Decorum restored

by Damian Thompson, Spectator

Pope Leo XIV is quietly reshap­ing the Vat­ican

On the after­noon of Easter Sunday last year, Pope Fran­cis was driven through St Peter’s Square in an open-topped Pope­mo­bile. A few weeks earlier he had nearly died from pneu­mo­nia, so pil­grims were thrilled to watch him bless­ing babies. They told journ­al­ists that it was a mir­acle to see the 88-year-old Argen­tinian in such good shape.

At 9.45 the next morn­ing the Vat­ican announced that Fran­cis had just died from a stroke. And so began the pre­par­a­tions for a con­clave that elec­ted the second pope from the Amer­icas. Car­dinal Robert Pre­vost – ‘Bob’ to his friends – was a Chicago-born dual cit­izen of the United States and Peru. Until 2023 he’d been bishop of the Per­uvian dio­cese of Chiclayo. He wasn’t exactly an obscure fig­ure, hav­ing pre­vi­ously been head of the Augustinian order. But it was a sur­prise when Fran­cis cata­pul­ted him into the Vat­ican as Pre­fect of the Dicastery for Bish­ops.

Pre­vost had been a car­dinal for only 19 months when he became Pope Leo XIV. Easter is early this year, so we’re still some weeks away from the anniversary of his elec­tion on 8 May. But that is long enough, surely, to anti­cip­ate the dir­ec­tion of his pon­ti­fic­ate? Not neces­sar­ily. The press like to call Leo ‘the Quiet Amer­ican’, intend­ing it as a com­pli­ment. They pre­sum­ably haven’t read Gra­ham Greene’s novel, in which Viet­namese civil­ians are blown to pieces by the crim­in­ally naive CIA oper­at­ive of the title. Leo is cer­tainly quiet: at 70 years old, he has the gauche smile of a stu­dent at a junior prom. But he isn’t naive. He knows – though he’d never say so – that in some respects the

12-year pon­ti­fic­ate of his pre­de­cessor was cyn­ic­ally divis­ive. It is his job to repair the dam­age. But how?

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