Wounded shepherd: Pope Francis and his struggle to convert the Catholic Church
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Following his critically acclaimed The Great Reformer, Austen Ivereigh's colorful, clear-eyed portrait of Pope Francis takes us inside the Vatican's urgent debate over the future of the church in Wounded Shepherd.This deeply contextual biography centers on the tensions generated by the pope’s attempt to turn the Church away from power and tradition and outwards to engage humanity with God’s mercy. Through battles with corrupt bankers and worldly cardinals, in turbulent meetings and on global trips, history’s first Latin-American pope has attempted to reshape the Church to evangelize the contemporary age. At the same time, he has stirred other leaders’ deep-seated fear that the Church is capitulating to modernity—leaders who have challenged his bid to create a more welcoming, attentive institution.Facing rebellions over his allowing sacraments for the divorced and his attempt to create a more "ecological" Catholicism, as well as a firestorm of criticism for the Church’s record on sexual abuse, Francis emerges as a leader of remarkable vision and skill with a relentless spiritual focus—a leader who is at peace in the turmoil surrounding him.With entertaining anecdotes, insider accounts, and expert analysis, Ivereigh’s journey through the key episodes of Francis’s reform in Rome and the wider Church brings into sharp focus the frustrations and fury, as well as the joys and successes, of one of the most remarkable pontificates of the contemporary age.
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
Ivereigh, author of the fine biography of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, The Great Reformer (2014), published barely more than a year after Bergoglio became Pope Francis, continues the story with energy that matches its subject's. Towards the end, Ivereigh notes that by May 2019, Francis had reached the end of the list of priorities for the church that he made 10 years earlier at a gathering of South American bishops. Those priorities don't represent tasks to be concluded as much as ongoing missions to which Francis believes the church must be rededicated. Primary among them is outreach to assure all humanity, but especially the poor, isolated, and suffering, of God's mercy by making Catholicism close and concrete to both families and the larger community. To those ends, Francis has transformed Vatican finances to be open and transparent, appointed many more bishops and cardinals from where the church is burgeoning (South America) as well as its fringes (Oceania). His environmental concerns have built bridges between religion and science, and his determination to root out a self-protective clericalism that shields wrongdoers and hides crimes promises to expunge sex abuses, in particular. As he describes these and other efforts, Ivereigh shows that they proceed directly down paths blazed by Vatican II and trod by Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI before Francis. A thoughtful, essential book.--Ray Olson Copyright 2019 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Ivereigh, British journalist and papal biographer, pulls back the curtain on the first six years of the papacy of Pope Francis in this definitive study. Unlike The Great Reformer, Ivereigh's biography of the pope, this effort focuses on "the conversion of a Church that is struggling to put Christ at its center" and begins with a private conversation between Ivereigh and Pope Francis. "He was warning me against the 'great man' myth.... I realize now that The Great Reformer contributed to that myth." Shirking chronology, Ivereigh catalogues many of Pope Francis's actions, among them maneuvering to prevent the Vatican from entering bankruptcy, his acceptance of responsibility for decades of sexual abuse and the resulting cover-up, and his encyclical for confronting climate change. For each reform, Pope Francis has seen a common adversary in far-right, anti-Vatican II reactionaries, such as the traditionalist Order of Malta and American cardinal Raymond Burke, who has formed a coalition to resist many of the pope's reform efforts. Using unprecedented access, Ivereigh provides detailed, frank analysis informed by his own deep Catholic faith and also warns against threats such as a rise in populist nationalist movements. Ivereigh's insider account will be a revelation to readers interested in the inner workings of the Vatican. (Nov.)
