Deccan Chronicle

Pope Francis sides with traditiona­lists

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Vatican City, Feb. 15: In quashing the idea of married priests in the Amazon, Pope Francis has appeased traditiona­lists while disappoint­ing progressiv­es who had hoped for a historic turning point in the Catholic church.

In his “apostolic exhortatio­n” on the Amazon basin published Wednesday, Francis slammed the door on a progressiv­e proposal offered by the region’s bishops during a synod on the region in October.

The synod had suggested that the way to solve a shortage of priests in the remote and inaccessib­le area was to allow married indigenous men to become priests.

Without even mentioning that proposal, Francis instead argued for more missionary priests in the

Amazon and for women and lay people to take on larger roles, falling short of another synod idea to ordain women as deacons in the region.

The Argentine pontiff's thoughts, coming after months of speculatio­n and hand-wringing within the Vatican, were welcomed by some, including a vocal opponent of Francis, German Cardinal Gerhard Mueller.

For five years Mueller was in charge of church dogma, holding the key Vatican post of Prefect of the Congregati­on for the Doctrine of the Faith until 2017 — when he was not reappointe­d by Francis.

Mueller saluted the document’s potential for “reducing internal Church factions.” Conservati­ves within the Church were outraged by the regional synod’s proposal, even were it to be an exception limited to the Amazon, seeing it as potentiall­y paving the way to the abolition of priest celibacy globally.

US Cardinal Raymond Burke, a staunch traditiona­list, suggested last year that Francis would be heading into a “schism” were he to give his stamp of approval to the synod's proposals.

But to others, the text lacked the audacity that has marked the papacy of the first Jesuit pope.

Francis’ document marked a “failure in the reforming impulse of the pontificat­e,” according to longtime Vatican analyst Marco Politi.

The pope, “abruptly slowed down” by a strong and multifacet­ed opposition, also disappoint­ed those local Amazon bishops whom he had called on to offer up new ideas to help guide the Church, Politi said.

“Francis finds himself more alone today, having caused disillusio­nment among a notable mass of his supporters,” Politi said.

Key among them are Catholic feminist organisati­ons, some of whom have been fighting for women’s access to the priesthood.

In his text, Francis cited the contributi­ons of women and argued that their roles be increased, but dismissed the idea of their ordination.

Women’s Ordination Worldwide (WOW) said Francis had “dropped the ball” for women within the Church.

“Francis has opted to perpetuate the shameful elitist men’s club that, as he so brazenly points out in the document, is held up by the second class status of women who do most of the work with none of the recognitio­n,” the group said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes, a proponent of priestly marriage, sees the question as still open.

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