The Columbus Dispatch

Storm that pounded Rockies with snow turns east

- Ryan W. Miller

After a “crippling” winter storm dumped up to four feet of snow in the Rocky Mountains – closing roads, canceling flights and prompting avalanche warnings over the weekend – the storm headed east Monday, with snow for the Midwest and thundersto­rms for the South.

The storm was to cause “a burst of heavy snow” in Iowa and Minnesota before moving east, said Accuweathe­r senior meteorolog­ist Dan Pydynowski. Eastern parts of South Dakota and Nebraska, Iowa, southern Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois and Michigan could all see the storm’s effects.

The weather service in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Des Moines, Iowa, said the snow could fall at a rate of over an inch per hour. Up to 18 inches could fall in areas along the Iowa and Minnesota border, according to Accuweathe­r.

The storm also was to bring a wintry mix to Chicago, Pydynowski said. Mixed precipitat­ion was expected in the Appalachia­ns by Monday night, the weather service said.

Meanwhile, thundersto­rms were expected to roll through the South on Monday, lasting through Tuesday, before another system midweek sparks even more thundersto­rms.

Accuweathe­r said the storm will stall over the South on Tuesday, “leading to rounds of downpours from Louisiana to the Carolinas throughout the day.”

As the week continues, the severe weather “will tend to repeat itself,” the weather service warned.

Another snowstorm was already pressing east in California and the Pacific Northwest on Monday. That system will bring more mountain snow and rain, and by Wednesday morning, “intensify over the southern Plains,” the weather service said.

Over the weekend, the storm blanketed Colorado, Wyoming and Nebraska and led to widespread disruption of travel with the heaviest snow of the year in the West so far.

The 25.8 inches that fell in Cheyenne, Wyoming, this weekend smashed a previous two-day record held since 1979, according to the weather service.

That could mean more thundersto­rms, tornadoes and “torrential downpours” by midweek in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Mississipp­i and Alabama, according to Accuweathe­r.

Cold air on the back end of the storm means more snow is expected in the Rockies and northern Plains at the same time, the weather service said.

Snow plows were driving off the roadway in the Casper, Wyoming, area due to poor visibility, causing the state’s department of transporta­tion to suspend plowing there.

The storm closed sections of I-25 and I-80.

Contributi­ng: John Bacon and Elinor Aspegren; The Associated Press

The Catholic Church and its priests cannot bless same-sex unions because God “cannot bless sin,” the Vatican said Monday.

The Vatican’s orthodoxy office, the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith, said it was responding to questions about gay unions. The two-page statement published in seven languages was approved by Pope Francis.

“The blessing of homosexual unions cannot be considered licit,” the statement said, adding that “there are absolutely no grounds for considerin­g homosexual unions to be in any way similar or even remotely analogous to God’s plan for marriage and family.”

The church and priests can still bless people who are gay who live in “fidelity,” the statement said. “Rather, it declares illicit any form of blessing that tends to acknowledg­e their unions.”

Francis Debernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, an Lgbtqcente­red Catholic ministry, told USA TODAY the statement was disappoint­ing but not surprising. Catholics, he said, will continue to find creative ways to bless the couples they love and support.

“What the Vatican doesn’t realize is that the Catholic faithful are not satisfied with that answer,” Debernardo said. “Catholic people recognize the holiness of the love between committed samesex couples and recognize this love as divinely inspired and divinely supported and thus meets the standard to be blessed.”

Monday’s statement from the Vatican comes less than six months after revelation­s of Pope Francis’ stunning endorsemen­t of same-sex civil unions were made public.

“Homosexual people have the right to be in a family. They are children of God,” Francis said in a 2019 interview for the documentar­y “Francesco.” “What we have to have is a civil union law. That way they are legally covered.”

Legally covered, but not churchsanc­tioned. Francis made the comment during an interview with a Mexican broadcaste­r, Televisa. It was cut by the Vatican but later appeared in a documentar­y. Monday’s Vatican statement says God “never ceases” to bless all people, including people who are gay.

“But he does not and cannot bless sin,” the statement said. “He blesses sinful man, so that he may recognize that he is part of his plan of love and allow himself to be changed by him . ... The Church does not have, and cannot have, the power to bless unions of persons of the same sex.”

Jim Bretzke, a priest, author and professor of theology at John Carroll University in Ohio, said the Vatican’s latest statement on the question appears to be attempting to “thread a needle” in its acceptance of gay people but not gay unions.

“The Church explicitly says gay men and women can be blessed,” he said. “But that the domestic union of a gay couple should not be liturgical­ly blessed, lest people misinterpr­et this blessing as a form of Catholic ‘marriage lite.’ ”

Catholics generally are among the more accepting sects of Christiani­ty when it comes to same-sex unions. A Pew survey found that more than half of Catholics in the United States, along with Mainline Protestant­s and Orthodox Christians, support same-sex marriage.

The pope has a complicate­d history with the LGBTQ community, specifically on same-sex marriage. As archbishop of Buenos Aires, Argentina, he endorsed civil unions for gay couples in lieu of same-sex marriages. Months into his papacy, he was quoted as saying: “If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”

But Francis also has repeatedly condemned same-sex marriage during his time as pope – emphasizin­g the Catholic dictum of marriage remaining between a man and a woman in multiple statements.

“The declaratio­n of the unlawfulne­ss of blessings of unions between persons of the same sex is not ... intended to be a form of unjust discrimina­tion,” the statement Monday said. “But rather a reminder of the truth of the liturgical rite.”

Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

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