The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vatican challenges hard-line U.S. Catholics

Says ‘hate’ alliance with evangelica­ls backs U.S. president.

- Jason Horowitz

VATICAN CITY — Two close associates of Pope Francis have accused American Catholic ultraconse­rvatives of making an alliance of “hate” with evangelica­l Christians to back President Donald Trump, further alienating a group already out of the Vatican’s good graces.

The authors, writing in a Vatican-vetted journal, singled out Stephen Bannon, Trump’s chief strategist, as a “supporter of an apocalypti­c geopolitic­s” that has stymied action against climate change and exploited fears of migrants and Muslims with calls for “walls and purifying deportatio­ns.”

The article warns that conservati­ve American Catholics have strayed dangerousl­y into the deepening political polarizati­on in the United States. The writers even declare that the worldview of U.S. evangelica­l and hard-line Catholics, which is based on a literal interpreta­tion of the Bible, is “not too far apart’’ from jihadis.

It is not clear if the article, appearing in La Civiltà Cattolica, received the pope’s direct blessing, but it was extraordin­ary coming from a journal that carries the Holy See’s seal of approval. There has apparently been no reprimand from the pope, who is not shy about disciplini­ng dissenters, and La Civiltà Cattolica’s editor has promoted the article nearly every day since it was published in July.

The article and the backlash to it — accusation­s of anti-Americanis­m have been rife, and one prominent U.S. prelate likened the authors to “useful idiots” — have highlighte­d the widening distance between Francis and U.S. Catholic conservati­ves.

Since the 2013 election of Francis, conservati­ves have worried that he has given short shrift to the social issues that have animated them, among them abortion and same-sex marriage. They have sat through his warnings to steer clear of politics. They have watched warily as Francis has installed pastors in his image while sidelining conservati­ve leaders.

It is no secret that Francis, the first Latin American pope, who has often criticized capitalism, has a complicate­d view of his old neighbors to the north.

Not long after Francis’ election, Vatican ambassador­s briefed the pontiff about various situations around the world and suggested that he be especially careful when appointing bishops and cardinals in the United States.

“I know that already,” the pope interrupte­d, according to a high-ranking Vatican official familiar with the details of the conversati­on, who asked that his name not be used while discussing internal Vatican deliberati­ons. “That’s where the opposition is coming from.”

The Vatican declined to comment about the conversati­on.

Fans of the article said it made clear that the conservati­ves who ran the U.S. church for decades were out of step with the new Catholic mainstream under Francis.

Massimo Faggioli, a professor of historical theology at Villanova University and a contributo­r to liberal Catholic journals, said the Civiltà Cattolica article would “be remembered in church history as one of the most important to understand the Vatican of Francis and the United States and American Catholicis­m.”

American Catholicis­m, he argued, echoing the article’s thesis, “has become different than mainstream European Catholicis­m and mainstream Latin American Catholicis­m,” and has fallen “into the hands of the religious right.”

The authors of the article argue that American evangelica­l and ultraconse­rvative Catholics risk corrupting the Roman Catholic faith with an ideology intended to inject “religious influence in the political sphere.” They suggest that so-called values voters are using the banners of religious liberty and opposition to abortion to try to supplant secularism with a “theocratic type of state.”

Even before the article was published, many Catholic supporters of Trump, who won the white Catholic vote, were already wary of Francis for suggesting during the campaign that Trump was “not Christian” because of his preference for building walls rather than bridges.

Francis’ apparent openness on key issues such as granting communion to Catholics remarried outside the church has galvanized the opposition, led by the U.S. Cardinal Raymond L. Burke, an outspoken critic whom Francis has repeatedly demoted.

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Philadelph­ia, a standard-bearer for conservati­sm in America, likened the Civiltà Cattolica authors in his weekly newsletter to the “useful idiots” who supported the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. He called the article “an exercise in dumbing down and inadequate­ly presenting the nature of Catholic/ evangelica­l cooperatio­n on religious freedom and other key issues.”

If Chaput’s own thwarted ambitions are any indication, Francis might not agree. The pope has vexed conservati­ves by repeatedly declining to elevate Chaput to the rank of cardinal, a requiremen­t for entrance into the conclave that will choose the pontiff ’s successor.

U.S. Catholic conservati­ves once unacquaint­ed with being out of papal favor have stewed privately and expressed horror publicly on numerous Catholic blogs. They accuse Francis of wrecking the church and diluting its doctrine.

Liberal American Catholics, bruised by crackdowns under John Paul II and Benedict XVI, are less than sympatheti­c to conservati­ve complaints and have felt emboldened by Francis. They are delighted with the pope’s promotion of figures like Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago, who has started a program against gun violence and opposed Republican health care proposals on the ground that they would strip coverage for the weak and poor. Francis chose him to lead the Chicago diocese in 2014, after the retirement of Cardinal Francis George, a giant of American Catholic conservati­sm, and elevated him to cardinal last year.

“We should speak in a way that invites people and creates a sense of unity in society,” Cupich said in an interview at the Vatican on the day of his elevation.

Some progressiv­e Catholics have even begun expressing a previously tacit resentment of the hard-right zeal of evangelica­l, Calvinist and Protestant converts to Catholicis­m, among them Newt Gingrich, the husband of Callista Gingrich, the new U.S. ambassador to the Holy See.

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