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Pope
Softening Tone, Not Stance, O'Malley Says
By John L. Allen Jr. and Lisa Wangsness Boston Globe
February 9, 2014
http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2014/02/09/pope-francis-softening-tone-not-stance-cardinal-sean-malley-says/DpMiEqtWtBR28LoazbaFNM/story.html
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Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley is
widely considered to be Pope Francis’ closest American
adviser.
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Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley says he shares in the sense of
wonder at how swiftly Pope Francis has captured the world’s
attention and softened, with his sometimes startling words and
personal gestures, the image of the Roman Catholic Church.
But he cautions that those with high expectations that
the shift in tone presages major changes in church teachings on
contraception, abortion, homosexuality, and other flashpoint
issues are likely to be disappointed.
“I don’t see the pope as changing doctrine,’’ O’Malley
said in an interview with the Globe, though he said the pontiff’s
focus on compassion and mercy over doctrinal purity has
reverberated powerfully throughout the church.
The Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston and the closest
American adviser to the popular new pontiff, O’Malley said says
it would also be unrealistic to expect the church to consider
allowing divorced and remarried Catholics to receive the
sacraments, even though Francis himself once appeared to signal
openness to the idea.
“The church needs to be faithful to the Gospel and to
Christ’s teaching,” O’Malley said. “Sometimes that’s very
difficult. We have to follow what Christ wants, and trust that
what he asks of us is the best thing.”
O’Malley asked that the interview, conducted at the
rectory of the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston’s South End,
where he lives with four other priests, focus on the pope and the
global church, not local matters such as the controversy at
Fontbonne Academy, a Catholic girls’ school in Milton, where an
applicant to run the food service was dropped from consideration
after revealing that he is in a gay marriage.
The cardinal said Francis’ early stress has been on
changing the emphasis of the church, which in the past has been
“too strident, maybe too repetitious.”
The pope wants to focus more on evangelism, mercy, and
care for the poor, O’Malley said.
Church observers have speculated that bishops might
discuss revising the prohibition on remarried Catholics receiving
the sacraments in a worldwide gathering, or synod, in Rome this
fall to discuss the church’s ministry on family issues.
Two prominent prelates close to the pope have offered
clashing views on the matter, and Francis himself, in remarks to
reporters aboard the papal plane in July, appeared to signal
flexibility on the question.
But O’Malley said that although the pope is concerned
about the plight of remarried Catholics who want to be close to
the church, “I don’t see any theological justification” for
relaxing the rules.
In preparation for the synod, the Vatican has been
gathering input from bishops around the world on how the church
communicates its teachings on the family and sexual morality, and
how receptive Catholics are to those teachings.
German bishops last week released their response to the
Vatican, a remarkably blunt assessment asserting that most German
Catholics reject the church’s views on sexual morality and view
its position on homosexuality as discrimination. (The US bishops
declined to release their reply.)
Asserting it was already well known know that some
Catholics break with the church on these issues, O’Malley said,
“I don’t think that’s a stunning revelation. You could have saved
some postage if that’s the only thing you got out of it.”
O’Malley acknowledged that the church’s teachings on
social issues are unpopular in contemporary Western societies.
But he said the church cannot change its views to suit the times.
Instead, he said, it must find new ways of explaining its
teachings to a culture dominated by secular humanist values.
“The church has always tried to explain the faith,” he
said.
O’Malley’s read on Francis carries special weight.
He is the only American cardinal Francis knew well
before his election. O’Malley has traveled widely in Latin
America, and once stayed at the Buenos Aires residence of
then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio. They conversed comfortably
in Spanish, a language O’Malley speaks fluently.
The 69-year-old archbishop is the only American on the
pontiff’s all-important “G8” council of eight cardinal advisers,
who will have their third session with Francis later this month
to ponder reform of the Vatican bureaucracy and other matters.
O’Malley, who has built a reputation as a reformer on
clergy sexual abuse, expressed “distress” over a Feb. 5 report
from the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child
charging the Vatican’s policies allowed child abuse to continue
and let perpetrators go unpunished.
