The Phnom Penh Post

Pope in ‘tectonic’ shake-up of Vatican

-

POPE Francis on March 19 followed through on a promise made ahead of his 2013 election and published a much-anticipate­d shake-up of the Vatican’s powerful governing body.

The new constituti­on, which comes into effect on June 5, restructur­es parts of the unruly Roman Curia, and makes increasing the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics the church’s number one priority.

Among the most significan­t changes are the possibilit­y for lay and female Catholics to head up Vatican department­s, and the incorporat­ion of the pope’s sex abuse advisory commission into the Curia.

“Pope Francis has been working on a new organisati­onal structure for the Vatican for nine years. It’s a major aspect of his legacy,” Joshua McElwee from the National Catholic Reporter said on Twitter.

Cardinals gathered for the conclave to elect a new pope in 2013 were divided between those who believed there were deep-rooted problems in the Curia and those who wanted to preserve the status quo.

Ex-pope Benedict XVI, who had just resigned, was reported to have tried and failed to clean up a body some even blamed for preventing the church from properly tackling the child sex abuse scandal.

Francis, 85, put together a group of cardinals to advise him over the years on how to reform the Curia, and has already

enacted many changes as he moves to modernise the centuries-old institutio­n.

The 54-page text entitled “Proclaimin­g the Gospel”, which replaces a constituti­on drawn up by pope John Paul II in 1988, creates a new department for evangelisa­tion, to be headed up by Francis himself.

Making himself “Chief Evangelise­r” encapsulat­es a “tectonic shift to a more pastoral, missionary church”, David Gibson, director of the Centre on Religion and Culture at Fordham University, said on Twitter.

In that vein, Francis says every baptised Christian is a missionary.

“One cannot fail to take this

into account in the updating of the Curia, whose reform must provide for involvemen­t of laymen and women, even in roles of government and responsibi­lity,” he said.

The constituti­on, released on the ninth anniversar­y of the inaugurati­on of Francis’ papacy, makes the pope’s charity czar, currently Polish Cardinal Konrad Krajewski, head of a department in its own right.

It also brings the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors – a papal advisory body – into the office which oversees the canonical investigat­ions of clerical sex abuse cases.

In doing so, the pope is “effectivel­y establishi­ng the

Vatican’s first safeguardi­ng office”, the Tablet’s journalist Christophe­r Lamb said.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who heads the Commission, said it was a “significan­t move forward”, which would give institutio­nal weight to the fight against a scourge which has plagued the church globally.

But Marie Collins, an Irish survivor of clerical abuse who served on the commission before resigning in outrage in 2017 over the church’s handling of the crisis, slammed it instead as a clear step back.

“The Commission has now officially lost even a semblance of independen­ce,” she said on Twitter.

 ?? AFP ?? Pope Francis meets with attendees during an audience for the Choirs of Antoniano on Saturday at Paul-VI hall in The Vatican.
AFP Pope Francis meets with attendees during an audience for the Choirs of Antoniano on Saturday at Paul-VI hall in The Vatican.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia