At best, he seems to be sending mixed signals with the visual of vestments and the restoration of some traditions that Francis ignored or abrogated standing next to the stroke of the pen on who he makes leaders of the Roman Catholic Church. At worst, the visual is merely a smokescreen for the substantive choice to be an extension of Francis' disastrous papacy. He has revived the consultation and council of the cardinals at what would seem to be a pace of twice a year but most of those cardinals were appointed by Francis and owe him their red hat if not their theological, liturgical, and philosophical allegiance. For those who look around our own households of faith with fear and trembling, all of this leaves a question mark where Rome needs at least a period or even an exclamation mark. It could be worse for us. We could have the same kind of vacillating signals from our own leadership in the LCMS. While there are always potshots taken at leaders from the galleries, we have less to wring our hands over than Rome does right now and it is just the beginning of what might be a generation or so of leadership from the guy in white. If I were Roman Catholic, I would be worried.
Leo seems to ignore some of the most radical things liberals say. Think here about Cardinal Cupich who ought to be minding the Chicago shop but seems hellbent upon making his stamp extend well beyond the Windy City. He had the gall to say that the Latin Mass a spectacle that must be suppressed. Imagine somebody in the LCMS saying the same thing about Divine Service 3? Granted our DS3 has had less than a hundred and fifty years of usage but it has been deemed venerable and has never been put out to pasture. Cupich wants to turn the Church's back on something that served Rome for over 400 years and to say it is so bad it cannot be allowed any longer. No matter what you think about the Latin Mass, this has the net effect of disowning your own history. We Lutherans are a bit like Rome. We seldom admit our mistakes and add cars on the train of our traditions that seem sometimes to weigh down the engine of our churches. Rome does that in spades. But not Cupich. It was bad then and it is bad now and it must be gotten rid of for the health of Rome. Gosh. You might think somebody in the Vatican might have made a phone call to tell Cupich to deal with the faithful who are his charge and to leave this kind of thing to those to whom jurisdiction is given. This is but one example of something that seems, without Leo demurring, to cast gasoline on the fires burning in Rome. Why does Leo not say or do something for the sake of the Roman Catholic Church?
I guess what I am saying is this. If people inside or outside of Rome (like me) were expecting this pope to repair what damage has been done over the last decade or so, they will have to wait longer. Leo is not doing much to suggest that his vision for Rome is all that much different than Francis' -- except in style.




