Seán Ó Conaill: The Pyramid Will Stay Inverted
This article was first published on the Association of Catholics in Ireland website: https://acireland.ie/the-pyramid-will-stay-inverted/
Pope Francis’ enemies in the church will be ‘talked up’ by media as possibly capable of reversing the direction he set over the twelve years of his pontificate.
However, the historical circumstances in which Francis came to the chair of Peter have not changed. Those same circumstances now make the 21st century Franciscan ‘startup’ – synodality – irreversible.
The Inverted Pyramid
“Jesus founded the Church by setting at her head the Apostolic College, in which the Apostle Peter is the ‘rock’ (cf. Mt 16:18), the one who must confirm his brethren in the faith (cf. Lk 22:32). But in this Church, as in an inverted pyramid, the top is located beneath the base.”It was in this celebrated passage in his address to bishops in 2014 that Pope Francis first introduced the idea of the church as an upside-down pyramid, with bishops in the role of servants rather than overlords. He went on:
“Let us never forget this! For the disciples of Jesus, yesterday, today and always, the only authority is the authority of service, the only power is the power of the cross. As the Master tells us: ‘You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great men exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among you; but whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave’ (Mt 20:25-27). It shall not be so among you: in this expression we touch the heart of the mystery of the Church, and we receive the enlightenment necessary to understand our hierarchical service.”
The Synodal Pathway
The Synodal Pathway then launched in Ireland and globally from 2021 followed logically – by insisting that Baptism – not Ordination – is the foundational sacrament of the church – and by calling all of the baptised people of God to communion, participation and mission
Is this vision of the church’s future truly in danger now that Francis has passed? Media will hype this as a cliff-edge moment, with the return of ‘Command Catholicism’ – a bid for tight control from above on sexual practice – a real possibility. Could that truly be the direction taken by the Conclave of 2025?
Teachers Must Also be Witnesses
To understand why this is highly unlikely we need only remind ourselves of a key insight of Pope Paul VI, expressed in the 1975 document Evangelii Nuntiandi. Writing on the vital topic of evangelisation – the communication of the ‘Good News’ of the Gospel to the modern world – that pope declared:
“Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.” (Evangelii Nuntiandi 41)An unavoidable question arises from this declaration:
If teachers are not witnesses will anyone listen?
And what of the church’s supreme teachers, its official magisterium, its bishops – who did not, as a body, witness to the paramount importance of the safeguarding of the innocence of children until – beginning in the last two decades of the 20th century – Catholics – globally – discovered that the safety of their children had in fact been considered much less important than the reputation of ordained men? And that this was true even of the era of Pope Paul VI?
Lay Victims of Abuse Were its Witnesses
Had even one Catholic bishop been the source of this revelation the shock would have been that much less – but in fact it had been some of the affected Catholic families – lay people – in Louisiana, USA in the mid 1980s – who first informed the wider church of this ghastly anomaly, not any Catholic bishop anywhere.
So all bishops – and all cardinals attending the 2025 Conclave – know well that the truth of clerical sexual abuse of children was imposed upon the church not by its leaders but by the innocent victims of that abuse.
For many observant Catholics it became impossible from then on to think of bishops – the church’s official magisterium – as necessarily witnesses to the Gospel and even necessarily as exemplary moral leaders of the church. This inevitably applied also to the bishop of Rome, the pope. In the era of Pope Benedict XVI – the era in which Archbishop Bergoglio of Buenos Aires emerged as a likely successor – this was the climate that inevitably gave shape and direction to the Conclave of 2013.
Moreover, as if to underline the fact that bishops were not holy ex officio, the internal wranglings of the Vatican bureaucracy were by then also on public display – in the so-called ‘Vatileaks’ affair. Had not this same scandal helped to bring about that conclave by influencing Benedict XVI’s astonishing decision to retire? If he was truly disabled finally by insomnia, as recently reported, who can fail, now, to see the causes?
Cardinal Bergoglio Reads the Times
‘Francis’ then became the title of Benedict XVI’s successor because, more clearly than anyone else, Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio saw that the centuries-old strategy of governing and leading the church by moral edict from above had backfired disastrously. Focused on imposing tight discipline on sexual morality on the non-ordained people of God it had exposed the hierarchical clerical church to the charge of rank hypocrisy, in the concealment of the sexual sins of clergy.
Who now could not see also that, on a global scale, children had been sacrificed to preserve this secret? So obviously sinful was this mistake that only penitence on the part of leadership could now be persuasive.
“I Am a Sinner!”
And so, when asked directly ‘Who is Jorge Mario Bergoglio?‘ the new Pope Francis declared:
“I am a sinner. This is the most accurate definition. It is not a figure of speech, a literary genre. I am a sinner.“
Stunning the Catholic world as it did this declaration told us not just about Jorge Bergoglio but about the times – the circumstances in which he had been elected. Everything else about his pontificate followed logically from this declaration. We Catholics – people, priests, bishops and even popes – are all sinners – and are taught – if we pay attention – to understand our greatest sins.
