Main content
This episode will be available soon

Francis: The Pope's Calling

Does Pope Francis herald a revolution in style or substance?

Just over a year ago, the phone rang at the office of the Italian newspaper La Repubblica. A man asked to speak to Eugenio Scalfari, the paper's 90-year-old founder and a prominent atheist. The caller was Pope Francis. And so began an unusual friendship, an unconventional piece of journalism and an unexpected glimpse into the character of a man who has taken the world stage by storm. Scalfari drew a picture of a "revolutionary" Pope, set on reforming Church bureaucracy, punishing paedophile priests and re-examining priestly celibacy.

It is just one example of the style that has seen Pope Francis labelled the "cold-call Pope" - someone who has swapped the traditional, measured means of Papal communication for off the cuff statements and direct outreach to Catholics and non-Catholics alike. His informal approach has added to his mega-star popularity and fuelled hopes, and fears, about change in the Catholic Church.

In Heart and Soul, James Harding sets out to understand one of the world's most fascinating and charismatic leaders. How does Pope Francis really operate, does he herald a revolution in style or substance, and can his popularity survive in the face of such high expectations? As Church leaders gather in the Vatican for a Synod looking at how Catholic teaching concerning the family relates to the reality of modern life for the faithful around the world, he asks whether a "revolutionary" really has taken over at the Vatican.

27 minutes

Last on

Mon 6 Oct 2014 23:32GMT

More episodes

Next

Coming soon

See all episodes from Heart and Soul

Broadcasts

  • Sat 4 Oct 2014 02:32GMT
  • Sun 5 Oct 2014 08:32GMT
  • Mon 6 Oct 2014 23:32GMT

Podcast