Subject: Potential Pope

Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Profession: Servant of the Servants of God

He�s the latest Latin-American rumored for the papacy, and he�s already at
the head among the possible successors of Peter. If elected, he would be the
first Jesuit pope

by Sandro Magister                              

(From "L�espresso" no. 49, November 28 - December 5, 2002, original
title: "Bergoglio in Pole Position")


Midway through November, his colleagues wanted to elect him president of the
Argentine bishops� conference. He refused. But if there had been a conclave,
it would have been difficult for him to refuse the election to the papacy,
because he�s the one the cardinals would vote for resoundingly, if they were
called together to choose immediately the successor to John Paul II.

He�s Jorge Mario Bergoglio, archbishop of Bueno Aires. Born in Argentina
(with an Italian surname), he has leapt to the top of the list of the
papabili, given the ever-increasing likelihood that the next pope could be
Latin-American. Reserved, timid, and laconic, he won�t lift a finger to
advance his own campaign - but even this is counted among his strong suits.

John Paul II made him a cardinal together with the last group of bishops
named to the honor, in February of 2001. On that occasion, Bergoglio
distinguished himself by his reserve among his many more festive colleagues.
Hundreds of Argentinians had begun fundraising efforts to fly to Rome to pay
homage to the new man with the red hat.
But Bergoglio stopped them. He ordered them to remain in Argentina and
distribute the money they had raised to the poor. In Rome, he celebrated his
new honor nearly alone - and with Lenten austerity.

He has always lived this way. Since he was made archbishop of the
Argentinian capital, the luxurious residence next to the cathedral has
remained empty. He lives in a nearby apartment, together with another
bishop, old and sickly. In the evening, he himself cooks for both of them.
He rarely drives, getting around most of the time by bus, wearing the
cassock of an ordinary priest.

Of course, it�s more difficult now for him to move about unnoticed, his face
becoming always more familiar in his country. Since Argentina has spun into
a tremendous crisis and everyone else�s reputation - politicians, business
leaders, officials, intellectuals - has fallen through the floor, the star
of Cardinal Bergoglio has risen to its zenith. He has become one of the few
guiding lights of the people.

Yet he�s not the type to compromise himself for the public. Every time he
speaks, instead, he tries to shake people up and surprise them. In the
middle of November, he did not give a learned homily on social justice to
the people of Argentina reduced by hunger - he told them to return to the
humble teachings of the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes. "This," he
explained, "is the way of Jesus." And as soon as one follows this way
seriously, he understands that "to trample upon the dignity of a woman, a
man, a child, an elderly person, is a grave sin that cries out to heaven,"
and he decides not to do it any more.

The other bishops follow in his footsteps. During the Holy Year of 2000 he
asked the entire Church in Argentina to put on garments of public penance
for the sins committed during the years of the dictatorship. As a result of
this act of purification, the Church had the credibility to be able to ask
the nation to acknowledge how its own sins had contributed to its current
disaster. At the celebration of the Te Deum at the most recent national
feast, last May 25th, there was a record audience for Cardinal Bergoglio�s
homily. The cardinal asked the people of Argentina to do as Zacchaeus had
done in the Gospel. Here was a sinister loan shark. But, taking account of
his moral lowliness, he climbed up into a sycamore tree, to see Jesus and
let himself be seen and converted by him.

There isn�t a politician, from the right to the extreme left, who isn�t
dying for the blessing of Bergoglio. Even the women of Plaza de Mayo,
ultraradicals and unbridled anti-catholics, treat him with respect. He has
even made inroads with one of them in private meetings. On another occasion,
he visited the deathbed of an ex-bishop, Jeronimo Podest�, who had married
in defiance of the Church and was dying poor and forgotten by all. From that
moment, Mrs.
Podest� became one of his devoted fans.

But Bergoglio has also had his difficulties with his ecclesiastical
environment. He is a Jesuit of the old school, faithful to St.
Ignatius. He became the provincial superior of the Society of Jesus in
Argentina just when the dictatorship was in full furor and many of his
confreres were tempted to take up the rifle and apply the teachings of Marx.
Once removed from his position as superior, Bergoglio returned to obscurity.
He came back into the public eye in 1992 when the archbishop of Buenos
Aires, Antonio Quarracino, made him his auxiliary bishop.

>From there, his ascent began. The first - and almost only - interview he has
given was to a parish news bulletin, "Estrellita de Bel�m," as if to make
the point that the Church is in the minority and shouldn�t cultivate
illusions of grandeur.

He travels as little as possible. He visits the Vatican only when strictly
necessary, the four or five times a year they summon him. He reserves a
small room in a residence for clergy (the "Casa del Clero"
on Via della Scrofa), and every morning at 5:30 he�s already awake and
praying in the chapel.

Bergoglio excels in one-on-one communication, but he can also speak well in
public when necessary. At the last synod of bishops in the fall of 2001,
they unexpectedly asked him to take the place of one of the speakers who had
withdrawn. Bergoglio managed the meeting so well that, at the time for
electing the twelve members of the secretary�s council, his brother bishops
chose him with the highest vote possible.

Someone in the Vatican had the idea to call him to direct an important
dicastery. "Please, I would die in the Curia," he implored. They spared him.

Since that time, the thought of having him return to Rome as the successor
of Peter has begun to spread with growing intensity. The Latin-American
cardinals are increasingly focused upon him, as is Joseph Cardinal
Ratzinger. The only key figure among the Curia who hesitates when he hears
his name is Secretary of State Angelo Cardinal Sodano - the very man known
for supporting the idea of a Latin-American pope.

__________


The Life of a Jesuit


Jorge Mario Bergoglio was born in Buenos Aires on December 17, 1936.

He studied chemistry before becoming a Jesuit. He became a priest at the age
of 33. He studied philosophy, literature, psychology, and theology in
various universities in Argentina, Chile, Spain, and Germany.

In 1973, he was made the provincial superior of the Society of Jesus in
Argentina. But in 1980 he returned to his studies and disappeared from
public view.

In 1992 he was named auxiliary bishop of Buenos Aires. In 1998, he became
the city�s archbishop. John Paul II made him a cardinal in 2001.

He is the vice-president of the Argentine episcopal conference and is part
of the secretary�s council of the worldwide synod of bishops. He speaks
Italian well.

__________


Reply via email to