He said: "The time for an African pope was ripe even in the time of the Apostolic Fathers in the first century of the church.
"I am not saying that I
wish to be considered for the papacy, but the fact that the Gospel is to
be preached to all peoples, languages, and races means that the highest
leadership of the church should be open to anyone from any race,
language and nation. I will not be surprised to see an African pope in
my lifetime."
None of us who listened
to him expected that a week later, the prospect of an African pope will
be put to the test in the next conclave in March as a result of the
sudden resignation of Pope Benedict XVI.
For many Catholics, where
a pope comes from may not be as important as who the pope is, but for
most African Catholics the election of an African pope will be a
wonderful sign that African Catholicism has come of age, and they hope
that such a pope will address squarely the particular challenges facing
Africans today and integrate African culture and socio-economic
priorities into mainstream Catholicism.
This is not only with
regard to African Catholicism but to African Christianity in general.
British Missiologist Andrew Walls argues: "African Christianity must
be
seen as a major component of contemporary representative Christianity,
the standard Christianity of the present age, a demonstration model of
its character. That is, we need to look at Africa today, in order to
understand Christianity itself."
This is a view shared by
many who watch the exponential growth and diversity of African
Christianity at a time when Catholicism is dying in the heartland of
Europe, weakened by sexual abuse, a crisis of leadership, and a crisis
of faith and secularism.
According to recent figures,
70% of Catholics now live in either in the Americas (48%) or in Europe
(24%) and more than a quarter live either in the Asia-Pacific region
(12%) or in Sub-Saharan Africa (16%).
For the first time in
history, Latin America and Africa provide more than half of the
population of Catholics in the world today.
At a time when the pews
and churches of Europe and North America are empty and many dioceses are
declaring bankruptcy, the churches in Africa are filled beyond capacity
every Sunday. At a time when European church celebrations are seen to
be too formal, too medieval and ritualistic, and lacking in joy and
flavor, church celebrations in Africa are very enthusiastic,
celebratory, communal and joyful.
There is always
something new and surprising in many African churches on Sunday,
reflecting the unpredictable innovation and openness of African
religious beliefs and practices to the dynamist of the Holy Spirit. As
one White Canadian who attended our African Mass in Toronto told me
recently: African Catholicism rocks!
Whereas there is a
frightening drop in vocations to the priesthood and religious life in
North America and Europe, religious vocations are booming in Africa and
African clerics are all over the Western world helping in the
re-evangelization of the descendants of the Western missionaries who
brought Christianity to Africa.
Catholicism is also a
strong cultural influence in Africa's continuing search for answers to
the challenges of poverty, diseases, ethnic and religious conflicts,
wars, political and economic problems, radical Islamic fundamentalism,
and how to mitigate the effects of climate change and natural disasters.
Churches in Africa are
becoming strong social capitals whose values lie not simply in providing
spiritual support, but also in strengthening the civil society,
creating healthy networks among people and valorizing the agency of
Africans to safeguard basic human security for integral and sustainable
development.
Pope Benedict XVI
also recognizes this shift. In November 2011, Pope Benedict XVI was in
Contonou, Benin, to unveil the post-Apostolic Exhortation, Africae
Munus, which contained the road map of the Second African Synod for the
future of African Christianity. Among other things, Pope Benedict argued
that Africa has become the spiritual lungs which will awaken the
sleeping churches of the West, and that Africa should also become the
center for the renewal of Catholic thought, philosophy and theology.
Pope Benedict thus sees African Catholicism and African Catholics as well placed to lead Christianity to the future.
Pope Benedict thus sees
African Catholicism and African Catholics as well placed to lead
Christianity to the future. The election of an African pope will no
doubt vindicate Africa's place as the new center of Catholicism and
world Christianity.
The fundamental
questions are: Is the Catholic church ready for a black pope? Will the
church, which defines herself as universal, live up to the full
consequences of her identity and give room to a new reality that could
help reconnect the church to the movement of history which it seems to
have abandoned under the papacy of Pope Benedict?
Will the Catholic Church
accept Africa's brand of Catholicism and will an African pope be more
Roman than African? Is an African pope better placed to address the
challenges facing Africa today as well as give new energy and renewal to
a tired church in the West?
However, whoever becomes
the next pope -- African or non-African -- should see himself as a pope
for the world. He should not become a prisoner of the Vatican or to a
eurocentric medieval notion of Roman Catholicism or orthodoxy.
Furthermore, he should not become a slave to some of the time-worn structures and teachings of the Catholic Church.
On the contrary, he
should go out to the ends of the earth and reach out to all people,
especially those disenchanted and marginal Catholics -- women divorced
and separated Catholics, gays and lesbians, victims of clerical sexual
abuse, and those who feel alienated from the church because of some of
its sterner moral and spiritual prescriptions.
The boundaries of
ethical and doctrinal discourse are shifting in a radical way. It should
be the task of the new pope to help make the Catholic Church a
community of faith of people of many colors; a church that embraces
social change and cultures as a friend, and endorses through her laws
and practices the dignity of differences.
This way, the Catholic
Church will become truly a household of God, where blacks and whites,
saints and sinners, men and women, liberals and conservatives, rich and
poor, gays and straights are all treated as equal children of God,
without regard to rank or status.
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