The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pope’s remarks cheer LGBT community

- By Nicole Winfield

VATICAN CITY » Pope Francis’ reported comments to a gay man that “God made you like this” have been embraced by the LGBT community as another sign of Francis’ desire to make gay people feel welcomed and loved in the Catholic Church.

Juan Carlos Cruz, the main whistleblo­wer in Chile’s clerical sex abuse and cover-up scandal, said Monday he spoke to Francis about his homosexual­ity during their recent meetings at the Vatican. The pope invited Cruz and other victims of a Chilean predator priest to discuss their cases last month.

Cruz said he told Francis how Chile’s bishops used his sexual orientatio­n as a weapon to try to discredit him, and of the pain the personal attacks had caused him.

“He said, ‘Look Juan Carlos, the pope loves you this way. God made you like this and he loves you,’” Cruz told The Associated Press.

The Vatican declined to confirm or deny the remarks in keeping with its policy not to comment on the pope’s private conversati­ons. The comments first were reported by Spain’s El Pais newspaper.

Official church teaching calls for gay men and lesbians to be respected and loved, but considers homosexual activity “intrinsica­lly disordered.” Francis, though, has sought to make the church more welcoming to gays, most famously with his 2013 comment “Who am I to judge?”

He also has spoken of his own ministry to gay and transgende­r people, insisting they are children of God, loved by God and deserving of accompanim­ent by the church.

As a result, some sought to downplay the significan­ce of the comments as merely being in line with Francis’ pastoral-minded attitude.

In addition, there was a time not so long ago when the Catholic Church officially taught that sexual orientatio­n was not something people choose, the implicatio­n being it was how God made them.

The first edition of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, the dense summary of Catholic teaching published by St. John Paul II in 1992, said gay individual­s “do not choose their homosexual condition; for most of them it is a trial.”

The updated edition, which is the only edition available online and on the Vatican website, was revised to remove the reference to homosexual­ity not being a choice. The revised edition says: “This inclinatio­n, which is objectivel­y disordered, constitute­s for most of them a trial.”

Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, which advocates for equality for LGBT Catholics, said the pope’s comments were “tremendous” and would do a lot of good.

“It would do a lot better if he would make these statements publicly, because LGBT people need to hear that message from religious leaders, from Catholic leaders,” he said.

The Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit whose book “Building a Bridge” called for the church to find new pastoral ways of ministerin­g to gays, noted that the pope’s comments were in a private conversati­on, not a public pronouncem­ent or document. But citing the original version of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Martin said they were neverthele­ss significan­t.

“The pope is saying what every reputable biologist and psychologi­st will tell you, which is that people do not choose their sexual orientatio­n,” Martin said in a telephone interview.

A great failing of the church, he said, is that many Catholics have been reluctant to say so, which then “makes people feel guilty about something they have no control over.”

Martin’s book is being published this week in Italian, with a preface by the Francis-appointed bishop of Bologna, Monsignor Matteo Zuppi, a sign that the message of acceptance is being embraced even in traditiona­lly conservati­ve Italy.

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 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis asperges holy water as he celebrates a Pentecost Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Sunday.
GREGORIO BORGIA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis asperges holy water as he celebrates a Pentecost Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican on Sunday.

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