Dayton Daily News

Catholic bishops focus on abortion at conference

- By Peter Smith

Even as they BALTIMORE — signaled a continued hardline stance on opposing abortion and same-sex marriage, the nation’s Catholic bishops acknowledg­e they’re struggling to reach a key audience: their own flock.

The members of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops rounded out their leadership bench during the last day of public sessions of their fall annual meeting in Baltimore, which concluded with private meetings Thursday.

They also set in motion a plan to recirculat­e in 2024 their long-standing election document — a 15-yearold statement that prioritize­s opposition to abortion — while acknowledg­ing it’s outdated and adding a cover statement addressing such things as the teachings of Pope Francis and the Supreme Court’s Dobbs ruling that overturned the nationwide right to abortion in June.

The bishops elected Oklahoma City Archbishop Paul Coakley as secretary in a 130104 vote over Cardinal Joseph Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, who had been named a cardinal by Pope Francis. It’s the second time in five years that the bishops have passed over a Francis-appointed cardinal for a key leadership post.

Earlier this year, Coakley had applauded the decision by San Francisco’s archbishop to deny Communion to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Catholic Democrat from that city who supports abortion rights. So had the bishops’ new point man on opposition to abortion — Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia, elected Wednesday as chairman of its Committee on Pro-Life Activities.

The votes came a day after the bishops elected as their new president Archbishop Timothy Broglio of the Archdioces­e for the Military Services. Broglio is also seen as more of a culture warrior than Pope Francis, though Broglio has dismissed the idea of any “dissonance” between the two.

At the same time, Coakley cited the importance of Francis’ priorities in a news conference Wednesday.

Coakley is leading the bishops’ review of “Forming Conscience­s for Faithful Citizenshi­p,” a document they have used in election years, with only minor revisions, since 2007.

While a full revision will take years, bishops approved Coakley’s recommenda­tion to begin drafting a new introducti­on to issue with the document in time for 2024’s election. It would incorporat­e recent events such as the Ukraine war and the Dobbs decision.

The plan also includes using parish bulletins and social media to share main ideas from the lengthy document.

Coakley said the new introducti­on needs to reflect Pope Francis’ priorities, such as promoting civil discourse and protecting the environmen­t.

“It’s a rich pontificat­e that offers us plenty to lay out for people … to embrace the vision that Pope Francis has articulate­d,” Coakley said.

Seeking relevance

Bishops from both the progressiv­e and conservati­ve flanks of the church echoed concern that Catholics aren’t reading the document.

Bishop John Stowe of Lexington, Kentucky, a Francis appointee, said that bishops need a statement that’s relevant amid the shaken confidence in democracy following the U.S. Capitol riot and in the wake of Dobbs and defeats for abortion opponents in votes on five state ballot measures.

“It’s irresponsi­ble to issue an old teaching and suggest the church has nothing new to say when so much of this context has changed,” he said.

Bishop Joseph Strickland of Tyler, Texas, one of the most outspoken conservati­ve bishops, lamented the recent state ballot measures. Polls show Catholics to be mixed on legal abortion.

“I think it’s a solid document,” Strickland said, but “I think we have to acknowledg­e people aren’t listening.”

The gap between Francis and the U.S. bishops reflects in part the conference’s continued emphasis on culture-war battles over abortion and same-sex marriage.

Francis, while also opposing both issues in keeping with church teaching, has used his papacy to emphasize a wider agenda of bringing mercy to those at the margins, such as migrants and other poor people.

The Vatican said in 2021 the church cannot bless gay unions because God “cannot bless sin,” but Francis has made outreach to the church’s LGBTQ members a hallmark of his papacy.

Last Friday, Francis met with the Rev. James Martin, an American Jesuit priest whom the pontiff has supported in his calls for dialogue with LGBTQ Catholics.

The bishops also heard an impassione­d talk Wednesday by Archbishop Borys Gudziak of the Ukrainian Archeparch­y of Philadelph­ia on behalf of war-torn Ukraine.

Gudziak thanked U.S. Catholics for providing millions in relief for displaced Ukrainians and urged continued American support for Ukraine’s self-defense, saying Russian assaults have left many vulnerable in the coming winter.

At the same time, he said that on a conference call with staff at a Catholic university in Lviv, he heard only joy and resolve despite losses of electrical power in Russia’s missile barrage Tuesday.

One staff member told him, “Better without electricit­y and with Kherson,” he said, alluding to the recently liberated city.

Gudziak accused Russia of a “genocide” through such attacks and through its denial of Ukrainians’ identity as a separate people.

Addressing abuse

Also Wednesday, a small group of survivors of sexual abuse and their supporters held a sidewalk news conference outside Baltimore Marriott Waterfront, where the bishops are meeting.

While this year marks the 20th anniversar­y of the bishops’ landmark policy barring all abusers from ministry, advocates are seeking more transparen­cy.

They called for bishops in every diocese to post detailed lists of credibly accused abusers and to stop lobbying against state legislatio­n that would extend statutes of limitation­s for abuse lawsuits.

David Lorenz, Maryland director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, cited Archbishop Broglio’s archdioces­e as one of the few that still does not publish even a minimal list of abusers.

Broglio declined to comment.

“I don’t need another apology because it doesn’t do anything to protect kids,” Lorenz added.

“I want action to help kids. I want them (bishops) to be totally, absolutely transparen­t,” he said.

Also Wednesday, the bishops voted to advance efforts to have three American women declared saints.

They include Michelle Duppong of North Dakota, a campus missionary who died of cancer in 2014 and is credited with showing faithfulne­ss in suffering.

They also include two 20th century women: Cora Evans, a Catholic convert from Utah who reported mystical experience­s from an early age; and Mother Margaret Mary Healy Murphy of Texas, founder of a religious order, who provided education and other ministry to African Americans.

 ?? PETER SMITH / AP ?? The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops gathers in Baltimore, Wednesday. The group plans to update and recirculat­e a statement on opposing abortion.
PETER SMITH / AP The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops gathers in Baltimore, Wednesday. The group plans to update and recirculat­e a statement on opposing abortion.

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