The Pope always speaks as a Shepherd
The Editorial Director of Vatican News, Andrea Tornielli, reflects on the role of the Successor of Peter and his Magisterium
VATICAN
by Andrea
Tornielli
Pope Leo XIV in Castel Gandolfo (@Vatican Media)
Even when he
speaks about war and peace, migration or how to remain human in the age of
artificial intelligence, the Successor of Peter remains, above all, a spiritual
leader. The fact that the Bishop of Rome, by virtue of the Lateran Pacts of
1929 that resolved the “Roman Question,” is also the sovereign of the world’s
smallest state—less than half a square kilometer in the heart of the Italian
capital—does not mean that he acts or speaks as a politician when addressing
issues concerning the affairs of humanity.
Pope Paul VI
explained this well in his address on October 4, 1965, to the United Nations
General Assembly: “This gathering,” he said, “as you are all well aware, has a
twofold nature: it is marked at one and the same time by simplicity and by
greatness. By simplicity because the one who is speaking to you is a man like
yourselves. He is your brother, and even one of the least among you who
represent sovereign States, since he possesses—if you choose to consider us
from this point of view—only a tiny and practically symbolic temporal
sovereignty: the minimum needed in order to be free to exercise his spiritual
mission and to assure those who deal with him that he is independent of any
sovereignty of this world.” The Pope, on a visit to the United States,
immediately added, speaking about himself: “He has no temporal power, no
ambition to enter into competition with you. As a matter of fact, we have
nothing to ask, no question to raise; at most a desire to formulate, a
permission to seek: that of being allowed to serve you in the area of our
competence, with disinterestedness, humility and love.”
It is true
that, to guarantee the absolute freedom of the Vicar of Christ, it was
established nearly a century ago that there would be a tiny patch of land
where the Bishop of Rome and Shepherd of the Universal Church would also be
sovereign—and thus head of state. But this was, and remains, an arrangement
designed to recognize precisely this need for independence from any other
state, and not an affirmation of a dual mission. Any glorification or
exaggeration of the Pope’s role as head of state, any emphasis on the
importance of this role, is therefore misleading because it comes at the
expense of his one true mission as universal Shepherd. A Shepherd who speaks to
Catholics, Christians, believers, and all people of good will with the sole
intent of proclaiming the Gospel—his message of love, brotherhood, and “unarmed
and disarming” peace.
This was
aptly emphasized by the then-Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini, Cardinal
Archbishop of Milan, in his address at the Campidoglio on October 10, 1962, on
the eve of the opening of the Second Vatican Council. In that speech, the
future Pope, speaking of the end of the Church’s temporal power with the fall
of the Papal States in 1870, said: “It was then that the papacy resumed with
unusual vigor its functions as teacher of life and witness to the Gospel, thus
rising to such heights in the spiritual governance of the Church and in its
moral influence on the world as never before.”
When he
calls for human life to be respected and protected at every stage of its
existence, when he speaks of peace with the good of all peoples in mind and
calls for an end to the mad arms race—even going beyond the concept of a “just
war”—when he calls for dialogue and negotiation by invoking the Magisterium of
Social Doctrine, when he calls for migrants to be regarded as people to be
welcomed, without ever forgetting their human dignity; when he reminds us that
the poor are at the heart of the Gospel and that we must build more just and
equitable societies; when he defends the right to religious freedom; when he
emphasizes the importance of caring for Creation so that we may pass it on to
our children and grandchildren—the Successor of Peter is not speaking as a head
of state. He is simply proclaiming the Gospel.


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