in their lives. They have never asked a Jesuit to explain why something was said or done.
It is too easy for all of us to become experts without ever having been in contact with the subject, just be reading the Internet, a newspaper, a blog or a complaint on a forum. The real expert on a problem is the person who is in direct contact with the alleged problem. He has firsthand experience. of the situation.
This is not a denial that there are problem children among the Jesuits. It’s just a recognition that many of those who are reporting the alleged problems are problem children themselves. In light of the fact that there are problem children everywhere, among the Jesuits and among their accusers, it is in the best interest of the Church to proceed very cautiously.