Thursday, May 16, AD 2024 3:47pm

PopeWatch: I am the Law!

 

Like other tyrants throughout history, Pope Francis has a cavalier view of the Law.  Sandro Magister gives us the details:

On October 10, Francis set in motion a mammoth synod on synodality, as if wanting for the first time ever to hear from the whole people of God. But he made it known right away – from the lips of synod secretary general Cardinal Mario Grech – that when the final document comes along it may not even be voted on. The counting of votes will be used only in extreme cases, “as a last and undesired resort.” In any case, to then deliver the document to the pope, who will do what he wants with it.

That this Leninist party practice is the synodality longed for by Jorge Mario Bergoglio comes as no surprise, given the unbridled monarchical absolutism with which he governs the Church, unrivaled by the popes who came before him.

There are at least two overwhelming proofs of this absolutism so far. The first is well known, the second less so.

*

The well known proof is given by the way in which Francis steered the three previous synods and in particular that on the family, based in part on what was candidly revealed after the operation by the special secretary of that assembly, Archbishop Bruno Forte.

It was May 2 2016 and Forte, speaking in the theater of the city of Vasto, reported as follows the answer Francis had given him in the run-up to the synod, to his question on how to proceed in the assembly on the incendiary topic of communion for illegitimate couples:

“If we were to speak explicitly of communion for the divorced and remarried, you don’t know what a mess these [the cardinals and bishops against it – ed] would make for us! So let’s not talk about it directly, you make sure the premises are in place, then I will draw the conclusions.”

After that Forte commented, amid smiles from the audience: “Typical of a Jesuit.”

Bad move. That learned archbishop, who until then had been one of Pope Francis’s favorites and was on the way to the dazzling triumph of his career, from that day fell into disgrace. The pope dropped a cross on him. No more buddying up, no more insider roles, advisory or executive, gone as theologian of reference, no promotion as prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith or president of the Italian episcopal conference, nor even, though a Neapolitan by birth, as archbishop of Naples and cardinal.

And that’s just for telling the plain truth, as reconstructed in more detail in this post from Settimo Cielo:

Phony Synodality. It’s Just Francis In Charge, His Own Way

*

The other proof, the less well known but no less serious one, of the monochromatic absolutism with which Francis governs the Catholic world, is given by the abnormal quantity of laws, decrees, ordinances, instructions, rescripts issued by him on the most disparate matters. Abnormal not only for the number of provisions – which in a few years ran to the dozens – but even more for how it is reducing the Church’s juridical architecture to rubble.

A methodical review of the legal babel created by Pope Francis can be found in an extensively documented recent volume, with an impressive array of notes, by Geraldina Boni, professor of canon and ecclesiastical law at the University of Bologna, a volume (readily available online) that already in the title expresses a severe judgment: “Recent ecclesial normative activity: ‘finis terrae’ for the ‘ius canonicum’?

Professor Boni, already known to the readers of Settimo Cielo, does not belong to the opposing camp, far from it. She was appointed in 2011 by Benedict XVI as consultant to the pontifical council for legislative texts and “developed [this volume] step by step through a continuous dialogue with Professor Giuseppe Dalla Torre,” an outstanding jurist and one very loyal to the Church, her teacher and predecessor at the University of Bologna as well as president of the tribunal of Vatican City State from 1997 to 2019, who passed away prematurely on December 3 2020 due to complications from Covid.

Scrolling through the pages of this book, the picture one gets from it is of devastation.

The first blow is struck by the almost complete marginalization of the pontifical council of legislative texts from the tasks entrusted to it, in the first place that of “assisting the supreme pontiff as supreme legislator.”

Statutorily delegated to elaborate and supervise all new Vatican legislation and made up of ecclesiastics of proven canonical competence, with Pope Francis the pontifical council practically counts for nothing and learns of every new norm just like any ordinary mortal, after the fact.

The texts of each new norm are elaborated by ephemeral commissions created “ad hoc” by the pope, the components of which are almost never known, and when at times a name does leak out it is found to be mediocre or with no juridical background.

The result is that every new norm, greater or lesser, almost always causes interpretative and applicative confusion, which often gives rise to a disorderly sequence of changes and corrections, harbingers in their turn of further confusion.

One of the most emblematic cases is that of the apostolic letter in the form of a motu proprio “Mitis iudex dominus Iesus,” with which Francis intended to facilitate the processes of marital annulment.

A first oddity is the date of the motu proprio, published as a surprise on August 15 2015, during the interval between the first and second session of the synod on the family, as if to intentionally give the go-ahead to an almost generalized practice of declarations of nullity regardless of what the synod might have said on the matter.

A second negative element is the large number of material errors in the versions of the motu proprio in the national languages, in the absence of a base text in Latin, “not available until six months after the law went into effect.”

But the disaster was above all of substance. “Together with the initial panic of ecclesiastical court personnel,” writes Professor Boni, “a truly disreputable confusion has spread. Legislative acts with ‘addenda’ and ‘corrigenda’ of equivocal legal value, coming from various Roman dicasteries – even circulating clandestinely – and some attributable to the supreme pontiff himself, as well as being produced by atypical organisms created for the circumstance, have crisscrossed with the result of aggravating the already chaotic situation. […] A hodgepodge in which even the apostolic courts have ‘recycled’ themselves as authors of sometimes questionable norms, and organisms situated a few dozen yards from each other in Rome have issued conflicting instructions.”

Go here to read the rest.  The Pope is the Vicar of Christ.  He is not Christ.  Pope Francis could use a refresher course on that point.

 

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Don L
Don L
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 4:57am

Maybe Francis listened a bit too carefully when Christ told his Apostles to be as cunning as serpents?
One gets the feeling that what happens to truth seeking in Francis’s Vatican is not much different than what happens to truth seeking at a CNN newsroom or at a Biden White House.

Frank
Frank
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 6:14am

If someone who managed to be installed as Pope wanted to render the institutional Church incapable of its Christ-ordained purpose, without admitting his goal, what would he do differently?

Father of Seven
Father of Seven
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 6:15am

L’Eglise, c’est Bergoglio! Not.

Father of Seven
Father of Seven
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 6:17am

Too true, Frank. What piece of the puzzle doesn’t fit?

Phillip
Phillip
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 7:57am

In Francis we have our Denethor.

Dale Price
Dale Price
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 8:01am

“The Pope is the Vicar of Christ. He is not Christ. Pope Francis could use a refresher course on that point.”

The rampant papolatry in the Catholic world is a cultural problem that needs to be broken, stat. Functionally, popes replace the Holy Spirit in the hearts of too, too many faithful. In their minds, universal jurisdiction and infallibility make him a living oracle who must be obeyed without question and whose magisterium can contradict and rewrite even Christ Himself.

Take a look at the Papa Krishnas over at Where Peter Is, and you see it in its most advanced form. My evangelical brother’s snarling about Catholicism being a cult is, sadly, quite true in some quarters.

Frank
Frank
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 9:22am

@Dale Price, a choral Amen!

Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 6:09pm

To Dale’s point, Vicar comes from the Latin Vicarius meaning:

Substitute, deputy, one acting for another; successor; slave to do one’s work.

Note that last meaning – slave to do one’s work.

I wonder if Francis understands that.

GregB
GregB
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 7:09pm

The Gospel reading at today’s Mass was the Parable of the Dishonest Steward. There are those in the hierarchy whose conduct is suggestive of this parable.

SouthCoast
SouthCoast
Friday, November 5, AD 2021 7:22pm

Phillip, I was thinking that very thing, yesterday.

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