Francis, Filtered
What the media won’t tell you
about the pope.
By George Weigel in the Wall Street Journal
About a year ago, I suggested to one
of the top editors of a major American newspaper that his journal’s coverage of
things papal left something to be desired, as it seemed based on the assumption
that Pope Francis was some kind of radical wild-man, eager to toss into the
garbage bin of history all those aspects of Catholic faith and practice that
mainstream western culture finds distasteful. My friend replied, in so many
words, look, you know how these media narratives are: They’re like bamboo. Once
they get started, there’s no stopping them. They just keep growing.
Alas, he was right. And while
there’s been a lot of talk about the “Francis Effect,” it’s worth pondering, on
the Holy Father’s seventy-eighth birthday, the Francis Filtration.
The Francis Filtration began in
earnest during the impromptu press conference in the papal plane while the pope
was en route home from World Youth Day 2013 in Rio de Janeiro. That was the
presser that produced the single-most quoted line of the pontificate: “Who am I
to judge?” But as Cardinal Francis George pointed out in a pre-retirement
interview with John Allen, that sound-bite “has been very misused . . . because
he was talking about someone who has already asked for mercy and been given
absolution. . . . That’s entirely different than talking [about] someone who
demands acceptance rather than asking for forgiveness.” (For the record, the
entire quote, which is almost never cited, was “Who am I to judge them if
they’re seeking the Lord in good faith?”)
But as my journalist-friend
suggested, the “bamboo” shoot of “Who am I to judge?” has continued to grow,
until it’s now a virtual bamboo curtain. And what’s being filtered out? All the
things the pope says that don’t fit the now-established “narrative” of “humane,
progressive pope vs. meanie reactionary bishops and hidebound Catholic traditionalists.”
Things like what?
Well, things like the pope’s
passionate defense of marriage as the stable union of a man and a woman, which
he underscored in an address to the Schoenstatt movement right after Synod
2014, and in his keynote address to a November interreligious conference at the
Vatican on the crisis of marriage in the twenty-first century.
And things like the pope’s defense
of the Gospel of Life, a persistent theme in Francis’s November address to the
European Parliament. The press reports I read focused on Francis’ concerns for
immigrants and the unemployed. Fair enough; that was certainly in the text. But
what about the Holy Father’s defense of those whom indifference condemns to
loneliness or death, “as in the case of the terminally ill, the elderly who are
abandoned or uncared for, and children who are killed in the womb?” What about
his insistence that “Europe,” past, present, and future, makes no sense without
Christianity? What about his condemnation of those who subject Christians “to barbaric
acts of violence,” and his plea for support for those Christians who are
“evicted from their homes, and native lands, sold as slaves, killed, beheaded,
crucified or burned alive, under the shameful and complicit silence of so
many?” You didn’t read much about that, did you?
Nor did you read (unless you read
the pope’s text himself) that Francis, having made a plea for environmental
stewardship, went on to “emphasize” (his word) that “along with an
environmental ecology, there is also need of a human ecology which consists in
respect for the person.”
Another aspect of Pope Francis’s
preaching that’s been too often filtered out of the coverage of his pontificate
involves (if you’ll pardon the term) demonology. No pope in decades has so
regularly referred to Satan as Pope Francis. The Evil One is no abstraction to
this pontiff, nor does he think of “satanic” as a rhetorical intensifier to
underscore one’s disapproval of, say, Hitler. Satan and his minions are very
real to Pope Francis; it would be interesting for an enterprising reporter to
draw him out on the subject in one of those freewheeling papal press
conferences.
The Francis Filter may be bamboo.
But if it keeps growing, so will the distortions that bamboo curtain creates.
George Weigel is distinguished
senior fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.
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