Saturday, March 23, 2013

Pope Francis bringing balance

Always nice to find another writer, especially a professional one expressing my own thoughts (read WSJ article) because writing is hard work.

Quoting from it;


Then the telling moment about the prayer. Before he gave a blessing he asked for a blessing: He asked the crowd to pray for him. He bent his head down and the raucous, cheering square suddenly became silent, as everyone prayed. I thought, "My God—he's humble."

I wasn't sure what to make of it and said so to a friend, a member of another faith who wants the best for the church because to him that's like wanting the best for the world. He was already loving what he was seeing. He asked what was giving me pause. I said I don't know, the curia is full of tough fellows, the pope has to be strong.

"That is more than strength," he said of the man on the screen. "This is not cynical humanity. This is showing there is another way to be."

Yes. This is a kind of public leadership we are no longer used to—unassuming, self-effacing. Leaders of the world now are garish and brazen. You can think of half a dozen of their names in less than a minute. They're good at showbiz, they find the light and flash the smile.

But this man wasn't trying to act like anything else. "He looks like he didn't want to be pope," my friend said. That's exactly what he looked like. He looked like Alec Guinness in the role of a quiet, humble man who late in life becomes pope. I mentioned that to another friend who said, "That would be the story of a hero."

1 comment:

  1. It is amazing how things are unfolding over the last 60 days. Pope Emeritus Benedict threw a real surprise - maybe even the devil was caught off guard. And that was reaffirmed from Above by the two lightning strikes on the dome. Time for the curia, the little devils inside the church - and the world too - to wake up. The new normal world just seems to be heading further and further into the abyss - with levy on bank deposits (destroying the hard core virtues of savings and working-for-a-just-living), unemployment (especially among the 40ish and above so to "give way to the young graduates who thus can find jobs within 6 months - what a claim!) and inflation (just compare the store prices and the official inflation rate!)

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