Current:Home > reviews5 conservative cardinals challenge pope to affirm church teaching on gays and women ahead of meeting -MarketLink
5 conservative cardinals challenge pope to affirm church teaching on gays and women ahead of meeting
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:17:20
VATICAN CITY (AP) — Five conservative cardinals from Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas have challenged Pope Francis to affirm Catholic teaching on homosexuality and female ordination ahead of a big Vatican meeting where such hot-button issues are up for debate.
The cardinals on Monday published five questions they submitted to Francis, known as “dubia,” as well as an open letter to the Catholic faithful in which they outlined their concerns.
The cardinals said they felt duty-bound to inform the faithful “so that you may not be subject to confusion, error, and discouragement.”
The letter and questions were first published on the blogs of veteran Vatican reporter Sandro Magister and Messa in Latino two days before the start of a major three-week synod, or meeting, at the Vatican. More than 450 bishops and laypeople are gathering behind closed doors to discuss the future of the Catholic Church following a two-year canvassing of rank-and-file Catholics around the globe.
Agenda items for the meeting call for concrete steps to promote women to decision-making roles in the church, including as deacons, and for ordinary faithful to have more of a say in church governance. It calls for a “radical inclusion” of LGBTQ+ Catholics and others who have been marginalized by the church, and for new accountability measures to check how bishops exercise their authority to prevent abuses.
The synod and its proposals for greater lay involvement have thrilled progressives and rattled conservatives who warn any changes could lead to schism. The cardinals are among those who have issued such warnings, and their questions to Francis asked him to affirm Catholic doctrine lest the synod undue the church’s traditional teaching.
In particular, they asked Francis to affirm that the church cannot bless same-sex couples, and that any sexual act outside marriage between man and woman is a grave sin. The Vatican teaches that homosexuals must be treated with dignity and respect but that homosexual acts are “intrinsically disordered.”
They asked him if the synod itself could replace the pope and bishops as the supreme authority in the church, an issue of concern to some in the hierarchy who feel threatened by the synod’s call for empowering lay people. And they asked him to affirm or deny if the church in the future could one day ordain women; church doctrine holds that only men can be ordained priests.
The letter and questions mark the latest high-ranking challenge to Francis’ pontificate and his reform agenda. The signatories were some of Francis’ most vocal critics, all of them retired and of the more doctrinaire generation of cardinals appointed by St. John Paul II or Pope Benedict XVI.
They were Cardinals Walter Brandmueller of Germany, a former Vatican historian; Raymond Burke of the United States, whom Francis axed as head of the Vatican supreme court; Juan Sandoval of Mexico, the retired archbishop of Guadalajara, Robert Sarah of Guinea, the retired head of the Vatican’s liturgy office, and Joseph Zen, the retired archbishop of Hong Kong.
Brandmueller and Burke were among four signatories of a previous round of “dubia” to Francis in 2016 following his controversial opening to letting divorced and civilly remarried couples receive Communion. Then, the cardinals were concerned that Francis’ position violated church teaching on the indissolubility of marriage. Francis never responded to their questions, and two of their co-signatories subsequently died.
Francis apparently did respond to this new round of questions penned by the five cardinals in April. The cardinals didn’t publish his reply, but they apparently found it so unsatisfactory that they reformulated their five questions, submitted them to him again and asked him to simply respond with a yes or no.
He didn’t, prompting the cardinals to make the texts public and issue a “notification” warning to the faithful.
veryGood! (464)
Related
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Governor suspends right to carry firearms in public in this city due to gun violence
- Michigan State U trustees ban people with concealed gun licenses from bringing them to campus
- YouTuber Ruby Franke has first court hearing after being charged with 6 counts of aggravated child abuse
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- College football Week 2 highlights: Alabama-Texas score, best action from Saturday
- The Golden Bachelor: Everything You Need to Know
- Andy Reid deserves the blame for Chiefs' alarming loss to Lions in opener
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Coco Gauff plays Aryna Sabalenka in the US Open women’s final
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Evacuation now underway for American trapped 3,400 feet underground in cave
- What's at stake for Texas when it travels to Alabama in Week 2 of college football
- Powerful earthquake strikes Morocco, causing shaking in much of the country
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Hundreds of Pride activists march in Serbia despite hate messages sent by far-right officials
- Trump, DeSantis and other 2024 GOP prospects vie for attention at Iowa-Iowa State football game
- Emma Stone-led ‘Poor Things’ wins top prize at 80th Venice Film Festival
Recommendation
DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
Puzzlers gather 'round the digital water cooler to talk daily games
US, Canada sail warships through the Taiwan Strait in a challenge to China
Vicky Krieps on the feminist Western ‘The Dead Don’t Hurt’ and how she leaves behind past roles
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Stassi Schroeder Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby No. 2 With Beau Clark
Some millennials ditch dating app culture in favor of returning to 'IRL' connections
Russia is turning to old ally North Korea to resupply its arsenal for the war in Ukraine