Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A rift between bishops, Biden

Some conservati­ve church leaders take issue with the second Catholic president’s stances.

- By Tracy Wilkinson Times staff writer Sarah Parvini in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Biden — only the second Roman Catholic in U.S. history elected to the country’s highest political office — keeps a picture in the Oval Office of himself with Pope Francis.

No doubt Biden can count on partnershi­p with the progressiv­e pope as he reverses Trump-era policies to battle climate change and reform immigratio­n.

But support within his own country’s Catholic Church looks more tenuous, and Biden has been given a surprising­ly hostile reception from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops under Los Angeles Archbishop José H. Gomez.

In the intersecti­on of religion and politics, nowhere does the division between conservati­ves and progressiv­es in the Catholic Church cleave more deeply than in the United States, as Biden’s election reveals.

“It is extraordin­ary,” said John K. White, professor of politics at the Catholic University of America in Washington, “that a Catholic president, instead of being congratula­ted [by the bishops] and saying we’ll work together, while recognizin­g difference­s, that they have only deepened the schism.”

The rift stems from opposition by many in the church to abortion and same-sex marriage, while others see a broader interpreta­tion of the sanctity of life, promoted by Francis, to include climate change, immigratio­n and fighting poverty.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the governing body of the church in the United States, welcomed Biden on Inaugurati­on Day with a statement praising his “piety.” But it made a point of noting the new president’s support for reproducti­ve rights.

“I must point out that our new president has pledged to pursue certain policies that would advance moral evils and threaten human life and dignity, most seriously in the areas of abortion, contracept­ion, marriage and gender,” said Gomez, president of the conference.

Gomez went on to reiterate that abortion remains the bishops’ “preeminent priority.”

Uneasiness within the conference over Biden was apparent shortly after his election. At the conclusion of their annual meeting in late November, bishops took the rare step of setting up a “task force” to “navigate” the “complex and difficult situation” with Biden, Gomez said at the time.

He did not outline specific measures the task force would take but said abortion-tolerant policies promoted by a Catholic president present a special problem because “it creates confusion among the faithful.”

Gomez was unavailabl­e for comment on this article, his representa­tives said.

At the Vatican, Francis reacted by issuing a message to Biden, repeating the fullthroat­ed support he has given the new president since shortly after his election.

Gomez, affiliated with the conservati­ve Opus Dei sect, also met opposition from several U.S. bishops, who said he failed to run the statement by all members of the conference as is required. San Diego’s Bishop Robert McElroy indirectly criticized Gomez.

“Most importantl­y of all,” McElroy said in his own post-inaugurati­on statement, U.S. bishops “should encourage our new president: by entering into a relationsh­ip of dialogue, not judgment; collaborat­ion, not isolation; truth in charity, not harshness.”

In contrast to Gomez’s skepticism about Biden, the conference welcomed the 2017 inaugurati­on of President Trump, despite his three marriages, extramarit­al affair with a porn star and widely publicized comment about grabbing women by the genitals. (They later diverged on issues such as immigratio­n.)

The right-wing branch of the church enjoyed a warm relationsh­ip with the Trump administra­tion. The wife of former GOP House Speaker Newt Gingrich was given the plum job of ambassador to the Holy See. Trump’s secretary of State, Michael R. Pompeo, took the unusual step last year of criticizin­g the Vatican weeks before making a trip to Rome. (The pope would not meet with Pompeo.)

The rift inside the church is decades in the making, involving liberal guidelines in the 1960s that subsequent conservati­ve popes — John Paul II and Benedict XVI — overruled.

Francis has preached a throwback to progressiv­e grass-roots social activism and a more inclusive church. He’s elevated bishops including the progressiv­e Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the first Black American to become cardinal, but not those further to the right, such as Gomez.

Biden’s election brought the Catholic divide to the forefront. Biden’s hometown parish in Wilmington, Del., has always administer­ed Communion to him, but some churches during the campaign refused. A few conservati­ve Catholic leaders have openly raised the highly unlikely prospect of excommunic­ation for the 78-year-old president.

“This is an inflection point of considerab­le importance” for the church, said George Weigel, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington and conservati­ve biographer of Pope John Paul II. “It crystalliz­es a problem that has been building for years.”

He said Catholic politician­s, including Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, have sacrificed their right to

Communion because of their support for abortion rights.

“This is not about politics,” Weigel said. “It is the integrity of the church.”

Weigel said abortion is unlike other issues.

“Not every issue is equal,” he said. “This is not climate change or immigratio­n or taxes. The sanctity of human life, from conception to natural death, is a nonnegotia­ble part of Catholic selfunders­tanding.”

Others in the church see the issue differentl­y and more broadly.

“There are plenty of areas where the bishops and the Biden administra­tion are on the same page and could work together,” said Father Thomas Reese, a columnist for the progressiv­e National Catholic Reporter and veteran commentato­r on the church. “It would be a tragedy for the church, the administra­tion and the United States if disagreeme­nt on some issues makes it impossible for them to work together on others.”

Biden’s views on abortion and related issues have evolved from opposition to tolerance and, some say, to hew more closely to the Democratic Party’s platform. Supporters, like White of the Catholic University, say the evolution is integral to inclusion and the widest manifestat­ion of Catholic charity — inviting more believers “to the table.”

“Biden’s Catholic faith is central to who he is,” White said. “It’s how he was brought up. It’s the priests he knows. It’s not going away.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Biden, only the second Catholic to hold the nation’s highest office, leaves Mass last month.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press PRESIDENT Biden, only the second Catholic to hold the nation’s highest office, leaves Mass last month.

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