VATICAN CITY (CNN) -- Pope Francis on Thursday emphasized church advancement
in his first Mass with the cardinals who elected him as pontiff a day
earlier.
With solemnity, he delivered a homily about moving the Catholic Church
forward to the cardinal electors, who were dressed in light yellow robes. Altar
servers burned incense in the Sistine Chapel, the setting for the Mass.
He didn't appear to use a script and kept the sermon short, calling on the
cardinals to have courage.
"When we don't walk, we are stuck. When we don't build on the rock, what
happens? It's what happens to children when they build a sand castle and it all
then falls down," the new pontiff said.
"When we walk without the cross, when we build without the cross and when we
confess without the cross, we are not disciples of Christ. We are mundane," he
said. "We are all but disciples of our Lord.
"I would like for all of us, after these days of grace, that we find courage
to walk in the presence of God ... and to build the church with the blood of
Christ," he continued. "Only this way will the church move forward."
When Jorge Bergoglio stepped onto the balcony at the Vatican on Wednesday
evening to reveal himself as the new leader of the world's 1.2 billion
Catholics, he made history as the first non-European pope of the modern era, the
first from Latin America, the first Jesuit and the first to assume the name
Francis.
Thursday has been low-key by comparison.
Francis began the day by praying at the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore in
Rome, a place of special significance for the Jesuits.
His next public appearance is likely to be Sunday. The new pontiff will "very
probably" celebrate Mass at St. Peter's and then deliver the traditional Angelus
blessing, said the Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman.
But it won't be until Tuesday that Francis will be formally installed as
pope.
That's by design. The day coincides with the Feast of St. Joseph, the patron
saint of Italy.
Already a picture is emerging of a humble man who shies away from the
trappings of his new status and is devoted to his pastoral duties.
As pope, Francis will have plenty to deal with. He takes the helm of a Roman
Catholic Church that has been rocked in recent years by sex abuse by priests,
and claims of corruption and infighting among the church hierarchy.
Reflecting the urgency of those concerns, a group representing the alleged
victims of sexual abuse by priests has written an open letter to Pope Francis
requesting a meeting.
"Your predecessor met only a few times with a few carefully chosen victims in
tightly choreographed settings, as he visited nations where this crisis had
reached a fever pitch," the letter from the Survivors Network of those Abused by
Priests states.
"We write today seeking a different kind of meeting -- one in which our
respective organizations -- yours, huge and struggling, and ours, small and
struggling -- can begin to work together to safeguard children across the
globe."
Pope Francis called Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI on the phone Wednesday night,
and will visit him at Castel Gandolfo at some point soon, but not in the next
couple of days, Lombardi said.
The new pontiff will meet with all the cardinals, not just those who were
eligible to vote for him, on Friday and will hold an audience with the media on
Saturday, Lombardi said.
Conservative reformer
The 76-year-old, who served as the archbishop of Buenos Aires, is the first
pope to take the name in honor of St. Francis of Assisi, revered among Catholics
for his work with the poor.
The pontiff is considered a straight shooter who calls things as he sees
them, and a follower of the church's most social conservative wing.
As a cardinal, he clashed with the government of Argentine President Cristina
Fernandez de Kirchner over his opposition to gay marriage and free distribution
of contraceptives.
He was runner-up in the 2005 papal conclave, behind then-Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger.
The new pope brings together the first and the developing worlds. Latin
America is home to 480 million Catholics.
By choosing him, the cardinals sent a strong message about where the future
of the church may lie.
Francis' first public appearance as pope -- when he appealed for the crowds
to pray for him before he gave a blessing -- suggested a "different pastoral
style" in comparison with the more academic approach of Benedict, said
Lombardi.
Francis is someone who has had "a day-to-day link with the population and
ordinary people" during his many years at the head of a large diocese in Buenos
Aires, he said.
He also sought to dampen concerns prompted by media reports that the new pope
has only one lung.
Although Francis had part of one lung removed when he was a young man, the
whole lung was not removed and the new pope is in good health, Lombardi
said.
CNN iReporter Cesar Sotolongo in Lima, Peru, said the election of a Latin
American pope, particularly from the Jesuit order, marked "a new chapter" for
the Catholic Church.
Originally from Florida, Sotolongo also has his own advice for Francis: "The
pope should shape the church with what he has been doing during his career (as
an example)," he said. "Stay in contact with the people, communicate clearly,
promote the unification of faith and ... represent the word of Jesus."
A Jesuit pope
Born in Buenos Aires to an Italian immigrant father, Francis is known for his
simplicity.
Details given by Lombardi on Thursday of Francis' first hours as pope
reinforce that impression -- one which may go down well with his global flock,
many of whom live in poverty or are feeling the squeeze of austerity.
