Pope Francis needs to ensure power of the Church handed down to people |
In many
ways, the new pope is full of surprises -- the first Jesuit, first
Latin-American and also the first non-European pope in about 1,300 years.
He is
the first Pope Francis and the first to ditch the red papal mozzetta and to
wear a simple wooden cross as he emerged onto the balcony of St Peter’s
basilica.
The
very way Pope Francis presented himself is in contrast to his predecessor
Benedict XVI. Does it send a powerful message to local bishops, clergy and
religious? Will it change those ‘line breaks’ in the local churches like ours?
I would
like to believe these ‘firsts’ are signs of better things to come in the
Church.
I take
pride in my Catholic faith not for what the Church can do or cannot, but
because I’m a member of the world’s largest faith organization. Because I
believe that no matter how rich or poor, my joys and hopes, grievances and
anxieties count, and there is someone with authority to listen to me.
I am
among those faithful whose tiny local Church had no hand in choosing their
supreme spiritual leader.
Catholics
here are a tiny minority – about 350,000 people in a Muslim-majority country of
more than 150 million. In 1986, on the only papal visit to Bangladesh, the late Pope John Paul II called us 'God’s little flock,’
whose life of faith is influenced by a multi-religious culture, a common
reality in churches in Asia.
Most of
the ‘little flock’ considers the pope no less than a demigod.
Most of
us are devout and listen to what the pope says and does, rather than caring who
he is or where he comes from. They care little (actually they know little)
about the clerical abuses and financial scandals, or the dysfunctional Vatican
bureaucracy haunting the Church at the moment.
They
see the new pope as ‘a source of hope and joy’ as he comes from a developing
country which they too live in, because like the Vatican, the local Church also
needs changes.
All
these years, the local Church has been a ‘light of hope’ in the ‘vast sea of
Islam,' making significant contributions to education, health and development
sectors, especially to the poor.
Besides
spiritual nourishment, by improving their socio-economic status the Church has
developed a small but devout community of faithful. Thus, the laypeople have
grown up.
But
sadly, they have failed to find a sturdy position in the Church -- either
nationally and locally. From episcopal commissions to parish level or at Church
programs, with few exceptions, laypeople are merely participants, not
decision-makers.
With
due respect to the bishops, clergy and Religious who are close to the people,
many of their colleagues think that by the virtue of ordination or religious
vows they are the be-all and end-all when it comes to the Church.
It’s
not that laypeople are less educated than the clergy or Religious, or they have
too little theological and apostolic training opportunities. Not because they
know little about Vatican II and changes in the Church it was intended to
bring.
There
is a fear among many clergy and Religious that empowerment of the laity will
decline their power to rule them. Also, they are afraid that laypeople might
rise against things that are not going well in many places, like what happened
in Europe and America?
I guess
this tendency is a legacy of Eurocentric Vatican bureaucracy as well.
But in
his sermon during the installation Mass, Pope Francis emphasized the Church’s
role as the "protector of the poorest, weakest and vulnerable" and
reminded people that "authentic power is service."
Does
this signify real hope for the laity in the near future?
With
each passing day, the pope's style, words and actions ignite hope and joy in
1.2 billion Catholics around the world.
We have
seen some signs of hope, but real change and reform are yet to happen. Our
leaders need to realize that authentic power comes from God and lies with
people and empowering people they empower themselves.
If that
happens during Pope Francis' time, the Church will become not only ‘of and for
the poor’ but also ‘for the poor’ in the real sense.
Third World View is the pseudonym of a commentator based in
Dhaka
Read original post here- A practising Catholic's simple wish
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