Will Anything Change With a Latino Pope?

Pope Francis has a new style, but he´s quite conservative on social issues

ByABC News
March 19, 2013, 5:56 PM

March 19, 2013— -- Throughout the Americas, home to nearly 50 percent of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, expectations are running high with the election of the first non-European pope in more than 1,300 years.

Priests, activists and millions of faithful practitioners are looking for Argentinian cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now Pope Francis, to turn around a church that has been hard hit by child abuse scandals and alienated some adherents through stances that bar women from priesthood, deny priests from getting married, designate abortion as murder, discriminate against gays and ban the use of contraceptives even in AIDS ravaged regions like the Horn of Africa.

"Even if Bergoglio was careful enough not to appear like he was straying from the positions of his predecessors, he always chose to keep his options open," Sergio Rubin, an Argentinian journalist who is the co-author of the book "The Jesuit, Conversations with Jorge Mario Bergoglio" wrote in an article for Argentinian newspaper Clarín. "It is hard not to see in that a prelude for changes in the Church, at least in the way to approach the problems and the demands for modernization."

For many analysts, hopes of reform are in part justified by Bergoglio's character, which in many ways is pointedly different from that of his predecessors.

An austere and frugal man known for his rejection of pomp and luxury, Bergoglio is a Jesuit by training whose stance on poverty is perhaps more similar to that of a Franciscan. In Argentina, he rejected the archdiocese's official cars and opted to ride the subway or the public bus to work. As pope, he paid for his own hotel bill and asked his countrymen not to spend their money on tickets to attend his inauguration in Rome, but rather to use the funds to help the poor.

"I think there will be a change in style," said Paul G. Crowley, a theology professor at Santa Clara University who specializes in the Jesuit Community, in an interview with ABC/Univision. "I think we will see a simpler papacy and more popular gestures of simplicity. There will be a change in that level and that will be significant."

Thus far, the change of style seems to be refreshing for many Catholics who felt alienated by the previous pope's lack of charisma and by the Church's traditional pageantry.

"I love Pope Francis because he has a unique kind of simplicity," Gloria Arbeláez, a regular churchgoer, said last Sunday after an 11 a.m. mass in Bogota, Colombia. "You can see he is truly humble. At least he doesn't want people to kiss his ring. He looks like a regular guy, not like Pope Benedict."

This excitement, however, is not always shared by Catholics who expect deep reforms on the church's stance towards contraception, same-sex marriage or abortion. But according to Crowley and other observers, those kinds of changes should not be expected. The son of an Italian railway worker, Bergoglio is first and foremost a social conservative who follows the Church's traditional doctrine.

"As far as I know, Pope Francis is a moderate conservative who will maintain the Church's current moral positions," says Father Francisco de Roux, the highest Jesuit authority in Colombia and one of the country's most prominent clerics.