San Francisco Chronicle

Catholic bishops likely to dodge rebuke of Biden

- By David Crary David Crary is an Associated Press writer.

While some U.S. Catholic bishops continue to denounce President Biden for his support of legal abortion, their conference as a whole is likely to avoid direct criticism of him at its upcoming national meeting.

The highest-profile agenda item is a proposed “teaching document” about the sacrament of Communion. Months of work on the document, by the conference’s Committee on Doctrine, coincided with sometimes heated debate among the bishops as to whether Biden and other Catholic politician­s who support abortion rights are unworthy of receiving Communion.

A draft of the document circulatin­g ahead of the Nov. 15-18 meeting in Baltimore breaks little new ground, though its language could be toughened during the gathering. The draft mentions abortion only once and doesn’t name Biden or other politician­s, though it says at one point, “Lay people who exercise some form of public authority have a special responsibi­lity to embody Church teaching.”

A member of the doctrine committee, Bishop Michael Olson of Fort Worth, Texas, said he and his colleagues decided that the document should avoid partisan politics. Yet Olson remains an outspoken critic of Biden’s abortion stance.

“He’s gone on record as saying abortion is a fundamenta­l right while presenting himself as an exemplary Catholic,” Olson told The Associated Press. “The issue of public confusion is really at stake here.”

While some bishops have made clear that they would deny Communion to Biden, there is no national policy on the matter. Cardinal Wilton Gregory, the archbishop of Washington, has affirmed that Biden is welcome to receive Communion there.

Last month, after a private meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican, Biden said the subject of abortion was not raised, but indicated he had the pontiff ’s general support. Francis and some of his aides have sought to tone down the anti-Biden sentiment with USCCB ranks, calling for an approach to Communion that is pastoral rather than punitive.

Among the outspoken Biden critics is Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco — the hometown of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, also a Catholic. Cordileone has made clear his view that Pelosi and Biden should refrain from receiving Communion.

Cordileone said he does not expect the document to single out Biden, but he wants it to send a firm message regarding Catholics in public life and their stance on abortion.

 ?? Nicole Winfield / Associated Press ?? President Biden and and first lady Jill Biden attend Mass during the G-20 summit last month in Rome. Some U.S. Catholic bishops continue to criticize Biden for his support of legal abortion.
Nicole Winfield / Associated Press President Biden and and first lady Jill Biden attend Mass during the G-20 summit last month in Rome. Some U.S. Catholic bishops continue to criticize Biden for his support of legal abortion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States