By
Nicole Winfield
VATICAN
CITY (AP) — To the Catholic Church's "seven deadly sins," Pope
Francis has added the "15 ailments of the Curia."
Francis
issued a blistering indictment of the Vatican bureaucracy Monday, accusing the
cardinals, bishops and priests who serve him of using their Vatican careers to
grab power and wealth, of living "hypocritical" double lives and
forgetting that they're supposed to be joyful men of God.
Francis
turned the traditional, genteel exchange of Christmas greetings into a public
dressing down of the Curia, the central administration of the Holy See which
governs the 1.2-billion strong Catholic Church. He made clear that his plans
for a radical reform of the structures of church power must be accompanied by
an even more radical spiritual reform of the men involved.
Ticking
off 15 "ailments of the Curia" one by one, Francis urged the prelates
sitting stone-faced before him in the marbled Sala Clementina to use the
Christmas season to repent and atone and make the church a healthier, holier
place in 2015.
Vatican
watchers said they had never heard such a powerful, violent speech from a pope
and suggested that it was informed by the results of a secret investigation
ordered up by Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI in the aftermath of the 2012 leaks of
his papers.
Benedict
tasked three trusted cardinals to probe deep into the Vatican's back-stabbing
culture to root out what would have prompted a papal butler to steal incriminating
documents and leak them to a journalist. Their report is known only to the two
popes.
Francis
had some zingers: How the "terrorism of gossip" can "kill the
reputation of our colleagues and brothers in cold blood." How cliques can
"enslave their members and become a cancer that threatens the harmony of
the body" and eventually kill it off by "friendly fire." How
some suffer from "spiritual Alzheimer's," forgetting what drew them
to the priesthood in the first place.
"The
Curia is called on to always improve itself and grow in communion, holiness and
knowledge to fulfill its mission," Francis said. "But even it, as any
human body, can suffer from ailments, dysfunctions, illnesses."
Francis,
who is the first Latin American pope and never worked in the Italian-dominated
Curia before he was elected, has not shied from complaining about the
gossiping, careerism and bureaucratic power intrigues that afflict the Holy
See. His 2013 Christmas address cast a spotlight on such sins.
But
a year into his reform agenda, Francis seemed even more emboldened to make
clear to the prelates themselves that superficial displays of change aren't
what he is looking for.
"This
is a speech without historic precedent," church historian Alberto Melloni,
a contributor to Italian daily Corriere della Sera, said in a telephone
interview. "If the pope uses this tone, it's because he knows it's
necessary."
Melloni
noted that until Francis was elected, the Vatican bureaucracy largely answered
to no one, saying "an entire generation of the Curia ran it as if they
were pope." St. John Paul II was too busy travelling the world, and later
too sick, to pay attention to administrative details, and Benedict left the
minutiae of running a government to his deputy, later determined to have been part
of the problem.
The
Rev. Robert Wister, a church historian at Seton Hall University, said Francis
was essentially asking the Curia to undergo an examination of conscience,
asking them to reflect on how they had sinned before God before going to
confession.
"Perhaps
he believes that only a severe rebuke can help turn things around," he
said.
The
cardinals were not amused. Few smiled as Francis spoke, and at the end they
offered only tepid applause to a speech that was so carefully prepared it had
footnotes and Biblical references. Francis greeted each one, but there was
little Christmas cheer in the room.
It
is, to be fair, a difficult time for the Curia. Francis and his nine key
cardinal advisers are drawing up plans to revamp the whole bureaucratic structure,
merging offices to make them more efficient and responsive.
Francis
has said though that while this structural reform is moving ahead, what is
taking much longer is the "spiritual reform" of the people involved.
The
Vatican's finances are also in the midst of an overhaul, with Francis' finance
czar, Cardinal George Pell, imposing new accounting and budget measures on
traditionally independent congregations not used to having their books
inspected.
Francis
started off his list with the "ailment of feeling immortal, immune or even
indispensable."
Then
one by one he went on: Being rivals and boasting. Wanting to accumulate things.
Having a "hardened heart." Wooing superiors for personal gain. Having
a "funereal face" and being too "rigid, tough and arrogant,"
especially toward underlings — a possible reference to the recently relieved
Swiss Guard commander said to have been too tough on his recruits for Francis'
tastes.
Some
critiques could have been seen as worthy of praise: working too hard and
planning too much ahead. But even those traits came in for criticism as Francis
noted that people who don't take time off to be with family are overly
stressed, and those who plan everything to a "T'' don't allow themselves
to be surprised by the "freshness, fantasy and novelty" of the Holy
Spirit.
At
the end of the speech, Francis asked the prelates to pray that the "wounds
of the sins that each one of us carries are healed" and that the Church
and Curia itself are made healthy.

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