Aboard the Papal Plane (CNN)
Pope Francis said on Sunday that Christians owe apologies to gays and others
who have been offended or exploited by the church, remarks that some Catholics
hailed as a breakthrough in the church’s tone toward homosexuality.
“I repeat what the Catechism
of the Catholic Church says: that they must not be discriminated against, that
they must be respected and accompanied pastorally,” Francis said at a press
conference aboard the papal plane returning from Armenia.
“The Church must ask
forgiveness for not behaving many times, when I say the Church, I mean
Christians! The Church is holy, we are sinners!”
“I believe that the church
not only should apologize to the person who is gay whom it has offended,” he
added, “but has to apologize to the poor, to exploited women, to children
exploited for labor; it has to ask forgiveness for having blessed many
weapons.”
The Rev. James Martin, a
Jesuit priest and editor at large of America magazine, called the Pope’s
apology to gays and lesbians “a groundbreaking moment.”
“While St. John Paul II
apologized to several groups in 2000, the Jewish people, indigenous peoples, immigrants
and women, among them, no pope has ever come close to apologizing to the LGBT
community. And the Pope is correct of course. First, because forgiveness is an
essential part of the Christian life and second, because no group feels more
marginalized in the church today than LGBT people.”
The Pope’s comments came in
response to a question about a German Cardinal who said the Catholic Church
should apologize for being “very negative” about gays. The Pope was also asked
whether Christians bear some blame for hatred toward the LGBT community, as horrifically
demonstrated in the Orlando massacre at a gay night club that killed 49 people
on June 12.
Repeating the teaching of
the Catechism of the Catholic Church about respecting and not discriminating
against gays, Pope Francis said that one could condemn certain behavior.
“One can condemn, but not
for theological reasons, but for reasons of political behavior…Certain
manifestations are a bit too offensive for others, no?
“But these are things that
have nothing to do with the problem. The problem is a person that has a
condition, that has good will and who seeks God, who are we to judge? And we
must accompany them well.”
Francis first uttered that
rhetorical question — Who am I to judge gay people? — in 2013, also during a
news conference on the papal plane. His comments were hailed as a breakthrough
for a church that has historically condemned homosexuality, often in harsh
terms. Francis has not changed church doctrine that calls homosexual acts
sinful, but he has shown a more merciful approach to people on the margins,
including gays and lesbians.
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