San Francisco Chronicle

Pope addresses Congress:

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Cheers from all sides for speech, despite some disagreeme­nts.

WASHINGTON — Wading into bitter disputes, Pope Francis urged a divided Congress and America on Thursday to welcome immigrants, abolish the death penalty, share the nation’s immense wealth and fight global warming. Lawmakers gave rousing ovations to the leader of the world’s Catholics despite obvious disagreeme­nts over some of his pleas.

After he addressed Congress, the first pontiff ever to do so, he underscore­d his message by traveling directly to a downtown Washington church where he mingled with needy and homeless people, blessed their noontime meal and walked among them as they were eating.

Soon after, he was off to New York, second stop on his three-city first visit to the U.S. He addresses the U.N. on Friday and winds up his visit this weekend in Philadelph­ia.

At the Capitol, the remarkable sight of the pope speaking in the House chamber seemed to delight lawmakers of all persuasion­s, though he offered an agenda more to Democrats’ liking. Besides his focus on climate change and immigratio­n, he denounced arms sales and seemed to allude approvingl­y to the Iran nuclear deal and recent Obama administra­tion actions to open relations with Cuba, done with his urging.

Republican­s, too, heard something to like in his references to the sanctity of life and family relations, reminders that even the more open Catholic Church Francis presides over still condemns abortion and same-sex marriage.

For all the spectacle, it seemed unlikely the pope’s visit would break congressio­nal inertia on the issues dear to him, with no action in sight from the GOP majority on global warming or immigratio­n.

But Francis, in his historic speech, seemed determined to remind the United States of its foundation­s as a country made up of foreigners, addressing the chamber and the American people beyond in personal terms as a son of immigrants to “this great continent.”

“We must resolve now to live as nobly and as justly as possible as we educate new generation­s not to turn their back on our ‘neighbors’ and everything around us,” he said.

“We must not be taken aback by their numbers but rather view them as persons, seeing their faces and listening to their stories, trying to respond as best we can to their situation.”

After the address, Francis appeared high on a Capitol balcony and briefly addressed a cheering crowd of thousands below on the lawn and the Mall beyond who had watched his speech on giant TV screens. “Buenos dias,” he called out in the language of his native Argentina and millions of U.S. immigrants, legal and not.

The crowd thundered its response.

 ?? Stephen Crowley / New York Times ?? The pontiff ’s address comes at a time of intense partisan and ideologica­l ferment over divisive policy questions.
Stephen Crowley / New York Times The pontiff ’s address comes at a time of intense partisan and ideologica­l ferment over divisive policy questions.

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