As
the doctors serve in hospitals for the body, the good people in the
church serve in hospitals for the soul. One cardinal remonstrates the
cowardly priest. “You should have loved, my son; loved and prayed. Then
you would have seen that the forces of iniquity have power to threaten
and to wound, but no power to command.” In the end there are
heart-wrenching scenes of confession, forgiveness, reconciliation and
marriage.
But
this visit is also a spiritual and cultural event. Millions of
Americans will display their faith in public. Francis will offer
doctrinal instruction for Catholics. But the great gift is the man
himself — his manner, the way he carries himself. Specifically, Francis
offers a model on two great questions: How do you deeply listen and
learn? How do you uphold certain moral standards, while still being
loving and merciful to those you befriend?
Throughout his life Francis’ core message has been anti-ideological. As Austen Ivereigh notes in his biography “The Great Reformer,”
Francis has consistently criticized abstract intellectual systems that
speak in crude generalities, instrumentalize the poor and ignore the
rich idiosyncratic nature of each soul and situation. He has written
that many of our political debates are so abstract, you can’t smell the
sweat of real life. They reduce everything to “tired, gray cartoon-book
narratives.”
Francis’
great gift, by contrast, is learning through intimacy, not just to
study poverty, but to live among the poor and feel it as a personal
experience from the inside. “I see the church as a field hospital after
battle,” Pope Francis told the interviewer
Father Antonio Spadaro. “The thing the church needs most today is the
ability to heal wounds and to warm the hearts of the faithful; it needs
nearness, proximity. … Heal the wounds, heal the wounds. … And you have
to start from the ground up.”
That
closeness teaches you granular details, but also arouses a sense of
respect. “I see the sanctity of God’s people, this daily sanctity,”
Francis has said. “I see the holiness in the patience of the people of
God: a woman who is raising children, a man who works to bring home the
bread, the sick, the elderly priests who have so many wounds but have a
smile on their faces.”
We
practice material and intellectual elitism, looking upward for status
and specialized and de-spiritualized knowledge. Pope Francis emphasizes
that different kinds of knowledge come from different quarters. As he
put it, “This is how it is with Mary: If you want to know who she is,
you ask the theologians; if you want to know how to love her, you have
to ask the people.”
Francis’
whole approach is personal, intimate and situation-specific. If you are
too rigorous and just apply abstract rules, he argues, you are washing
your hands of your responsibility to a person. But if you are too lax,
and just try to be kind to everybody, you are ignoring the truth of sin
and the need to correct it.
Only
by being immersed in the specificity of that person and that mysterious
soul can you strike the right balance between rigor and compassion.
Only by being intimate and loving can you match the authority that comes
from church teaching with the democratic wisdom that bubbles from each
individual’s common sense.
Pope
Francis is an extraordinary learner, listener and self-doubter. The
best part of this week will be watching him relate to people, how he
listens deeply and learns from them, how he sees them both in their
great sinfulness but also with endless mercy and self-emptying love.
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