I did not write this, but I find it worth sharing. A Fr. Daly wrote it, I believe:
Like everybody else, I was surprised to hear
that Pope Benedict was resigning. But I was also relieved for him. It has been
painfully obvious that he is declining. At Christmas, we saw him wheeled around
on that rolling platform. He looked tired. It was time to resign.
Perhaps the most important legacy of Benedict
XVI's papacy will be his resignation. It has set a very healthy precedent. In
an age when medical science can keep us living well into our 90s and maybe even
past 100, it is important that popes should feel free to resign when they are
no longer up to the task of their ministry. Pope Benedict showed true pastoral
concern for the church when he recognized he could not carry on.
As Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, he lived through
the final years of John Paul II's papacy. He saw his friend decline, and he
knew the church was drifting for the last few years of that long reign. Yet
John Paul II felt bound by tradition to carry on until the end. Benedict XVI
has freed future popes of that burden and perhaps freed the church from a major
problem of having a senile or incapacitated pope. He deserves our thanks for
this precedent.
The Benedictines have a saying about the
selection of a new abbot: The abbot should be ne numis sapiens, ne
nimis sanctus, et ne nimis sanus -- not too healthy, not too wise
and not too holy. In other words, they should select a regular guy. That's what
I hope for: a regular guy.
What does that mean in the context of the
College of Cardinals? They are 120 guys, all pretty much cut from the same
clerical cloth. They are all older men and accomplished church politicians who
have been serving in church offices, where everyone is Catholic and everyone
deferential.
But I hope we get somebody who has at least
some experience as a parish priest. I hope we get someone who has heard
confessions and done marriage counseling, been on youth retreats and done
marriage prep. It would be nice if he had the experience of being alone in a
parish where he had to do all the liturgies, week after week, and struggled to
inspire the same people with his preaching. I hope he has had to explain the
teaching of the faith to skeptical youth and angry adults. I hope he has to
deal with divorced people.
I hope we get somebody who had not lived
exclusively in the world of chancery offices where people give him deference
and obedience all the time. I hope we get someone who has dialogued with
evangelicals, Muslims and atheists as equals. It would be nice if he has a few
friends who are Protestant clergy and he has come to respect them as
intelligent and sincere Christians, every bit as saved as he is.
I hope we get someone from a big family, with
many brothers and sisters.
I hope he has a lot of nieces and nephews who
have challenged him around the dinner table and in family gatherings. Maybe
some of them have married outside the church or have left the church to join
other religions. He has attended their weddings only as a family member.
Perhaps one of those nieces and nephews has come out to him as gay and he has
had to love them still.
I hope he has several strong-willed and
outspoken biological sisters who have more than a streak of feminism. Maybe
they have told their brother that they use birth control. Maybe they have
responsible and substantial careers outside the home where women are the boss.
I hope he is a man who has many old friends.
That he has kept his friends since childhood and that some of the people on his
Christmas card list still call him by his first name. Maybe some of them can
still remind him of the stupid things he did or impetuous statements he made in
his youth. There is nothing like an old friend to bring you down to earth.
I hope we get somebody who is in touch with
his own humanity. It would be nice if he was a man who admits that he, too, is a
sexual being who has struggled with human desires and impulses like everybody
else.
I hope we get a man with a sense of humor. It
would be nice if he was not too much of ninny. He might even be able to tell a
joke once in a while and laugh at himself.
I hope we get somebody who puts on his pants
one leg at a time. In fact, it would be nice if he would wear pants. Clerics
should leave behind the silly affectation of dressing like they are still
living in some Renaissance villa or a Baroque painting.
I hope we get a man who knows what it is like
to be poor. It would be nice if he has dealt with the homeless and drug addicts
and the sick for a few years of his life. It would be good if he has had to
struggle like the rest of humanity for his daily bread. It would be nice if he
has held a job and had to pay his own bills.
Maybe the cardinals could look around the room
and perhaps even look outside the room for the new pope. There is nothing in
canon law that says they have to elect a cardinal.
One thing is for sure: We need to try
something new if the church is to be revived. What Yogi Berra said about
baseball managers is also true about the cardinals' choice: "If you do
what you have always done, you are going to get what you have always got."
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