Electing a new pope is never easy, but in the movie Conclave, it appears to be impossible. The voting rounds of over 100 cardinals, locked away behind closed doors, are plagued by sexual scandals, bribery, and even Muslim acts of terror.
One by one, initially favored candidates fade away, and it all plays into the hands of the ultraconservative cardinal Goffredo Tedesco. At one point, he claims the papacy should go to someone “who fights these animals.” For the first time, a quiet cardinal who arrived only at the last minute raises his voice.
Vincent Benitez, who spent his ministry in the Congo, Baghdad, and Kabul, calls Tedesco out: “When you say we have to fight, what is it you think we’re fighting?” The real battle lies “inside each and every one of us,” Benitez explains. Having watched the conclave play out from the sidelines, his main observation is that “these last few days we have shown ourselves to be small, petty men, concerned only with ourselves, with Rome, with these elections, with power.”
“But things are not the Church,” Benitez continues. “The Church is not tradition. The Church is not the past. The Church is what we do next.”
A long silence follows. No one wants to admit it yet, but Benitez’ words left their mark. And by the next morning, when every cardinal holds yet another slip of paper in their hand, they still don’t all agree, but they have learned one lesson: Electing a new pope is not impossible, but it will take a lot of humility, working together, and, as all good things that come out of the Church, faith to get it done.
What struck me most about Benitez’ speech, however, is that you could replace the word “Church” not only with just about any other organization, but even with the word “life,” and it’d still make perfect sense. We are not our lowest common denominator. We are not our greatest fear. And we are definitely not who we were yesterday. Whatever obstacle will drop into your path today, remember: Life is not how we got here. Life is what we do next.