There is intense anticipation in the Catholic Church — and no small
amount of anxiety for traditionalists — over what Pope Francis will say
about Communion for divorced and remarried Catholics in a key document
expected in the coming weeks.
But Francis has already made an
intriguing change in this area, albeit one that only concerns the
Vatican’s arcane diplomatic protocol and a very, very select group:
Catholic heads of state.
As longtime Vatican-watcher Andrea
Tornielli reports, the pontiff has altered the long-standing Vatican
custom that if a Catholic president or prime minister (or dictator) who
is divorced and remarried without an annulment visits the pope with his
or her spouse, the pope will meet with the head of state first and then
later greet the spouse — who is usually waiting ensconced in an
anteroom.
“From now on,” Tornielli writes, “Catholic heads of
state in irregular marital unions will be able to meet the pope along
with their spouse and the latter will also be able to appear in official
group photos when gifts are exchanged.”
Tornielli said Francis
asked for the change — first reported by Argentine journalist Elisabetta
Pique — two years ago when an unnamed Latin American head of state who
had married his wife in a civil ceremony met the pope, who then greeted
the wife in a separate location.
The new protocol was
used for the first time last Saturday (Feb. 27) for another Latin
American head of state, the new president of Francis’ native Argentina,
Mauricio Macri, and his third wife, Juliana Awada.
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