Leo Governs, but Not Alone. The Exemplary Case of Gaza

There is a curious inno­va­tion in Pope Leo’s method of gover­ning : his fre­quent sen­ding of tele­grams writ­ten “in the name of the Holy Father,” but signed by the secre­ta­ry of sta­te, Cardinal Pietro Parolin.

They are publi­shed in all caps, just like tra­di­tio­nal tele­grams, but with punc­tua­tion and para­gra­ph breaks as in nor­mal wri­ting. And they are unu­sual­ly long, con­tra­ry to the typi­cal tele­gra­phic bre­vi­ty.

The fir­st tele­gram of this kind to make news was the one sent on August 18 to the bishops of the Amazon. Which was by no means rou­ti­ne, but urged them both to avoid put­ting poli­ti­cal bat­tles over the pro­cla­ma­tion of faith, becau­se “whe­re­ver the name of Christ is pre­a­ched” “inju­sti­ce rece­des pro­por­tio­na­te­ly,” and to care for the natu­ral resour­ces “that speak of the good­ness and beau­ty of the Creator,” without sub­mit­ting to them “as a sla­ve or wor­shi­per”: with a clear cor­rec­ti­ve refe­ren­ce to the two stum­bling blocks of the synod on the Amazon held in Rome in 2019.

This was fol­lo­wed, on August 20, by a tele­gram to a moral theo­lo­gy con­fe­ren­ce under­way in Bogotá, in which the pope urged peo­ple to take Saint Alphonsus Maria de’ Liguori as an exam­ple of balan­ce bet­ween “the laws of God and the dyna­mics of man’s con­scien­ce and free­dom.”

And then ano­ther tele­gram on the arri­val in India in the 17th cen­tu­ry of a great mis­sio­na­ry, the Lithuanian Jesuit Andrius Rudamina, who was able to com­bi­ne the pro­cla­ma­tion of Jesus with cul­tu­ral and inter­re­li­gious dia­lo­gue.

In short, in the­se and other tele­grams sent on behalf of the pope by Cardinal Parolin the­re is Leo’s evi­dent desi­re to resto­re value to the role of the secre­ta­ry of sta­te, not only as head of diplo­ma­cy but abo­ve all with “the task of clo­se­ly assi­sting the Supreme Pontiff in the care of the uni­ver­sal Church,” as writ­ten in the major reform of the curia car­ried out by Paul VI after Vatican Council II, with the 1967 apo­sto­lic con­sti­tu­tion “Regimini Ecclesiae Universae.”

And Leo’s esteem for Parolin is also con­fir­med by his affi­lia­tion with the Order of Saint Augustine – of which the pope was prior gene­ral – which was besto­wed on the car­di­nal on August 27, the fea­st of Saint Monica, the saint’s mother, in the Roman basi­li­ca named after her son, for his “meri­ts acqui­red toward the Order.”

With the papal tele­grams signed by Parolin, but not only with the­se, Leo wan­ts to con­vey the ima­ge of a govern­ment of the Church that is not mono­cra­tic, with the pope as a soli­ta­ry abso­lu­te monarch, but more “syno­dal” – for tho­se who love this term – or in any case foun­ded from the outset on the con­sen­sus of the one who has the role of fir­st assi­stant to the pope.

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But there’s more. The con­cer­ted­ness of Pope Leo’s method of gover­ning has found con­fir­ma­tion in recent days pre­ci­se­ly on the ter­rain whe­re in the pre­vious pon­ti­fi­ca­te the disor­der at the Church’s highe­st levels was most visi­ble and dama­ging : that of wars.

To under­stand this novel­ty it is enou­gh to fol­low the sequen­ce of even­ts.

On August 22 Leo cal­led for a day of prayer and fasting for all tho­se suf­fe­ring becau­se of war, and the same day saw the publi­ca­tion of the mes­sa­ge from the pope, signed by Parolin, to the Meeting for friend­ship among peo­ples, orga­ni­zed in Rimini by Communion and Liberation.

In his mes­sa­ge the pope expres­sed appre­cia­tion for the wit­ness of the mar­tyrs of Algeria, kil­led in the nine­ties for not bowing to the order to lea­ve that land. And the day after, August 23, recei­ving at the Vatican a group of refu­gees from the Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean, for­ced into exi­le some time ago to make way for the Anglo-American mili­ta­ry base on Diego Garcia but retur­ned to their islands by an agree­ment in London on May 22, he took the oppor­tu­ni­ty to say that “all peo­ples, even the smal­le­st and wea­ke­st, must be respec­ted by the power­ful in their iden­ti­ty and rights, in par­ti­cu­lar the right to live in their own lands, and no one can com­pel them to a for­ced exi­le.”