Of these perhaps the greatest is a tendency to believe that we are qualified to tell others what to do – but had not Jesus himself warned even the apostles – the very first bishops – against doing that?
The Culmination of Centuries of Scandal
Schooled well in the history of the church Francis could see also that the clerical abuse cover-up scandal was but the latest in a centuries-long series of church scandals.
Already, just before the Jubilee year 2000 Pope John Paul II had issued the document Memory and Reconciliation lamenting:
- the medieval Inquisitions,
- the church’s own role in causing conflicts between Christians
- the persecution of Jews in Catholic countries even into modern times,
- the abuse of women,
- the violation of the rights of indigenous peoples in supporting European imperialism and colonialism across the globe.
Had not the church also supported imperial European regimes that had gone to total war in 1914 – a major cause of the rise of secularism and atheism in the 20th century West?
The abuse scandal – by no means over yet in 2013 (or even now) – was merely the final blow – a blow delivered by a church system of ‘moralising from above‘ that had backfired – justly – on the moralisers.
The Meaning of Synodality
So, if moralising from above could not lead the church any longer, what could?
Pope Francis’ answer – an answer derived obviously from deep prayer and the guidance of the Holy Spirit – is synodality – communion, participation and mission – a new era in which Catholic ministers accompany those to whom they minister – instead of talking down to them .
Those who cannot get on board with this must be prayed for very seriously – to receive the insight to understand their own times. No effective leadership can ever emerge from historical blindness, the prime disability of the church faction that opposed and sometimes disgracefully vilified Pope Francis.
Constantinian Nostalgia Not the Answer
Almost certainly the historical worldview of the opponents of synodality is one that idealises Christendom – that long era in which the church was patronised by nominally Christian kings. Even today the perceived danger of tyrannical anti-Christian government leads some to yearn for a new union of Catholic church and state – the union that began with the first Roman emperor to patronise the church
But who cannot see now that it was that long privileging of the church – and especially of clergy – that corrupted and divided it originally?
Had it not been the mission of the first St Francis – in the 1200s – to restore Christ’s Church in an era of nominally Christian kings?
Were not the divisions of the church – into East and West and then into the Protestant fragmentations in the West – caused and widened by that same corruption?
And what of Christian and Catholic minorities today in e.g. China, India, Pakistan, Israel and elsewhere? How could any new movement to unite church and state in the West not be seen by people of other faiths as proof of the danger of tolerating Christians anywhere?
Constantinianism – or Christian nationalism – is yet another historical cul de sac. Too close a relationship with political power will always corrupt the church and endanger the sincere belief of those without it – and reconnect the church scandalously with privilege, mendacity and violence.
No Other Future
What, truly, is the alternative to the direction that Pope Francis has set? What, truly, are the signs of these times?
What would any victim of clerical abuse – or any kind of abuse in, or by, the church – make of a turning back by bishops – to moralising from above?
Where in this media-saturated world could any bishop hope to succeed with such a strategy? Could the 2025 Conclave truly think seriously of abandoning synodality and reverting to that same stilted mode of leadership – when all who attend it will know that Pope Francis is revered globally for his humility?
Did not the Covid pandemic reveal the shortcomings of governments everywhere – and reveal also the potential of ordinary yet extraordinary people to save one another and to show us the truth of the Beatitudes? It is the compassionate and the powerless who will liberate and inherit the Earth.
All Catholic bishops and cardinals now are surely done with Lording. The only possible future for the church is to suffer – i.e. to put up with – the vulnerability of its founder – Jesus of Nazareth – rather than ever again to seek – or to accept – a position of privilege and power.
What, seriously, are the chances that the upcoming conclave of 2025 will not be led, by prayer, to see the future of the church as Pope Francis so clearly saw it?
Sean O’Conaill
27th April, 2025
I did not realize that “inverted pyramid” is Francis’s own language, and it is good to see Paul VI striking a similar note (in line with his emphasis that the church exists for the world — whereas we’d been led to think of the church as a supreme sacral object, an end in itself). In face of the talking points which rightwing Catholics constantly spew, it is good to look up what the popes really said — often bold and daring, and more enlightened than anyone else.
More on the Inverted Pyramid
https://theologicalstudies.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/1-Rush-Inverting-the-Pyramid.pdf
Sean, You haven’t anything to worry about.
Those of us who reject Synodality as not of the Holy Ghost, who regard Fiducia Supplicans as written by Satan and Delivered from Hell to Tucho, have either left the Church or, in my case been excommunicated.
“Look at me, I’ve been excommunicated!” Excommunication is the gravest sanction in the church’s arsenal, implying some terrible crime. There are plenty of people who dismiss Fiducia supplicans and the very ideal of synodality — these are NOT excommunicable offences. No one knows what you mean.