Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pope’s envoy at conference talks doctrine

- By Peter Smith

BALTIMORE — Pope Francis’ top envoy to the United States cautioned the country’s bishops on Tuesday that the church needs to listen before it teaches as they deliberate­d at their fall meeting on a sensitive document about Holy Communion that emerged amid debates over Catholic politician­s’ support for abortion.

“It is sometimes said that there is a lot of confusion about doctrine in the church today,” Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the papal ambassador, told the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “However, the argument continues that what is needed is clear teaching. That is true, but the Holy Father says a church that teaches must be firstly a church that listens.”

His remarks in the first public session of the gathering in Maryland came as bishops were readying to hold a vote on the document, which has been months in the making and has been surrounded by debate over the taking of communion by President Joe Biden and other politician­s who support abortion rights.

Some bishops argue that it’s necessary to send a rebuke to such officials because it’s a source of scandal and confusion for them to partake in the sacrament; others have called the document divisive and said it politicize­s Communion.

Pierre focused on an initiative of Francis known as the Synod on Synodality, which will involve a series of dialogues in local churches around the world over the next two years.

“As we listen to God and to one another, we learn,” he told the U.S. bishops. “The church needs this attentive listening now more than ever if she is to overcome the polarizati­on facing this country.”

A draft of the Communion document mentions abortion only once and doesn’t identify Biden or other politician­s by name.

The bishops discussed the document briefly in open session Tuesday afternoon, with minor suggestion­s such as making it more accessible for children. No one brought up publicly the issue of politician­s and abortion.

The conference cannot dictate a blanket policy on denying Communion to politician­s; each bishop has authority in his own diocese.

While some bishops have said they would deny the sacrament to Biden, the archbishop of Washington, Cardinal Wilton Gregory, has affirmed that the president is welcome to receive the sacrament there.

The document would require a two-thirds vote for approval.

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