Everyone sees in this admo­ni­tion of Leo a refe­ren­ce to the peo­ple of Gaza, under pres­su­re to lea­ve their land. And this is cer­tain­ly the thin­king of the Christians living in that ter­ri­to­ry, as evi­den­ced by the joint sta­te­ment publi­shed on August 26 by the Catholic and Orthodox patriar­chs of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa and Theophilos III, who quo­te ver­ba­tim none other than Leo’s words to the Chagos Islands refu­gees of three days befo­re, to also say that “the­re can be no futu­re based on cap­ti­vi­ty, displa­ce­ment or reven­ge.”

In Gaza City, from which the govern­ment of Israel wan­ts to expel all its inha­bi­tan­ts for mili­ta­ry occu­pa­tion, live the two small Christian com­mu­ni­ties of the Strip, the Catholic (see pho­to) and the Orthodox, which shel­ter hun­dreds of civi­lians, inclu­ding Muslims, many of them wea­ke­ned and mal­nou­ri­shed. “Leaving Gaza City and try­ing to flee to the south would be nothing less than a death sen­ten­ce,” the two patriar­chs wri­te. And for this rea­son, the cler­gy and nuns have deci­ded to remain and con­ti­nue to care for all tho­se who will be in the com­pounds.”

It is the same respon­se that the mar­tyrs of Algeria gave to tho­se who wan­ted to for­ce them into exi­le. And it is what Pope Leo rei­te­ra­ted on Wednesday, August 27, at the end of the gene­ral audien­ce, expli­ci­tly asso­cia­ting him­self with the sta­te­ment of the patriar­chs of Jerusalem : “I plead that all hosta­ges be freed, that a per­ma­nent cea­se­fi­re be rea­ched, that the safe entry of huma­ni­ta­rian aid be faci­li­ta­ted, and that huma­ni­ta­rian law be ful­ly respec­ted, in par­ti­cu­lar the obli­ga­tion to pro­tect civi­lians and the pro­hi­bi­tions of col­lec­ti­ve punish­ment, the indi­scri­mi­na­te use of for­ce, and the for­ced displa­ce­ment of popu­la­tions.”

And that same August 27, a few hours later, Cardinal Parolin, que­stio­ned by jour­na­lists, also agreed with what the pope and the two patriar­chs had said regar­ding the expul­sion of the popu­la­tion of Gaza City.

It is hard to find a more con­cer­ted and con­cor­dant mes­sa­ge than the one expres­sed by the­se voi­ces. And on such a sen­si­ti­ve issue. But for Leo – it is now clear – this is how the gover­ning autho­ri­ty of the Church should be and appear.

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It can be added that, by resto­ring influen­ce and autho­ri­ty to the secre­ta­riat of sta­te, Pope Leo has effec­ti­ve­ly set to the side the role that the Community of Sant’Egidio exer­ci­sed on the ter­rain of inter­na­tio­nal rela­tions during the pon­ti­fi­ca­te of Francis.

Sant’Egidio’s rival­ry with the secre­ta­riat of sta­te was par­ti­cu­lar­ly evi­dent with regard to the war in Ukraine, on which the respec­ti­ve judg­men­ts were very discor­dant, with Francis siding deci­si­ve­ly with the Community’s pro-Russian orien­ta­tion.

One proof of the chan­ge of cour­se silen­tly effec­ted by Leo was the scant atten­tion given on July 26 to the visit to the Vatican of Metropolitan Anthony of Volokolamsk, second in com­mand of the Moscow Patriarchate and chair­man of the depart­ment for inter­na­tio­nal rela­tions.

In the sum­mer of 2023, on the occa­sion of a pre­vious visit to Rome by Metropolitan Anthony and then the sen­ding to Moscow of Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, a histo­ric mem­ber of Sant’Egidio, as Francis’s dele­ga­te, the noi­se had been much grea­ter, with par­ti­cu­lar empha­sis given to the friend­ly rela­tions bet­ween Anthony and the lea­ders of the Community, foun­der Andrea Riccardi and vice-president Adriano Roccucci, respon­si­ble for rela­tions with Russia.

Today the Holy See’s voi­ce on the war in Ukraine is again just one. And it is the pro-European and pro-Atlantic one, clear­ly and una­ni­mou­sly expres­sed by Leo and the secre­ta­riat of sta­te, final­ly appre­cia­ted by the heroic Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and its major arch­bi­shop Sviatoslav Shevchuk, who now no lon­ger have to suf­fer, in addi­tion to ruthless Russian aggres­sion, the col­la­te­ral dama­ge of Sant’Egidio’s “paci­fi­sm” and the incon­si­sten­cies of Pope Francis.

(Translated by Matthew Sherry : traduttore@​hotmail.​com)

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Sandro Magister is past “vati­ca­ni­sta” of the Italian wee­kly L’Espresso.
The late­st arti­cles in English of his blog Settimo Cielo are on this page.
But the full archi­ve of Settimo Cielo in English, from 2017 to today, is acces­si­ble.
As is the com­ple­te index of the blog www.chiesa, which pre­ce­ded it.

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