Edmonton Journal

Vatican bows to more conservati­ve bishops

English version of overture to gays significan­tly waters down welcome

- NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is watering down a groundbrea­king overture to gays — but only if they speak English.

After a draft report by bishops debating family issues came under criticism from conservati­ve English-speaking bishops, the Vatican released a new translatio­n on Thursday.

A section initially titled “Welcoming homosexual­s” is now “Providing for homosexual persons,” and the tone of the text is significan­tly colder and less welcoming.

The initial English version — released Monday along with the original — accurately reflected the Italian version in both letter and spirit, and contained a remarkable tone of acceptance extended to gays. Conservati­ves were outraged.

The first version asked if the church was capable of “welcoming these people, guaranteei­ng to them a fraternal space in our communitie­s.” The new version asks if the church is “capable of providing for these people, guaranteei­ng … them … a place of fellowship in our communitie­s.”

The first version said homosexual unions can often constitute a “precious support in the life of the partners.” The new one says gay unions often constitute “valuable support in the life of these persons.”

In nearly all cases, the first version followed the official Italian version in verbatim; the second provides a different tone altogether.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said English-speaking bishops had requested the changes, arguing that the first translatio­n was hasty and error-ridden.

When Lombardi was shown how significan­tly the meaning had changed, he pledged to investigat­e and didn’t rule out a third version.

Lombardi stressed that the original Italian remains the official text, and noted that the draft is being revised topto-bottom for a final report which will go to a vote among bishops on Saturday.

If two-thirds approve it, the report will form the basis of discussion­s in dioceses around the world before another meeting of bishops next year.

 ?? ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pope Francis greets a Vatican Swiss Guard as he arrives for a morning session of a twoweek synod on family issues at the Vatican on Thursday.
ALESSANDRA TARANTINO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pope Francis greets a Vatican Swiss Guard as he arrives for a morning session of a twoweek synod on family issues at the Vatican on Thursday.

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