Saturday, March 2, 2013

Someone's Got to be the Pope Pt. 1


Benedict XVI is no longer the Pope.  That this happened by his decision and not by death makes this event not only an enormously historic one for the church he has faithfully served, but also for him personally, as a human being.  While I am not a Roman Catholic, I respect the historic office of the Pope as one which has provided spiritual leadership to billions of people across the centuries.  I do not of course subscribe to all the tenets which establish the authority of the office a pope holds, but that doesn’t mean that I do not think the man who serves in that office is not important. It makes a difference who serves in what the Roman Catholic church teaches to be the office first held by St. Peter 2000 years ago.  I have difficulty thinking of another position in life that makes a more significant claim to its historic importance.

Which is what makes the decision of the man who was Benedict XVI so fascinating.  He moves from being the authoritative voice for over a billion souls to being, in his own words,  a  “pilgrim on the last stop on this earth.”  I do not know what all went into his decision to “renounce” his office and to become a praying pilgrim, but what I see in that decision is the humble recognition that our work does not define us.   Our vocation, as opposed to our occupation, is what is important for everyone who desires to serve God.  Our “calling” is to serve God;  to please what one writer famously describes as  “the audience of One.”  Retirement from any position, even from the wearing of “the shoes of the fisherman”, neither changes who we are nor does it diminish our value as human beings.  We work to earn a living, but in the end we are all just pilgrims on our way home, on our way to a glorious home that is beyond human comprehension.  It is the recognition of this reality, that our earthly occupation does not define our value to God, which perhaps ultimately informed the retirement decision of the man who is no longer Pope.  I wish the man a peaceful pilgrimage, that he may “finish well.”

But, someone’s got to be the pope. While he will not be “my pope”,  someone will be called to speak to a world-wide audience as the most recognized of religious voices. And it is for that reason that I will pray for the Cardinals as they assemble to discover whom God has called to as leader of the world’s largest “denomination”, representing  over half of the Christians in the world. My prayer will be that the man whom God is calling will remember that the most important audience he serves occupies the only seat in the house.  What matters most for the successor to Benedict XVI is not what the world thinks of his work, but what God thinks of it. And so it is for all of us.

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