Windsor Star

‘Better to be atheist’ than a hypocrite

Spoke against Catholics living a ‘double life’

- JULIE ZAUZMER

Pope Francis has hit out at hypocritic­al Catholics, saying it would be better if they were atheists.

The subject of Francis’s homily at the daily Mass on Thursday was hypocrisy. He criticized the “scandal” of “saying one thing and doing another.”

Many of these hypocrites, Francis implied, according to the Vatican’s text of his homily, were Catholics who acted rigorously in their ritual observance but did not apply the religion’s values to their lives.

“A totally double life: ‘I am very Catholic, I always go to Mass, I belong to this associatio­n and that one; but my life is not Christian, I don’t pay my workers a just wage, I exploit people, I am dirty in my business, I launder money ...’ A double life. And so many Christians are like this, and these people scandalize others.”

The Pope envisaged someone knocking on the doors of heaven and saying to God, “Don’t you remember me? I went to Church, I was close to you … Don’t you remember all the offerings I gave?”

To which Francis said God would reply, “Yes, I remember those: All dirty. All stolen from the poor. I don’t know you.”

He then quoted a sentiment that he said he had heard expressed repeatedly: “But to be a Catholic like that, it’s better to be an atheist.”

He added, according to CNN, “To be a Christian means to do: to do the will of God — and on the last day — because all of us we will have one — that day what shall the Lord ask us? Will He say: ‘What you have said about me?’ No. He shall ask us about the things we did.”

Francis has surprised Catholics before with his warmth toward atheists.

He remarked soon after becoming pope that even atheists can go to heaven thanks to the redemption of Jesus. He granted an interview to an atheist journalist, and told the reporter that efforts to convert people to Christiani­ty are “solemn nonsense” and each person “must choose to follow the good and fight evil as he conceives them.”

He has also been friendly toward Jews, particular­ly through his longtime friend, Argentine Rabbi Abraham Skorka. On Thursday, Skorka led a group of rabbis to the Vatican, where they gave Francis a new edition of the Torah.

Looking at the text of the five books of Moses, the most holy books for Jews as well as a key part of the Christian Old Testament, Francis called the Torah “the Lord’s gift, his revelation, his word,” according to the Vatican’s text of his remarks.

He said that the Torah “manifests the paternal and visceral love of God, a love shown in words and concrete gestures, a love that becomes covenant.”

The Vatican has been open about trying to move beyond its anti-Semitic past for many years; Pope John Paul II spoke in a synagogue, visited concentrat­ion camps and officially apologized for the church’s lack of action during the Holocaust. On Thursday, Francis described dialogue between Christians and Jews today as “ongoing and collaborat­ive.”

 ?? GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Pope Francis spoke out strongly Thursday against Catholics who go to church but “exploit people,” calling them hypocrites who “scandalize others.”
GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Pope Francis spoke out strongly Thursday against Catholics who go to church but “exploit people,” calling them hypocrites who “scandalize others.”

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