May 18, 2013
A look at the history and future of
the sometimes-controversial movement
When the newly elected Pope Francis appeared at the window before the
cheering crowd in St Peter’s Square, and promptly bowed down asking the people to pray for him, most of the public at large was
charmed, but puzzled. Pope Benedict too had asked the people to pray for him
from the outset, but without the bowed head. To some spectators, however—including
the members of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal and their counterparts in the Protestant
and Orthodox worlds—the gesture came as something surprisingly familiar. In the “charismatic” galaxy, prayer is
offered and asked for in this way by people of all levels—specifically, prayer
for a renewed outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
Pope Francis’ frequent mentions of the Holy Spirit—whom he has described
as someone who “annoys us”
and “moves us, makes us walk, pushes the Church to move forward”—as well as
his unprecedentedly frequent references to the devil (rather than to a generic
“evil”), indicate his affinity for the Charismatic Renewal. The election of such a back-to-basics man as Supreme
Pontiff provides us with an opportunity to look at the road traveled by the
Charismatic Renewal and to “hold on to what is good” (1 Thess 5:21).
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