Saturday, December 28, 2013

The Good Pope

I just finished reading the book The Good Pope by Greg Tobin. It is subtitled “John XXIII and Vatican II – the Making of a Saint and the Remaking of the Church”. A number of the actions and character traits portrayed in the book reminded me of our current Pope, Francis.

Angelo Roncalli, who later became Pope John XXIII, was born in 1881, in a town in northern Italy to a peasant farming family. Tobin writes “The Roncallis seldom even had bread, but made do with polenta (a dish made from corn meal). Despite this, they always had room at the table for one more.” As a boy, Angelo worked in the fields with his father. He went to the Bergamo junior seminary when he was 11 years old and, later in his seminary training studied at the Pontifical Roman Seminary. While still in the seminary, he and many of his classmates were drafted into the Italian army. After a year, he returned to the seminary. After his ordination, he returned to the Pontifical Roman Seminary to study Canon Law.

Later, he returned to Bergamo as secretary to the new bishop, Giacomo Radini-Tedeschi. Bishop Radini-Tedeschi had been involved with the Opera dei Congressi, an organization for social action groups. The bishop was a “firm believer in social justice and Catholicism as a spiritual force that could change the lives of the poor and less fortunate”. Radini-Tedeschi became Roncalli’s mentor.

In May1915, Italy declared war on Austria and Father Roncalli was once again called up to serve in the Italian military as a medical corpsman. He did both hospital orderly work and tended to the patients as a priest. In March 1916, all priests in the Italian army were made chaplains. He continued to serve in that capacity for the next 3 years.

In January 1921, he was appointed by Pope Benedict XV to oversee missionary work for the Vatican. In 1925, he was appointed apostolic delegate to Bulgaria and made a bishop. This was followed by diplomatic assignments in Turkey and Greece in 1934 and France in 1944. During these appointments, his diplomatic skills were very successful, probably because of his willingness to reach out and talk with the political and religious leaders of those countries, even those of different faiths. His efforts in this regard were not always in accord with the views of the Vatican, but he pursued them anyway. He also was very involved in charitable relief efforts in response to different situations in those countries.

In 1953, he was named the patriarch of Venice and made a Cardinal. Tobin writes: “The administration of a diocese and the thousands of demands on his time and attention were, to him, secondary to the primary task of tending to the spiritual needs of the people, ‘into which he flung himself with all the energy and ardor of his nature. He was, in fact, joyfully fulfilling a spiritual need of his own.’” Tobin also writes that “As in Paris, he did not shut himself away in his magnificent marble residence. Instead he spent a good deal of time in public, where he enjoyed traveling on the vaporetto, the water bus, rather than the Fiat provided him by the diocese.” And “He sold the patriarch’s summer palace to pay for a new seminary and used personal funds to support charities for the poor.”

John XXIII convened the Second Vatican Council (Vatican II). His intention was that the Council would address how the Church should interact with the modern world. Tobin writes: “The repository of belief that all Catholics shared, the pope said, ‘should be studied and expounded according to the methods of research and literary forms of modern thought.’” Although some previous popes had criticized “modernism”, John supported the humanistic values involved in modernism. Tobin continues: “This meant that historical and scientific studies of the Church and the Bible, in particular were welcome in John’s world; he wasn’t afraid to shed rational light on the mysteries of faith.  … the updating John had in mind was not merely window dressing or a useful slogan but a profound change in the way Catholics practiced their religion and viewed themselves and their Church.” Even though he died before the second of four Vatican II sessions, the Council he convened significantly changed the Church.

To me, John XXIII stands out from other recent popes because of his emphasis on people rather than on the rules and the institution of the Church. There were times before he was Pope when he acted in ways the Vatican powers would not have approved. And he used the resources of the Church to help people in need (e.g., those affected by natural catastrophes or war, Jews escaping from the Nazi regime). He also interacted with and reached out to religious leaders of different faiths and political leaders of different political views. He believed that we are all God’s children and was a big supporter of ecumenism. Pope Francis reminds me of Pope John XXIII in his emphasis on people, especially those who are in need, and his not embracing the finer things that usually come along with being a bishop, cardinal or pope. I remember reading in The Good Pope about John XXIII leaving the Vatican to visit people who were ill and in prison (although I was unable to find that specific passage in preparing this blog). I did find a reference in Wikipedia to his making visits to children with polio in some nearby hospitals and visiting a reformatory school for juvenile delinquents. He also visited the Regina Coeli prison. Here is a youtube video about that visit. The Wikipedia entry also refers to his “frequent habit of sneaking out of the Vatican late at night to walk the streets of the city of Rome.” Regarding Pope Francis, we have seen stories of him visiting the poor, ill and those in prison; even washing the feet of young people in a detention center during Holy Week. On his birthday, he had breakfast with 3 homeless men who live on the streets near the Vatican. It has also been reported that he will sneak out of the Vatican at night to visit homeless people. Just as John XXIII had a profound affect on the Church, it seems possible that Francis will “shake up” the Church with his emphasis on caring for the poor, ill, disabled, imprisoned, homeless, etc.

During this Christmas season, let us be thankful for the Good Pope, John, for his efforts to modernize the Church and his concern about people of all faiths and nationalities. And let us pray that our new Pope, Francis, will continue to direct the Church toward brotherly love for all people, especially those in need.


As I end this blog, my wish for all of you echoes the words the angels sang at that first Christmas and John XXIII used as the title of his last encyclical  – Pacem in Terris (Peace on Earth)!