VATICAN CITY (RNS) A day after signaling a warmer embrace of gays and
lesbians and divorced Catholics, conservative cardinals hit back
strongly Tuesday (Oct. 14), with one insisting that an abrupt-face on
church teaching is “not what we are saying at all.”
After Monday’s
release of a document with a softer tone on issues such as “welcoming
homosexuals,” American Cardinal Raymond Burke and German Cardinal
Gerhard Mueller complained the media was getting a biased view of the
bishops’ debate.
“It seems to me that information is being
manipulated in a way that gives comment to only one theory instead of
faithfully reporting the various positions expressed,” Burke said in a
full-page interview published in Italian by the conservative daily, Il
Foglio.
“This worries me very much because a significant number of
bishops do not accept the ideas of an opening, but few (people) know
that.”
In a separate interview published Tuesday, Burke told the
conservative U.S. outlet Catholic World Report
that the bishops “cannot
accept” any changes because they are not based in Scripture or church
teaching.
Monday’s mid-point report was released Monday as the the
nearly 200 bishops and lay delegates to the Synod on the Family called
by Pope Francis broke into discussion groups.
The summary
document, presented to the media by Hungarian Cardinal Peter Erdo,
immediately provoked the fury of conservatives about how he and his
colleagues were interpreting the spectrum of views aired on the synod
floor.
In what looked like strenuous damage control, the Rev.
Federico Lombardi, the Vatican’s chief spokesman, told a packed media
conference Tuesday that this was a “working document, not a final
document.”
South African Cardinal Wilfrid Napier told journalists
the document had been misunderstood and that’s why it had caused “such
an upset” among participants because the synod had not yet ended.
“The
message has gone out, it is not what we are saying at all, ” Napier
said of the media coverage. “Once it is out there there’s no way of
retrieving it. It is not a true position. Whatever goes out after looks
like damage control.”
Media reports claimed that the controversial
summary document provoked 41 responses inside the synod from bishops,
including staunch conservatives like Burke, who heads the Vatican’s
highest court; Mueller, the Vatican’s doctrine czar; and Australian
Cardinal George Pell, the powerful finance minister.
“The phrasing
may lead people to believe that the document reflects the views of the
synod,” Napier said. “We couldn’t have possibly agreed on it.”
Washington
Cardinal Donald Wuerl, widely seen as a moderate and one of the
cardinals charged with writing the synod’s final report to be released
Saturday, declined to comment on the complaints but insisted the
document was a “big step forward” in addressing issues concerning
marriage and the family.
“What we saw in the document … was the
first effort of this synod to present the issues in a way that expressed
that we understand what the concerns are, what the issues are,” he said
outside the Paul VI hall Tuesday.
New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, too, rejected claims the document’s views were an “earthquake” in the church’s approach.
“It’s
not the final word and we’re going to have a lot to say about it,”
Dolan said in a radio interview. “And there were some that said we
probably in our final statement need to be much more assertive about the
timeless teaching of the church.”
Much of the attention has now
turned to Pope Francis himself, and whether or how he will work to
ensure that the the synod’s final report matches his own inclusive,
pastoral approach.
Marco Tosatti, from the Italian daily La
Stampa, said he would pay anything to know what the pope is scribbling
on the many notes he passes to the synod’s secretary-general, Cardinal
Lorenzo Baldisseri, throughout the synod sessions.
In his daily
homily on Monday, Francis said “God has often reserved surprises for his
people.” Burke, in his interview with Catholic World Report, said a
statement by Francis “is long overdue.”
Whatever comes out of this
week’s synod is simply a prelude to a follow-up synod in October 2015.
Or, as Cardinal Anthony Tagle from the Philippines, put it: “The drama
continues.”
Source: HuffPost
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