Looking out for No. 2: Who will be Vatican secretary of state?
By Francis X. Rocca
Pope Francis greets Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, former Vatican secretary of state, following a meeting with the College of Cardinals in the Vatican's Clementine Hall March 15. (CNS photo/L'Osservatore Romano)
Posted: 4/5/2013
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Of the several widely acknowledged priorities in the run-up to the conclave that chose Pope Francis, including the challenge of secularism and the growth of the church in the global South, none was more prominent than a need to reform the Roman Curia, the church's central administration in the Vatican.
The College of Cardinals extensively discussed corruption and mismanagement sensationally documented in the 2012 "VatiLeaks" of confidential correspondence, which were also the subject of a detailed report that Pope Benedict XVI designated exclusively for the eyes of his successor.
The new pope has already given signs of his intention to reform. According to his personal notes for his pre-conclave speech to fellow cardinals, subsequently published with his permission, then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio denounced the "self-referentiality" of a church "living within herself, of herself, for herself." Although his main target seems to have been a "theological narcissism" that saps evangelical zeal, the future pope's words were also an implicit rebuke to the inward-looking mindset of a pre-modern royal court, which still characterizes the Vatican in the 21st century.
Since his election, Pope Francis' many gestures of humility and accessibility -- such as praying at the back of the chapel where he celebrated Mass for Vatican maintenance workers -- not only underscore his avowed desire that the church be close to the poorest and least powerful; they also set an example for higher-ranking officials.
His decision to live in the Vatican guesthouse rather than in the Apostolic Palace also says a lot about his approach to management. Like a CEO escaping the baronial isolation of his corner office, this pope will not be a prisoner of any gatekeepers and will be free to hear a wide range of his collaborators' voices.
As he moves beyond words and gestures to the stage of substantive actions, no decision that Pope Francis makes will be of greater consequence for reform of the church's bureaucracy than his choice of a secretary of state, the Vatican's highest official, who oversees both the internal affairs of the Holy See and its relations with 180 other states.
Having filled that role for most of the previous pontificate, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone has drawn most of the blame from outside critics for dysfunction within the Roman Curia. Whether or not the criticism is entirely fair, the cardinal is bound to step down soon, if only because he is already three years past the standard retirement age of 75.
Pope Francis, who has shown himself ready to defy precedent and conventional wisdom at least in matters of protocol, could, in principle, replace Cardinal Bertone with just about anyone. Nevertheless, since the new pope is from Latin America and has never studied or worked in Rome, he is likely to choose someone who shares the Italian nationality of the vast majority of the Vatican's staff and who has some experience working inside its bureaucracy.
http://www.thebostonpilot.com/article.asp?ID=15857