Sunday, November 10, 2013

Pope Francis: Satiating The World's Desire To Feel Love


I have to admit that I get very uncomfortable when people get googely-eyed over Pope Francis and praise him excessively, as if he were the first good Pope in history. Don't get me wrong - I love Pope Francis...but I also love Pope Benedict and Pope John Paul II. I have great affection for many popes who have gone before us. These vicars of Christ have the weight of the world on their shoulders but have managed to remain extraordinarily holy, wise, disciplined, and humble. The world will never fully realize the struggles of the papacy, with all of its challenges, anxieties, and responsibilities. Maybe I read too much into things, but it sometimes seems as though people's obsession with Pope Francis is an indirect negative critique of previous popes. But this article reminded me that in a world literally starved for authentic love, Pope Francis makes it tangible for us.

From Little Catholic Bubble:
Pope Francis burst into our comfortable neatness and encouraged us to "make a mess" -- by leaving our books and debates and pristine doctrines for a time and going out into the streets and byways to meet our fellow human beings exactly where they are.
The world "likes" this pope, not for the doctrine and morality he teaches and preaches (which is no different from what came before), not because of ordered thought and careful words, but because he seems to care and listen and love. He seems relatable and real, and more like a loving grandpa in the neighborhood than a Supreme Pontiff on a throne.
But let me stop right here, lest anyone misunderstand: It's not that his predecessors did not love and care for and ache for every soul on the planet! Oh, how it boils my blood when people misunderstand the mystical, saintly JPII who embraced all mankind, or when they malign the shy and kindly Benedict, a quiet and gentle introvert. It's simply that Francis moves the world in a different way, and I think it's that he makes people feel something first, before he makes them think something.
For so many reasons, the soul of modern man is desperate to feel, and feel profoundly.

Read entire article here.


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