Library Journal Review
British journalist Ivereigh (The Great Reformer) here describes a church struggling to put Christ at its center. The book focuses on efforts by Pope Francis and the church on "conversion" and the turbulence that followed, with progressives feeling that he isn't going far enough and traditionalists opposing changes in the status quo. Ivereigh compares the pope to St. Francis of Assisi, highlighting their common goals of repairing the church and combating spiritual worldliness. Themes running through the book include clericalism's perversion of power, at the root of many of the church's problems; preference for synodal rather than hierarchical governance; greater inclusion of the laity, including women, in key church roles; the importance of focusing on the marginal rather than the center of the institution; and the far-reaching implications of the clergy sex abuse crisis. Ivereigh notes the strong influence on Francis of the 2007 Latin American Aparecida conference, especially on major papal documents on the family, the environment, and evangelization. Though clearly sympathetic to Francis, the author's assertions are well documented. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers seeking to understand the complexities of a papacy very different from those of the recent past.--Denise J. Stankovics, Vernon, CT
Kirkus Book Review
A praiseful portrait of Pope Francis.British journalist Ivereigh (Fellow, Contemporary Church History/Campion Hall, Univ. of Oxford; The Great Reformer: Francis and the Making of a Radical Pope, 2014) presents a hagiographic biography of the Francis papacy to date. In a detailed study packed with insider tidbits, the author examines various overarching issues that have affected and defined the Francis era. In addition to the inescapable issue of priestly abuse, Ivereigh also discusses such topics as Vatican finances, rehabilitation of divorced Catholics, human rights crises, and gender and sexuality controversies. An overarching theme is the problem of clericalism, which the author defines as "the perverse idea that clerics of any sortbishops, priests, consecrated personsare superior to non-clerics, who are treated as inferiors." Clericalism, writes Ivereigh, has pervaded Catholicism for years and tainted it in countless ways, leading to many of the problems the church faces today. Whereas clericalism leads to a distance from those the church is meant to love, Francis is consistent in promoting "closeness" in every possible way. Ivereigh presents Francis as a nearly flawless figure, "an old Jesuit spiritual master" with "native cunning" who "truly imitates Christ." The closest the author comes to criticizing Francis is in the chapter on the abuse crisis, in which he admits that Francis made certain missteps in his handling of specific cases. Francis' critics, on the other hand, are "Pharisaical" examples of "naked legalism." He even goes so far as to call them "neo-Donatists," referring to an ancient heresy marked by a lack of mercy. Francis, "the master bridgemaker in an era of angry wall builders," is presented as standing nearly alone against a moribund church and a misguided world. Ivereigh's connections with church insidersconnections he does not hesitate to highlightmake for an interesting read. His lack of objectivity, however, detracts from an otherwise intriguing study.A good read for Francis devotees but far from unbiased journalism. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Reviews
British journalist Ivereigh (The Great Reformer) here describes a church struggling to put Christ at its center. The book focuses on efforts by Pope Francis and the church on "conversion" and the turbulence that followed, with progressives feeling that he isn't going far enough and traditionalists opposing changes in the status quo. Ivereigh compares the pope to St. Francis of Assisi, highlighting their common goals of repairing the church and combating spiritual worldliness. Themes running through the book include clericalism's perversion of power, at the root of many of the church's problems; preference for synodal rather than hierarchical governance; greater inclusion of the laity, including women, in key church roles; the importance of focusing on the marginal rather than the center of the institution; and the far-reaching implications of the clergy sex abuse crisis. Ivereigh notes the strong influence on Francis of the 2007 Latin American Aparecida conference, especially on major papal documents on the family, the environment, and evangelization. Though clearly sympathetic to Francis, the author's assertions are well documented. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers seeking to understand the complexities of a papacy very different from those of the recent past.—Denise J. Stankovics, Vernon, CT
Copyright 2019 Library Journal.Publishers Weekly Reviews
Ivereigh, British journalist and papal biographer, pulls back the curtain on the first six years of the papacy of Pope Francis in this definitive study. Unlike The Great Reformer, Ivereigh's biography of the pope, this effort focuses on "the conversion of a Church that is struggling to put Christ at its center" and begins with a private conversation between Ivereigh and Pope Francis. "He was warning me against the ‘great man' myth.... I realize now that The Great Reformer contributed to that myth." Shirking chronology, Ivereigh catalogues many of Pope Francis's actions, among them maneuvering to prevent the Vatican from entering bankruptcy, his acceptance of responsibility for decades of sexual abuse and the resulting cover-up, and his encyclical for confronting climate change. For each reform, Pope Francis has seen a common adversary in far-right, anti-Vatican II reactionaries, such as the traditionalist Order of Malta and American cardinal Raymond Burke, who has formed a coalition to resist many of the pope's reform efforts. Using unprecedented access, Ivereigh provides detailed, frank analysis informed by his own deep Catholic faith and also warns against threats such as a rise in populist nationalist movements. Ivereigh's insider account will be a revelation to readers interested in the inner workings of the Vatican. (Nov.)
Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.