The local ABC affiliate, KIII-TV, will air "The Francis Effect" on Sunday, Feb. 15, at noon. The original 75-minute production by Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation was edited to 58 minutes for television broadcast on ABC Television Network.
What has happened in the Church, and how can it be that a 77-year-old, retirement-bound archbishop from Buenos Aires has captivated the world? Did the Vatican hire a public relations company or clever media strategists to frantically work behind the scenes to re-brand its image or is there something else at work?
On March 13, 2013, Jorge Mario Bergoglio received the call in the Sistine Chapel to go, rebuild, repair, renew and heal the Church. There are those who delight in describing the new Pope as a bold, brazen revolutionary sent to rock the boat.
Others think he has come to cause a massive shipwreck. But the only revolution that Pope Francis has inaugurated is a revolution of tenderness, the very words he used in his major letter, The Joy of the Gospel.
It was not long into the pontificate of Pope Francis before the world knew this pope was going to be different. The spontaneity of his words and actions and his down-to-earth style generated unprecedented and overwhelmingly positive global attention.
"The Francis Effect" takes a critical and in-depth look at how the Catholic Church is rapidly changing under the leadership and vision of Pope Francis. The film begins by situating the pontificate of Francis in a wider historical context, referencing an essay written by the German theologian Father Karl Rahner, SJ–one of the most influential Catholic thinkers of the 20th century. Father Rahner proposed that the Second Vatican Council of the 1960s was the beginning of a fundamental transformation of the Catholic Church into a fully world religion.
The person and ministry of Pope Francis are seen as part of the continuing realization of that transformation. The body of the film is divided into six chapters representing the major themes of Francis' first year as pope. By analyzing these themes both individually and collectively, a more complete picture of the Francis effect emerges, namely, the realization of the Second Vatican Council and a concrete expression of how to preach the Gospel in today's world.
The film concludes by raising the essential question: what happens now? Will those who are inspired by Pope Francis transform their communities, and society as a whole, by living and sharing the Gospel of mercy and love?
Pope Francis has not come to overturn doctrine and age-old beliefs that are the bedrock of our Catholic Christian faith. He wants to make those teachings understandable and part of our lives. He opens doors to a faith that offers attractive, compelling answers to questions deep in the hearts of all men and women. There is something incredibly appealing here not only to Catholics, but to Christians and to all men and women of good will. Is it any wonder then, why the world is listening to him?
Francis, Bishop of Rome, reminds us each day of the words of his predecessor St. John XXIII more than 50 years ago at the beginning of the Second Vatican Council: "The substance of the ancient doctrine of the Deposit of Faith is one thing, and the way it is presented is another." With Pope Francis, it is the same story we have heard for ages, but the packaging has indeed changed.