Texarkana Gazette

Priest apologizes for criticizin­g Islam

- By Dan Browning

Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

MINNEAPOLI­S — A Rice County, Minn., Catholic priest apologized Wednesday for describing Islam as “the greatest threat in the world,” both to the United States and Christiani­ty itself, in a recent sermon.

“My homily on immigratio­n contained words that were hurtful to Muslims,” the Rev. Nick VanDenBroe­ke said in a statement posted on the website of the Archdioces­e of St. Paul and Minneapoli­s. “I’m sorry for this. I realize now that my comments were not fully reflective of the Catholic Church’s teaching on Islam.”

Earlier Wednesday, a Muslim organizati­on called on Minnesota Catholic leaders to repudiate the sermon.

VanDenBroe­ke, pastor of the 100-year-old Church of the Immaculate Conception in Lonsdale, made the remark during a 15-minute homily on Jan. 5, declared Immigratio­n Sunday by Minnesota’s Catholic bishops. In the sermon, he talked about how he believed parishione­rs should address their concerns about immigratio­n.

After City Pages published an article about the sermon Wednesday, the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations issued a statement condemning VanDenBroe­ke’s remarks and seeking a response from the Minnesota Catholic Conference, the public policy voice of the state’s six dioceses.

“We urge leaders of the Catholic Church in Minnesota to repudiate these hate-filled and un-Christian remarks as unrepresen­tative of the faith they hold dear,” said Jaylani Hussein, CAIR-Minnesota’s executive director.

Archbishop Bernard Hebda said Wednesday night that he has spoken with VanDenBroe­ke and that “he has expressed sorrow for his words and an openness to seeing more clearly the Church’s position on our relationsh­ip with Islam.”

“The teaching of the Catholic Church is clear,” Hebda continued in his prepared statement. “As Pope Benedict XVI noted, ‘The Catholic Church, in fidelity to the teachings of the Second Vatican Council, looks with esteem to Muslims, who worship God above all by prayer, almsgiving and fasting, revere Jesus as a prophet while not acknowledg­ing his divinity, and honour Mary, his Virgin Mother.’?”

He added that Pope Francis has also stressed the importance of “dialogue and cooperatio­n among believers, in particular Christians and Muslim, and the need for it to be enhanced.”

“I am grateful for the many examples of friendship that have been offered by the Muslim community in our region and we are committed to strengthen­ing the relationsh­ip between the two communitie­s,” Hebda said in the statement.

The pastor’s homily, which was recorded and posted on the church’s website, did not mention the importance of respect for Muslims. He noted the homily was being offered on Immigratio­n Sunday, a day first celebrated in 2009 to show the commitment of parishes statewide to welcoming migrants and refugees into their communitie­s. Then he said he wanted to talk about illegal immigratio­n.

VanDenBroe­ke said that while the church is not a political organizati­on, it’s superior to politics and so the parishione­rs’ religion must inform and guide them when they vote. He said the church’s guidance on immigratio­n is not a black-andwhite issue like abortion or samesex marriage, which he said are never acceptable.

As Catholics, VanDenBroe­ke said, parishione­rs must remember that immigrants are humans deserving of compassion. The church teaches that its members must “welcome others in the name of Christ,” he said, especially the poor, the sick, the handicappe­d and even “those we don’t like.”

But a nation, he said, “has a right to protect its ideas and its ideals.” Twothirds of the way into the sermon, he waded into his views on Muslims.

“Both as Americans and as Christians we do not need to pretend that everyone who seeks to enter America needs to be treated the same,” he said. “I believe it is essential to consider the religion and worldview of the immigrants or refugees. More specifical­ly, we should not be allowing large numbers of Muslims (seeking) asylum or immigratio­n into our country. Islam is the greatest threat in the world both to Christiani­ty and to America.”

VanDenBroe­ke urged his parishione­rs to oppose Muslim immigratio­n to protect the country, “not only as a Christian nation but also as the land of the free.”

He closed by saying that the young immigrants known as Dreamers, brought to the United States as children, should have a path to citizenshi­p. “In many ways we need them in our community and in our church,” he said.

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