Francis stood, rather than sitting on a throne, to receive the oath of
allegiance from his fellow cardinals after his election, and for his appearance
on the balcony wore just a white cassock and a simple cross, eschewing gold or
jewels, Lombardi said.
Also, on the ride back from the Sistine Chapel to the Santa Marta residence,
he declined the papal car that had been prepared for him and instead took the
bus with other cardinals, Lombardi said.
And Francis thanked the other cardinals at dinner, joking, "May God forgive
you for what you have done," Lombardi said.
Francis will remove the seals from the official papal apartments Thursday but
will not move in until renovations are complete, he added. The new pontiff will
live in a suite at the Santa Marta residence until the papal apartments are
ready.
Back in Buenos Aires, Francis chose to live in an apartment rather than the
archbishop's palace, passed on a chauffeured limousine, took the bus to work and
cooked his own meals.
He was ordained by the Jesuits in 1969. He became co-archbishop of Buenos
Aires in 1997 and sole archbishop of that city one year later.
He was made a cardinal in 2001 and served as president of the Argentine
bishops conference from 2005 to 2011.
As a Jesuit, Francis is a member of the Society of Jesus, one of the biggest
and most important orders in the church.
Jesuits are recognized for their exceptional educational institutions and
focus on social justice.
"Jesuits are characterized by their service to the church ... but trying to
avoid positions of power," said Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, who is also a
Jesuit. "I am absolutely convinced that we have a pope who wants to serve.
"His election was the election of a rejection of power."
'Most stunning' choice of name
His selection of the name of Pope Francis is "the most stunning" choice and
"precedent shattering," CNN Vatican analyst John Allen said. "The new pope is
sending a signal that this will not be business as usual."
The name symbolizes "poverty, humility, simplicity and rebuilding the
Catholic Church," Allen said.
Miguel Diaz, a former U.S. ambassador to the Holy See, agreed, calling the
new pontiff's choice of names "very significant."
"Francis of Assisi is the saint who opted for the little ones in God's
kingdom," he said. "This man represents a change and could potentially be a
great gift for leadership, servant leadership, for all of us within the church
and society."
It is something the Catholic Church says it desperately needs.
"If you look back over the past years -- the crisis of abuse, the scandals
here at the Vatican, financial mismanagement, questions about the leaks and
everything -- when you step back from it all, every crisis we faced ultimately
is a crisis of holiness that we've missed the calling," said the Rev. Thomas
Rosica, the Vatican's deputy spokesman.
"We've moved far away from what we're supposed to be."
World reacts
Word of the election of Pope Francis, who was not considered a frontrunner
among analysts, quickly spread around the globe, with everyone from U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to U.S. President Barack Obama offering
congratulations.
"As the first pope from the Americas, his selection also speaks to the
strength and vitality of a region that is increasingly shaping our world, and
alongside millions of Hispanic Americans, those of us in the United States share
the joy of this historic day," Obama said.
Ban said the new pope shares common goals with the United Nations, from the
promotion of peace to social justice. "We also share the conviction that we can
only resolve the interconnected challenges of today's world through dialogue,"
he said.
There is likely to be no shortage of invitations for Pope Francis to travel
to the four corners of the globe in the pursuit of such goals.
Syria's Patriarch Gregory III Laham of Antioch, who heads the Melkite Greek
Catholic Church, on Thursday invited Francis to visit Syria, Jerusalem and
Lebanon for peace and reconciliation, according to Syria's official news
agency.
Israeli President Shimon Peres and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas also urged him to visit the Middle East.
"He'll be a welcome guest in the Holy Land, as a man of inspiration that can
add to the attempt to bring peace in a stormy area," said Peres.
Nowhere was the reaction to Francis' selection as pope more heartfelt than in
Latin America.
"I am truly still very surprised ... not just that a Latino pope came out,
but that he is an Argentinian from Buenos Aires," the Rev. Eduardo Mangiarotti,
an Argentine priest, told CNN en Español.
It's a "huge event" not only for the church in Latin America but worldwide,
he said.
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, archbishop emeritus of Washington, greeted the
selection with "extraordinary joy."
"I have been hoping that we would move into the Southern Hemisphere, and
especially I think many of us had hoped ... we would have a pope who would come
from Latin America," he said.
"One-half of the Catholics in the world are from Latin America, so this is a
way the cardinals have very graciously acknowledged that."
Filipino priest and CNN iReporter Joel Camaya was among the tens of thousands
who witnessed history Wednesday night in St. Peter's Square, as Francis emerged
on the balcony.
"The multitude, from all parts of the world, were ecstatic to be in the
square for this beautiful occasion," he said. "This was one event that left me
teary-eyed and thanking God for making me a Catholic."