ROME — On the second anniversary of the start of his papacy, Pope Francis announced that the Roman Catholic Church would mark an extraordinary Holy Year in December, though he might not be celebrating many more anniversaries in the future.
“I have the feeling that my pontificate will be brief — four or five years; I do not know, even two or three,” he predicted in an interview
with a Mexican broadcaster. “Two have already passed. It is a somewhat
vague sensation,” the pope said, reiterating his belief that “the Lord
has placed me here for a short time, and nothing more.”
Leaving
open the possibility that he might follow in the footsteps of his
predecessor, Benedict XVI, who became the first pope to step down in 600
years when he did so in 2013, the pope said Benedict “should not be
considered an exception, but an institution.”
“Maybe
he will be the only one for a long time, maybe he will not be the only
one,” said the pope, 78, adding that Benedict opened an “institutional
door.”
The chatty interview with Mexico’s
Televisa News was in keeping with Francis’s outgoing manner and personal
touch — from the cold-calls to faithful who write to him sharing their
sorrows, to his off-the-cuff avuncular advice. His predecessors
dispensed their personal musings sparely, and rarely through the
mainstream media.
In the interview, Francis
confessed that what he missed most since becoming pontiff was being able
to “go to a pizzeria for a pizza without anyone recognizing me.”
The pope also discussed global trends in
migration, and the plight of refugees fleeing poverty, hunger and wars.
He also cited reasons people are abandoning the Catholic Church,
including “disastrous” homilies that “do not reach the heart.” The
interview also included comments about the contentious reform of the
church’s Roman bureaucracy and of the shame of the sexual abuse of
minors by priests.
Vatican Radio posted a translated transcript of the Spanish-language interview.
In
an announcement at a ceremony in St. Peter’s Basilica on Friday, the
pope said the church would celebrate a Holy Year, summoning pilgrims to
Rome and other religious sites, that would commence on Dec. 8 and
conclude on Nov. 20, 2016. The opening of the Holy Year, or Jubilee, as
it is also known, coincides with the 50th anniversary of the closing of
the Second Vatican Council, the gathering of bishops that set the
church’s course for the future.
This will be the 29th Holy Year since the practice began in 1300. They usually take place every 25 years.
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