Oroville Mercury-Register

Leader of US Catholic bishops: Biden’s stances pose dilemma

- By David Crary

The head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops told colleagues this week that President- elect Joe Biden’s policy positions, including support for abortion rights, pose a “difficult and complex situation” for the church.

Los Angeles Archbishop José Gomez, completing his fi rst year as the USCCB’s president, welcomes many of Biden’s stances, including on immigratio­n, racial justice and climate change. But some conservati­ve bishops, noting the church’s strong opposition to abortion, were upset last week when Gomez congratula­ted Biden — a fellow Catholic — on his victory.

As the USCCB ended the public portion of its twoday national meeting, Gomez departed from the official agenda to broach the issue.

“We are facing a unique moment in our history,” he said.

“The president- elect has given us reason to think he will support some good policies” but also some that “undermine our preeminent priority of the eliminatio­n of abortion.”

“These policies pose a serious threat to the common good,” Gomez said. “When politician­s who profess the Catholic faith support them ... it creates confusion among the faithful about what the church actually teaches on these questions.”

Gomez said he would form a working group to address the matter, headed by the USCCB’s vice president, Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron.

There was no immediate response by Biden’s transition team to an AP request for comment.

Gomez’s unexpected remarks followed a two-hour session in which bishops from across the U.S., meeting online due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, shared their dioceses’ efforts to cope with the pandemic

and to racism.

Some who spoke during the racial injustice discussion represent communitie­s that have seen protests and occasional violence after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in May.

Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore was among several who described church- organized listening sessions for community members to share their experience­s with racism and their thoughts on how to curtail it.

“These conversati­ons can be difficult, painful,” Lori said. “A lot of people don’t think they need those conversati­ons because they don’t have a racist bone in their body. The reality is much different.”

As one of several race-related initiative­s, Lori said his archdioces­e is building a new K-8 Catholic school in one of Baltimore’s poorest neighborho­ods.

Archbishop Mitchell Rozanski of St. Louis said his archdioces­e is seeking to promote racial equity in its hiring practices and has hired a diversity officer for

combat

systemic

a group of Catholic schools.

Rozanski recently toured predominan­tly Black neighborho­ods including a stop in nearby Ferguson, where he prayed at the site where Michael Brown, an 18-yearold Black man, was fatally shot by a white police officern in 2014.

Mark Seitz, the bishop of El Paso, Texas, recalled the 2019 mass killing of 23 people at a Walmart by a gunman who said he was targeting Mexicans.

“It brought home the fact that white supremacy is not a harmless fringe ideology. It’s a death- dealing ideology,” Seitz said.

“It reminded us that words matter — words that denigrate immigrants and other people of color really matter and feed into these ways of thinking.”

Seitz said the diocese is looking at forming a truth commission exploring the history and current status of racism in the region, and how it has impacted Native Americans, Hispanics, immigrants and others.

The discussion was led by Bishop Shelton Fabre of the Louisiana diocese of Houma-Thibodaux, who

heads the USCCB’s Committee Against Racism.

“The work is hard, the work is slow, but the work is being done,” he said. “In my diocese, hearts are being changed.”

Amid the protests following Floyd’s killing, some Black Catholics were outspoken in urging the church to take substantiv­e steps conveying that their presence is valued.

There have been calls for some form of reparation­s, and for the teaching of Black Catholic history in Catholic schools.

Black Catholics’ somewhat marginal place in the U.S. church is illustrate­d by statistics compiled by the USCCB: There are about 3 million African American members of the faith, roughly 4% of the nation’s 69 million Catholics, but as of January there were just 250 Black priests, or less than 1% of the total of 36,500.

Also, a dozen bishops shared their experience­s coping with the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has forced many dioceses to halt or sharply reduce inperson worship.

 ?? STEVE RUARK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, of Los Angeles, speaks during a news conference after being elected as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops during their Fall General Assembly in Baltimore on Nov. 12.
STEVE RUARK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, of Los Angeles, speaks during a news conference after being elected as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops during their Fall General Assembly in Baltimore on Nov. 12.

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