We need courage to rebuild Church –Pope Francis
•Unveils vision for Papacy •Shuns limousine, rides in bus
Pope Francis yesterday emphasized church advancement in his first
Mass with the cardinals who elected him pontiff on Wednesday. With
solemnity, he delivered a homily about moving the Catholic Church
forward to the cardinal electors, who were dressed in light yellow
robes.
Altar servers burned incense in the Sistine Chapel, the setting for
the Mass.Francis didn’t appear to use a script and kept the sermon
short, calling on the cardinals to have courage. “When we don’t walk, we
are stuck. When we don’t build on the rock, what happens? It’s what
happens to children when they build a sand castle and it all then falls
down,” the new pontiff said.
“When we walk without the cross, when we build without the cross and
when we confess without the cross, we are not disciples of Christ. We
are mundane,” he said.
“We are all but disciples of our Lord. I would like for all of us,
after these days of grace, that we find courage to walk in the presence
of God … and to build the church with the blood of Christ,” the pope
continued. “Only this way will the church move forward.”
Meanwhile, Pope Francis put his humility on display during his first
day as pontiff yesterday. Barely 12 hours after his election, Pope
Francis quietly slipped out of a Vatican car to pray for guidance at one
of Rome’s great basilicas as he prepared to usher in a new age of
simplicity and humility in a Church mired in scandal. Francis went to
Rome’s 5th-century Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore where he prayed
before a famed icon of Mary, the mother of Jesus, which is known as the
Salus Populi Romani, or Protectress of the Roman People.
“He spoke to us cordially, like a father,” said Father Ludovico Melo,
a priest who prayed with the new pontiff. “We were given 10 minutes’
advance notice that the pope was coming.” The first leader of the church
to come from the Americas, Francis also takes the title of bishop of
Rome.
He is known for his humility and lack of pretension. From the
basilica, he asked the driver to go to a Rome residence for priests so
that he could pick up bags left there before he moved to a Vatican
guesthouse for the conclave of cardinals that elected him, confirming
that he did not expect to become pope. On Wednesday, after his first
appearance as Pope, Francis shunned riding in his official car. He drove
in a bus with the cardinals and his former colleagues.
Members of his flock were similarly charmed when Francis stopped by
the Vatican-owned residence where he routinely stays during visits to
Rome and where he stayed before the start of the conclave to pick up his
luggage, pay the bill and greet staff.
The Vatican said Francis, who has a reputation for frugality,
insisted on paying the bill. “He was concerned about giving a good
example of what priests and bishops should do,” a Vatican spokesman
said. Father Pawel Rytel-Andrianik, who lives in the same residence in
the winding backstreets of central Rome, told Reuters: “I don’t think he
needs to worry about the bill.
This house is part of the Church and it’s his Church now.” “He wanted
to come here because he wanted to thank the personnel, people who work
in this house,” said The Rev. Pawel Rytel-Andrianek, who is staying at
the residence. “He greeted them one by one, no rush, the whole staff,
one by one.” “People say that he never in these 20 years asked for a
(Vatican) car,” he said. “Even when he went for the conclave with a
priest from his diocese, he just walked out to the main road, he picked
up a taxi and went to the conclave.
So very simple for a future pope.” Francis displayed that same sense
of simplicity and humility immediately after his election, shunning the
special sedan that was to transport him to the hotel so he could ride on
the bus with other cardinals, and refusing even an elevated platform
from which he would greet them, according to U.S. Cardinal Timothy
Dolan. “He met with us on our own level,” Dolan said.
“I think we’re going to see a call to Gospel simplicity,” said U.S.
Cardinal Donald Wuerl. “He is by all accounts a very gentle but firm,
very loving but fearless, a very pastoral and caring person ideal for
the challenges today.” During dinner, Francis, however, acknowledged the
daunting nature of those challenges in a few words addressed to the
cardinal electors: “‘May God forgive you for what you have done,’”
Francis said, according to witnesses. The break from Benedict XVI’s
pontificate was evident even in Francis’ wardrobe choices: He kept the
simple pectoral cross of his days as bishop and eschewed the red cape
that Benedict wore when he was presented to the world for the first time
in 2005 choosing instead the simple white cassock of the papacy. The
difference in style was a sign of Francis’ belief that the Catholic
Church needs to be at one with the people it serves and not imposing its
message on a society that often doesn’t want to hear it, Francis’
authorized biographer, Sergio Rubin, said in an interview Thursday with
The Associated Press. “It seems to me for now what is certain is it’s a
great change of style, which for us isn’t a small thing,” Rubin said,
recalling how the former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio would celebrate Masses
with ex-prostitutes in Buenos Aires. “He believes the church has to go
to the streets,” he said, “to express this closeness of the church and
this accompaniment with the people who suffer.” Francis began his first
day as pope making an early morning visit in a simple Vatican car to a
Roman basilica dedicated to the Virgin Mary and prayed before an icon of
the Madonna. He had told a crowd of some 100,000 people packed in
rain-soaked St. Peter’s Square just after his election that he intended
to pray to the Madonna “that she may watch over all of Rome.” He also
told cardinals he would call on retired Pope Benedict XVI, but the
Vatican said the visit wouldn’t take place for a few days. The main item
on Francis’ agenda Thursday was an inaugural afternoon Mass in the
Sistine Chapel, where cardinals elected him leader of the 1.2
billion-strong church in an unusually quick conclave. Francis is
expected to outline some of his priorities as pope in the homily. The
Vatican said it would likely be delivered in Italian, another break from
the traditional-minded Benedict whose first homily as pope was in
Latin. Francis, the first Jesuit pope and first non-European since the
Middle Ages, decided to call himself Francis after St. Francis of
Assisi, the humble friar who dedicated his life to helping the poor.
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