Economist magazine:
… What should he do? A secular newspaper has to divide its suggestions into two groups: reforms to church doctrine that many conservative Catholics, including Francis, may disagree with; and managerial ones that all Catholics can support.
In terms of doctrine, the list of rules that the church defends with great cost and mixed success begins, from our perspective at least, with priestly celibacy.
Many priests are married—ex-Anglicans, and the Byzantine-rite Catholics of eastern Europe. All the scriptural evidence suggests that the first pope, Peter, had a wife. Allowing other clergy to do likewise would help stem the decline in the priesthood and relieve a great burden of suffering and loneliness. With that taboo gone, others could follow, such as the ban on artificial contraception.
This may be too much for Francis. But there should be no debate about the urgent managerial need to clean up and modernise the Vatican. The church is scandalously badly run. …
read more – The first southern pope
Pope Francis inherits a mess but has great opportunities. He will need to act quickly

Easter Mass March 31, 2013 – Vatican City
So far Pope Francis has done some wonderful, symbolic things.
I’m hoping he has the will and heart to seriously debate the big issues.
What percentage of Catholics in 2013 use birth control?
The pope himself is an anachronism. Asking the pope to reform the Catholic Church is like asking the fox to reform the hen house so he can’t get in. It seems to me that regardless of what the pope does many Catholics will simply ignore the “rules” (e.g. birth control) they don’t like. BTW, it took the Catholic church about 400 years to recognize that Copernicus was right so at that rate the pope in about 2475 will decide that woman really do have equal status. 😉