He said Vatican could not be held responsible for
policing the entire Catholic world — it is only in direct charge,
he said, of its own citizens in Vatican City.
“I think the competence of the United Nations would have
been to look at how they’re managing child protection with their
own citizens,” he said. “I think that would have been a very
positive contribution, because I think it’s very important the
Holy See become a model of what we would like to see in other
nations.”
Citing the UN panel’s call for the church to reverse its
teachings on abortion, contraception, and gay marriage, he said
the committee members had “allowed their ideological positions to
enter into their judgments.”
Still, O’Malley said he thought the committee’s report
would put new pressure on the Vatican to take stronger steps to
prevent abuse. He agreed with the UN panel that the church must
develop methods of holding bishops accountable when they fail to
abide by a “zero tolerance” policy.
In December, O’Malley announced on Francis’ behalf that
the pope was creating a new Vatican commission to lead the
anti-abuse charge. In the Globe interview, O’Malley said that
developing ways of holding bishops’ feet to the fire should be
part of its mandate, but he did not indicate how long that would
take.
“The first order of business is getting national
policies in place, to have some clarity about what the
expectations are throughout the world,” he said. “Once the
policies are in place, what the [Vatican] might do to intervene
where bishops are not following those policies has to be part of
a future plan.”
Outside the doctrinal realm, O’Malley seemed to signal
the possibility of breakthroughs on two other fronts: women in
the church, and the practice of granting annulments, meaning a
church declaration that a marriage is dissolved — that,
technically, the marriage never existed in the first place.
O’Malley said it is at least possible Francis might name
a woman to serve as the head of a major decision-making
department in the Vatican, such as a hypothetical new
“Congregation for the Laity.” Some theologians believe that only
clerics can exercise power in the name of the pope.
While ruling out both female priests and female
cardinals, Francis has called for greater leadership by women, a
sentiment O’Malley echoed.
“I think we’re all anxious to have more lay people
involved, particularly more women in positions of responsibility
at the Vatican,” he said.
On annulments, O’Malley said, the church’s Church’s
system must be made become more “user-friendly,” perhaps by
allowing cases to be brought to conclusion at the national level
without appealing them to Rome.
“Sometimes the process can drag on for years, and that
shouldn’t happen,” he said.
O’Malley described himself as “hopeful but realistic”
about the prospects that Francis might include a stop in Boston
during a US trip tentatively planned for September 2015, when a
Vatican-sponsored “World Meeting of Families” will take place in
Philadelphia.
The cardinal recalled joining Francis for a trip to the
Italian city of Assisi on Oct. 4, the home of the pope’s
namesake, St. Francis, and said he saw the demands such outings
impose.
“They dragged him to every cave, every altar, and every
crypt,” he said. “Everywhere he would go, someone would stand up
and say, ‘This is the first time a pope has ever come here.’ I
kept thinking, ‘He shouldn’t be here this time!’ ”
“He’s not a young man,” O’Malley said of the 77-year-old
pontiff, “and he’s got to husband his strength and his health.”
If the only American stops Francis makes are in
Philadelphia and possibly New York for a talk to the United
Nations, O’Malley said, “We’ll take a lot of people from Boston
there.”
O’Malley also said that Francis’ eloquent concern for
the poor is having an effect, not only pushing bishops and
priests to lead simpler lives but also stimulating parishes
across the country, including in Boston, to expand programs of
service and outreach.
Francis, he said, has opened a new window into the
church.
“If people only think of the Church in terms of the sex
abuse crisis or the culture wars, and that makes our job very
challenging,” he said.
“But when they say, ‘Oh, the Church is about announcing
the Good News, about God’s love for us, that God wants us to be
touched by his mercy and his love and that we have to take care
of one another,’ that’s the Gospel we all want to preach,” he
said. “Francis has done it so well, which makes it easier for all
of us.”
But O’Malley, who participated in the conclave that
elected Francis, suggested even he was surprised at the world’s
embrace of the new pontiff.
“We’re proud of him, that he’s so popular and has
captured the hearts and the imagination of the world,” O’Malley
said. “We expect Catholics to love the Holy Father, but not
Rolling Stone.”
Contact: isa.wangsness@globe.com
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