No sabemos quién será el próximo Papa, pero sí podemos intuir, siquiera oscuramente, a qué desafíos habrá de enfrentarse y qué clase de dificultades entorpecerán su tarea. Aunque el teólogo católico George Weigel no aspire a responder al primer interrogante —es teólogo, no adivino—, sí arroja luz (mucha) sobre el segundo. Con la clarividencia propia de los pensadores más solventes, enuncia uno por uno los quehaceres que el próximo pontífice no podrá eludir sin infligir a la Iglesia un daño irremediable, los quehaceres que habrá de acometer con firmeza de espíritu y una ciega confianza en la gracia: entre otros, el fortalecimiento del espíritu misionero, la promoción de un diálogo interreligioso que orbite en torno a la verdad y tienda a ella, el robustecimiento del papel de la Iglesia en el mundo y, en un plano más prosaico, la renovación de la Curia.
El próximo Papa se erige así en un texto fundamental para todo católico al que le inquieten los problemas que hoy acechan a la Iglesia y que sienta vértigo ante un futuro aparentemente envuelto en brumas de incertidumbre.
The Catholic Church is on the verge of a transition of great consequence.
As Catholic theologian, historian, and papal biographer George Weigel notes, the next pope will probably have been a teenager or a very young man during the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965); he may even have been a child during those years. Thus the next pope will not have been shaped by the experience of the Council and the immediate debates over its meaning and reception like Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, and Pope Francis. The next pope, Weigel writes, "will be a transitional figure in a different way than his immediate predecessors. So it seems appropriate to ponder now what the Church has learned during the pontificates of these three conciliar popes—and to suggest what the next pope might take from that learning."
Drawing on his personal discussions with John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis, as well as his decades of experience with Catholics from every continent, George Weigel examines the major challenges confronting the Catholic Church and its 1.3 billion believers in the twenty-first century: challenges the next pontificate must address as the Church enters new, uncharted territory. To what is the Holy Spirit calling this Church-in-transition? What are the qualities needed in the man who will lead the Church from the Chair of Saint Peter?
Taking lessons from the pontificates of John Paul II, Benedict XVI, and Francis, George Weigel proposes what the Catholic leaders of the future, especially the next pope, must do to remain faithful to the Holy Spirit's summons to renewed evangelical witness, intensified missionary fervor, and Christ-centered reform in the wake of grave institutional failures, mission confusion, counter-witness, and the secularist challenge to biblical faith.