Looking Back at the Pope’s Year

Pope Francis gives a thumbs up as he greets the crowd after celebrating the canonisation Mass for seven new saints in St Peter’s Square at the Vatican on October 14. Among those canonised were Ss Paul VI and Oscar Romero.
For Pope Francis, it was a year of coming to terms with the abuse crisis in the Church, leading a synod on youth, releasing a new document, canonising two big names and striking a deal with China. Cindy Wooden looks back on the pope’s 2018.
Pope Francis marked the fifth anniversary of his election in March in the midst of a firestorm over his handling of clerical sexual abuse and bishops’ accountability in Chile.
He soon apologised for his slow response and invited Chilean abuse survivors to the Vatican and then all the country’s bishops to meet with him in May. By mid-October, the pope had dismissed two Chilean bishops from the priesthood and accepted the resignations of seven others.
The firestorm began when Pope Francis visited Chile and Peru in January, but the trip also included a meeting with the region’s indigenous peoples, marking an important stage in the preparation for the 2019 special Synod of Bishops on the Amazon, which will focus on safeguarding creation and on the pastoral care of the people who live in the region.
Also during 2018, Pope Francis travelled to the Geneva headquarters of the World Council of Churches to celebrate the ecumenical body’s 70th anniversary; he went to Ireland for the World Meeting of Families; and he visited the Baltic nations of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
He spent most of October presiding over the Synod of Bishops on young people, and during the synod, he celebrated the canonisations of Ss Paul VI, Oscar Romero and five others.
Sex abuse crisis
But the sex abuse crisis dominated news coverage of the pope’s year, particularly after accusations were deemed credible that former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, retired archbishop of Washington, had abused a minor and for years had sexually harassed seminarians.
Pope Francis accepted Cardinal McCarrick’s resignation from the College of Cardinals, forbade him from publicly exercising priestly ministry, and ordered him to “a life of prayer and penance until the accusations made against him are examined” in a canonical process.
Less than a month later, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the former nuncio to the United States, inflamed the situation by claiming that Pope Francis had known of Archbishop McCarrick’s history of sexual misconduct and of supposed sanctions imposed on him, but ignored or lifted them. Archbishop Viganò later admitted sanctions were never formally imposed, but he continued to insist the pope ignored warnings about Archbishop McCarrick.
In mid-September, the Vatican announced that Pope Francis was calling the presidents of all the world’s bishops’ conference to a four-day meeting at the Vatican in February to address the abuse crisis and better ways to protect children.
Synod on the youth
At the synod on young people, faith and vocational discernment, some bishops — especially from Australia and the US — insisted the abuse crisis be a topic of discussion.
Australian Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney used his speech at the synod to formally apologise to young people for all the ways the Catholic Church and its members have harmed them or let them down.
In the presence of Pope Francis, he apologised “for the shameful deeds of some priests, religious and laypeople, perpetrated upon you or other young people just like you, and the terrible damage that has done”.
Archbishop Fisher apologised “for the failure of too many bishops and others to respond appropriately when abuse was identified, and to do all in their power to keep you safe; and for the damage thus done to the Church’s credibility and to your trust”.
While each of the 14 working groups at the synod reported having discussed the abuse scandal, in the end the final document removed a reference to “zero tolerance” of abuse that had been in the draft document.
The synod was enlivened by the presence of three dozen young people in their 20s and 30s who addressed the assembly, participated in the small groups, spoke at press briefings and—uncommonly at a synod — cheered for some of the speeches of bishops and other observers.
In the end, the synod affirmed that the Catholic Church and all its members must get better at listening to young people, taking their questions seriously, recognising them as full members of the Church, patiently walking with them and offering guidance as they discern the best way to live their faith.
Travel and China
Pope Francis’ trip to the former Soviet republics of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia in September coincided with the announcement that after decades of talks with China’s communist government officials, the Vatican had reached a provisional agreement on the appointment of bishops.
Giving the government input on bishop candidates in exchange for official recognition of their office was a move widely debated. Some people, including the pope, saw it as an essential step towards ensuring the unity of Catholics in China with the universal Church, while others viewed it as an unacceptable concession to the Chinese government and a betrayal of Chinese Catholics who have risked their lives for decades by refusing to allow the government to control the Church.
One positive result, however, was that for the first time, two bishops from mainland China were allowed to attend a Synod of Bishops, although they had to leave early.
Canonisation
Canonising Ss Paul VI and Oscar Romero during the synod, Pope Francis focused on Jesus’ call to leave everything behind and follow him.
“Do not walk behind Jesus only when you want to, but seek him out every day,” the pope said. “Do not be content to keep the commandments, to give a little alms and say a few prayers: find in him the God who always loves you; seek in Jesus the God who is the meaning of your life, the God who gives you the strength to give of yourself.”
The sainthood ceremony came seven months after Pope Francis published his third apostolic exhortation, Gaudete et Exsultate (“Rejoice and Be Glad”) on how every person is called to holiness.
“We are all called to be holy by living our lives with love and by bearing witness in everything we do, wherever we find ourselves,” he said.
He cited the example of “saints next door”, as seen, for example, in “parents who raise their children with immense love, in those men and women who work hard to support their families, in the sick, in elderly religious who never lose their smile”.—CNS
- Mass Readings: 16 February – 23 February, 2020 - February 14, 2020
- Shaping The Future For At-Risk Youth - January 29, 2020
- Confirmations for All Saints Parish in Ennerdale! - January 28, 2020