Thread: Pope Francis has done more for #LGBTQ people than any pope. But he does so step by step. Two years ago today I met with him to speak about LGBT Catholics, and he asked me to continue my ministry. Often, however, people don’t notice these small steps, which add up to...
...a sea change in the Catholic Church's approach to LGBTQ people.
Here are 11 important steps, which he has made since his election as Pope in 2013. Let's look at them
chronologically...
1. When asked about gay priests in 2013, Pope Francis uttered perhaps the five most famous words of his papacy: “Who am I to judge?” With those words, he also became the first pope to use the word “gay” in such a public setting. nytimes.com/2013/07/30/wor…
2. During his pastoral visit to the United States in 2015, Pope Francis met with his former student, Yayo Grassi, who is gay, and Mr. Grassi’s same-sex partner. nbcnews.com/storyline/pope…
3. In his 2016 apostolic exhortation “Amoris Laetitia” (“The Joy of Love”), Francis wrote that when ministering to LGBT people, we should “before all else” affirm their human dignity as well as the church’s desire to oppose violence against them. vatican.va/content/dam/fr…
4. In 2016, on an in-flight press conference returning from Azerbaijan, Pope Francis encouraged a ministry of “accompaniment” of LGBTQ people, saying that Jesus would never tell a gay person, “Go away from me because you are homosexual.” vatican.va/content/france…
5. On an in-flight press conference in 2018, returning from the World Meeting of Families in Ireland, the Holy Father said that LGBT children should never be kicked out of their families and encouraged families to love and accept them. apnews.com/article/pope-f…
6. His 30-minute meeting with me in the Apostolic Palace in September 2019, was listed on his official public schedule and accompanied by photographs from the Vatican, a sign of his support for LGBTQ ministry overall. americamagazine.org/faith/2019/09/…
7. In 2020, while defending traditional church teaching on marriage as between a man and woman, Pope Francis nonetheless signaled his support for legal protections for civil unions in a documentary film. washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2020/…
8. Also last year, he offered his support for Sister Mónica Astorga, an Argentine sister who had worked with transgender people for 14 years, saying, “God, who did not go to seminary or study theology, will repay you abundantly.” thetablet.co.uk/news/13270/pop…
9. This March, he appointed Juan Carlos Cruz, an openly gay man and a clergy abuse survivor and advocate, to a high-level Vatican commission. In 2018, Mr. Cruz had earlier reported that Francis had told him “God made you this way.” apnews.com/article/pope-f…
10. In June, he wrote a warm letter on the occasion of the Outreach LGBTQ Catholic Ministry webinar, and also promised his prayers for this “flock” of LGBTQ people. americamagazine.org/faith/2021/06/…
11. In a conversation with Jesuits in Slovakia last month, he encouraged them to reach out pastorally to “homosexual couples,” not just LGBTQ individuals. laciviltacattolica.com/freedom-scares…
Taken together, we can see how Francis’s approach to LGBTQ people is one of pastoral accompaniment, moving slowly, avoiding the dramatic statements that some people may want and setting limits. His focus is always on encouraging the pastoral care of LGBTQ individuals...
...defending them against violence and supporting those who minister with them, in new ways that would have not been countenanced by his predecessors.
Since his election in 2013, Pope Francis has shown himself to be a pastor to LGBTQ people and their families.
Gospel: Today's Gospel beautifully illustrates Jesus's appreciation of humor. Nathanael has just made fun of Jesus's hometown, saying, "Can anything good come from Nazareth?" (Nazareth was a tiny town, only 200 to 400 people). How does Jesus respond? Does he rebuke him?...
Does Jesus criticize him for making fun of Nazareth? Does he say "go away from me"? Quite the opposite! Jesus praises him saying, "Here is a true child of Israel. There is no duplicity in him!" Then he invites Nathanael to become not only a disciple, but one of the Twelve...
There are many signs of Jesus's sense of humor in the Gospels. Eg., the Aramaic wordplay in his comment about "straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel," his funny parables, his sly remarks to the religious authorities.
Jesus was fully divine and also fully human and...
Gospel: James and John, the sons of Zebedee, are fascinating. They are so fiery in temperament that Jesus playfully nicknames them "Boanerges," or "Sons of Thunder." Today, after a Samaritan town doesn't welcome them they ask Jesus to "call down fire from heaven" (Lk 9). Jesus...
..."rebukes" them in response. Yesterday John asked Jesus about preventing an exorcist who was doing good, but not following "in our company." Jesus disagreed with him on that one, too. Elsewhere, they ask to be seated at Jesus's "right hand," infuriating the other disciples....
Remember: James and John were two of the First Disciples, called by Jesus at the Sea of Galilee. They immediately left their father's fishing business (a prosperous business, since they had a boat and hired hands) to follow him. One wonders what Zebedee thought about that...
Today Matt Malone, SJ, @Americaeditor, my Jesuit brother (and boss) announced that he would be stepping down as president and editor in chief at @americamag in 2022.
For me, his most notable accomplishments (among many) are: First, moving America to a "multi-platform" company (when he took over we had a magazine and a website; now we have video, podcasts, events, pilgrimages and much more). Second, his (literal) moving to our new offices...
And, third, the very successful O'Hare Fellows program, an internship for recent college graduates. (Not incidentally, he also convinced me to start leading pilgrimages, which took some doing, as he'll tell you!)...
Breaking: "No, I have never denied the Eucharist to anyone; to anyone! I don't know if someone came to me under these conditions, but I have never refused them the Eucharist, since the time I was a priest."
"If we look at the history of the church, we can see that every time the bishops did not act like shepherds when dealing with a problem, they aligned themselves with political life, on political problems," he said.
The pope told journalists that when defending a principle, some bishops act in a way "that is not pastoral" and "enter the political sphere."
Gospel: Today is the Memorial of Our Lady of Sorrows. It follows the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, and so today's reading tells of Mary standing by the Cross, while her son suffers and dies (Jn 19). Both feasts remind us that Jesus understands suffering and...
...so does his mother.
When asking for Mary's intercession (that is, her prayers), remember that you are asking for help from a woman who understood all manner of human suffering. At some point in her life on earth she may even have had to live through a pandemic...
Go to Our Lady in prayer, confident that she will hear you, understand you and pray for you.
Gospel: Today a Roman centurion in Capernaum asks Jesus to heal his servant (Lk 7). A few NT scholars have suggested that the servant was the centurion's lover, based on a few words used in the Gospels.
In short: He is first described by Luke as a δοῦλον (doulon), the word...
... used almost everywhere else in the NT for "servant" or "slave." Luke also describes him as ἔντιμος (entimos), which means "highly valued," "precious," "dear," etc.
Yet the centurion calls him not "doulon," but παῖς μου (pais mou), which is "my boy" or "my son..."
Some scholars suggest that this is the reason the centurion says he is not "worthy" (ἠξίωσα) for Jesus to enter his house.
To me, this is a stretch. But even if the man was simply a "doulon," or servant, the story is no less remarkable....