Yahoo – AFP,
Angus MacKinnon, March 13, 2015
Vatican City (AFP) - Pope Francis on Friday marked the second anniversary of his election by declaring a jubilee year that will be interpreted as a powerful signal of his commitment to reforming the Church.
Pope
Francis leads a penitential ceremony on March 13, 2015 at
St Peter's basilica
in the Vatican (AFP Photo/Alberto Pizzoli)
|
Vatican City (AFP) - Pope Francis on Friday marked the second anniversary of his election by declaring a jubilee year that will be interpreted as a powerful signal of his commitment to reforming the Church.
The
extraordinary holy year, dedicated to the theme of mercy, has been called to
celebrate the 50th anniversary of a groundbreaking Vatican council that
transformed how the Church related to the modern world, most notably ending the
obligation for religious services to be conducted in Latin.
The jubilee
year will begin on December 8 and run until November 20, 2016. December 8 is
one of the holiest dates in the Catholic calender as the Feast of the
Immaculate Conception and is also the date on which the Vatican II council
closed in 1965.
Pope
Francis receives confession during
the penitential celebration in St. Peter's
Basilica at the Vatican, on March 13,
2015 (AFP Photo/Alessandro Bianchi)
|
Vatican II
is considered to be one of the defining moments in the history of the Catholic
church -- the point at which the clerical hierarchy accepted that some
centuries-old ways of thinking and acting had to be jettisoned if the
institution was to remain relevant as the sixties began to swing.
A divided
Church
Fifty years
later, the Church is facing a similar set of dilemmas and is beset by divisions
over how to respond to them and close the gap between what it officially
preaches and how many of its followers actually live their lives in the early
21st Century.
Deep
divisions over how the Church should relate to homosexual, divorced and
co-habiting believers were aired at an inconclusive, sometimes rancorous, synod
of bishops in October-November 2014. They will be revisited when senior clerics
re-assemble in Vatican City this October.
Francis,
the first pope to hail from Latin America, is regarded by most of the world as
having been a huge success in his two years at the helm of the Church.
His easy
charm, decisive approach to issues such as paedophile priests and his pleas for
a more merciful and worldly approach on questions like homosexuality and
divorce have endeared him to a much broader public than his conservative, dour
predecessor Benedict XVI could reach.
But he has
not endeared himself to everyone within the Church.
The forces
of passive resistance and inertia are holding up his efforts to reform the
Vatican's bureaucracy and his tendency to speak his mind has caused concern
amongst conservative theologians.
They fear
his populism may provide cover for an edging away from long-established
doctrinal stances, especially on the issues at the centre of the synods on the
family.
A pope in
a hurry
The
decision to announce the jubilee may reflect Francis's apparent belief that he
is not destined to spend a long time in St Peter's.
Pope
Francis leads a penitential ceremony on March 13, 2015 at
St Peter's basilica
in the Vatican (AFP Photo/Alberto Pizzoli)
|
"I
have a feeling my pontificate will be brief," he told Mexico's Televisa
channel in an interview to mark his anniversary. "Four or five years, I
don't know. Two years have already gone by.
"It is
a vague feeling I have that the Lord chose me for a short mission. I am always
open to that possibility."
Francis has
hinted in the past that he could emulate his predecessor Benedict XVI, who
became the first pope to resign in seven centuries when he stepped down in
February 2013.
Intriguingly,
when asked if he liked being pope, Francis replied: "I don't not like
it," before expanding on his dislike of travelling and his fondness for
the comforts and familiarity of home.
Despite
that, Francis insisted he did not feel lonely in the top job, although he did
confess to sometimes longing for the anonymity enjoyed as the parish priest he
once was.
One thing
he would really like is to be able to go out of the Vatican one day without
being recognised and "go and eat a pizza," he said.
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