Pope Francis was formally installed as bishop of Rome
on Sunday in a ceremony characterized by more simplicity than the usual
ritual and pomp enjoyed by papal predecessors taking up their pastoral
duties.
In yet another sign that Francis sees his mission as pontiff as one of humble service, he used his arrival at St. John in Lateran Basilica
to honor a past pope who remains wildly popular in Rome. Francis
arrived a half-hour early to bless a plaque renaming a corner of the
piazza outside the church after Pope John Paul II, who died in 2005.
Francis applauded, then gave his blessing after Rome's mayor unveiled
the simple white stone plaque marking "Giovanni Paul II Square" in a
section of the vast piazza, which often hosts free rock concerts and
political and labor rallies.
The pope, who has stressed the importance of simplicity, arrived for
the unveiling wearing a plain white cassock, in modest contrast to the
wardrobe of the Italian cardinal who welcomed him wearing a red cape.
The two-hour-long, early evening installation ceremony
was a significant one for the church, since a pope is pontiff because
he is elected bishop of Rome, and not vice versa. Right after his
election on March 13 as the church's first pope from Latin America,
Francis made clear he would relish his pastoral role as the city's
bishop.
"I ask you to pray for me, I need it, don't forget," the pope told
tens of thousands of people in the square after he stepped onto the
basilica's main balcony at ceremony's end and greeted the public with
impromptu remarks. "Let's go forward, all together, the people and the
bishop, all together, forward with the joy" of the risen Christ, Francis
said. A gust of wind blew off his white skull cap.
Francis' insistence on his bishop's role "speaks to his sensibility
in truly being the pastor of a church through concrete ways," Cardinal
Agostino Vallini told Vatican Radio ahead of the installation ceremony.
Vallini, who is the pope's vicar to the Rome diocese, is the prelate who
greeted Francis and who, along with city hall, decided a part of St.
John in Lateran Square should be named after John Paul II.
The basilica is the city's most ancient, with foundations dating back
to the early 4th century. The installation ceremony held there is
steeped in centuries of ritual that modern popes have updated to the
times.
But while many ornately dressed pontiffs in centuries past arrived in
a fancy horse-drawn carriage, Francis rolled into a side entrance of
the basilica complex in an open-topped white jeep. Before going indoors,
the vehicle stopped again and again so his security team, walking
briskly alongside, could pass babies to him so he could kiss them, to
the delight of thousands of people gathered in the area. When wind
started whipping up, Francis took off his skull cap, letting the breeze
tussle his hair.
Francis later donned the tall, peaked bishop's hat, and wearing
simply adorned cream-colored vestments, gently sat back in the
mosaic-studded basilica chair, known as the "Cathedra Romana," that
symbolizes the post of Rome bishop.
He was handed the pastoral staff, symbolizing a bishop's care for his
flock. Barely a few minutes later, Francis was up on his feet, shaking
hands with priests, nuns, and then with the parents and young children
in a Rome family, chatting amiably with them. The clergy and lay people
were chosen to represent his flock and pledge obedience to the pontiff.
"It is with joy that I am celebrating the Eucharist for the first
time in this Lateran Basilica, the Cathedral of the Bishop of Rome. I
greet all of you with great affection," Francis said in his homily.
Francis urged people to cultivate patience and love, saying that
"those who love are able to understand, to hope, to inspire confidence;
they do not give up, they do not burn bridges, they are able to
forgive."
Also updated in Francis' installation as bishop were the words chosen
to be recited by Cardinal Vallini when professing obedience to the
pope's teaching and leadership. While such past pledges have described
the pontiff as being "in an elevated position to govern," the one used
for Francis simply described the pontiff as "presiding over all the
Churches in charity."
That choice is seen as not only as an expression of Francis' humility
but also of his sensitivity to other religious figures, especially
those who lead Orthodox Christians. The Orthodox church broke off some
1,000 years ago from Rome in part over disputes about the primacy of the
pontiff.
In applauding the plaque honoring John Paul, Francis also paid
tribute to a pontiff who enthusiastically embraced his role as bishop of
Rome. The late pontiff would visit Rome parishes, hundreds of them, and
often in poor neighborhoods on the city's outskirts, on Sunday
mornings.
Vallini said Francis would make his first parish visit in May and
then go to others in the city after Romans return from summer vacation.
While Francis instantly proved to be a crowd pleaser — about 100,000
people turned out in St. Peter's Square on Sunday and a nearby street
for his noon blessing — the mention of the widely beloved John Paul
still prompts affectionate cheers.
When Francis noted that John Paul "closed his eyes to this world"
exactly eight years ago this month, the new pope drew so much applause
that he couldn't finish his sentence.
Francis might be the pope who decides whether another miracle has
been attributed to John Paul's intercession, which would enable the
late, Polish-born pontiff to enjoy the church's highest honor,
sainthood.
The church process to certify a first miracle needed for John Paul's
beatification went exceptionally fast. The six years it took from his
death until Pope Benedict XVI beatified him in 2011 was the shortest
time in modern history. Beatification is the last formal step before
sainthood.
Pope Francis seemed to be adding a new twist to the role of public
squares in everyday life. At his Vatican appearance Sunday, he
encouraged faithful to "go into the piazzas and announce Christ our
savior" to the people. "Bring the Good News with sweetness and respect,"
he added. The "Good News" refers to the Gospels.
John Paul, then Benedict, and now Francis have all made shoring up
flagging faith on the traditionally Christian European continent as well
as in other affluent areas of the world a priority of their
leadership.
The Vatican is also keen on preserving Catholic loyalty in places
such as South America, where dynamic evangelical sects have been
attracting baptized Catholics away from their faith, as well as
encourage growing communities of Catholics in Africa and Asia.
The new pope is expected to lead Catholic youth in pep rallies this
summer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, during a pilgrimage that would take
the world's first pope to be born in South America back to his home
continent.
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