The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pope pushes Vatican reform

Cardinals urged to cooperate with the overhaul effort.

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis urged his cardinals Thursday to cooperate in reforming the outdated and dysfunctio­nal Vatican bureaucrac­y, saying the overhaul will help him govern the Catholic Church better and spread the faith more effectivel­y.

Francis summoned cardinals from around the world to hear his proposals for revamping the central government of the 1.2-billion-strong church. The proposals include merging smaller offices into two big new congregati­ons: one for laity, family and life issues; another for charity and peace that will have an important new sector focused on the environmen­t, a core concern for Francis.

Francis said the aim of the reform was to encourage greater harmony and collaborat­ion in “absolute transparen­cy,” to help the church spread the faith and reach out to others.

“Certainly, reaching that goal won’t be easy,” he said. “It needs time, determinat­ion and above all the collaborat­ion of everyone.”

Francis was elected two years ago on a mandate from cardinals to reform the Vatican hierarchy, which during the final year of Pope Benedict XVI’s papacy was exposed publicly as being a place of petty, back-biting turf battles, beset by cronyism, corruption and waste.

Francis made clear what he considered to be wrong with the Vatican Curia last December, when he ticked off 15 ailments that can afflict its members. He cited “spiritual Alzheimer’s,” lusting for power and the “terrorism of gossip.”

The reform proposals aim to rationaliz­e the sometimes haphazard way department­s have grown over the years and to improve communicat­ion among them, said the Vatican spokesman, Rev. Federico Lombardi.

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