Analysis-Pope visit to Italian city spotlights need for rules on
ex-pontiffs
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[August 22, 2022]
By Philip Pullella
VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis has
quashed rumours that he plans to resign anytime soon but his planned
visit next weekend to the Italian city of L'Aquila will underscore the
Catholic Church's need to regulate the status of pontiffs who step down
instead of ruling for life.
L'Aquila is the burial place of Celestine V, who resigned as pope in
1294 after only five months to return to his life as a hermit,
establishing a papal prerogative. Pope Benedict XVI, who in 2013 became
the first pontiff in about 600 years to resign, visited L'Aquila four
years before stepping down.
When the Vatican announced in June Francis' Aug. 28 trip to L'Aquila -
to attend an annual "feast of forgiveness" - it fuelled speculation that
a conjunction of events - including the induction of new cardinals the
day before the visit and meetings the day after on the Vatican's new
constitution - could foreshadow a resignation announcement.
However, in an exclusive interview with Reuters on July 2, Francis, 85,
laughed the idea off, saying "it never entered my mind", while leaving
open the possibility that he could step down for health reasons in the
distant future.
Church law says a pope can resign, provided he does so willingly and not
under pressure, but it lacks specific rules on his status, title, and
obligations afterwards.
Before Benedict abdicated on Feb. 28, 2013, he scripted his own rules,
investing himself with the title pope emeritus, deciding to continue to
wear white and to live in the Vatican.
But his presence has caused some confusion among the faithful, with some
right-wing conservatives still refusing to recognise Francis as pope.
Francis wants to set rules for former popes in stone in canon (Church)
law. But he is loathe to do so while Benedict, 95, is still alive as it
could be seen as insensitive, according to a senior Vatican source.
Since stepping down, Benedict has occasionally allowed his views on
specific subjects to be aired outside the Vatican, to the delight of
some fellow conservatives who have used them as ammunition to contest
his successor's more open-minded and inclusive papacy.
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Pope Francis (R) greets Emeritus Pope
Benedict XVI before a mass in Saint Peter's square at the Vatican
September 28, 2014. REUTERS/Tony Gentile/File Photo
RESIGNATIONS NO LONGER UNTHINKABLE
There is near universal agreement among leaders in the 1.3
billion-member Church on the need for protocols now that papal
resignations are no longer unthinkable.
Cardinal George Pell, a leading conservative close to Benedict, says
that while a retired pontiff could retain the title of "pope
emeritus", he should return to being a cardinal, and be known as
"Cardinal (surname), Pope Emeritus".
Pell also says a former pontiff should not wear the white papal
cassock, as Benedict does. It is important for Catholics to be clear
that "there is only one pope", he told Reuters in a 2020 interview.
Academics and canon lawyers at Italy's Bologna University say the
Church cannot risk even the appearance of having "two heads or two
kings" and have proposed a set of rules.
They say a pope who resigns should not return to being a cardinal,
as Pell proposes, but be known as "Bishop Emeritus of Rome". They
say he could wear white "in public appearances".
He could live anywhere but should avoid writings or statements that
could be seen to be "in competition" with his successor, the
proposal says.
Any papal document would likely take the form of an Apostolic
Constitution decreeing changes in Church law.
Francis says that if he does resign for health reasons, he wants to
be known as Bishop Emeritus of Rome. He would live in the Italian
capital because "it is my diocese" and not return to his native
Argentina.
He wants to live modestly in a residence for retired priests and
close to a church where he could hear confessions.
Asked in the Reuters interview when he thought that might be,
Francis said: "We don't know. God will say."
(Reporting by Philip Pullella; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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