
As the Church’s cardinals prepare to elect a new pope, they must be wary of “elegant speeches” that hide a subtle cruelty toward the poor and vulnerable, the Vatican’s former doctrinal chief said. Source: CNS.
Celebrating a memorial Mass for Pope Francis in St Peter’s Basilica yesterday, Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, former prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, warned that disrespect for the poor can be expressed not only in openly “cruel and vain” terms, but also in refined language.
“Those words” – such as calling the poor “lazy,” he said – “are also found hidden behind other, more elegant speeches.”
Cardinal Fernández celebrated Mass with cardinals on the sixth day of the novendiali – nine days of mourning for Pope Francis marked by Masses.
The cardinals did not gather for their general congregation meetings yesterday because May 1 is a holiday for Vatican City State to observe the feast of St Joseph the Worker.
With members of the Roman Curia seated in the front rows, the cardinal said that distorted ideas of merit and success – what Pope Francis denounced as “false meritocracy” – risk obscuring the Gospel truth of human dignity.
“False meritocracy,” the cardinal said, “leads us to think that only those who have succeeded in life are worthy.” Instead, through his ministry, Pope Francis “launched a prophetic cry against this false idea,” he said, rejecting a view that sees failure as a moral fault and success as proof of virtue.
Reflecting on the life and message of Pope Francis just days before the cardinals begin the process of choosing his successor, Cardinal Fernández pointed to the late Pope’s insistence that every person, regardless of status or background, possesses an “immense dignity that is never lost, that in no way can be ignored or forgotten.”
He recalled Pope Francis’s belief that authentic help for the poor cannot stop at material aid, rather their dignity must be “promoted” by developing their God-given gifts and allowing them to support themselves.
“It is not enough to give things,” the cardinal said. “Every person must be able to earn their bread with the gifts God has given them.”
The cardinal closed his homily by recalling Pope Francis not just as a teacher of the dignity of work, but as someone who lived it.
“Even with very little strength in his final days, he found the strength to visit a prison,” he said.
FULL STORY
Before conclave, cardinal warns of cruelty hidden behind ‘elegant speeches’ (By Justin McLellan, CNS)