Please read this in its entirety before responding. I can cite references if needed, but it might take me some time.
In preparing a new campaign, I was looking over the
timeline on the Sixth World Wiki (via dumpshock), and saw something that just doesn't fit. Apparently, several older sourcebooks introduced some future history regarding the Catholic Church, and how they handled the emergence of metahumanity and magic.
Here's everything the timeline has to say about the Church:
- 2010: In Vatican City, Pope John Paul III dies suddenly of the VITAS plague. He is succeeded by archconservative Cardinal Vitali who takes the name John Paul IV. (Shadows of Europe)
- 1 Jan 2011: In Vatican City, during the traditional New Year's Message from St. Peter's Square, Pope John-Paul IV denounces metahumans as abominations in the eyes of God. (Tír na nÓg)
- 2012: In the Czech Republic, Czech Catholics, responding to the Pope's denouncement of metahumans, rise up against the Vatican. (Shadows of Europe)
- 2012: In France, the FCC opposes Pope John-Paul IV's declaration against metahumans, creating a permanent rift between the FCC and the Vatican. (Shadows of Europe)
- Mar 2012: In Vatican City, a Papal Bull is issued confirming Pope John Paul IV's position against metahumans and further denouncing all things magical as "unholy and ungodly by their very nature." (Shadows of Europe)
- 2013: In Vatican City, Pope John Paul IV dies in his sleep. He is replaced by a moderate Brazillian cardinal who takes the name John XXV. Despite this change in power, several Irish Catholic bishops who had refused to accept John Paul IV's denouncement of metahumans, break from the Catholic church and instead go to the Church of Ireland, a small splinter church. (Tír na nÓg)
- 2023: In Fatima, Portugal, during a visit by Pope John XXV, a new apparition of the Virgin Mary appears before thousands of witnesses. This event reinforces the Pope's declaration against metahumans and further pushes the Portuguese Catholic community into a conservative mindset. (Shadows of Europe)
- 2024: Pope John XXV issues 'In Imago Dei' encyclical: Metahumans have souls and are capable of salvation. Magical abilities are not inherently evil. Spirits are manifestations of nature (gray area).
- 2036: Open war in Italy is only avoided when Pope John XXV negotiates a settlement between the corporations and the sindaci (mayors). The cities of Genoa, Milan and Turin are written off as a catastrophe zone and renamed the Special Administrative Zone of Genoa-Milan-Turin (GeMiTo). (Shadows of Europe)
- 2042: In the Papal States, Italian Confederation, Pope John XXV declares that women may now be appointed priests in the Catholic Church. (Shadows of Europe)
I don't know if there are any other Catholics here, but there are a couple things here that don't sound right.
First is the original denunciation of metahumans in 2011. This sort of thing just wouldn't happen -- the Vatican simply wouldn't make an announcement like this without a LOT of deliberation, and the Church is extremely conservative about this. (To give an example, they spent a long time on the question "If a human were cloned, what's its status?" They decided that, while they don't approve of cloning, the beings that result would still have souls.) If this were a personal opinion of the Pope, it would have been left out of the New Year's Day message. It's one of those thorny issues that would start with a "wait and see" attitude. It would probably take a decade or longer for them to reach a consensus on this.
Next is the 2023 visitation of the apparition of the Virgin Mary. This, quite simply, makes no sense at all. I'm assuming that this apparition is visual and had a spoken message -- it doesn't really say. If it DID have a message, it would've been picked over with a fine-toothed comb before being taken as as canon. (And what if this apparition was actually just an unstable Catholic magician creating an illusion?)
The very next year, the Pope issues an encyclical reversing the entire denunciation. Right after having it 'reinforced' by the Virgin Mary. Wait, what? (Now, this particular item is really the only thing on the list that fits with how the Church operates. It's about the right time-frame for them to have discussed the issue, and it also meshes with the Church's stance. They've always held that people have the same status -- spiritually -- regardless of race or status.) The Church also investigates these sort of things very thoroughly; a Marian apparition in Green Bay, WI, was only recently ruled as 'worthy of belief'; it happened 150 years ago.
One more really big sticking point. 2042, when the Pope declares that women can be priests. Not gonna happen. This is one of those things that's always been in the rules, and Pope John Paul II issued a letter, "Ordinatio Sacerdotalis", in 1995 that basically says that the Church simply does not have the authority to change this rule, ever.
Okay, so I'm likely filtering this through a bunch of people who know next to nothing about the Catholic Church. That's okay; I'm not here to try to convert people or whatever, just to try to clear up some things. This isn't intended to start some sort of flame-war, I just think that the references dropped in the cited sourcebooks (especially
Shadows of Europe) were written by someone who didn't have a clear understanding of the Church.
Here's an idea that might make the stuff that John Paul IV did. What if his denunciation was simply a personal opinion, rather than an official statement? It wouldn't be the first time a Pope has had something blown way out of proportion. If something turns up that falls outside the issues the Church has dealt with, they take a VERY long time debating it before they make any official proclamations.
The apparition could have simply been an illusion created by a magician to try to reinforce the denunciation; maybe a local priest or monk was able to detect the deception, which would have triggered the Church coming to the conclusion that magic can be used for good or evil.
Regarding the "women as priests" issue: What if this were changed? What if, instead, they declared that metahumans are eligible for priesthood and religious vocations? This would sound more like something they'd do, and the time-frame (18 years from 'you have a soul' to 'you can help us out') sounds about right.
Some interesting things that might be worth working on for something later:
- What if some of the saints turned out to be metahuman? Say, Saint Christopher being a troll? The same thing could be done with the saints who are currently lying in state -- the sort where their bodies are on display, and not decomposing. (Yes, that sounds really weird. It happens. Creeps me out.) What if these bodies changed during the Awakening?
- The Church has a strong tradition of healing miracles, and magic includes some pretty powerful healing spells. What if it turned out that some of the more recent saints -- like St. Pio of Pietrelcina (aka Padre Pio) -- were pre-Awakening spellcasters?
- Saint Isidore of Seville is the unoffical patron saint of the Internet (mainly because he hand-wrote a 20-volume encyclopedia). What if they made it official? Even better, how about a monastic order of white-hat hackers? Or a monastic order that focuses on exorcisms, dispatching troublesome spirits, and thwarting corrupted spellcasters?