Jorge Mario Bergoglio chose the name Francis to demonstrate his commitment to the common people and the environment. In his papacy he demonstrated courage and openness. He spoke out on behalf of poor and marginalized people of the world and he spoke out against authoritarians including Putin, Netanyahu, Bolsonaro, and Trump. No doubt he will be named a saint joining the pantheon of 83 previous sainted popes, some whose holiness is questionable.
Of course Francis will have to go through the ancient and strange process of beatification and sanctification including finding a couple of miracles he must now get on the schedule. Francis himself elevated two popes to sainthood, John Paul II and John XXIII. John the XXIII was another pope of the people, an enormously consequential pope who moved the Church somewhat belatedly into the 20th century. Pope Francis also sainted Pope John Paul II, who not only reached out to all faiths and nations and Jews but apologized for 2,000 years of Christian anti-semitism. John Paul II may well be a saint but his dealing with sexual scandal by priests is less than saintly.
More importantly, in my mind, Pope Francis put a hold on the process of sanctifying Pope Pious XII, a craven betrayer of his duty. Francis opened the secret archives on Pious XII which confirmed the obvious, that Pius accommodated the Nazis in order to preserve the wealth and position of the Church. I recall the day in November 1958 when we Catholic school kids were marched next door to pray for dead pope in St. Ann’s church whose entrance was draped in black. For years little was said about the perfidy and awful silence of Pious XII.
The secret archive that was opened by Francis was studied and reported by David Kertzer in The Pope at War: the Secret History of Pius XII, Mussolini, and Hitler. In his book, Kertzer shows that the negotiations of Pious with Hitler’s emissary, were secretly recorded, Nixon style, by a staff who listened in an adjoining room as Pious, in fluent German, agreed to say nothing against Hitler in return for protection of priests and churches. And Pious kept his vow of silence even as Jewish and Catholic leaders pleaded throughout the war for the pope to speak out against the monstrous crimes of the Nazis. When President Roosevelt asked the pope if he had any evidence of the Nazi atrocities, the spies of the papacy told the pope they indeed had confirmed evidence of the ethnic cleansing but convinced the pope to tell Roosevelt that the Vatican knew nothing. And as the war proceeded to its close, the Nazis rushed to kill all the Jews they could find. Nearly under the windows of the Vatican, the Jews of Rome were rounded up. The secret archives revealed that Pope Pius asked his advisors for recommendations and received only grossly anti-semitic responses from his own staff. Once again there was only silence from the pontiff. So my our Catholic school prayers for Pius might not have done much good. If you sell your soul to the devil, whether for Helen or Hitler, you are not likely to get it back.
In contrast, the successor to the weak Pious, the now sainted John XXIII was outspokenly liberal and made the first outreach to other religions with respect and humility. Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli was the Vatican nuncio (ambassador) to Turkey and Greece during World War II. During the war, he saved thousands of Jews from the Holocaust. He issued certificates of baptism, a kind of fake Christianizing, to Jews all over Eastern Europe to rescue them from the Nazis. He facilitated the transport of endangered Jews to Palestine and supported the creation of the State of Israel and he has been recognized as a righteous Christian toward the Muslims and Jews.
Known as “the Good Pope” his efforts to reach out to non-Catholics began the ecumenical process among the formerly feuding Christian sectarians. He began the liberalization of Catholicism by creating the Second Vatican Council which further the pontiff’s efforts to elevating the movement toward universal human rights. Some authors refer to John XXIII as the most consequential pope in history. But “consequential” can have two meanings. The extraordinary extravagance of the 16th century Pope Leo X was financed through the sale of indulgences. This led to the Protestant Reformation surely the most consequential change in Christian history. On the other hand, how can you not admire a prince of the Church who rides to his coronation on his enormous pet white elephant? The elephant’s name was Hanno. Hanno now rests in peace beneath the Vatican. Leo X is not a saint.
John XXIII also rests in the crypt of St. Peter’s Basilica. Vatican tour guides often point out his burial site saying “here is the tomb of Pope John XXIII, the most beloved pope in history.” The tomb of Pope Francis will read simply: Franciscus. Jorge Mario Bergoglio was a man of humility and chose to name his papacy after the humble and nature loving St. Francis. I’ve never come across anyone deserving of sainthood, except my mother of course. Surely the gentle but courageous Pope Francis comes close. His most humble and perhaps brave statement was when he responded to a question about homosexuality and he responded “who am I to judge?” Well, you are the pope for Chrissake! But this was his humility and acceptance of all people especially those who suffer discrimination. When Pope Francis elevated John to sainthood, he did so without the proof of the attribution of two miracles. Two miracles are a tough act to deliver, especially after you’re dead, but I have faith in Pope Francis, the pope of the people.
