Philippine Daily Inquirer

Catholics say Pope Francis doing good job but disagree...

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WASHINGTON—Catholics believe Pope Francis is doing a good job, but many disagree with Church doctrine on hot-button issues, especially contracept­ives, according to a global poll out on Sunday.

The survey by the US-based Spanishlan­guage network Univision of Catholics

in 12 countries found that those most likely to support Church teachings are married men and women 55 years and older who attend Mass frequently and live in rural areas.

For the rest, opinions on issues such as gay marriage, abortion, divorce and female priests vary by region, age, geographic location and income.

According to the poll, 87 percent of Catholics believe that Francis is doing a good or excellent job as his papacy reaches its first anniversar­y in March.

Yet 78 percent favor using contracept­ives, a violation of Church teaching that sex should always be had with an openness toward procreatio­n.

The Church teaches natural family planning, which Catholics can use to plan sex and attempt to avoid getting pregnant.

Most controvers­ial

On other issues there are marked regional difference­s.

For example, 80 percent of Catholics in Africa and 76 percent in the Philippine­s support the ban on female priests, but only 30 percent in Europe and 36 percent in the United States are in favor.

The most controvers­ial subject is gay marriage: Opposition to such unions is overwhelmi­ng in Africa at 99 percent, compared with 40 percent in the United States.

“On average, 5 percent more women, 18 percent more young people and 10 percent more upper class and upper middle-class members are in favor of gay marriage compared to their counterpar­ts,” the pollsters said.

Catholics in Spain—which for centuries enforced Church doctrine through the Holy Inquisitio­n—are among the most liberal in the world, according to the survey, along with those in France.

Catholics in Africa and the Philippine­s are the most conservati­ve, while those in Argentina and Brazil are mostly liberal.

Seven questions

Overall, The Washington Post said in a separate article, the poll revealed a Church dramatical­ly divided—between the developing world in Africa and Asia, which hews closely to doctrine, and Western countries in Europe, North America and parts of Latin America, which strongly support practices that the Church teaches are immoral.

The poll focused on countries with some of the world’s largest Catholic population­s, the Post said. The countries are home to more than six of 10 Catholics globally.

The Post noted that, of the seven questions asked about hot-button issues, there appeared to be the greatest global agreement on contracept­ion (opposing Church teachings) and gay marriage (supporting the Church’s stance).

Countries surveyed

The poll by Bendixen & Amandi Internatio­nal for Univision surveyed 12,036 Catholics in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Democratic Republic of Congo, France, Italy, Mexico, Philippine­s, Poland, Spain, Uganda and the United States.

The countries represent 61 percent of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, and pollsters say the survey has a 0.9-percent overall margin of error.

 ?? AFP ?? THUMBS UP Pope Francis gives a thumbsup sign to pilgrims gathered at St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.
AFP THUMBS UP Pope Francis gives a thumbsup sign to pilgrims gathered at St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.

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