Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Conservati­ve Catholics denounce papal gathering

- By Jaso■ Horowitz

ROME ❯❯ Sitting under the bright house lights of a theater near the Vatican, Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke, the de facto leader of the Roman Catholic Church's opposition to Pope Francis, displayed a theatrical sense of timing Oct. 3 for the adoring conservati­ves in the red velvet seats.

The day before, Burke and other traditiona­list prelates made public an exchange of letters with Francis in which they aired grave doubts about the legitimacy of a major assembly of the world's bishops and laypeople that will, on Wednesday, begin discussing some of the most sensitive topics in the church.

In their letters, they urged Francis to slam the door shut on proposals that they believe would erode the doctrine of the church, including the blessing of same-sex unions.

Instead, Francis cracked the door open. In his response, he seemed to reverse a 2021 Vatican ruling that came down hard against the blessing of gay unions. While the pope clearly upheld the church position that marriage could exist only between a man and a woman, he said that priests should exercise “pastoral charity” when it came to requests for blessings.

Burke and his allies were horrified.

Francis' supporters consider the multiyear meeting, the so-called Synod on Synodality, to be the potential culminatio­n of his decadelong papacy and a vehicle through which he may bring about great change. The gathering at the Vatican, which for the first time will include and give a vote to laypeople — including women — is central to Francis' bottom-up view of the church. The pope envisions an inclusive institutio­n that upends the traditiona­l hierarchy and forces bishops to listen to and work with their flocks more.

OnOct. 3, in a theater that usually hosts a hypnotist, a Barbra Streisand tribute concert and broad Italian comedies, Burke was the star attraction of what Francis' supporters consider a dangerous sideshow, and what his critics consider a fateful last stand.

“The synod that will open tomorrow,” he said, clearly has the “harmful goal” of reshaping the hierarchy of the church with radical, secular and modern ideas.

Burke, who was not invited to the meeting at the Vatican, said he was doubtful that the actual participan­ts, who were away on a spiritual retreat Tuesday to prepare for the assembly, were being upfront about their true motives. “It's unfortunat­ely very clear that the invocation of the Holy Spirit on the part of some has as its aim to push forward an agenda that is more political and human than ecclesiast­ical and divine,” he said.

He also expressed shock at the suggestion by some bishops attending the synod that he wanted to hurt the pope. “These comments reveal the state of confusion and errors of vision that permeate the session of the Synod of Bishops,” Burke said.

Supporters of Francis see Burke and his conservati­ve allies as a small group that is making a big racket in defeat.

“I can understand why someone like Cardinal Burke is worried,” Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, an organizati­on of LGBTCathol­ics, said about the pope's remarks on the blessing of same-sex unions. “Because this will have a tremendous effect on pastoral practice and church life.”

DeBernardo argued that instead of eroding doctrine, the pope's view on blessing those unions was a developmen­t of it. Just as the legalizati­on of same-sex marriage in the United States normalized the practice, he said, “when pastoral ministers encouraged by the pope start blessing samegender couples, it is going to normalize same-gender relationsh­ips in church life.”

Even DeBernardo acknowledg­ed that the manner in which the pope's response on the issue became public was unusual, suggesting that Francis likes to work in incrementa­l steps.

Some observers have questioned just how bold Francis intends to be on the issue. In his response, he also made clear that he did not want priests to follow new protocols — such as those in liberal parts of the German church that support same-sex blessings — and said priests should be open to “channels beyond norms.”

The entire exchange took place over the summer, but was hidden from view.

On July 10, Burke and other leading traditiona­list cardinals sent a letter to Francis known as a “dubia” that conveyed their concerns about the Synod, and demanded that he clear up, among other issues, the blessing of samesex unions. Some bishops had made comments, they wrote, that were “openly contrary to the constant doctrine and discipline of the church” and that would “continue to generate great confusion and the falling into error among the faithful and other persons of good will.”

It was not the first time Burke and other conservati­ves had sent such a letter. But in the past, Francis had infuriated them by not responding.

This time, Francis replied.

On July 11, the day after he received the questions, he made it clear that he viewed the Synod as vital to his view of the church's future and as “a process that involves the participat­ion of a truly significan­t part of the entire people of God,” meaning laypeople.

Francis noted in his response that the topics to be discussed at the assembly resulted from a canvassing of issues important to the faithful and were tied to the “mission of the church in the time in which we happen to live” — a phrase that had the ring of a dig against traditiona­list cardinals, whom many liberals consider stuck in the past.

Suggesting that he wanted to clear things up before the assembly began, Francis wrote that this time he would respond to their doubts and added of the Synod, “With great sincerity, I say to you that it is not very good to be afraid of these questions and consultati­ons.”

To the cardinals' question about whether divine revelation of the church should be “reinterpre­ted according to the cultural changes of our time,” or whether it was “binding forever,” Francis responded: “The answer depends on the meaning you give to the word `reinterpre­t.' If it is understood as `to interpret better,' the expression is valid.”

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Participan­ts of the 16th General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops gather in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican on Thursday. Pope Francis is convening a global gathering of bishops and laypeople to discuss the future of the Catholic Church. The Synod of Bishops runs through cot. 29.
GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Participan­ts of the 16th General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops gather in the Paul VI hall at the Vatican on Thursday. Pope Francis is convening a global gathering of bishops and laypeople to discuss the future of the Catholic Church. The Synod of Bishops runs through cot. 29.

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