Today's Scripture Reading (February 8, 2026): 1 Kings
12
The history of the Papacy of the Roman Catholic Church is complicated.
There is no doubt that there have been many good and God-honoring men who have
been elected to the papacy. I love the story of Gregory I's election as Bishop
of Rome. According to the story, Gregory never wanted to be Pope, preferring to
remain a monk and lead a life of contemplation and study. When he learned he
had been elected Pope, Gregory ran away and tried to hide from his brothers. He
was forced back into Rome and made the "Papa" of the Catholic Church,
whether he wanted the office or not. Gregory was Pope from 590 to 604 C.E.
Only three Popes have been officially honored with the title "the
Great," and chronologically, Gregory is the second to bear it, appearing
between Leo (I) the Great (440-461) and Nicholas (I) the Great (858-867). He
may not have wanted to be Pope, but Gregory was precisely the man that the
church needed as the sixth century closed and the seventh dawned.
I wish that Papal history had given us more Gregorys, but it sometimes
seems that for every good Pope, there is a historically bad Pope to balance the
scales. One of the bad ones was Pope Benedict IX. Benedict IX was the only Pope
who assumed the office three times. He was also possibly the youngest person to
be made Pope. We think Benedict was twenty years old when he became Pope, but
some reports assert that he was only eleven or twelve. I have grandsons who are
turning twelve in a few weeks, and while I am proud of them, I can't imagine
either of them as the leader of the Roman Catholic Church.
Benedict IX became Pope not because he had the experience and aptitude
for the position, but because his father bribed the Romans to secure it for him.
And Benedict IX quickly disgraced the Chair of Peter. Medieval historian,
Ferdinand Gregorovius (1821-1891) argued that "It seemed
as if a demon from hell, in the disguise of a priest, occupied the chair of
Peter and profaned the sacred mysteries of religion by his insolent
courses." To be honest, it sounds like something that a precocious twelve-year-old
might do. Pope Victor III (1086-1087), in Dialogues III, says that Benedict IX
demeaned the papacy by "his rapes, murders, and other unspeakable acts of
violence and sodomy. His life as a pope was so vile, so foul, so execrable,
that I shudder to think of it."
Jeroboam
built shrines in the northern Kingdom and encouraged his people to worship them
as gods. But he supported the practice by ordaining men who were unqualified
for the priesthood. These were men who wanted to advance themselves, and to do
that, they were willing to pervert the priesthood dedicated to the God who had
brought Israel out of Egypt, and to focus the worship of the God of Israel on a
pair of golden calves that had been placed in the north and the south of the
nation.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: 1 Kings 13