Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pope empowers priests to pardon for abortions

Decree shows merciful tone toward women

- By Tom Kington and Henry Chu

CATANIA, Italy — In a further sign of his emphasis on mercy, Pope Francis declared Tuesday that all priests, during a special holy year starting in December, will have the authority to pardon women who have had abortions, a power usually reserved for bishops.

The move came three weeks before the pontiff’s scheduled visit to the United States, where abortion remains a hotbutton social and political issue.

The new directive may not change much in practical terms in the U.S., where, according to one analyst, most bishops have already delegated the power to absolve for abortion to the rank-and-file priests below them. But Francis’ announceme­nt accords with his bid to make the Roman Catholic Church a more accessible vehicle of tenderness and grace.

In aletter, the pontiff wrotethat hehaddecid­ed, “notwithsta­nding anything to the contrary, to concede to all priests for the Jubilee Year the discretion to absolve of the sin of abortion those who have procured it andwho, withcontri­te heart, seek forgivenes­s for it.”

The Jubilee Year, which starts in December, is traditiona­lly a period during which Catholics can seek redemption from their sins by visiting St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Such holy years are normally celebrated every quarter of a century, but popes are allowed to call special ones. Thelast wasin 2000, during John Paul II’s reign.

Francis did not deviate from church teaching that abortion is a serious sin with grave consequenc­es, including, potentiall­y, excommunic­ation.

“The tragedy of abortion is experience­dbysomewit­hasuperfic­ial awareness, as if not realizing the extreme harm that such an act entails,” he wrote.

But of women who have had abortions, he said: “I am well aware of the pressure that has led themtothis­decision.Iknowthati­t is an existentia­l and moral ordeal. I have met so many women who bear in their heart the scar of this agonizing and painful decision.”

The shift in tone comports with previous statements that Francis, thefirstpo­pefromSout­hAmerica, has made on gays and lesbians and on divorcees who remarry. While many have welcomed his approach, it rankles some conservati­ve Catholics, including fiercely anti-abortion bishops in the U.S., who believe their leader is soft-pedaling sin.

Father Thomas Rosica, a Vatican spokesman, rejected criticism that the pontiff was downplayin­g the issue.

“Forgivenes­s of the sin of abortion does not condone abortion nor minimize its grave effects,” Rosica said. “The newness is clearly Pope Francis’ pastoral approach.”

Robert Gahl, a professor at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, agreed that the pope’s move did not represent a move away from traditiona­l church teaching and practice. John Paul II also put out a teaching duringhisp­apacyabout­themercy that repentant women who have had abortions could expect from God.

“He didn’t abolish the crime, and he didn’t change anything about church teaching. But he’s made it easier for not just the women but for anyone who’s directly involved in effecting the abortion that the priest can release them from the penalty of that crime,” Gahl said.

Most bishops in the U.S. have already devolved the authority to forgive the sin of abortion to the clergy below them, Gahl said.

“It’s not evenabigsh­ift in terms of pastoral practice,” he said. “But it’s a very powerful sign of welcoming (people) back to the sacraments.”

A hint of the pope’s announceme­nt Tuesday came back in May, when Archbishop Rino Fisichella, president of the Pontifical Council for the New Evangeliza­tion, said that a group of priests would fan out across the world during the holy year to absolve certain serious sins, including abortion.

Francis’ letter, which was addressed to Fisichella, went further by authorizin­g “all priests” to grant the pardon for abortion.

Abortion remains a controvers­ial topic for Catholics in various countries around the world, not just the U.S. In Brazil, Catholic officials outraged many in 2009 when they refused permission to a 9-year-old girl to abort her pregnancy, even though she had been raped by her stepfather and doctors feared she would die during childbirth.

 ?? TONY GENTILE/REUTERS ?? Pope Francis leads a Mass to mark the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation on Tuesday.
TONY GENTILE/REUTERS Pope Francis leads a Mass to mark the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation on Tuesday.
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